Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, May 15, 1936, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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PAGE TWO Society Home Makins Milady’s Features Mrs. E. A. M. Schroeder To Give Dinner Tonight For Miss Elsie Kuck POPULAR BRIDE-ELECT GUEST AT AFFAIR AT GENERAL OGLETHORPE HOTEL; SWIMMING PARTY PLANNED TOMORROW. Honoring Miss Elsie Kuck, bride, elect, Mrs. E. A. M. Schroeder will entertain with a dinner party this evening at the General Oglethorpe Hotel. Mrs. Schroeder has asked her guests to meet at her home on East Hunt ingdon street for cocktails and motor out to the Hotel later for dinner. The dinner table has been arrang ed with crystal bowls of pink sweet peas and baby’s breath, and in be tween the bowls are placed tall pink tapers in crystal holders. The attrac tive place cards are mlnature pottea plants of pink and white. After dinner the guests will retire to the drawing room where games will be played. The guests will in. Graduates Guests At Tea PAPE, ST. VINCENT’S AND SAVANNAH HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS TO BE HONORED AT EVENT TOMORROW. Honoring the June graduates of Paps school, St. Vincent’s, the Sa vannah High school, and the faculty and alumnae of G. S. C. W. will be the tea given tomorrow afternoon by the G. S. C. W. club at the home of Mrs. J. Lee Highsmith, 218 West 37th street. The tea will be a musical one and will begin at 4 p.m. A delightful program has been ar ranged and the guests of honor for the occasion will be Dr. Guy Wells and the dean of women of the Geor gia State College for Women. Alpha Delta Pi Banquet Tonight SORORITY MEMBERS TO BE HOSTS AT ENTERTAINMENT IN THE GEORGIAN. Among interesting social affairs of the week-end will be the banquet with which the members of the Sa vannah City Club of the Alpha Delta Pi Sorority will entertain at the Georgian Tea Room this evening at six-thirty o’clock. The ccasion will be in celebration of the eighty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the Sorority. Those who will attend the banquet are: Mrs. Perry Land, Mrs. H. S. Gib bee, Miss Eleanor Demmond, Miss Helen Meeks, Mrs. V. D. Johnson, ST. JOSEPH’S HOSPITAL ALUMNAE TO GIVE DANCE TONIGHT This evening the alumnae of the St. Joseph's Hoapital will entertain with a danoe at the Catholic club from 9 until 1 o’clock, honoring the student nurses who have completed their training course in the hospital and received their diplomas yesterday The nurses to be honored are: Miss Willie Mae Reid, Miss Mary Cooper Miss Frances Toomey, Miss Mildred Cartwright, Miss Dorothy Usry, Miss Virginia Ellison, Miss Catherine Pope Miss Dorothy Lucken, Miss Mar gherite Powers, Miss Elizabeth Hogan Miss Louise Byrnes, Miss Elizabeth Beytagh, Miss Ellen Ryan and Miss Mary Jane Ray. Miss Dora Fountain is chairman of the arrangements. LACHLAN McINTOSH D. A. R. ENTERTAINED AT POOLER Mrs. Iverson Lord, Mrs. Hoyt War. and Mrs. J. Sanford Sutton were hostesses to the Lachlan Mclntosh chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution on yesterday afternoon, a’ the home of Mrs. Lord in Pooler. The Right Rev. Monsignor Joseph D. Mitchell, D. C„ gave a short ad dress on “Preserving the Past’’ and Mrs. Henry Purse read a paper. “Austin Dabney, Negro Patriot of the Revolution.. Mrs. Homer Peeples Is regent of the chapt r. GEORGIA INVESTMENT COMPANY AUTOMOBILE LOANS 311 SAVANNAH BANK BLDG. If You Need Cash —See Us DIAL 4184 GRAND OPENING 1936 SEASON SATURDAY, MAY 16TH KASSEL’S PAVILION WAYS, GA. DANCING With Free Bathing To AU Dancers —EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION— CHARLES HUGHES “IN PERSON” Savannah’s Boy Wonder Tn Eccentric Dancing and Songs. MUSIC BY REED’S ORCHESTRA “Savannah’s Best.” —NO ADVANCE IN PRICES— “Come See Hawkeye And We’ll Have A Time.” elude besides Mrs. Schroeder and Miss Kuck, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Kuck, Sr., Harry Kuck, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Paulsen, Mr. and Mrs. John Paul sen, Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Paulsen, John M. Schroeder, Mrs. Henry Nan nfhga, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Muns ter. Tomorrow afternoon, Miss Sophie Kolshorn is entertaining for Miss Kuck with a swimming party at her cottage at Tybee. The guests will motor down about four and after a swim, a picnic supper will be served. Those