Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1929 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Spanish Castle —High • on Man-Made Cliff— City Folks ’ Uream 7 rue 1 ITHILF, r ir- !hr bir.hnghr of every sir! to build beautiful dream? of ** turretrd castle- with tower? rearing .kv nrd re er the brink of dancing blue water?., it ha? remained for an Inaanapoh. woman to make her dream come true. On the -rduded i' rr of Lake Maxinkuckee up in Mar hall county speeding motor boat and fleet sailing craft wi:. in rough he water?, before a Spanish ca tie set high on a ehn over the cry shore edee. I* is a building that brings a gasp of admiration when one runs • ero 'it .- udelenl* hidden m a beer oi trees. Bn: it i: more than a building It ir the dream molded in ro-k. and old ood and heavy tapestries, of Mrs. Norman Perry. •’ ifr of the ident of the Indianapolis Light and Power Company.
For year Mr:- Perry aid. a she opened the door to her journalistic cue.-t. i dreamed of a home--a Spanish car tic - that woulo incorporate all of my idea: when sir Prrrv and I decided to build here. " e tried to do it completely. This is the - r ult. The ? ometiung to be proud of. 'I <:r nrst cmT.'uHy 'hat the Ferry- encountered wa a lack of cliff-.. Central Indiana is sadly deficient in ilifT A five-foot boulder m the gradually rolling count 1 - is an object, of intcrc: t So a cliff had to be buih Whoever heard of e castle -t-ithout one? r. a tt SHALL and rock: were piled in a great ma along the shore line, until the effect of a great, solid wall •'r produced. On this the castle was erected and then the whole w.a urrounded with an airangement of terrace It. sas Spanish as the Alhambra Stepping into the spacious hallwav e.ne i: impre ed with the beauty of oki Spanish detail-. Finiplicit- i" the guiding motif, by it. i a implicity that prinas into being in such perface details a: a twi.ting iron handrail losing it-elf in the shadows, or a twisted column reminiscent of the Hall of Lions. Don Quixote, born in the nund of Cervante come 10 life on the ficor of the center room Every alternating qu re foot of the tiled floor is illuminated with a scene from the great Spanish epic, givig the full interpretation. n b tt fa SPANISH flrepiace dominates •it\ the south wall m >lit' small parlor. It m, transported from a true castle m Spain and the intricate beaut' of elaborate carvings tratify to the day when the Span-j-Vi arti an: took pride in their everyday ma terpicce:. The dignit' of age breathes from every ’corner" o> this newest castle. Ceremonial robes used m the religicu - r ice of Hie middle ages hang on ihe v all" The hca - gold t bread? are dimmed bj tire centuries b.it still retain a deep lu t-v Each tint stitch in them was m;-r woven with tir p rr vf of counties nun as the- tailed m the calm cloisters so long ego. A mona levy bell that toiled to Hi- monk -as I hey to’led in the fields hane. in the hallway. In an adjoining room a modern Chickeiinr piano remains m harmoiv through the politico surfaces of Us special Spanish case. Bright hues. ° favored in the oid country, predominate in the uphol*tery. rpHF second floor is given over to J- bedrooms, each overlooking toe lake. Fach has a balcony Spanish furniture i to be found m each of the bedrooms, with hrigiU color., woven into traditional figure on the counterplanes The room in the tower is a room that appeals to men. Here thMoorish influence makes itself fob A dancing senorita is captured on the canvas above the fireplace. Mr and Mr.. Perry have no love for publicity. Their home is their? to enjov to themselves a? much as were trio dreams from which it sprang. a . . Nearbv the' have provided a modern airport for their five-passenger cabin ptanc.
