Newspaper Page Text
popular bride-
entertaln
. . to Dwight
• take place
at the Wes-
Sflmneth Rob
*’’7Jss Roberts
''.'.'at her home
x. have been at
iroughout the
K L. Roberts as-
Aoae invited to
Rtere Miss Geor
ge-Marie Roux,
Ee, Miss Aide
d Johnson, Mrs.
k, Mrs. Ravenel
7As You Like It” Pioneers
tage Rally For Little Guests
■ rally for the children
©recently attended “Camp
■ke It” and tl sir friends
|&eld by a group of the
Sneers, the Misses Rav.
■ T. H. Gignllliat, Mrs.
and Miss Meta
■ the home of the Misses
■i east McDonough street,
V morning
pair will be a candy pull
lightful time is anticipated,
•llowing children have been
jMWPERONS AKE NAMED
W FOR P. T. A. DANCE
W TONIGHT
F
Those serving as chaperons for the
Spring Dance, to be given this eve.
ning, sponsored by The Parent-Teach
er Association of the Senior High
school are: Prof, and Mrs. J. C. How
ard, PrJ?. and Mrs. Ira Gaines, Mrs.
and Mrs. I* V. Graham, Mrs H. D.
Leigh, Mrs. Frankie Kelly, Mrs. O.
H Paddison, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Brit
tain, Major and Mrs. H. R. Hansen,
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Phillips, Donald
Gray and William A Byler.
The dance will be given at the Chat
ham Artillery Hall and Mrs. Bertha M.
Robherds is chairman of the commit
tee in charge of the entertainment
and serving with her are: Mrs. John
T. Jenkins, Arthur Funk and Albert
w. Vick.
A number of prises will be given
during the evening.
Members of the High School have
assisted with arrangements and have
worked to make the dance a most
sucessful one.
BADENHOP TO BRAZIL
Friends of Harry Badenhop. for
mer Savannahian. will be Interested
to learn that he was transferred some
t ime ago from Mobile. Ala., offices of
Ab derson-Clayton Cotton Company to
» post at the Recefes. Brasil office of
ths cotton firm. Mr. Badenhoop was
stationed at Mobile for nine years.
Special Permanent Wave 32.50
Ideal Beauty Shoppe
117 EAST BROUGHTON ST
SAVANNAH, GA. . Ph0ne32783
Other Permanents Reduced
Bye Brow and Lash Dya
.*■ 4?- - - * ter jflfr V'
\ MMMKM Z W
• g eaM flHKfrifl aw! ■wspsm.
By tWHw K
■B ? Cho » e The
■ Econom-icer
ok’ B & for
r-! . CONVENIENCE
“Plenty of space and easy
% 1 " to B et at •• • that's what
tAk I’ ve always wanted! Now I have it in my
New ECONOM-ICER!
■wgßft x -I.
** *J U6 * l room > Friend hus
: SBra hand asked me if I were going to start a
’’hotel. He didn’t realize how much can he
BSVe d buying ahead of time, even for
' jp*-' a little family of four like ours! I can get
t;> •'■■Wil * a week’s provisions in my ECONOM-ICER
Io and ever yth in g keeps perfectly!”
HOlste. 1 Come in and see for yourself the ideal con-
1 | venience of The New Ranney ECONOM-
J||. " y ICER! There’s a model for your kitchen
*lsi —and your budget!
3EE THIS LATEST REFRIGERATION DEVELOPMENT AT
COLONIAL ICE COMPANY
BULL and V.CTORY DRIVE
PHONE 2-1143
2
fciety ** Home Makins Milady*s Features*
To Become Bride
' Bruce J\ext Week;
ained At Many Parties
Gignillat, Mrs j3radley Johnson, Mrs.
Edwin Jonm ,a. Jr.. Mrs. Fred
Schenkel of Washington, D. C.; Mrs.
Gklays G. Peabody, and Mrs. George
Harmon, Jr. ,
This evening Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
Lewis will honor Miss Roberts and
Mrs. Bruce with a reception at their
home on East Thirty-fourth street.
The guests have been invited to call
at 8:30 o’clock and they will include
the deacons of the First Baptist
Church and their wives, also the pas
tor of the church Dr. Arthur Jackson
and Mrs. Jackson. A few others have
been invited to call among them, Mrs.
Sara McCandless, Mrs. Mildred Rob
erts Clark, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. L.
Roberts and Mrs. Elizabeth Cargill
Bruce of New Haven, Conn.
invited: Armin Cay, Marthan and
Margaret Claghorn, Lucy Brennan.
