Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 225, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1928 — Page 14
PAGE 14
Income on Which Man Can Afford to Marry Rests on Station in Life BY MARTHA LEE i(TT OW much money must a young man have in order to AJ. marry comfortably?” is another one of those questions that are impossible to answer with a general statement. Three young men have written me on this subject. Ail three writers were from different walks of life, so, of course, the amount each will need to put his marriage on a firm foundation will vary with the different standard of living each has.
The first letter was from a college man. He will need enough to keep his wife and himself able to do the things their college friends are doing. He will have to have prospects of making much more in a few years from now, because he probably will insist on his children having the same educational training he had. A man in the trades wrote me the second letter. He will need a salary large enough to support his wife, a family and to start a savings account to provide for his old age, because the income of a man in the trades stops when the man's ability to work ceases. The last letter was from a laborer. Steady employment and a tiny bank account for the proverbial “rainy day” will be two things for him to consider before he proposes. Now you see, readers, that a young man must realize fully just what his expenses and the probable expenses of the girl he would like for a wife will be before he can consider starting a household of his own. • Dear Martha Lee: I am a young man, 54. and am engaged to a business girl. We have not set the date of our wedding, because we feel that my financial state is not secure enough to give us a flrni basis on which to start. _ . Mv salary is S3O a week and I have about SSOO saved, some of which I inherited from my mother. My fiancee and I both are high school graduates. What is the minimum amount on which we should start? TED. Dear Ted: It is possible for you to manage on S3O a week, but you understand that you and your wife would have to forego many pleasures and little luxuries to which you .are perhaps accustomed now. Os course, if you really feel you can give up these little “side issues” without becoming “sour” and “crabby,” I should say go ahead and marry now. Many couples have married on far leis than that, Ted, and have been utterly happy. Bettie Lou: I have referred your query regarding the removal of inkstains to the question ahd answer department. I do not answer questions of that sort in this column. Bertha K.: Marry this man. You kr.cw that the woman. 30 is approaching the borderline between young womanhood and spinsterhood. Since you have this offer and really have a deep affection for this man who seems admirable in all respects, I should marry him immediately before he is snapped up by someone else. This relative of whom you speak is totally selfish. Any man who thinks more of the owning of an automobile rather than the welfare of his own wife and children certainly deserves little love and no respect. Why not have his wife give him the ultimatum of either providing for her or else having his home broken up. Perhaps then he will understand his responsibilities as a husband and father. DR. TAYLOR TO SPEAK AT ANNUAL Y. DINNER Dr. Alva W. Taylor, secretary of the board of temperance and moral welfare will speak at the annual meeting of the Indianapolis Y. W. C. A. this evening. Miss Oolah Burner, New York, member of the national Y. W. C. A. staff, who was scheduled to speak, is unable to attend because of illness. Art, Salon Patrons The following local persons are patrons and patronesses of the Hoosier Art Salon which opens in Chicago. Saturday evening: Mesdames H. B. Burnet, Frederic M. Ayres, S. S. Perkins, Hugh J. Baker, Charles F. Hanna, Robert Elliott, Fred Nelson Vance, H. K. Fatout and Messrs. Harry Showe, J. I. Holcomb, Warren C. Faibanks, J. W. Barnes, Evans Woollen, Louis Weisenburger, Thomas Taggart, Frank B. Shields, Brandt Steele and Carl Lleber. To Get National Charter The national educational sorority of Delta Sigma Epsilon has accepted the local sorority Phi Kappa Theta at Teachers College for membership. The college chapter will be the twenty-seventh. The installation will take place In March. Miss Hazel Herman is faculty sponsor of the pew chapter. The officers are Miss Martha Phares, president; Miss Ruth Schnied, vice president; Miss Nell Cooper secretary, and Miss Virginia Schweikel, treasurer. Sorority Bridge Miss Ruth Brown and Miss Gail Long will entertain members of the Beta Gamma Sorority and guests with a bridge party at the Lumley tea room this evening. AppointK ents are to be in the sorority colors, peach and applegrecn. Teachers’ Sorority Dance Psi Omega Xi Sorority of Teachers College will give Its annual midwinter dance Saturday evening at the Propylaeum. Miss Lucille Ktamer is chairman, assisted by Miss Marcella Hindman and Miss Pauline Rawles. Alumnae members will be guests.
