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PAGE TWO
- Home Making Milady’s
Miss Elsie Kuck, Bride Elect
Honor Guest At Dinner Party
A lovely affair of last evening was
the dinner party with which Mrs.
Frank M. Nichols entertained at her
home on East, Forty-Eighth street,
honoring Miss Elsie Kuck, popular
bride-elect.
Dinner was served in candle light
and the dining bible, an antique one,
was not covered, lace mats being used.
The cenberpieos was a large silver
bowl of white daisies, and around
thia was placed small silver cups i
filled with daises and graceful fern,
four of them holding tall white tapers,
as well as the daises. The arrange
ment almost covered the entire center
of the table, giving the very beautiful
effect of growing flowers. *
Mrs. Nichole presented the guest
of honor with crystal ash trays, and i
the guests included only a few close
friends of the gueet of honor. i
Yesterday afternoon, Mrs. J. H. ]
Paulsen, aunt of the bride, entertain- ,
Mrs. Hohenstein To Entertain
WILL BE HOSTESS AT GATHERING HELD IN HONOR OF
MISS BETTY HUNT, BRIDE-ELECT.
Honoring Miss Betty Hunt, bride
elect, Mrs. R. W. Hohenstein will en
tertain thia afternoon at her home on
West Thirty-Third street.
Mrs. Hohenstein’s guest will in
clude, besides Miss Hunt, Mrs. John
Eyler. Mrs. Edward Eyler. Miss Betty
Allen, Miss Elizabeth Guest, Miss
Mary Baldwin, Miss Anne Blount,
Miss Claire Stillwell, Mrs. Frank
Hahne, Mrs. Theron Burts, Mrs. O.
W. Barthelmess, Mias Louise Mc-
Leod, Mrs. Bruce McMillan and Miss
Virginia McCall.
Yesterday, Mrs. J. C. Eyler, was
hoet’ss at a lovely bridge party at
her home on East Fifty-First street.
The gu?st of honor was presented
Graduation Gifts
LUGGAGES
LASTING, USEFUL AND
APPRECIATED
Give the boy graduate a leather gladstone case or club
bag, or dressing set. Give the girl graduate an overnite
or week-end case, fitted with dressing set. BiH folds,
cigarette cases, key cases, manicure sets, memory books,
evening bags. Many other gifts in small leather goods.
Moyle Trunk Co.
22 BROUGHTON STREET, EAST
Grand Opening
Tybrisa Tomorrow!
4:30 P. M.- Fifty bathing beauties from Savannah and the Ooaei*
al Empire in a notable pageant of feminine loveli
ness. The biggest beauty contest of all. Free to aM,
The most brilliant grand ball in Tybrisa’s histoey.
9:00 P. M.“ Music Joe Haynes, America’s famous composer,
conductor, and his 15-piece Dance Band. Special
feature, Loretta Lee, auburn-haired beauty, who at
22, has intrigued the country with her songs.
I
PRICE-SI.OO-INCLUDING TAX ,
—Special Sunday—
Mr. Haymes and Miss Lee will give concerts on the Pavilion Sunday from
4to 6P. M., and Bto 10 P. M. Also Sunday afternoon Sandy Strachan
will drop from his big Stinson plane. Bob Robertson, manager of the ap«
proved parachute station, Strachan Skiways. _ -
ANNOUNCEMENT
Bob Page and his red hot band, beginning at
Tybrisa, Wednesday, June 3rd.
TYBRISA
ed with a bridge luncheon at her
home on West Thirty-Seventh street.
There were six tables of players and
luncheon was served at the individual
card tables which wm covered with
green cloths and centered with crys
tal bowls of bright-colored summer
flowers.
The place cards, were of the wed.
ding motif and ths ices were mould'd
wedding bells, decorated with a small
spray of lilies of th? valley, and the
little individual oakes were- decorated
to match.
