Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 158, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1931 — Page 11

NOV. 11, 19311

Marriage of City Couple Solemnized Marriage of Miss Margaret Sullivan, daughter of James J. Sullivan, 840 Harrison street, to John P. Shaughnessy was solemnized at 9 this morning at St. Philip Neri church, with the Rev. Raymond B. Noll officiating. Palms and ferns banked the chancel, with large urns of chrysanthemums surrounding the altar, which was lighted with cathedral candles. Miss Mary Helen Brooks, organist, played, and accompanied Mrs. John Carroll, who sang an “Ave Maria” and several bridal songs. Wears Turquoise Satin Miss Helen Prentiss, the bride’s only attendant, wore turquoise satin with long skirt, and short jacket, with velvet turban, gloves and slippers of pink. She carried an arm bouquet of Talisman roses. The bride wore a fitted gown of pink satin, with turqoise velvet turban, gloves and slippers, and carried a shower bouquet of Columbia roses and lilies of the valley. John E. Dorsey was the best man. Ushers were Paul Lyons and James E. Sullivan. Leave on Trip to South Following the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served at the Whispering Winds. The table was centered with a bridal cake, with appointments in the bridal colors, turquoise and pink. Mr. and Mrs. Shaughnessy have left by motor for a wedding trip through the south, the bride traveling in green transparent velvet with accessories to match. They will be at home after Dec. 1 at 940 North Riley avenue. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Katherine Schuler, Madison, Ind.; Mrs. Delia Gerahty, St. Louis, and Mrs. Earl Denham, Winamac, Ind.

MAN ms>. MORALS By Jane JokdAn XV)

DON’T lock up your troubles! Tell them to Jane Jordan, instead. Your letters are always welcome and will be treated with perfect confidence. Send a stamp and your address if you want a personal reply. Dear Jane Jordan—Will you please help me find a wav to Interest older men? I am iust 18 and have two fine boy friends. They like me dignified and reserved, but I am fond of older men. The boys are so young. you see. I am anxious to make a good impression on a man considerably older than I am. but mv noise and calmness do not seem to attract him. What can I do to catch his interest? DOROTHY. Dear Dorothy—Just “keep kissable.” I would like to tell you that you must improve your mind, read good books and practice the art of conversation, but observation has taught me that it hardly is ever necessary. No kissable young girl has to worry about how to attract an older man, or a younger one, either, for that matter. He falls with a thud for her youth and prettiness, even if she hasn’t a grain of sense. As for your mind, all you have to know is how to look pretty; as for books, even a speaking acquaintance with them is not required; and your conversation merely needs to sing every known variation of “How marvelous you are!” Os course if the man you wish to attract is unusual and has the brains to demand his mental equal in a woman, you haven’t a chance. You can’t assume the qualities he is looking for to save your soul. You’ll have to live and learn and grow and develop before you can interest him in the slightest. <r tt a Dear Madam—Mv wife divorced me and I gave her all the mone vl could get together. Now I live at a hotel and keen the account books for part of mv room and board. That takes one night a week, and I don't know what to do after work hours. I can't read all the time I walk to and from my work for exercise, but when I walk in the evenings I get so depressed I almost go crazy. . . I can’t afford to play cards or other games for money. Isn’t there some cheap hobobv vou can suggest? What do other people do who don't go 'p movies, or gamble? Don't say play golf, for I can’t afford the togs and it doesn’t interest me iust now. with winter coming on. J- w. Dear J. W.—Can you save enough money to join an athletic club or the Y. M. C. A.? There you would find the companionship of other men and the facilities of the clubsuch as swimming, bowling, gymnasium, chess, checkers and other games—open to you. Make more contacts and meet another woman. What you need more than anything else is companiship. Do you recall George Elliot’s statement, “The human heart finds rest only in human kind?” As for hobbies, there are dozens of them. What about stamp collecting as one of the least expensive? Philatelists are enthusiastic about their hobby and have formed a society for exchange of stamps and labels. You might meet seme new people which would help to get you out of the doldrums. 8 M tt Dear Jane Jordan—Single blessednes3 turned in double "cussedness" and my wife and I separated. To get money to pav court costs and give her a start. I borrowed *SOO from a man I know. To pay him back I signed a contract to keep his books and write his letters at night for ten years. Mv wife is mad because I don't give her money, and tells everv one that I am holding out on her. that I must have had some saved that I did not declare, since I paid the costs of the suit and gave her $lO a week until the end of the first anv more money now. My wor kis only half-time and I have to go on with mv contract to keen mv word. Shall I tell her about my contract? 1 don't want her to know. She will tell. Has she anv right to expect any support since she is ab e to work and has no children? I air sick of the thing. ?m so tired at night that I almost fall alreo over mv cxtfft *ork. What oußht I to do? **. A. Dear H. A— Merciful heavens! Tell your ex-wife the truth about your situation! What if she does tell? The story reflects to her discredit, not yours. If you signed away your evenings for ten years to get your freedom and give her a start, angels could no more! If she is able to work, she ought to be willing to do so. Women should learn that matri-

/V Heid’s ♦S&wkShoes Priced Lower 1546 North Illinois Street 233 East Washington Street 5537 E. Washington St, Irvington

What’s in Fashion?