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Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- and e o o tern No. 15 D SI *7 O Size Name Street City
A CHARMING DESIGN FOR SLENDER OR MATURE FIGURES .-■996. Velvet and satin are combined in this pretty model. Georgette and satin or crepe are also appropriate. The pattern is cut in six sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. To make the dress for a 38-inch size as illustrated in the large view, will require % yard of 32-inch lining for the underbody. 1% yard of one material 40 Inches wide for blouse, puff portion of sleeve; collar reverse and cuff facings, and 3*4 yards of other material for skirt, upper sleeve portions and bolero. The width of the skirt at the lower edge with plaits extended is I*4 •yards. Every day The Times prints on this page pictures of the latest fashions, a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. Obtain this pattern by filling out the above cupon, Including 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week Card Party There will be a card party Thursday at 8:30 p. m. at the Clarke hall, Twenty-Fifth and Station Sts., by Opitsah Council D. of P.
By Buying your Next COAT OH DRESS ’ £*>[l ENNER. S T us V 2fi o*sr vASAf//vr.roA/ sr Fine Baby Sal&uim p'^Nos ox THE circle Special IDEAL fiuMluslc Ho. SPECIAL WINDOW SHADES 34-Inch Oil OPAQUE /£ SHADE DOC W. R. BEARD & CO. 433 E. Washington St. Used Furniture WANTED Call MAin 3929 Washington Furniture Cos. 361 W. Washington St.
THE CONNOISSEUR - -
Os all the pleasing luxuries that bless the mortal state, The morning bath to Van de View Is greatest of the great, And before he takes his tub, he looks around him in delight For his bathroom is a colorful and animated sight.
Cooking Expert Will Use Radio to Give Lessons Three hundred sixty-five different ways of making salads, one for each day in the year, is just one part of the information that will be given out by Miss Alice McCarren, supervisor of home economics of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, in the cooking school and radio talks she will give next week under the auspices of Indianapolis Power & Light Company. She will conduct classes at 2 p. m. Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday on the second floor of the power and light company building. Washington and Meridian Sts. She also will broadcast a series of ten-minute talks on modern cookery from station WFBM at noon and at the dinner hour, each day next week, beginning Monday. An essay contest will be conducted in which two electric ranges will be given as prizes. These essays are to be written on “The Advantages of Electric Cookery” limited to 506 words. The contest will be in two divisions, one for residents of Marion County and the other for persons living outside the county. One range will be given as a prize for the best essay in each division. The essays are to be sent to the Indianapolis Power and Light Company. addressed to Electric Cookery Contest, not later than 6 p. m. Saturday Feb. 18. Winners will be announced over Station WFBM at 6 p. m. Saturday, Feb. 25.'
' Personals
Mrs Wilfred Gladstone Payne, Madison, Wis.. has come to spend two weeks with her cousin, Mrs. Charles T. Wolfred, 1215 Oakland Ave. Mrs. Payne was formerly Miss Helen Pouder of this city. Miss Mary Clement Turner, art. director of Teachers’ College, has gone to Chicago to attend the opening of the Hoosier salon at the Marshall Field galleries Saturday. Mrs. O. Griest, State secretary of mission work, and Miss Bertha Park, superintendent of Indiana young people's organizations, spoke at the regional missionary conference at Anderson Thursday. Rho Delta Meeting The Rho Delta Sorority will meet this evening with Miss Leah McDermitt, 930 Oakland Ave.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
I 1
He has chosen mats and towels in the fashion of the day Trimmed in birds and fish and animals, a spirited array, And a solemn train of elephants, a most amusing border. Decorates a set of towels in the modernistic order.