The guest) of honor was presented
with bread and butter plates to match
her dinner set. Miss Mary Eyler won
th? high score prize, two pairs of silk
hose; Mrs. Grover C. Paulsen, the
second prize, a pocketbook, and Miss
Mary Harms, the low score prize, a
crystal perfume bottla. The traveling
prize, stationery, was won by Miss
Juanita Graham.
with bookends and a shoulder corsage
of bride s roses. Mrs. George W. Hunt
won the high score prize, a boudoir
pillow; Miss Louise McLeod, the sec
ond prize, guest towels; Mrs. E. P.
Eyler, consolation, handkerchiefs and
the traveling prize a handkerchief
and flowers went t» Miss Betty Hunt.
Tomorrow, Mrs. Warter Mercer and
Mrs. Hugh Mercer are complimenting
Miss Hunt with a bridge luncheon at
the Georgian Tea room in the Pink
House, at 1:30 o’clock.
The guests will include, besides
Miss Hunt, Miss Betty Allen, Miss
Elizabeth Guest, Mrs. George Bar
thelmes:;. Mrs. Theron Burts, Miss
Anne Blount, Mrs. E. P. Eyler and
Mrs. George Hunt.
PIANO RECITAL LAWTON
MEMORIAL FOR
PUPILS
Miss Elizabeth Hardy will present
h»r piano pupils in a recital this
evening at the Lawton Memorial at
8:30 o'clock.
The program to be presented is as
follows:
“Dunce of the Fairy Queen” (Bug
de?), Jack Torrance and Jimmie Bow
den; “Daddy's Waltz” f Rolfe), Louise
Hall; “Little Injun Brave” (Hopkins),
Jimmi? Bowden; “The Old Clock in
the Corner'’ (Bost), Lavada New and
Helen New; “Th? Ballet Scene” (Wil
son), Navada New; ‘ Fairy Queen Ga
votte” (Monte’), Jack Torrance;
“First Rose of Spring” (Hopkins),
Louis? Hall and Mary Sanders; “Aft
er the Ball” (Campbell), Helen New;
“Spring’s Awakening” (Espen), Mary
Saunders; “The Robin’s Lullaby”
(Krogmcnn), Evelyn Cubbedge and
Olliried New; “Winds of Spring"
(Balling), Dorothy Hall; “Will o’ the
Wisp” (Jungmann), Bily Reed;
“Farewell to the Piano” (Beethoven),
Dorothy Cubbedge; “Prelude”
(Wlright), Ev-lyn Cubbedge; “Little
Rondo” (Martin), Lavada New, Mary
Saunders and Helen New;. “Blue But
terflies” (Dore), Olliried New; “Clay
ton 'g Grand March” Btak£), Dorothy
Cubbedge; “La Grace” (Bohn), Doro
thy Hall and Billy Reed; “Ventienne”
(Godard), Mary Ellen Beach; “Faust
Waltz” (Gounod-Lange). Bobbie Reed;
“Anitra’s Dance” (Grieg), Dorothy
Cubbedge and Mary Ellen Beach;
“Prelude” (Barbour), Dorothy Cub
bedge; “Lustepiel Overture” Keler-
Bela), Mary Ellen Beach and Bobbie
Reed.
GRADUATES OF PAPE
SCHOOL GUESTS AT
SWIM PARTY
Outstanding among the affairs of
this afternoon is the swimming party
with whch the Alumnae Association
of the Pape School will entertain the
graduating class of the school.
The party will take place at Dr. T.
P. Waring’s cottage on Wilmington
at 3:30 o’clock, and while no invi
tations have been issued it U ex
pected that many of the faculty and
alumnae will attend.
Miss Betty Peeples, president of
the alumnae, is chairman of ar
rangements for the party and serv
ing with her on this committee are
Miss Alicia Young and Mrs. Richard
Meyer, Jr.