Woman’s Day
A group of kids in a distiict school ncer Sayra. Pa-- kept a caetie 0 f rai unjack in the woods near the schoolhoure. A' recess they slipped out and imbibed Teacher told tin parents, and the kids were given what is known in the vernacular a.' "a sound whaling.' Now the parents can complacently sit back iwith much more comfort than their chastised progeny' and reflect that they w done their duty, and if the kids come to no gpod end. it s not then fault. The actions of our juveniles aie always and invariably merely a ditto mark to tire actions of their elders. When f kids are making and drinking mash it's because they're living in a society of elders doing the same thing. ff tt a Wailed for Him Here's a Robert Service poem from life. , . Fifty-five years ago Mary Louise Jukes and John Joseph Hill were married in London. A few months later they sailed to America, in quest of fortune. In 1903 Hill joined the gold rush to Alaska, promising that he would soon send for his wife and children. For more than a quarter century, so Mrs. Hill told a Chicago judge, when she filed her divorce petition on a charge of desertion, she answered every door bell and watched e.ery mail, believing that, she would hear from her wanderer. It look twenty-five years to make her give up the long waiting. Most women arc like that. To their own undoing, say mental and emotional scientists. n n n What Spells Success Thirteen-year-old Virginia Hogan of Omaha. Neb. is hailed as the nation's champion speller. One wonders how much if anythmg. that will mean to Virginia now or later. respite all the strides which has made since the day
BRIDE MAN iPhntn hr Pn-lzniani
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of Cleopatra or Delilah, the fact remains that beauty still remains a girls greatest asset in he pursuit of pleasure, happiness and worldly :oods. while mental prowess is so much of a one some-
ENTERTAIN GUESTS AT LUNCHEON
A one o'clock luncheon was given this afternoon at the home of Mrs. A. R. Kennedy 4456 Central avenue, by Mrs. Kennedy. Mrs. J. W. Yakcy, and Miss Helen Dailev. Covers v ere laid for Mrs. Kennedy, Mr-. Yakcy. Miss Dailey. Mrs. J. C. Dale. Mr.. B. E. Thornburgh. Mrs. Harriet Stcgncr. Mrs. G. T. Kerr, Mr Emmett F. Branch, Mrs. Myrtle Wood' Mrs. K. I. Nutter. Mrs. Clyde Schmidt Mrs. Ira Eubank, Mrs. Scottte Schuck. Mrs. Frank Eubank. Mrs. John Nutter. Miss Ella Harrison. Miss Virginia Harrison and Miss Mary Bain, all of Martinsville; Mrs. Walter Edwards, Moorcsv’lle; Mrs. John Landers, Mi?- Katherine Dailey and Miss Dorothy Cunningham.
times believes it a gift of the wicked fairy a' the christening. If Virginia had won a bathing ’ beauty contest, we would be surer of her future welfare than for ■ knowing how to spell pterodactyl tOh. you .peii 14 i
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Tiny Slight Is Married Life Peril BY MARTHA LEE The little things, so small, so seemingly inconsequential, that keep piling up in our hearts and minds are the material that sometimes build insurmountable walls between husbands and wives. A real honest-to-goodness fight, out in the open, is much more safe than these little cankerous sores that come from a tiny scratch on the sensitiveness of husband and w ife, made by the unthinking hand of one or the other. A barrage of harsh w ords can be answered back with w ords as harsh and cutting. It can be tit for tat that way. The words were meant to be harsh. They were meant to hurt and cut and bruise. And so it is fair to hand back the same sort of treatment. Slights Cause rain But take a slight, a forgotten an--1 niversary. a trifling thoughtless remark, or more often no remark at ill where one has been expected. Those are the things a husband and his wife can not combat. Simply because they are so utterly unintentional. That is one of the things that irks most about the whole affair. That these things arc unin- ! tcntional. Here is a letter from a woman whose husband would probably be struck dumb if his wife were to unburden her heart to him as she has ; in this letter. Dear Miss Lee—l have fecn married I seven years and have been, for tbc most prrt very fortunate. My husband has ; been a v onderful provider, a kind man. a faithful o.ne. but Mis.-- Lee. I ant utterly miserable. I suppose I am just another one of those-foolish women. He is so thoughtless about the things that count so much with a woman. For instance, he never remembers our anni- ! versary day. I should lore to have it mean that much to him that he would at least remember to mention it to me. It | isn't that I want a gin. I just want him I to feel as I do about it. that it is a very : special day. Then about myself. Hr never mentions that I look nice. Not that I want him always giving me compliments, but it, docs a woman's heart good to know | that her husband still thinks her attractive and beautiful. I sometimes wonder if other wives sufj fer for a bit of praise, a thoughtful remark or a glimpse of the little niceties, picn gave them before they were wives? 1 Tt. is these little things that make a woman happy. Miss Lee. T would willtnelv do vHhoul things to have my hu.,hanri gi-r. me. one of these of hi? ovn YEARNING. M,v dear, men must work and 1 women must weep—for a little attention. it, seems. Try Shaming Him Men soon become oblivious to sentimentality. It, isn’t in line with the day's work for bread and butter. The men. who always are flattering their wives, usually do so because they can give them nothing more substantial. Think that over. Your husband, as far as I can sec, is a great fellow. He is thoughtless not to even mention your anniversary, but since he doesn't, you might shame him a little by remembering it yourself, and planning a celebration in his honor. He is much more apt to do something about it the next time than if you were to pout and act hurt about his not having remembered it. Hand out a few compliments once in a. while yourself, and before long he will follow suit of his own accord.