invited are; Miss Christine Dil lard, Miss Sophie Asendorf, Miss Meta Asendorf, Miss Edith Brown, Miss Mary Eyler, Miss Mary Harms, Mrs. Joseph Booker and Mrs. Harry Kuck, Sr. The program is as follows: Hugl Taylor will sing, Edward Wiegand Krieger will play the accordion. A play will be presented by the stu dents of the commercial department of the high school. The play war written by Evelina Brown and is di rected by Rose Wexler. The members of the cast are: Evelina Brown, Stell? Mae Myrick, Carlotta Green and An gela Beasley. Katherine Cohen will give a solo and she, together with Beverly Blount and Callie Colgaklis will sing a trio. Mrs. D. M. Beggs, Mrs. H. Stuart Glbbes, Mrs. Brian S. Brown, Mrs. J. S. Sims, Mrs. Rufus Gartlemen, Mrs. A. S. Goebel, Mrs. J. B. Tren holm and Miss Marie Garvin. On May 30th at the Centenial cele bration of Wesleyan College, of Mac on, Ga.. the first chartered woman’s college in the world, the Alpha Delta Pi Memorial Foundation will be un veiled and presented to the college. The fountain was erected at a cost of $1,500, a beautiful and simple mem orial of snowy Georgia marble. The pool is 19 feet in diameter and water will flow from a central spray. On the slanting block will be carved the coat-of.arms of Alpha Delta Pi and on the ether side the history of the sorority and the names of the mem bers will be placed in the corner stone. Alpha Delta Pi is presenting this beautiful and lasting gift to the col lege upon the occasion of its 100th an niversary of this famous institution. The sorority was founded at Wes leyan College at Macon, Ga., on May 15th, 1851 and Is now eighty-five years old, the oldest collegiate soror ity. At the convention held at Lake Louise in the Canadian Rockies, celebrating its eightieth anniversary, a Wesleyan Fellowship was granted of $250 annually. The fellowship is in honor of the founders and is to be awarded to the daughters, grand daughters or great-grand-daughters or other relatives of memb. s of Alpha Delta Pi. This fellowship is only for Alpha Delta, but they have other stu dent loans and also maintain Alpha Delta Pi Day Nursery fellowship. LOCAL JEWISH WOMEN TO BE GUESTS OF MRS. E. H. ABRAHAMS Mrs. E. H. Abrahams will entertain the members of the board of Savan nah Section Council of Jewish Wom en, with a luncheon, at her Savannah Beach home on Monday. Luncheon will be served at 1:15 o’clock, after which the meeting will be held. The members of the board include the officers and chairman of standing committees. The officers are as follows: Presi dent, Mrs. E. H. Abrahams, first vice president, Mrs. Kayton Smith: second, vice president. Mrs. S. E. Wolff; third vice presdent, Mrs. Raymond Kuhr; treasurer, Mrs. Everett Iseman; cor responding secretary, Mrs. Jerome Labowitz; recording secretary, Mrs. Ernest Morrison. The directors are Mrs. D. A. Byck, Jr., Mrs. W. R. Morrison, Miss Sadie Garfunkel and Mrs. Sigo Mohr. Affairs Os 7ontg/if| The Athletic Association of . the Pape School will hold its annual ban quet this evening at the Y. W. C. A. at 8 o’clock. After the banquet the girls will go swimming in the pool. The committee in charge of the entertainment are: Social, Miss Eliza, beth Mercer; Miss Helen Doyle, Miss Margaret Gilchrist: decorations, M<ss Anita Edwards, Miss Betty Mcßride, Miss Eleanor Tobias, Miss Barbara Gilchrist, Miss Elsie Gnann; menu. Miss Eunice Foss, Miss Nan Moses and Miss Rose Maoponell. Palestine Chapter, Order of East ern Star, will entertain with a card party this evening at the Shrine Home on Bull Street. An afternoon game is being played from four until six o’clock and the evening game will be palyed from eight until ten o’clock. The committee announces an attrac tive prize list. • • • The Beta Circle of the Women’s Missionary Society of the Lutheran Church of the Ascension will meet this evening at the home of Mn R. E. Vanßuren, 620 East 48th St., at 8:15 p. m. • ♦ ♦ There will be a meeting of the Ben Hur Junior Association, this evening at the K. of P. Hall at 7 p. m. The Seniors will meet at 8 o’- clock. * • * Oglethorpe Council No. 5, Sons and Daughters of Liberty, will meet to night at 8 o’clock at the home of W. A. Sloan, 520 E. 34th St. * • • A card party will be sponsored by the St. Vincent and Marlst School this evening at the St. Vincent’s School hall for the benefit of the an nual picnic. • * * The Moose Club of the Loyal Order of Moose No. 1222, will