The guests of honor are: Miss
Mary Garrard, Miss Rose McDonald,
Miss Elizabeth Mercer, Miss Rose Mc-
Donald, Miss Evelyn Fagan, Miss
Jeanne Spencer, Miss Marjory Hey
ward, Miss Barbara Gilchrist. Miss
Annette Bull, Miss Nedra Household
er, and Miss Elsie Gnan.
Many delightful informal parties
have been given in honor of the
graduates.
CITY KINDERGARTENS
CLOSE SCHOOL DOORS
FOR SUMMER
The kindergartens of the city are
daily having their closing exerciser.
Today marks the closing of quite a
number of them.
This morning at 9:30 o’clock. Mas
sie School Kindergarten had their
exercises, at 10 am. Waters Avenue
Kindergarten, Agnes Rourke Memo
rial, Thitry-eighth Street School and
Pape School Kindergarten. 10:30
a.m. Charles Elis School Kindergar
ten and at 3:30 p.m. Louisa Walker
Memorial, Trinity Church building
had their May party, all kindergar
tens closing for the summer.
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1936
GIRLS MUST BE CHIC
• •••
COMMUTERS’ FROCKS SHOULD BE COOL, NONCRUSHABLE
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YOUNG SET ENTERTAINS
A congenial group in the school set
who will have a dinner party at the
General Oglethorpe this evening will
be:
Miss Julianna Meroer, Mws Emms
Carter, Miss Anne Farr, Miss Mary
Farr, Miss Jane Chew, Miss Kathryn
Boken, Miss Ruth Bolton. Miss Von
ette Carter and Katharine Royal.
Their escorts for the evening will be
Clifford Turner, Al Meyers, Taylor
Smith, Eugene Biackwelder, Walter
Way, David Scale®, Harrison Justice,
J. C. Davis and Cecil Meree.
Jewelry For the Graduates
LADY’S WRIST II MAN’S STRAP
WATCH WATCH
$14.95 I $17.50
Dainty, dignified timepiece al- A handsome, cusion shaped
ways in good taste. Utterly de- watch with illumniated hands
pendable at all times. 15-jewel. and numerals. 17-jewel.
STERLING SILVER BIRTHSTONE RINGS
Identification Bracelets 17
$l5O Un SI.OO Up
jj Very masculine rings, sturdily
A truly wonderful gift of great mounted In natural or white
distinction. gold. With or without initials.
A 1936 ELGIN WATCH
TO THE MAN AND TO THE LADY
Writing the Best Essay on
‘Why We Should Buy American Watches’
Essay Limited to 100 Words
L. LINDAUER, JEWELER
423 BROUGHTON STREET, WEST
Left, navy and white dotted ace
tate crepe bolero frock with field
flowers; center, copper-colored
acetate crepe tunic, slim black
skirt; right, blue and white print
ed suit of thin acetate crepe with
royal blue sheer blouse.
Wbat does the smart young busi
ness woman "wear when she com
i mutes to her work in the city? Or.
j what does the well-dressed young
I maid or matron wear when she visits
in the city for a day of shopping?
These three photographs are three
answers. They are smart looking and
what is very much to the point, prac
tical as well-
Left is a young woman wearing a
navy and white dotted acetate crepe
bolero frock with a corsage of field
flowers. She knows she will look cool
all day. Her hat is navy, so are her
belt, bag and pumps.
Waiting for her train is the second
chic young person. She is attired in
the new circular tunic of copper col
ored acetate crepe with square but
tons, worn over a slim black skirt.
Black patent leather belt and bag.
black toyo hat, black pumps and
gloves are her accessories.
Blue and White Print
Leaving the station for her office
or shopping tour is the third figure,
wlsr •
Z.- jMgjK
right. She is wearing a blue and
white printed suit of thin acetate
crepe with royal blue sheer blouse;
navy straw hat, navy bag and pumps.
If one has an engagement for din
ner and the movies after shopping
or working, a soft printed ensemble in
brown and beige, for instance, or
other favorite colors, is more suitable.
The coat of such a suit is sheer as
chiffon, and the frock of thin, cool
acstate crepe.
