Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 26, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1932 — Page 11
JUNE 10. 1032
Women of G.O.P. Open Convention Nominees named at the Republiran state convention were to speak at the state convention of the Indiana Council of Republican Women at the Columbia Club which was opened at 9:30 this morning by Mrs. Frank J. Lahr, president. Offices which were to be represented by nominees are United States senator, governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, superintendent of public instruction, supreme court reporter, attoney-gencral, judges of the supreme court of the third and fifth districts and Judges of the appellate court of the first and second divisions. All wome n candidates were to be introduced. Mrs. T. J. Louden, Bloomington, second vice-president, presided at the morning session. Mrs. Lahr, was in charge of both sessions The day's program was to be as follows: * CO—Registration. Rover of ball room 9 30 First stare counrll convention called to order. Lord's Prayer repeated in unison Organization of convention. Appointment of committees. Gratings, Mrs. Charle' M. Dawson chairman Marion Cos. council. Response. Mrs. Robert A Dennle, chairman of hostesses Roll Call, Officers and committees, 10 00 Reading of the Constitution of the Indiana Council of Republican Women Treasurer's report, Mrs. Zeola Hershey Misener. Secretary \s report, Miss Elizabeth Paul. Reacting of communications. 10 30- Community singing Reports of district, and county councils. Reports of standing and special committees. 11:00—President's message, Mrs. Frank J. Lahr, Mrs. T. J Louden, second vice-president presiding. Reprtrt of tnidttor Report of credentials committee. 7?cpot-i of educational program committee. Report of council magazine commit tr e Siihirt; - .on of resolutions hv district. councils to resolutions committee 11 30—AddrcfscsMrs Frank Donner. speaking as director of Republican clubs Mrs. Frank D Hatfield, speakers bureau and publicity. Mrs. Franklin 8 Reynolds, assistant. for state field work Miss Dorothy Cunningham, national committee woman of Indiana. Harry G. Leslie. Governor of Indiana. Mr Ivan C. Morgan, state Republican chairman Mrs. J ,E. P. Holland, state Republican vice-chairman. Mrs C W. Boucher, national speaker, first, vice-president of council, flong, "America the Beautiful." Adjournment. 13 30—Luncheon, Ball room, Mrs. Frank L. Lahr. presiding Invocation. Mrs. Felix T McWhirter. 1 30- Music.. Women's chorus. Introduction of distinguished guests and officers. Short speeches, candidates nominated in state Republican convention. Introduction of women candidates. Music, Mrs. Fred a. Purnell, soloist. Reports. Credentials and resolutions committees. Announcements Song, "America." Adjourn, sine die
fMANNtRWA/OALS) flX'ByjAN£ Jordan XPI
WHEN a letter appeals to you, and makes you think, write your reactions to Jane Jordan, who will publish your letters in this column. Prar Jane .Jordan—ls K really true (hat men have more respect lor the virtuous girl? Among my friends, there is a girl who has had a love affair with a young college man. She was not virtuous. Now that. he. is through school, they are going to be married. It marie no difference to him that she had a Firevious love affair and was, in fact, ntiniate with him. ft is every girl's ultimate aim to get married. Sometimes she meets a man who isn't in a position to marrv What shall she do? This is a verv vital question. How shall we face it? It, is needless to say morals have changed. Our mothers are helpless. They can not. guide us. We are young and we want love. Ail around us we see unvirtuous maidens getting married while we are told bv the men "You are virtuous because you haven't, been tempted." How little thev know! Sunday T was with three other attractive girls. We played bridge, took a walk, and sweltered in the heat. We are all attractive and lovable No one came by for us in a car to take us out of the beat Next, door the young girl was called for in a snappy roadster by a presentable young man. This afternoon she announced her engagement-. How can she have her cake and eat It. too? According to our parents' teaching. If we are good girls we will be appreciated. Bulk! All around us the not-so-good girls are having a good time while the "nice" girls sit on the porch and play bridge. And vet I can't be any other way. A NTCF. GIRL. Dear Nice Girl—What you say is perfectly true. Some young girls break all the conventions in the category and get away with it. Others try to emulate them and get their fingers badly burned. There always have been girls who were intimate with their fiances before marriage, and there is no evidence that they were punished for their misdemeanor, or suffered the loss *of their husband's respect. Others try the same thing and a great tragedy ensues. You ask me why some girls can have their cake and eat it, too. I do not know. Some love affairs succeed without benefit of clergy, and some go down to defeat. 