sponsor a card party this evening in the Knights of Pythias banquet hall. The proceeds of this affair will go toward an old. fashioned picnic for all of the mem bers. ♦ * * The Women's Missionary Union of Immanuel Baptiht Church will spon sor a demonstration supper this even ing at the church at 7 o’clock. * • * The Gertrude Jones School of Dancing will give their annual recital this evening at the Municipal Audi torium. The seats in the orchestra and those on the right dress circle are be ing reserved by appointment, but the rest of the house is, as usual, open to the public, who are interested. • • * The Phi Gamma Omega Fraternity will give its first tag dance this eve ning at the Shrine Country club, from 9 until 1 o’clock. The entertainment will be an out standing one in the younger set, and the committee announces the music will be by a well known orchestra. PAPE SCHOOL STUDENTS TO PRESENT PLAYLET TOMORROW There will be a meeting of the Alliance Francaise tomorrow evening at 8:30 o’clock at the Young Worn en’s Christian Association .in addi tion to the regular business meeting there will be a musical program and also a play. The play will be given in French by some pupils of the Pape school. Miss Fanny Phillips is general chairman of the program for the Al liance Francaise for 1996-37 and Mmd. Madeleine P. Davis is thepreai dent of bhe club. MRS. SHELBY MYRICK TO ENTERTAIN AT HER COUNTRY HOME Mrs. Shelby Myrick will be host ess to the Woman’s Auxiliary of Christ Church on Monday afternoon at her country home, ’ Wild Heron.” All chapters of the auxiliary win hold meetings at this time, and sepa rate rooms will be arranged for each group. These meetings will be at 11:30 o’clock, with the executive com mittee meeting at 12:30 o'clock. The members will bring picnic lunches and cold drinks will be pro vided. A program has been arranged and will be presented after luncheon is served. socnfjy briww Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Htctean will move down to Tybee on June 1 ait which time they wffl occupy the Howard cottage. • • • Mw. W. W. Owens wrti aretvv home tomorow after spending the winter at Miami Beach, Fla., with her son, Dr. Duncan Owens and Mrs Owens. « • • Mr. and Mrs. Allan Harden of Tampa, Fla., returned to their home yesterday after spending some time here with Mr. Harden's parents, Mr and Mrs. James M. Harden on EJost 48bh street. * « * Miss Marjorie Garvin will spend this week-end in Augusta ae the guest of Miss Norlne Maddox- • • * Mrs. Rosa R. Garvin left, today to visit her daughter, Mrs. H. L. Fen nell near Bfeaufort, 8. C., after spend ing the winter with Mr. and Mrs. W D. Garvin, Sr. • • • Mrs J. A. Spellman is in Oharlee ton, S. C., for the week-end. • • • Mrs. Lee Thompson is the guest oi her daughter, Mrs. Beverly Brookl and Mr. Brooks in Houston, Texas. • • • Miss Mary Baldwin is in Greenville 8. C., where rhe was an attendant in the wedding last evening of Mis; Moselle Groce, and Aubrey Shivers. • • * Mrs. W. H. Ziegler will sail for Norfolk. Va., on May 22. on her way to England to spend the summer ir London with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Soder. SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1935 You May Take Your Fun In Gray Bra and Slacks SUIT HAS HALTER NECK WITH V > ■ X* ■Hr iBP" " L.,., ■ •' ' Plaid slacks and bra worn by Nan Grey, By LISBETH You can take your fun in culotte or shorts, pajamas or trousers, as best suits you. This gay young person, Nan Grey of the films, prefers slacks and bra of gay plaid when she practices her dancing lesson. The bra has halter neck and V-shaped neckline, and the slacks give her plenty of freedom for her dance routine. Incidentally, Nan although only 17, holds a dancinj teacher's certificate. Speaking of slacks, for bicycling a garment that has a tapered leg hose been created. It is a cross between a Jodhpur and slacks. The trousere have a pegged top and narrow leg room being allowed for knee action In some there are white bands alone BWiSfW MAY ECONOMY FESTIVAI —- — " J“™f 6 ™ s “ S ™ D Do Your Washing the Sanitary Way, For**v tv Hundreds or thousands Are, By Using BROOMS PAILS €TAB Wen made, 4. M qt. galvan- !■ >/fIK . r 19C X ‘1 SC COLDEN JUBILEE IRONING CORD GARDEN HOSE I °°S h l7c 95c KENMORE' wnpk shirts MEN’S SOX | w A , H „ WvKK □nlKlu Your cholce 111 CEE t SW Ch x QQr 9c vasn |WH||gW®~g||g| „.d,. 