It is so very important to know the
kind of clothes that will become you
and look well all through the day,
and maybe into the evening. The four
costumes described are protective
enough for coolish .mornings when
motoring to the station or to the of
fice, proof enugh against wrinkles for
riding and sitting at the office, and
cool enough to withstand the heat
of streets, shops and offices. At the
same time they are pretty enough for
lunch with friends.
Hat brims are growing wider aa the
season advances.
SOCIETY BRIEFS
Mrs. J. C. Metts and young son
Jimmy wil leave today for Birming
ham, Ala., to visit her mother, Mrs.
P. O. Meulden. Next week they will
be the guests of her sister, Mrs. p.
N. .Richardson, in Atlanta.
* •
Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Barnes left yes
terday for Baylor Military Academy
at Chattanooga, Tenn., to attend
the commencement exercises. Ben S.
Barnes, Jr., will return home with
them on Tuesday.
Miss Ezelle Gober of Fort Pierce,
Fla., arrived last evening to visit Miss
Juanita Graham. She and Miss
Graham will leave this afternoon for
Bessie Tift College, Forsyth, Ga.,
where they will attend Alumnae Day
and Class Reunion this week-end. re
turning to Savannah Sunday evening.
Mrs. Ronald Vam left today for
Macon to attend Wesleyan Com
mencement, for the Centennial cele
bration held there this week-end.
HOSTS TO AUXILIARY
Mrs. A. B. Lovett win be hosteas
this afternoon to so-m of the women
visitors who are here for the meet
ing of the Georgia Bar Association.
Th® party will be given on the boat
of Beniamin O. Sprague, who has
turned the boat over to the entertain
ment committee.
Mrs. W. W. Douglas is chairman of
the entertainment committee for en
tertaining the ladies and numreous
informal parties are being given for
i the visitors.
RADIO SONGSTRESS TELLS
HOW TO CARE FOR RED HAIR
By GLADYS GLAD
“America’s Most Famous Beauty”
Are you a redhead? Well then,
listen to Deane Janis broadcast.
Deane, well-known songstrest whom
you hear on the radio so often, has
hair that is a perfect blend of Titan
and golden highlights. This lass al
ways washes her hair three times a
week. She firmly believes that red
Treatment
Prevents
Frostbite
PREVENTIVE ROUTINE
MAY BE GIVEN IN THE
SUMMER
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
THE BLOOD vessels of the extrem
ities, especially of the feet, can make
trouble entirely out of proportion to
their size. Both the arteries and the
veins are subject to changes which
bring both pain and disability with
them.
Much more attention is being paid
to these conditions than formerly,
and a great deal of progress is being
made in their treatment. For instance,
frostbite is essentially an affection of
the small arteries of the extremities.
The best treatment of frostbite, par
adoxically, can be carried out in the
summer time and is preventive in
character, designed to get the feet
or hands in condition for the coming
winter.
The object of treatment is to re
store the circulation in the blood ves
sels of the extremities, creating new
ones to replace those destroyed by the
freezing. The best way to do this is
by alternately sucking or pressing the
affected limb —creating a positive and
a negative pressure. An apparatus
called the Pavaex treatment unit has
been devised for this purpose and now
is widely used throughout the coun
try. Those who had frostbite during
our late severe winter are advised to
get in touch with hospitals or physi
cians who have possession of one of
these apparatuses, and submit to
treatment regularly during the sum
mer.
Vascular Massage Good
Besides treatment with the appara
tus, forms of “vascular massage”, as
it is called, can be carried out by very
simple means. One suggested is ac
cording to the following set of man
euvers:
(1) The limb to be treated is raised
long enough for most of the blood to
flow to the center of the body.
Around this limb is placed a light
rubber bandage, enough to make mod
erate constriction.
(2) The limb is now lowered and
remains pale and free from blood.
(3) The bandage is removed, the
anemia relieved, and the blood shoots
in. The patient feesl a pleasant
warmth, and tl?e skin becomes rosy,
then red and warm.