Variety in Men’s Shoes

Directed By AMOS PARRISH

NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—Right in line with lower prices on men's shoes is better styling. You can ’t help noticing these better looking shoes on men everywhere. Maybe it's because shoe designers are getting away from standardized styles. Certainly there are more 1 shoe styles now than we ever can remember. And never have men so taken to I the idea of alternating shoes by styles as well as colors. It’s good sense and good comfort to switch from one style to another several times a week. Stretches the life of a shoe over a longer period. Puts anew spring in the step, when you alternate styles.

The shoe most men are wearing I —and liking—is the black calf, 1 straight-toe shoe. It’s plain and simple. This season it leans a little more toward a tapered, “custom” toe. Which means it’s a more graceful shoe than the blunt toe —with just as much toe room and comfort. The running mate to shoe No. 1 is the wing tip shoe—a more important branch of the shoe tree

this year than ever. College men, I sportsmen, business men, wear it ! for every occasion. It’s more popuj lar today than ever since the prince of Wales first revived it some years | ago. The best version is the brogue 1 type—the one with perforated toe

mony is not a business that continues to yield them salaries after they have ceased to work at it. Os course if a woman devotes the best years of her life to a man, if she keeps his house and rears his children during the most productive period of her life, and then he leaves her flat, he owes her something. But where there are no children, the dissatisfaction is mutual and, the woman able to work, why should she expect support? No woman worthy of her salt wants to be a liability after she has ceased to be an asset. As for the man who accepted your labors for ten years in payment for a loan of SSOO, I never heard of such a Shylock! Do you realize he is paying you less than 14 cents a night? I’d ask for a moratorium while I earned the wherewithal! to pay him back in cash. It’s time for you to wake up and assert yourself. After all, you have the right to live yourself!

Finest Permanents Regardless of Price—Why Pay More? Genuine EX* 1 REALISTIC 3 ,J~ Vm Reg. $lO > ; t - rfiiSjppl The only real push-up wave. Expertly given. Uroquinole Ringlet Oil Wave 5.75 Ideal Push-Up Wave, $4.T5 Open Evening;* by Appointment LOCKERBIE BEAUTY SHOP Mezznnine Floor, Lockerbie Hotel —123 S. Illinois St, Riley 4562

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Sometliivuj Afjew CRAN B E RRY JcebatCab 2 cups Ten-Minute Cranberry Sauce 1 egg white 1 sponge cake % pint cream Add the stiffly beaten egg white to the cold Ten-Minute Cranberry Sauce. Slice a sponge cake so as to fit the pan. Alternate layers of cake and sauce until the pan is full, finishing w r ith a layer of cake. Place a weight on top and set in ice box for 6to 8 hours. Unmold and garnish with whipped cream. Chopped nuts, dates and figs can be added if desired. Recipe book mailed free, Adilrcsx: Dept, N —AMERICAN ® CRANBERRY EXCHANGE I JO West Broadway, New York City tammßmHwlHHHiilkiM

and welts, and a graceful wing as in the illustration.. And it’s good this season both in smooth calf and Scotch grain. Blucher type shoes still hold their

own with the comfort lovers. That’s the shoe whose tongue exi tends from the vamp of the shoe. If you were in the army, you wore the Blucher cut shoe. It’s best in black calf. Know what the newest, smartest shoe color it? If you’ve been to a college campus recently, you’ve probably seen it/ Or on the feet of some well-dressed clubman. It’s the new dark red shell cordovan shade—varnished a real dark

color—and especially good in that sporty wing tip model. That’s the newest—and most important fashion tip on shoes. What’s the right shoe to wear at night? Most men prefer the patent leather oxford with plain, and an easy, not-too-pointed toe. But the college men and many of

the two-pair-of-shoe men are doing their dancing in dull calf oxfords, which in our opinion is a better looking shoe. (Copyright. 1931. bv Amos Parrishl Next: Amos Parrish has some news on table settings.

If you’re a tall, thin man, did you know that certain materials, colors and types of suits will help fill you out and make you look less lean? If you’d like to know, write Amos Parrish, care of The Times, inclosing stamped, addressed envelope.