30e va>u, M x. ls e | $5 DOWN -$6 MONTH GET A RINGSIDE SEAT WITH A „ J 1 " '' . Your Clothes Washed Cleaner In Clean Water . . . Under Sanitary : MF* Conditions ... When You Use The lW< $00.95 KENMORE... SAVES ON CLOTHES! >■ C’ T L IY. lur Here—at last—is the gentleness of hand washing n *t? BMIIKMIMnBr □IX lube DURI Wave in a washer. Triple-vane aluminum gyrator swirls w nnwitf Cd MONTH water through every fibre. No scrubbing. No bunch- $3 DOWN $4 MOMTH, £ ver y type of clothes is washed beautifully— WM? Plus Carrying Charges. from blankets to chiffon hose—saving dollars every What a value! Not only a brand year in clothes replacement. Add that saving to > new 6-tube silvertone in full size [he S2O less you pay and you’ll see why this KEN- $0 table model ... but also all-wave ArAR'E' mvac mnrg than it. onsta American and foreign reception MOKE saves more than it costs. ... all at this low price! Every * modern radiq improvement in- THESE OTHER FEATURES. TOO! eluded—3 tuning bands . . . ilium. K at c d a^dM an c. FUii-rw r Safest Water Washing Action Known! New Improved Safety Wringer!’. . _ 20 Per ic loudspeaker .. . automatic vol-. Cent. More Capacity! __ _ Mechanism Sealed in Oil! _. _ Outside Clutch! Quick Em- aTpi.n'TSveS,® 11 | »y in « ! New Stmnilined Beauty! BeautitiU modem-type cabinet In KENMORE STANDARD WASHER Silvertone tubU. COME IN . .LET US DEMONSTRATE Terms Too! 6 TUBE CONSOLE With $0Q.95 J 1,1 ilil >ll l j *IIIJ VJ JI iYIWIjiS) Features As Above lIUI - the sides of the legs, which is an at tractive detail, especially when the models are in cotton twill in navj or brown. A slenderizing hipline Is achieved on wide-bottomed slacks with a panel closing that curves out around the pockets. Sweaters for Tennis Shorts, and preferably the pleated variety, are th echoice of many of the well-known tennis players, who unanimously combine them with sweaters. The types of sweaters chosen are all the way from the classic coat or slipover to edge-bound novelties and from long to short sleeves. There are slips to go with culottes so the manufacturers of this type of apparel must be sold on the idea that I SACRED MUSIC CONCERT I TO AID ORPHAN’S FUND A program of sacred music will be given Sunday evening at the Bloom ingdale Methodist Church at 8:30 o’clock, for the benefit of the orphan’s fund. Mrs. W. H. Heins, principal of the Bloomingdale school is chairman of the program. Mrs. Heins has done outstanding work in this commun ity and she has put forth every effort for this affair to be a success. The following profram will be presented: Address, Kenneth Palmer; Soprano solo by Miss Louis Pugh; Violin and Accordion soloes by Ed ward Wiegand Krieger; Baratcne solo by Kenneth Palmer; Duet by Miss Lois Pugh and Kenneth Pal mer; and Soprano solo with violin oblagato by Miss Louis Pugh accom panied by Prof. Wiegand. MRS. R. H. ROUX HOSTESS TO D. A. R. MEMBERS Mrs. R. H. Roux, will be hostess to the Savannah chapter, Daughters o the American Revolution this after noon at her home on East Forty Fifth street, at 4 o’clock. The program for the afternoon is in charge of Mrs. Philip Morgan, and a brief report of the Continental Con gress will be given by Mrs. John Daniel, Sr., and Mrs. Harold I. Tut hill. PERSONALS Frederick Leonard is a patient at the Oglethorpe Sanitarium. It is understood he is rapidly recovering. women like their skirts divided—as they sem to do. Large hats are being sold to pro tect the skin while on the bathing beaches. Milady is not so sure, as oi yore, that a sun-tanned skin is ad mirable. Some of the girls have found that too much sun-tanning has coarsened their skins, and they’re taking their sun bathing more dis creetly. Among swimming slut materials that seem to be most popular are printed linens, printed cottons jersey lining of gray or doubonnet and other novelty colors. Brown and white jersey one-piece suits with white jersey extra skirt and matching bag with brown trimming ore smart, and navy jersey one-piece with skirt and bright handbags for straps and belt are also among the chic new models Jodhpurs to wear with boots are liked for riding. Short socks are sole with these, and women like them be cause they say the boots fit better and there is no bother of buttoning the breeches. Tan is the favorite col or for riding breeches, with black green and dark brown following. Checked or tweed woolen coats are liked for ridihg in the cooler weather with sleeveless linen coats for