Elizabeth Drew, Joy Howden, Joan
Egan, Jean Gilcrist, Mary Lynah,
Anita Lippitt, Caroline and Anne
Martin, Catherine Morrell. Joe Ross.
Eleanor Styles, Parry Reed, Ann
Roberts, Harriet Train, Sarah Mae
Sipple, Helen Young, Betty Rob
ertson, Joan Jackson, Mary and
Newell Turner, Jessie Tobias, Peg
gy Gordon, Lucile Buerard, Ruth
Hogan, Josephine Clapp, Virginia
Coerr, Audrey Coerr.
PAPE SCHOOL STUDENTS
STAGE HOBBY FAIR,
ENTERTAINMENT
Upper class two of the Pape
School are having a hobby fair this
afternoon at the school at 4:30 o’-
clock. The entertainment is being
given for the benefit of the school.
Prizes and ribbons will be given
and delightful refreshments will
be served.
Members of the class giving the
fair are: Miss Anita Lippitt, Miss
Katherine Morrell, Miss Mary Ann
Hood, Miss Jessie Tobias, Miss
Jean Gilchrist. Miss Armin Cay,
Miss Ann Martin, Miss Lucille
Guerard, Miss Ruth Hogan, Miss
Virginia Coerr, Miss Anne Galt
Kirby, Miss Nell Jordan, Miss Luc
retia Edwards, Miss Alberta Rob.
ertson, Miss Josephine Clapp and
Miss Peggy Gordon.
FEDERATED MUSIC CLUBS
TO MEET IN VIDALIA
The Federated Music Clubs of the
First district, will meet in Vidalia to
moriuw, at which time Mrs. R. N.
Murray of Savannah, junior director
wil be in charge of the program. The
meeting will be held in the high
school
Miss Fannie FTlnderburke. head of
the music department of the Vidalia
schools is in charge of arrangements
for entertaining the guests and she
will be assisted by the members of
the Vidalia club.
Delegates from Savannah, States
boro. Sylvania, Millen, Kibbee, Mount
Vernon, Ailey, and Soperton will at
tend.
Among the Savannahians planning
to attend tomorrow are - - Mrs. R. N.
Murray, Mis Georgia E Word, and
Margaret Wilson, and Clifford Sher
rod pupils of Mrs. Murray.
MISS THETA E. THOMAS
WEDS FLORIDA MAN
TOMORROW
An interesting wedding taking
place tomorrow will be that of
Miss Theta Earlcedeane Thomas,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William
M. Coolidge, and John Rudolph
Wohanka, Jr., of Jacksonville, Fla.
The marriage will be solemnized
at the home of the bride s parents
on East. Anderson street at 4:30 o’-
clock in the afternoon, with the
Rev. Lon Day, pastor of the Im
manuel Baptist Church, officiating
Miss Thomas will be given in mar
riage by her brother, Tommy Thom
as, and she will have as her maid
of honor, Miss Joyce Yeomans and
as her matron of honor, Mrs. Wade
Smith.
Henry Deupree of Jacksonville
will be Mr. Wohanka’s best man.
SOCIETY BRIEFS
Dr. and Mrs. E. N. Gleaton. Dr.
and Mrs. A. A Morrison, have re
turned home after spending some
time in Florida.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Van have
as their guest, Miss Fay Lockhart
of Macon.
• • •
Mrs. Carl Claussen of Atlanta is
the guest of her mothe, Mrs. Agnes
Sample at her home in the Colonial
Hall Apartments.
♦ . •
Miss Ruby Ricks of Paducah,
Ky., has arrived to make her home
with her sister, Mrs. E. R. Boat
man and Mr. Boatman on East 51st
Street
* • •
Mr. and Mrs. Anton Fraps will
return to Miami, Fla., today after
spending some time with their par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Fraps.
♦ ♦ ♦
Mrs. Leland Burpee of Jackson
ville is visiting her sisters. Mrs.
Robert Daniels and Miss Minnie
Wamsley.
♦ ♦ •
Mrs. E. S. Trosdal has as her
guest Mrs. Bayard Wooten of Chap
el Hill, N. C.
• • *
Mrs. S. K. DiDmon of Columbus,
Ga„ who has been the guest of
Mr. and Mrs. James Averett on East
52nd Street has gone to Macon,
Georgia, where she will visit Mrs.
John J. McKay, Jr., before return
ing to her home in Columbus.
Mrs. Fred Schenkel of Washing
ton, D. C.. has arrived to attend the
Roberts-Bruce wedding next week
and is the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
W. R. L. Roberts.'
* « •
Mr. A. W. de la Plante of Miami
Beach is a guest at the DeSoto for
a month.