Urges Balanced Science Courses in Grade Schools ‘•The time is coming when every elementary teacher will be teaching science,” declared Dr. Gerald S. Craig, professor of natural science from Columbia university, in a lecture at Teachers College of Indianapolis Monday. Dr. Craig urged that the science program for children be a balanced program of many sciences and said that definite material from astronomy, chemistry and other fields be included. As author of ' Outlines of Elementary Science," and "The Science Classroom." Dr. Craig is one of the best known authorities on elementary science teaching in the United States. He will lecture at Teachers’ college every morning this week except Thursday, at 9:50.
MRS, ADA FROST GIVEN BON VOYAGE PARTY
Mrs. Ada O. Frost, who will leave soon for a trip to Europe, was the honor guest at a farewell bridge party given Monday- night tw Mrs. J. S. MaYlowe, at her home, 31 West Fall Creek boulevard. Guests with Mrs. Frost were Mrs. A. B. Bailey, Logansport; Dr. Lillian B. Mueller. Mrs. Florence French, Mrs. Rudolph Roller. Mrs. Amelia Walsh. Miss Ethel Martindale. Miss Bess Morgan. Miss Fannie Paine. Miss Irene Dougherty and Miss Stella Doeppcrs. WRITING LIKE WOMEN HELD LITERARY PERIL Feminine Style Dominates Authors of Today, Says Editor. l\i 7 inn $ Spec in l NEW YORK. July 2.—Women writers are not only dominating the American literary field today, but the younger male authors are be- I sinning to write like women. Therein ' lies a menace which ! threatens to sap the virility of mod- ! ern literature, warns Robert Herrick. veteran among authors and | editors, expressed in the Bookman. j The man who writes like a worn- j an. in Herrick's view, suggests in- ! stead of specifying, his ideas are j evasive, nebulous and embroidered j with pretty words in place of concrete thought. • The penalty of changing sex in art as in nature is sterility and extinction." Mr. Herrick warns the rung writer. "A feminized race ... extinct. So too feminized art,”
City Couple A re Wedded at Church The marriage of Miss Bernice Schmidt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Leonard Mardy Schmidt. 523 Cottage avenue, and Theodore A. Gocbcs. son of William Gocbe.-. "as celebrated this morning at Sacred Heart church, the Rev. John Joseph Bcrggcr officiating. A program of organ music was played before and during the ceremony. The ailar was banked with palms and ferns and lighted with cathedral candles. Miss Hortcnsc Mack, maid of honor, worca gown of orchid lafTo. fashioned robe do style, with insert? of ccru Chantilly lacc. She wore a hairbvaid hat to match and carried an arm bouquet of deep pink roses and baby breath lied "ith orchid tulle. Alary Gocbcs Flower Girl Miss Wiltrudic Brandmaier and Miss Virginia Schmidt, sister of the bride, were bridesmaids. Miss Brandmaier wore rose and Miss Schmidt blue, fashioned robe dc style. They wore hairbraid hats to match and carried roses and baby orcath tied with tulle to match their gowns. Little Mary Gccbo? flower girl wore green taffeta and carried a basket of rose petals. Francis Schmitt was best man and Stephen Sullivan, groomsman. The ushers were Bernard Weimci and Lawrence Eckstein. Plan Trip to Northwest The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore ivory ; tin fashioned robe dc style, with a yoke of tulle embroidered with parls and crystals. Her veil was arranged tiara fashion with a wreath of orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouque* of lilies, of trie valley, baby breath and white roses. A breakfast for the bridal party, and members of the immcdiati families was served at the home of the j bride's parents following the ceremony. The bridal table was decorated with a large wedding cake on i a mound of flowers. A reception will be held from 3 to 10 this evening Mr. and Mrs. Gocbcs will go on a trip through the northwest and " ill | be at home after Aug. 1 in Indianapolis.