CARDS MAILED FOR CIVIC’S CONCERTS Announcement is made that membership cards for the season’s series of concerts to be given by the Civic Music Association, a local civic enterprise, were mailed to members Tuesday. Officers ask that any member who does not receive his card promptly communicate to that effect w’ith the treasurer, Paul R. Matthews, 910 Fletcher Trust building. Mrs. Schubert Hostess Mrs. Carl Schubert, 1847 Brookside avenue, will be hostess tonight for a business meeting of the Alpha Tau chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Press Club Hears Talk by Haramy John J. Haramy, professor of history at Indiana Central college, spoke Tuesday at the luncheon meeting of the Woman’s Press Club of Indiana at the Columbia Club on his experiences as a press correspondent in the Near East. Mrs. Edward C. Toner, Anderson, president, presided. Miss Juliet Crittenberger, program chairman, announced the annual Christmas party and guest daywill be held Dec. 8 at the home of Mrs. Samuel Ralston, “Hoosier Home,” with Mrs. Julian Hogate, Danville; Mrs. Mabel Harlan and Miss Kathryn Pickett as the arrangements committee. Mrs. Toner appointed Mrs. William Herschel transportation chairman, and asked that members driving accommodate other members who will meet at noon at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Crittenberg also announced that Mrs. Helen Lotspeich, Cincinnati, will speak at the January meeting. Mrs. Lotspeich originated the “Outdoor School for Children” in Cincinnati for her own children about twenty years ago. So successful was the plan that enrollments were opened and 161 now attend the school. Mrs. Florence Ward, Batavia, 111., author of “Second Eden,” and Mrs. Jessie Ewbanks, psychologist of the University of Cincinnati, also will speak during the year. Haramy related unusual experi-

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Crittendon Home President Names Committee Chairmen

Mrs. Albert R. Coffin, president of the board of directors of the Florence Crittendon home, has appointed committee chairmen for the coming year. They are: Mesdames W. H. Morrison, adoption; J. William Wright, household

Slip Covers Slip covers on furniture should be snapped securely in place so that they won’t present an untidy, wrinkled appearance. Use a very large snap and sew half of it on the piece of furniture and the other half on the reverse side of the slip cover. Continue until all the cover is fastened securely.

ences in Palestine and other cities of the Holy Land. He was in Jerusalem at the beginning of the Zionist movement and spoke of trivialities that resulted in riots between the Jews and Arabs. He described a trip to Transjordania, the trans-Jordan territory ruled by King Abdulla, and his introduction to "guest chambers” peculiar to Oriental countries where there are no hotels. Haramy also described the scene, when England gave Egypt her independence, of more than 20,000 Egyptians in parade, each waving tiny American flags, and shouting, “Long live America,” “long live liberty,” associating their independence with Woodrow Wilson’s principal of self-determination.

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supplies; John Brant, food supplies, and I. C. De Haven, drug supplies. New officers or the board, elected 1 last week at the monthly luncheon meeting, are: Mrs. Coffin, re-elected: Mesdames De Haven, first vice-president; R. L. Kelser. j second vice-president; H. D. Hartley, third J vice-president; Charles O Roemler. treasurer: Eldo Wagner. recording secretary; ]Uz McMurtrie. corresponding secretary, j re-elected; R. T. Blatchley and Harvey | Belton, delegates to Indianapolis Council i of Social Agencies. Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall, a former board member, was a guest of honor at the luncheon last week. Mrs. Cannon to Be Hostess , for Alumnae Mrs. Fermor S. Cannon, 4231 North Pennsylvania street, will be hostess tonight for the November meeting of Beta Beta alumnae chapter cf Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Following a buffet supper, a program arranged by Mrs. J. Cleve F;:: will be given by the Junior Melody Boys orchestra, directed by George L. Stork. The program of popular airs will be opened and closed by the sorority songs. Assisting the hostess will be: Mesdames Joseph Buck. Clarence Weaver. W. W. Mcßeth: Misses Lorinda Cottingham. Katherine Smith. Rea Bauer. Edith Allen and Geraldine Reen.

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Mrs. Shank to Be Hostess at Browne Fete Mrs. Samuel Lewis Shank will be hostess for the luncheon at 12:30 Friday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club in honor of Dr. Lewis Browne, following his appearance at 11 at English's theater as the third Indianapolis Town Hall speaker. Dr. Brown’s subject will be “Why We Need Religion.” He will be introduced at the lecture by Mrs. Shank. Mrs. Shank’s committee includes Senator Arthur R. Robinson and Mrs. Robinson: Dr. and Mrs. Walter S. Athearn, Mrs. Frank Manly, Miss Clara Gilbert, Attorney-General James M. Ogden, John W. Atherton, Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks and Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht Dr. Browne will hold an open

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A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Canned pineapple, scrambled eggs with bacon, bran muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Baked squash, peanut butter and rye bread sandwiches, combination vegetable salad, floating island, crisp cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — Tamale pie, cauliflower in cream sauce. escarole with bacon dressing, apple snow, milk, coffee.

forum following the luncheon, and Town Hall patrons are invited to attend.