FOR SMART THROAT IN SPRING
JBHHp M •. fr-'g /’Wf Mug ‘ls iMBUi
Enter the “neckline” as the proper decoration for the smart throat this spring! Smartest of the smart is the strass torsade "neckline” with its slanting links sparkling with brilliants in many sizes. This becoming model is the Parisian creation of Lucien Lelong.
Normal Sorority Active Delta Sigma Sorority of Indiana State Normal, Terre Haute, held pledge service and initiation Tuesday evening at the home of the patroness. Mrs. Jonas Waffle. The service was given for Miss Alice Hepner, a Trl Delta from / Butler University. Initiates were Dorothy Doeder, Evelyn Slade, Jessie Needham, Grace Rathfan, Augusta O’Neil, Ruth Helen Hixon and Ruth Robinson. Sorority Meeting Tonight Alpha Beta Gamma Sorority, Alpha Chapter will meet with Mrs. Beatrice Buck this evening. .
Gay Towels and Bathmats Enliven His Bathroom
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And a pair of flying fishes are cavorting on the mat ->* In a manner most amusing for as plain a thing as that, v And he thinks it most appropriate to have a water scene, A refreshing combination in the shades of white and green.
I Valentine Bridge Tea Mrs. Charles M. Griffin. 989 East Dr., Woodruff Place, entertained Thursday afternoon with a bridge tea. Decorations were in Valentine design. The guests were: Mesaames Harold Pennick Charles R. Miller John Jerome Ficks Wendell P. Roth Harrv Morgan Robert Islin George Greenwood D. R. Smith Martin 1,. Burgess James E. Hobart Otto E. Marhdt Charles W. Reynolds Misses Dorothy Clubc Evelyn Garrett Harriet Shoemaker Elinor Carpenter W. R. C. Party Alvin T. Hovev, W. R. C. will give a card party at 8:15 this evening at Ft. Friendly. 512 N. Illinois St.
Elkhart Y. W. Ends Religious Discrimination Women of all religious faiths, whether members of Protestant evangelical churches or not, are to be admitted to membership in the Elkhart Y. W. C. A., it was voted at the annual meeting this week. The Indianapolis Y. W. C. A. at Its annual banquet Friday night will vote on the same subject. The local association voted once to admit women of all faiths but* since the national organization has approved it, a second vote must be taken. Federated Civic Clubs The market at the fairgrounds, the city market, and the bus situation will be discussed and reviewed at the meeting of the Indianapolis Federation of Community Civic Clubs Friday night at the Chamber of Commerce. John F. White, president, will preside. Tenth Birthday Seven charter members of the Business and Professional Women’s Club of Terre Haute, will attend the tenth annual birthday banquet of the club Feb. 2 at the Hotel Deming, Terre Taute. Postpones Meeting The meeting of the Woman's Round Table Club which was to have been held this afternoon with Mrs. C. M. Tinney, 3868 Carrollton Ave., will be held next Friday with Mrs. Finney as hostess.
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ALTRUSANS HEAR OF PUBLIC HEALTH WORK Various phases of work of the Public Health Nursing Association were described to members of the Altrusa Club today at luncheon when Miss Edna Hamilton, superintendent of the association, spoke. Miss Hamilton also showed a movie which illustrated work of the nurses. Miss Hamilton described hourly nursing service, maternity care, teaching and Americanization work. Woman’s Advance Club Mrs. L. D. Owens, 670 E. Twentyfourth St., was hostess this afternoon for the meeting of the Woman's Advance Club. Mrs. C. J. Cook read a paper on “Women in the White House,” and Mrs. Pheobe Clift read one on “American Painting and Sculpture.” Parent-Teachers’ Tea Officers of the city federation of Parent-Teachers will give a tea Monday afternoon at the Children's Museum, 1150 N. Meridian St. in honor of the presidents and the art chairmen of the various city school associations. Mrs. Logan Hughes, president, will preside. Party This Evening The card party of the Monumental division No. 128, G. I. A. to the B. of L. E., announced for Thursday night, will be held at 8:30 this evening in Room 421, Castle Hall. W. R. C. Party Tuesday A card party will be given by George H. Chapman. W. R. C. No. 10 at 2 p. in. Tuesday, at Ft. Friendly.