thr warm days. •• , 4-Y ear-Old Won’t Eat His Food NEVER HUNGRY, STATES MOTHER, PHYSICIAN IS NO HELP By GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D. Head Department Parent Education Cleveland College, Western Reserve University. ‘DEAR DR. MYERS: We have a boy four years old. It is impossible to get him to eat three regular meals a day. He caret nothing for food, even refuses candv. ice cream, cookies, etc. A battle Is staged with him three times a day. Coaxing, scolding, pun ishing are alike useless. He will sit at the table for two hours while con suming a small glass of tomato juice or slice of toast. If you send him away from the table for not eating, that suits him perfectly. He is never hungry. My doctor has been unable to help me.” My reply: If you or I were subject ed at every meal to the tortures your poor child must endure, we would have no appetite either. From careful scientific studies it has been clearly shown thai. when any annoying emo tion is associated with food taking, the flow of juices in the whole diges tive tract is retarded or wholly stop ped ,and that normal digestive move ments of the stomach are impaired; that nausea may set in. Certainly food-taking then becomes unpleasant, even repellant. To have desirable foods always associated with torment makes even the sight of them repel lant. Even your presence with the child at meal time may make his food less attractive. Serene Person in Charge If at all possible, be absent when he is to eat and have some serene competent person in your plaae for the next several weeks. The next best thing for you is to make yourself over, especially at mealtime, putting yourself in control of your emotions and conduct. Maybe you don’t have the stuff of character to do so—it will take more than many conscien tious mothers have. You will know if and when you have it by finding yourself wholly calm, silent, and se rene in the child’s presence when food is before him. Don’t bring him to the table with the family until you have wholly conquered yourself. Have no one else present. Place a very small portion of the most necessary food on a plate on a chair or low table with a spoon beside. Tap the plate with a spoon so he will see what is there. Keep your lips tightly sealed. Leave the room, Return in five minutes. If he has not begun to eat, remove the food, speechlessly, to the garbage pail, the meal end there. But if he eats' the food, give him a very small VETERAN MARINER TO FORSAKE SEA INVENTOR OF DECK TEN NIS QUITS SERVICE AFTER 44 YEARS NEW YORK, May 15 (TP).— The veteran mariner who invented the shipboard game ‘‘deck tennis,’’ is end ing 44 years of service with the In ternational Mercantile Marine today. Engineer William Joyce sails aboard the ‘ American Trader” to join his wife and daughter in Southampton, England. Joyce is recognized in shipping cir cles as “the senior chief engineer of the Atlantic.” He first went to sea 47 years ago, as junior engineer on the Scotch ship Crathae. He saw service in the Spanish-American and World wars, on a warship in the first and a troop ship in the latter. He in vented “deck tennis” in 1922 aboard the Kroonland. Engineer Joyce rig ged up two broomsticks and an old tennis net. They used deck quoits for rings and improvised the rules still in use today. “INDIAN OFF GOV. CURLEY MAY HAVE TO RETURN TITLE GIVEN HIM MASPHEE, Miass., May 15 (TP)— The Indian Wild Horse of the Wam panogas apparently was speaking a little out of turn last week when he conferred upon Governor Curley the title of Grand Sachem of the Tribe and named him Masi-Metah, or “Great Heart.” Today it looks as if it was an “Indian gift.” The Wampanoags of Mashpee are in high dungeon over the matter. They have held a tribal pow-wow and have issued a public statement White horse, they say, has no official con nection with the Wampanoag Tribe of Indians and had no authority to bestow honors on Governor Hurley, or anyone else for that matter. They hint‘that someone is trying to play politics, and such things ane not al lowed by the tribe. helping of another single food, aqd so on. Proceed in like fashion the next meal. In case he chooses not to eat for three successive meals, get in touch with your doctor. Be sure he gets no food at all between meals. Ideal Beauty Shoppe Special Permanent Wave $2.50 117 EAST BROUGHTON ST. SAVANNAH, <M. - PHONE 32783 Other Permanents Reduced Eye Brow and LasjtDye