• « «
Miss Josephine Wells and Mrs.
Farley Wells have returned home
after visiting in. Wilmington, N. C.
* • •
Mrs. Robert Stedeford of Jack,
sonville is visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Walter W. Metzger.
DINNER STORIES
The country farmer had given
permission to an old Irishman to
sleep in the barn. That night the
farmer went .around to the barn,
to see that tho man was comfort
able, and found him lying on a heap
of straw, with a drainpipe for a
pillow.
“Don’t you find that pips hard?”
asked the farmer.
“No, yer honor.” said Pat, *Tve
filled it with straw.’*
MISS GUERRY HOSTESS
Miss Elsie Guerry. charming
bride-to-be, whose marriage to Carl
Martin will take place next week,
will entertain tomorrow afternoon
with a trousseau tea at her home on
East 4Fth street.
No invitations have been issued
but the friends of Miss Guerry are
invited to call between the hours
of five and seven.
Those who have been invited to
serve are: Miss Lucille Williamson,
Mies Ruth Martin, Miss Clara Zip
perer, and Mrs. F. Harold Jones.
Ger gla 4-H Club boya and girls
last year in their club projects pro
duced products vaued at $1,886,000,
their reports sent to club leaders
show. That was $751,000 more pro
ducts than they produced in 1934.
The 4.881 Georgia 4-H Club boys
that grew com last year averaged
26 bushels to the acre. The average
for the farmers of the state was
about 11 bushels. The boys planted
5,393 acrese of oom and produced
142 199 bushels.
Angel Food
TENDER AND DELICIOUS
Devil’s Food
RICH WITH CHOCOLATE
KESSEL’S
THE NO-SUBSTITUTE
BAKERS
381 Whitaker 81
MADAM VAILA
oJjfcja Scientific Palmist and
Character Analyst. My
first time in Savannah.
wJSgp All readings strictly
confidential and satis
flUyljfl faction guaranteed. I
tell past, present and
future just a« It shows
In your hand. Located permanent
ly in private home. East Victory
Drive and Georgia Ave., on way
to Tyboe. Phone 8484.
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1938 '
Min erals
Are Needed
For Health
DEFICIENCIES IN DIET
ACCOUNT FOR FORMS
OF DISEASE
WE SPOKE yesterday of the pos
sibility that a number of obscure dis
seases could be due to food deficien
cies—to the absence of certain things
in the diet. We know enough to say,
in the present state of our knowl
edge, that the following substances
must be present in the diet for the
maintenance of health (1) Calcium;
(2, iron, (3) the vitamins and (4)
the anti-anemia factor. Strictly speak
ing, it is improper to say that the last
must be present in the diet, because
the bcdy furnishes it and stores it in
the liver, but we know that when a
certain type of anemia occurs, the
blood can be brought back to normal
by feeding animal liver, which con
tains the anti-anemia factor.
The inter-relationships of these
various disease factors are very com
plicated, and it may be that the for
mation of a necessary hormone in the
body is dependent upon very compli
cated dietary factors. For instance,
there is a disease in dogs known as
“black tongue,” which can be pro
duced by the same diet which ap
parently c.Vses pellagra in man. If
this diet, however, is fed to hogs,
they develop, not black tongue, but
a curious form of anemia similar to
pernicious anemia in man. This hints
at the fact that the anti-anemia fac
tor may be dependent upon elements
on the diet or, in short, upon a com
pletely balanced diet.
Case Illustrates Point
A case illustrating these compli
cated inter relationships is that of a
woman who had marked anemia, as
well as neuritis. She had been sub
ject to digestive upsets a good part
of her life and was easily fatigued.
Her blood showed an anemia erf the
type associated with iron deficiency.
She had been on an incomplete and
poorly balanced diet for years on
account of her digestive complaints;
she had not eaten meat since child
hood, and ate very few vegetables.
C..,. SATURDAYSPECIALS
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Upsets Precedent
Mrs. Ellen Harding (above), 31-
year-old mother of four children,
was given the unanimous decision
of three judges who reviewed her
case in the London assizes for the
murder of her youngest child, a boy
of six months. She is the first
woman ever to win an appeal for a
_ capital crime in Britain.
. (Central Press)
When her diet was reconstructed in
accordance with our knowledge of
a balanced diet, both the anemia and
the neuritis cleared up.
In many of these patients it is
necessary to restore the digestive
functions to normal before improve
ment takes place.