SINGER TO GO ON AIR
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Miss Mildred Fowler, soprano. will sing a group of songs during the radio program to be broadcast at, fi o'clock Wednesday night over WKBF by members of the .Indianapolis Indorsers of Photoplays, at which time Mrs. David Ross, state chairman of the organization, will talk on "The Indorsers' Safe and Sane Fourth of July Celebration.'* The program is being given in connection with the celebration being staged by the Indorsers.
Family Menu BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer There is no time of the 3 ear when hearty salads are as welcome as during the summer months. On a hot noon we are decidedly grateful for the cooling freshness of both the looks and tastes of a salad that furnishes our needed calories as well as mineral salts and vitamins. The cook will find it much easier to serve her main dish as a salad than in some other form. She.can; keep her kitchen cool during the heat of the day, since no fire is needed for prolonged cooking. The salad materials must all be prepared ready for mixing sometime before they will be needed, and since no salad should be mixed until ready to be served, she has no cause to worry over its "spoiling" if the family is late in coming. If you never have used string beans in salad combinations you have overlooked one of the best vegetables for salads. They don’t lose their shape and become "mushy” as some vegetables do. and they combine particularly well with meat. The young, early varieties arc most attractive used whole. They should be cooked until just tender In as little water as possible. Match-like pieces of veal and carrots can be substituted for beans and tongue suggested in the recipe. Honor Visitors ' Mrs. F. A. Linton Jr., entertained at her home. 4819 Guilford avenue, Monday night with a bridge party ( in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Merwvn Harris, San Francisco, Cal. Hold Social Meeting Mrs. Harvey Clark. 605 North Bradley avenue, entertained with a ! social meeting for members of Chi Beta Kappa sorority Monday night jat her home. Miss Marie Bruhn I entertained with a group of readings. Mrs. Wilhite Leaves Mrs. Mary E. Wilhite, teacher of piano and organ at the Metropolitan School of Music, will go to New York Thursday for the summer, where she will study pipe organ with Dr. Charles Docrsam. dean of pype organ at Columbia uxuvci'**yr.
ATTRACTIVE CITY BRIDE '
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Mrs. Joseph J'Jfcrsnn Cripc cns before he; marriage, Sa turd a u. June 22. Miss Marjorie Joan Brou:'ii. do lighter of •Mr. and Mrs. John A. Brow niO-i I'ni re mil >f a venue.
It cm Benefit Pent}! Ladies of St. Mary's parish will entertain with cards and lotto at 3:30 Wednesday night at the school hall. 315 North New Jersey street for the benefit of the lawn fete. Mrs. Josephine Roscgarden and Mrs. William Betz arc' in charge of the affair.