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JAN. 27, 1928
Auxiliary’s Committee in Session With women from every State In the Union and from three territorial departments present, the national executive committee of the American Auxiliary opened its winter meeting at national headquarters of the Auxiliary in the War Memorial Bldg., here today. Work of the organization for the coming year will be outlined at the meeting which will continue through Saturday. Plans for the auxiliary’s participation in the Women’s Patriotic Conference on National Defense, to be held in Washington, D. C., Feb. 1, 2 and 3, will be formulated and participation of the organization in the World Conference on International Justice, to be held in Cleveland, Ohio, May 7 to 11, will be considered. Programs for the different national activities of the auxiliary will be outlined in reports by the chairmen of national committees. The department of Alaska is being represented at the meeting by Mrs. Belle Simpson and Mrs. Bessie Ninnis, both of Juneau; Mrs. Julia Grider, Gatun, is representing the Panama canal zone, and Mrs. F. K. Sylva, Honolulu, is representing Hawaii. Many of the women attending the meeting will go directly from here to Washington to represent the Auxiliary at the conference on national defense. Farewell Party Miss Dorothy L. Friedman. 2427 N. Alabama St., entertained at bridge Thursday evening in honor of the Misses Loretta and Margaret Corcoran. who will leave Monday for an indefinite stay in Los Angeles. Cal. Mrs. C. W. Friedman assisted her daughter. Others present were: Misses Evelyn Fox Dolores E. Friedman Messrs, and Mesdames A. F. Deaney B. M. Webb R. H. Byers Messrs. Wilbur E. Smith Louis C. Wilson Roper A. Hav Wilbur C. Lobdell Carl Chitwood Club Hostess Mrs. F. A. Line, 320 E. Fifteenth St., was hostess this afternoon for the meeting of the Friday Afternoon Reading Club. Mrs. M. B. Moore read a paper on “The Business of Being a Woman,” after which there was a general discussion. Pace—Flaherty The marriage of Miss Betty Flaherty, daughter of James Flaherty, and Charles K. Pace, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Pace, all of Muncie, took place Thursday morning in that city. After a wedding trip east the couple will be at home in Munci^. Party at Druids Hall Maple Circle No. 7 U. A. O. D. will give a card party Monday night in Druids Hall, 29*4 S. Delaware St.
ARCH BRACE ■ M PAINS DISAPPEAR when pressure on the sensitive nerves and blood vessels is removed this scientific way. The instep muscles are pulled apart and strained. The Jung Arch Brace assists the weakened muscles and restores the arch to a normal position. Jung’s Wonder Arch flv| A A Brace. Per pair SI.UU Miracle Arch £A Brace. Per pair...,. Slmm’s Arch and ffl OQ Ankle Support Jung’s Banner Arch fro AA Brace, per pair tpti.UU Jung’s Victor Arch ffO CA Brace, per pair iPfc.UU PLAYING CARDS 50e Bicycle AO., Cards 50c 49 r Pinochle 75c 6^c Congreas •5. 49c--35c Broadway OQn Cards **'C 60c Bridge JOWhist HOG 50c Poker OQ _ Chips ...OOG 75c CA Rook ,_.... 7 Pit 59 c 60c Bicycle IQ. (Club Back) HOC 1 Do*. Bicycle JO Cards PH.HO *& $4.98