Another case is that of a woman,
who had five children in rapid suc
cession. At the age of 22 she was
found to have anemia and numbness
and weakness of the hands end feet.
She lived in a mill town, under poor
conditions, on a very limited diet for
economic reasons. The rapidly suc
ceeding pregnancies had been a se
vere drain upon her food store.
When her diet was rearranged and
balanced, her symptoms promptly
cleared up.
Correct Gowning Makes
Woman Look Right Height
Be She Tall Or Short, Dress May Be Chosen That Will Give
Desired Effect. rr „
BY GLADYS GLAD
“America’s Most Famous Beauty"
When a Broadway producer re
quires showgirls for his production,
he sends out calls for them. The
last producer to cast a new show fol
lowed the same routine. More than
2,000 girls responded to the call. And
of them an, only beauties who were
five feet seven inches tall or more
were chosen. Isn’t that enough to
cause you tall girls who resent your
height to take heart?
Personally, I’d say yes, emphatical
ly. But that doesn’t mean by any
chance that the short damsel should
become downhearted. For there are
plenty of our most popular screen and
stage stars who are only five to five
feet three inches tall.
It is through gowning that a dam
sel ca. Influence her apparent height.
For dillerent dress lines have different
effects on figures. A tall girl can’t
really make herself shorter, of course.
And a short girl can’t really make
herself taller. Each damsel, however,
can at least make herself appear
nearer the height she desires.
The tall girl who desires to make
herself appear shorter can do so by
gowning herself properly. In the first
place should avoid straight unbroken,
flowing lines. For her, the best
gowns are beelted dresses, cape
dresses, tunics, jumpers and boleros.
For frocks with such lines cut her
height and tend to make her appear
shorter. As to materials, horizontal
ly-triped dresses and small-figured
prints are best for tall folks.
Short Girl Does the Opposite
The short girl usually should avoid
just the lines in gowning that the
tall girl adopts. For her, those belted
dresses, cape dresses, tunics and bo
lores are taken taboo. Straight-line
dresses that are without any contrast
ing shade are best for the short girl,
because they do not cut her figure,
but tends to make her appear taller.
In addition, the short girl should
absolutely avoid crisp materials. Such
fabrics will tend only to make her
appear shorter and dumpier than she
-
$ **
I
•
EB
.- ■. ; ■ ■ wiM.;;.i/.m ■ .w<i muai
j Kay Francis O
A tall girl who is one of Holly- 1
wood’s best-dressed women.
really is. The best materials for the
short girl are vertically-trlped ones,
solid-colored ones and largelyfigured-
UTAH GIRL ENTERTAINED
Numerous informal parties have
been given Miss Marlon Oosgriff, ors
Salt Lake City, Utah, who Is the at
tractive guest of Miss Katherine
Doyle.
Yesterday Miss Doyle entertained
in honor of her visitor with a spend
the-day party at Sea Island, and «
few friends were invited tn motor
down In the morning for lunch, re
turning to the city in the late after
noon.
ones. For such materials add to
make her appear really taller.
ANSWERS TO QUERIES
Eyelashes
Dolores: Apply a bit of plain war
line or odorless castor oil to your
lashes nightly before retiring. Thfs
will help to promote their growth and
thickness.
Dandruff
Joan: You will find an excellent
dandruff remedy in my “Beauty Cul
ture” booklet. This booklet also gives
the hot oil treatments for promot*
ing hair growth and thickness, the
salt water treatments for oily, falling
hair, and many other excellent hair
beautifying hints.
Buttermilk
Jeannette: Buttermilk Is not at all
fattening. As a matetr of fact, you
may consume as much as two quarts
a day, if you so desire.
Cosmetics
Regina: I think that a soft ochre
shade of powder, soft orange, rouge,
light, vivid lipstick and dark brown
eyeshadow cream would blend har
moniously with your coloring.
Figure
Rutht The reducing course out
lined in my “New Figure" booklet
has Indeed been proved a healthful
and effective one.. This oomn take*
off about eight to tan pounds tn two
weeks, and inolndes rataetton of ttw
bust, watot, hips, abdomen, buttocks
and thigta.
Blonde Hair Rime
Elafeg The blonde hate sfcme that
you refer to is composed of the jufca
of one tamos, one taMespoos of vine
gar, one tablespoon of prmide and a
pHnt of dear water.
Superfioiis Hate
Irene* The superfluous taste btaach
to which you refer Is nrwnpoodß of
two toaepoons of oroxMe and tads a
teaspoon of ordtaZThomehoto am
monia