(4) The limb is lowered over the
side of the bed so that it hangs below
the center of the body.
Each movement lasts one minute.
This is repeated five or six times,
morning and evening, for a period of
from 15 to 30 minutes.
“AIR” SCHOOL PLANNED
TEANECK, N. J., May 29 (TP)—
The Teaneck Public High School is
claiming the distinction of being the
first of its kind in the world—in one
department, at least.
The Teaneck school claims it is the
first public high school to offer a
complete course in aviation in its
curriculum. The course includes
flight training in the school’s air
plane.
WE BUY AND WE SELL
USED TIRES
COATS TIRE COMPANY
Henry and Wret Broad SL
LIFE LIKE PHOTOS
ARE
TREASURES
Kodak Films Developed and
Printed.
DIXIE STUDIO
331 W. BROAD
I SOUTHERN SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY
PAYS 4 Per Cent on
TIME CERTIFICATES
AND
3 Per Cent on
SAVINGS DEPOSITS
Assets Over $900,000
An Institution for Savers and Home Owners
19 Bay Street, East Phone 2 . 21 u
hair needs special care if its full
loveliness is to be brought out.
When she was a mere tot, she was
taught to brush her hair vigorously
every day, and she thinks brushing
the first step in any redheads hair
grooming routine.
Deane always brushes her hair
briskly the first thing each morning.
And whenever possible, she suns her
hair and lets the air get at her scalp.
She sits out in the sun and runs her
fingers through her loosely hanging
hair so that the rays may reach hey
scalp. And once a week, se gives her
locks a hot oil treatemnt.
Deane generally uses olive oil for
these oil treatments, for she thinks
that this oil supplies just the correct
ingredients for red hair. Red hair,
she believes, requires more oil than
other kinds, as it loses its luster and
fine texture more quickly, if neg
lected. And sometimes she uses this
oil without an immediate shampoo
ing. She dips her fingertips lightly
into the warm oil and parts her hair
carefully, so that the oil does not get
into it. Then she rubs the oil gently
into her scalp, using only enough of
it to alow for complete absorption by
the scalp pores.
Liquid Shampoo Best
In shampooing red hair, Deane
says, a liquid castile soap shampoo
is Ibest. The hair should be lathered
and rinsed several times, and the wa
ter and shampoo solution should only
be tepid, not hot. After several rins
ings, the water should be gradually
reduced in temperature until it is al
most cold. The final rinse should be
a vinegar or lemon one. Then the
hair should be dried with warm
towels. This method of shampooing,
according to Deane, is best for bring
ing out the full, burnished loveliness
of red hair.
Having studied the subject exten
sively, Deane believes that redheads
must be careful in dressing their
tresses. For hair of this shade, she
warns, does not lend itself to every
type of coiffure. A soft wave is far
better for this type than a tight or
kinky one. And straight hair is not
at all desirable, for few redheads can
ever successfully wear their hair
straight or plain. Such hair always
should be dressed softly enough for
the sun and light to play through it
and bring out its copper tones. For
its radiance is one of the chief beau
ties of Titian hair.
Dandruff
Pa fey: You will find an ewcefient
dandruff remedy in my “Beauty ul
ture” booklet. This booklet also
gives the hot oil treatments for pro
motion# hair growth and thickness,
the salt water treatments for oily,
fallin hair, and many other excellent
hair beautifying hints.
LAWN PARTY TODAY
Mrs. F. A. Wleatnerford's school will
present their annual program this aft
ernoon at 6 o’clock. The affair wifi be
a lawn party in the park on the cor
ner of Abercom and Fifty-First
street.
Ware
BRAND Os
YOU THE JUDGE.. l&jggd
LET VOHfl OWN TASTE DE
ILsrffeJP
Success
easily cleans vU j
qlovesand
Silk. Stockings 1
MOREHOUSE MFG. CO.
SAVANNAH, GA.