Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 154, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 November 1931 — Page 17

NOV. 6, 1931

Nature Club Guests Will Visit Hills Nature Study Club of Indiana will entertain thirty members of the Prairie Club of Chicago over the week-end. The program includes a luncheon at the cabin in Woollen's Gardens Saturday followed by walks through the park. The guests will leave for Brown county and the lodge of the Owl Creek Association at 3, where they will be entertained over night. On Sunday a trip to Weed Patch Hill, a hike throueh the state game preserve and dinner at the Nashville house constitute the program. Members of the Nature Study Club have been entertained several times by the Prairie Club at its club house in the dunes. The exchange of entertainment has been made possible through the presidents of the two organizations, Otto C. Bruhhnan of the Prairie Club, and William A. Myers of the Indiana group. Arthur P. Thomas, Indianapolis, Is chairman of the committee in charge of the program of entertainment. Harry W. Glossbrenner is chairman of the arrangements committee for entertainment in Brown county; Mrs. C. C. Carey, chairman of the cabin committee of the Nature Study Club, is in charge of luncheon Saturday; Miss Clara A. Moore, assisted by Ralph Pierson, Robert A. Arnold, and Misses Dorothy Siegel and Peggy Knox is in charge of entertainment Saturday evening in Brown county.

MANNERS -♦"MORALS RV I OR 04/y

IS there something you want to get off your chest? Something you brood over all by yourself? Write to Jane Jordan, now! She is a wise woman with a wealth of human experience, whom The Times has employed to help you. It will be a great relief to unburden yourself to her. Don't put it off. Write your letter now! a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am 27 years old and I am thinking seriously of going to another town, husband hunting. There are a few nice men in my own home town who have known me all my life. They like me and take me lots of places, but none of them proposes marriage. As I see no prospect here, should I leave a good lob and a nice home and go to a strange city in hope of finding a nice man who will marry me? I am not so unhappy here and am not sure I should be happy if married. However. I don’t want to miss any normal experiences. There must be lots of other girls in the same fix. What do they do about it? VIOLET. DEAR Violet —You w r ould be foolhardy to throw up a good job in this period of depression, and I am sure you have too much good sense to do it. There is such a thing as doing the right thing at the wrong time. Economic security is important to your piece of mind. Hang to it and wait for business conditions to improve, before you consider making a change. After all, a husband is more or less of a gamble, whereas congenial work and a happy home are much more stable propositions. Yes, many fine girls in your situation have slight opportunity to meet new men, and many of them have solved their problems by doing exactly what you suggest. Every one has heard of the girl who was an old story to the home town boys, but who became the belle of another community overnight. If an attractive new girl comes within your own circle of friends, aren’t the men all agog in an instant? Don’t they always give her a grand rush and run after her as if shj were Queen Marie? Nine times out of ten she is not one-half as worth-while as you are, but she has the lure of the unknown about her. New acquaintanccss with satisfactory people are stimulating to all of us. In a community where you arc the new girl instead of the familiar Violet, you probably would kick up quite a rumpus. The fallacy in the theory is that it isn’t always easy to get acquainted in anew place, especially in a city of any size. The chances are that you would spend many lonely hours and days before you made friends with the young people. Isn’t there someone you can visit occasionally? Some place where you can spend your vacation, to get a change of scene and people? Seize every chance you have to enlarge your circle of acquaintances. Practice on the men you know by showing a sympathetic interest in their opinions and hobbies. Encourage them to talk about themselves. Whenever a man finds an admiring audience in a woman, the situation holds the germs of a romance! a a a Dear Jane Jordan—Two months ago I mot a man who seemed crazy about me. He paid me all sorts of compliments and sent me flowers at unexpected times and did many other little thoughtful things for me. I fell in love with him and thought sure he intended to ask me to marry him. The other day I met an attractive woman who knows him, too, and I found out that he has been handing her the same line and sending her flowers on the same davs he sent them to me. Why was he so nice to me if he wasn't in love’’ Miss Jordan, what makes men act that way? DISGUSTED. DEAR Disgusted—Men arc always amazed when women take their attentions so seriously. They have discovered that women like to be showered with attentions. Little thoughtful deeds and a bouquet work like magic. It is as simple as pressing a button to turn on the light. Certain actions are sure to bring certain results. If a man does not make love to a woman, if he ignores her sex and tries to treat her as he would another man, he is devoid of interest to her. She is furious, and brands him as a stick, a flat tire or & bore! What gets men down is the fact that women interpret their pleasantries as a tentative proposal of matrimony. Let a man send a girl a dozen roses and a box of candy, and the recipient begins to plan her bridesmaids’ dresses. If he tells her how pretty she is. she hums Mendelssohn's “Wedding March” under her breath. The smart woman accepts a man’s attentions in the spirit in which they are given, but she never believes his protestations of undying love and affection until he shows up with a ring, a license, and the preacher. Even then she tells herself that it may be a temporary Aberration!