PhOI e b- n " ’ ■
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ißlioln by Dcxhcitnri >
Cincinnati Girl Becomes Bride of City Man Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Zckind, Cincinnati, 0.. announce the marriage of their duaghtcr. Miss Rose Zckind. lo Thomas Harvic Barnard. \ son of Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Barnard. 5050 Pleasant Run parkway, which look place at Vernon Manor. Cincinnati. June 20. Miss'Marian E. Barnard, y.stcr oi the bridegroom, was maid of honor, and Harry M. Zckind. brother ol the , bride, was best man. A wedding breakfast followed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Barnard arc on a motor trip through southern Indiana and Kentucky and "ill be ai home after July 15 at 1512 North Pennsylvania street. MISS JENNIE ADAMS WEDS l)H. S. A. HESS Miss Jennie Mac Adam: and Dr. S. L. Hess. Chicago, were married Monday at the home of the bride's sister. Mrs. George S. Oshlo. 3536 North Meridian street. The Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel read the service. After a wedding trip at French Lick. Dr. and Mrs. Hess will so to Chicago, where they "ill be at. home at 5003 Drexel boulevard. McKeC’Myrrs Announcement lie: been made of the engagement of Miss Jenifer Virginia McKee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward -J. McKee. Bartlesville, Okla.. to William Morris Myers Jr.. son oi Mr. and Mrs. William M. Myers, Terre Haute. Miss McKee was graduated from the Junior college of Tudci hall. The date of the wedding has not been set.
JULY 2. 1929
Pavey-Zink Marriage Is Solemnized Miss Gladys Paicy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pavey, 114 West. Thirty-second street, became the bride of O. Glenn Zink, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. G, Zink, South Bend, at a simple ceremony performed a' the home of the bride's parents at 8 o'clock Saturday night by the Rev. J. A. Long. Miss Virginia Lawson, pianist, presented a group of bridal airs before and during the ceremony, which was read before an improvised altar. The flrepiace was banked with palms and ferns, interspersed with baskets of daisies and white roses i and lighted with two candelabra. Miss Beatrice Pavey. sister of the bride, was her only attendant. She wore orchid chiffon made with tight bodice and long, full skirt and carried Aaron Ward roses. A ! reception at the home followed. - Mr. and Mrs. Zink have gone on a trip west and will be at home at 114 West Thirty-second street. Out- ! of-town guests at the wedding were i Mrs. Robert Holt, Darlington: Ben- ! jamin Pavey. Crawfordsville, ami Miss Evelyn Bowles, Argos Bride-Elect Is Honored With Paily Miss Agnes Welch, whose marriage to Dr. Paul B. Kernel will fake place Thursday, was the guest in . " hose honor Miss Eileen Scanlon : entertained Monday night at the ; Brown Betty tearoom with a linen , shower. The bridal colors, pink and green, ; were carried out in the decorations I and appointments. The hostess was l assisted by her mother, Mrs. John K. Scanlon. Guests included Mrs. Wallace ! Jones, Mrs. Jack Stevenson/ Mrs. Howard Phillips. Mrs. Hugh O'Connell. Mrs. John Kelley, Mrs. Joseph Sexton, Mrs. Louis De Wald. Miss Mary Donahue. Miss Helen Markcy, Miss Helen Hiescl, Miss Juanita Mann. Miss Raffaela Montani. Miss Viiginia Mann. Miss Marie Gardircr. Miss Hazel Moore. Miss Mar- ; caret McCarthy. Miss Louise Culkins and Miss Ellon Dalton.
PERSONALS
Harry H. Fulmer, 3858 Broadway, lias as his guest for a few days, his sister. Miss Harriet Fulmer, Los Angeles, Cal. who is en route to New York, from where she will sail July 13 for a summer abroad. Mrs. Laura. G. C. Stout, 3113 North Meridian street, has arrived in New York from Europe and will return to Indianapolis soon. Miss Bess Garten. .3342 North Meridian street, has gone for a two months’ visit in Los Angeles. Cal. She will tear the western coast during her absence. Dr. and Mrs. E. B. Mumford, 34 West Forty-second street, have gone to Louisville, K\'., for the Fourth of July. Mrs. J. T. Eastman. 3471 East, Fall Crock boulevard, is in New York CHy for a short stay. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Peters and daughters Marian and Beulah. New York City, arrived in Indianapolis Monday to visit Mr. and Mrs. N. D. Deane, 406 North Gladstone avenue. Mrs. Otto Kazzard. Mrs. Frank j Smith and Norman Coltrain, .?1 J North Oxford 'tree',, will motor t-o ( 1 o- Angeles. Cal., with Dr. and Mr. C A. Porter. Cleveland. 0., for a | two months’ visit.