What’s in Fashion?

Wider Shoulder Effect „

Directed By AMOS PARRISH

Here’s color contrast, ™ally smart coat or widp shoulders wide dropped shoulders, buttons Coats fasten elbows, narrow waistand diagonal lines to make higher .. . above line—one of the smarta fashionable dress. the waistline is coat silho uettes. smartest. And 1 dressy coats button instead of belt. Their sleeves usually are close-fitting at the wrist and fuller above. Most coat fabrics are rough. Most furs blend their colors with the coat color. And these furs are used as fabric would be used . . they trim the coat as dresses are trimmed. illustration shows several of these points. The wide shoulders (that fluffy fox shawl collar do the trick), the trim waist, the buttoned fastening with one of the buttons above the waist, the close-fitting sleeve with above-the-wrist-fullncss obtained by a fur band.

Dressy necklinesc are higher, many of them quite close about the throat . . . and most of the interest in the fashionable dress is centered above the waistline. Look for color contrast in the new dress you’re going to buy, if the main color is dark. Or for bright color that contrasts pleasantly with your dark coat. Dresses have interesting, different sleeves, too. Button trimming is smart. Diagonal closing lines ap-

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents tor which send x astern No. o^*l Size Street City State Name

' t .44

PULLER SKIRTLINE ON NEW MODEL

Here's a splendid opportunity to make this effective afternoon dress of plum colored transparent velvet. It's smart in its simple styling. The rich fabric and coloring contribute much to its smartness, probably because of its association with the royalty and pageantry of the old days. Style No. 644 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Black crepe marocain is exceedingly modish this season. Our fall and winter fashion magazine is ready. Price of book, 10 cents. Pri*e of pattern 15 cents in stamflk or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.

New york, Nov. 6.—lt‘s figures that count this year, whether you’re talking of bank balances or clothes. No matter how the first kind looks, here's the way your figure must be in your coats and dresses, if it’s in fashion. So regard yourself well in the mirror w’hen you try them on. Briefly—shoulders look wider, the bodice and waistline and hips smoother, the skirt straighter. Fashion - right coats get their width at the top by the cut of the shoulder, by dropped armholes and by the way the fur collars are put on in shawl, rever or collarette collars. Dresses get this same effect by dropped shoulder seams, r a g 1 an sleeves, yokes that extend over on to the shoulder, by epaulets and wide revers. But even though figures are so important there are other fashion points to look for in the

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pear on many of the most fashionable. Rougher surfaced silks like canton crepe, rougher surfaced combinations of silk and wool, sheer, light, crepy wools—those are the materials to look for in daytime dresses. What about the hats that are worn with these coats and dresses? In color they match either the coat or dress—or both. Or they match one of the two and are trimmed with the color of the other. Smart hats are trimmed. With quills, ribbons, flat feather fancies. And the newest fashion is to have these trimmings high, so the hat has a builtup look Wear them well forward with a one-sided tilt—either to left or right. And then, in your new correct costume, you’ll shine in fashion. (Copyright. 1931. bv Amos Parrish) Next: The new fashion of brown fur trimmings on coats is discussed by Amos Parrish.

.... ADELE— -Black kid with clever little appliques of • Enzel-of-Paris sponsors "BLACK-and-BLACK" |jp\ JOSEE — A gay little gadabout f ' ~’il fc.\ in black or brown suede and / ‘'l calf. Choose this spectator / • ’ \ ■ ■ ’<• H r sports pump for the football games—forshopping— / ■ • Not just plain black —but black kidskin high-lighted with patent leather . . . black calfskin adding a swanky touch to black suede ... "Black-and-black" —so fashion-right! Yet so practical—harmonizing with so many costumes and colors! , . . So along comes Enzel-of-Paris, if you please, with the smartest "biack-and-black" shoes imaginable ... all inspired by our French successes, then superbly modeled and amazingly priced by the genius of American H OSIER Y Jr Enzel-of-Paris quality pF In shades! Enz.l i.xei ran., .ran, 3 to 9 width, to AAA 24 N. Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis

INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Patrons Are Named for Music Event A partial list of patrons, patronesses and box-holders for the concert by the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra Monday night at English's theater, under the sponsorship of Mrs. Nancy Martens, follows; Messrs, and Mesdames Frederick M. Ayres. E. Clifford Barrett. Oscar D. Bohlem, Arthur V. Brown. G. H. A. Clowes. Stewart Dean, John Eaglesfield. James W. Fcslcr. M. C. Furscott. M. C. Furscott. J. A. Goodman. J. P. Goodrich. Theodore B. Griffin. L. D. Grisbaum. George C. Haerle, V. E. Hahn. Frank A. Hamilton, H. P. Lieber. John A. McDonald. Erse Martin. S. J. Marttenet. F. E. Matson. Leo M. RannaDort. John G. Rauch. Peter C Reilly. J. O. Ritchey, Louise Schwitzer. O. F. Shattuck. Roy Shields, W. R. Simmons. Arthur Sinclair. R. S. Sfhclair, A. H. Steinbrecher, E. B. Taggart, Harold Taylor. A. A. Thomas. Arthur L. Trester. J. Hartley Sherwood. William Shafer. Thor G. Wesenberg. H. H. Wheeler, Herman Wolff. Mesdames Chester Albright. Bert B. Adams. Hortense Rauh Burpee, C. S. Crosley, Robert F. Daggett. J. J. Daniels. Philip Efroymson, Robert Elliott. Hattie B. Feinberg. D. W. Flickinger. Clarence Forsythe. Pauline Haueisen. Benjamin D. Hitz. Simon Kiser, Charles Krauss, Carl A. Lieber, Hugh J. McGowan, Edward L. McKee. Charles W. Merrill, Burton E. Parrott, Lafayette Page. Jesse Fletcher, Charles Latham. Samuel Lewis Shank, A. H. Steinbrecher. Lucius B. Swift. John R. Wilson. W. N. Wilson, Burton E. Parrott and W. J. Wright. Misses Edith Dockover. Mary E. Gavin. Beatrice Gedde.s. Jacobcne Gehrlein, Lorle Krull, Helen Hollingsworth, Isabel Mossman, I. Hilda Stewart, Lucy Taggart. Messrs. G. A. Schnull, Leonard Strauss and Lieutenant-Colonel Joseph Marmon. Mrs. Miller Hostess Mrs. Francis Miller will entertain members of the Fre-Amus Bridge Club tonight at the Lumley tea room.

Daily Recipe STUFFED ONIONS 5 large mild onions 3 tablespoons butter or other fat 1-2 cup chopped celery 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 2 cups bread crumbs 1 teaspoon salt Pepper Skin onions, cut in half crosswise, simmer in salted water until almost tender, and drain. Remove centers without disturbing outer layers and chop fine. Melt 2 tablespoons of fat in a frying ppn, add chopped onion, celery, parsley, and cook for a few minutes. Pueh vegetables to one side, melt remaining fat and add to it bread crumbs, salt, and pepper, then combine with vegetables. Fill onion shells with stuffing, cover and bake in a moderate oven for about 30 minutes, or until the onions are tender. Remove the cover from the baking dish during the last of the cooking, so the onions will brown on top.

Makes Plea for Women in Business Deploring the fact that women of middle age are “put on the shelf,” Mrs. Adah O. Frost, president of the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, made a plea for solution of the problem of the older woman in business at the Indiana night observance of the local business women’s club at the Woman's Department Club house Thursday night. “I believe that one of the ways to serve our federation and fulfill the purpose for which we are organized,” Mrs. Frost said, “is to use our influence in the retention of the older business woman ” Explaining that this is the first time such a problem has presented itself, she continued: “Never before has there been a large enough group of middle-aged women in business to cause comment. “Men from 40 to 60 years of age are considered “in their prime,” Mrs. Frost said. “Our legislators, Governors, mayors, rarely under 40, usually are considered of more value as statesmen after years of experience. Lawyers and doctors never reach the height of their profession until they attain the dignity and poise of later years.” Mrs. Frost urged her club members to use their influence in helping their sisters keep their selfrespect intact, “unbruised by a sense of uselessness,” and in proving to their employers that “the assets of J

<r 7 Tct/etnber 7 - // • • • • /Q-/Ay Cy/\/\OH/ • • • Flower shops and greenhouses will be on parade . . . Flowerdom at its best invites you to this outstanding event . . . The Fall Flower Festival ... A gorgeous feast of fragrant beauty . . . Gay blooming plants in fascinating hues . . . Nature's most exquisite and loveliest flowers . . . alluringly displayed daytime and evening. : ■nrTß ’7 * ; B I MB :

GLAMOUR TO MARK NUPTIALS

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the older women are far greater than their liabilities.” Past presidents of the state federation were dinner guests and were at the speakers’ table with Mrs. Frost and Miss Lucy Osborn, president of the local club, who presided. Mrs. Bonnie K. Robetson, Hammond, a past president and now second vice-president of the national federation was a guest with the following past presidents: Mrs. Helen Shaw Kurtz, Goshen; Misses Jennie Rae Hersch, Portland;

Miss Rosemary Baur, Chicago’s wealthiest heiress (center), is shows with her fiance, Bartle Bull, son of Mr. and Mrs. IV. Perkins Bull, Toronto, and her mother, Mrs. Jacob Baur. Miss Baur and Bull will be wedded Saturday afternoon at A:3O in St. Crysostom’s church in Chicago.

Mabel Ward. Union City; Mary C. Kennedy, Lafayette; Gertrude Barrett, Muncie; Nell Allemong, Ida Anderson and Forba McDaniel of Indianapolis. Mrs. R. Harry Miller, Mrs. Sara Major Avery and Miss Merica Hoagland, founders, also were seated at a special table. Mary Traub Busch ensemble, comprised of Misses Mary Rogers, violinist; Marcena Campbell, cellist; Ruth Noller, pianist, and Dorothy Kiliion, soprano, played during dinner. • •

PAGE 17

Jubilee to j N Be Observed by Reset~ves The city-wide grade school celebration of the Girl Reserves’ golden jubilee will be held Saturday afternoon at the Y. W. C. A. Old Girl Reserves will welcome new members to their fellowship in a candle light recognition ceremonial. Miss Evelyn Carpenter, grade school chairman in a costume of fifty years ago. will light the candles of old members from a golden candle of the past, and these girls in turn will light the candles of new members. Following the ceremonial the girls and their guests will be entertained at a reception in the Y. W. C. A. drawring room. Mrs. Walter P. Morton, chairman of the Girl Reserves committee; Mrs. Brandt C. Downey, president of the board of directors of the Y. W. C. A.; Miss Evelyn Carpenter, grade school chairman, and Miss Amy G. Bruce, general secretary, will receive. Assisting them will be members of the Girl Reserves committee: Mesdames J. E. Sevbert. Mrs. L. C. Litten, Mrs. H. J. Eikhoff, L. W. Hughett, Mrs. L. G. Hughes. Mrs. Ina Gaul. Mrs. C. M. Starr. Mrs. C. E Sunthimer. Mrs. Walter Reynolds. Miss Emma Mae Allison and Carrie Scott Guests will include motors, principals, teachers and other interested friends of Girl Reserves.

NEW AND LARGER (H ARTERS ROBERTSON BETAUTY SHOPPE PERFECT PERMANENTS *BOS X. Illinois St. TAlbot 5003