1 do not know the answer to this baffling problejn any more than you do, except that it seems to depend on the nature of the peoTwo Types pie involved. of Women of women break soBreak Rule ciety's rules—the very weak or the very strong. Some women are too wish.v washy to adhere to a standard of conduct which Interferes with their immediate desires. Others are too independent to accept the code of the average. Two classes of people are immoral today. One is composed of the sly and unprincipled. The other is made up of intellectual rebels. Each of these groups is relatively small and the vast gulf that separates them is filled with the average citizen. This great middle group constitutes public opinion. They are the ones who make our laws and demand that we conform. They are the ones who give us our jobs and ostracize us if they catch us breaking their code. The v*st majority of husband material is contained in the ir idd 1 e Rea] Crime group, which insists upon con- * s Romp ventional morale Found Out They are the men who have more respect for the virtuous girl, provided they are in a marrying mood. For purposes of pleasure, they court the girl with no standards and drop her like a hot cake when they are ready to choose a wife. They live by the eleventh commandment. 'Thou shalt not be found out.” Women are notoriously short on discernment. They see one young girl maintain a liaison with a ycung college man whose moral ideas are
—WHA T'S IN FA SHI ON
NEW YORK, June 10.—Of course, the bathing costume that beats them all is what you wore at the old swtmmin' hole as a boy. And we think that the 1932 suits come as near to that as any suit could. Studying the one-piece suits we saw at Palm Beach and Miami, we noticed that the plain suit and the port-hole kind stack up sbout fiftyfifty. Port-hole suits, of course, are the ones wrtch have connecting straps under the arms, as shown in the standing figure in the sketch. Aside from that, the one-piece suits—what there is of them—are about the same. The minimum of material in front . . . back bared for a good suntan practically down to the waist . , . skirts reaching just to the end of the brief shorts. Many Prefer Black As they parked here and there in the sun, we noticed that a good many men prefer black, although there was enough color to make things look lively, i Black, however, is an especially good choice for portly men, as it has a way of making waists seem smaller than they are.)Not that the two-piece suit has been shunted. It's keeping abreast with the others. And it's apt to be more colorful. The top of a horizontal bar stripe or a plain i light shade. No fancy business, however ... no modernistic effects i or allover patterns, i Put they plunge into such new • effects as gray tops with maroon trunks, yellow tops with brown trunks, green tops with darker green trunks. Or maybe a stripe of three colors . . . black, red and white, say. Use Different Tops If you swim a lot and like to look ! a bit different from time to time, i you might have two different tops to wear with the same trunks. The trunks themselves, though dark colored, have a bright stripe down the sides to match the tops. Asa matter of fact, when you gel to looking over these slick, new suits, you'll find yourself t,h ! nking that, after all, they're so romfortable and good-looking you prefer them to the swimmjn' hole outfit,! iCoovright, 1932. Amos Parrish) Next—Metal furniture for the garden. Maps Pledge Services Miss Louise Moorehead, 1242 College avenue, will be hostess to Alpha chapter, lota Tau sorority, at her home tonight. Pledge services will be held for Miss Dorothy Parley.
more Russian than American. The liaison ends happily in a marriage. With signal lack of judgment they try the same experiment with a man of traditional upbringing and are heart broken when he turns on them with righteous invective. Judge Ben Lindsey, who is the greatest friend that rebellious youth has in this counYou’re Not try. says that it is Fitted to Z r 'Sr Iy m„ 8e :; ous tor men or Touch Fire women to defy their own traditions. Even when they intellectually accept freedom from moral restraint, their subconscious emotions rise up and smite them, You say you are a "nice girl" and you can’t be anj r other way. My answer is by all means don't try. You are not equipped by temperament or training to experiment with fire. Where one girl wins, a thou- | sand lose. Remember, it is the exceptional male and not the average j who does not demand chastity in women. And even he expects the most exemplary conduct after marj riage. My own attitude toward'the young people who are flying in the face of traditions is neither to prdise nor condemn them, but to watch their course as sympathetically as passible. to see how much I can learn. As Galsworthy says in one of his novels. "I am not sure of anything, and I mistrust those who are." RECENT BRIDES FETED AT SHOWER Mrs. Floyd Summers and Mrs. Roy Gibbs, recent brides, were honored at a pewter and miscellaneous shower given Wednesday hight by Mrs. Frank Leibold, Mrs. G. E. Blakeman. and Mrs. William C. Moeller, at the home of Mrs Leibold. 1401 West Thirty-fourth ; street. Tables for bunco were arranged in the garden, and at serving time were decorated with flowers and tapers in the rainbow shades. Guests were: Mesdames Iva Wasson, G. E. Cavanaugh' Elmer Moeller, Merle J. Long, John McGuire, Misses Mary Lober. Doris Lober. Ruth Mitchell, and Cleo Jeffers
OPENING SPECIALS Shampoo, Finger W ave and Mani- !| cure, or Facial and 51 Arch, or Finger W ave. Arch and Manicure. ESTHER “B” BEAUTY SHOPPE 605 Roosevelt Bldg. LI. 0777
Have Your FUR COAT Refined, Cleaned ai (ft _ A Stored-- 5 I / > 0 All for ■ As Fox Scarfs Cleaned SI .5Q <Fnr Not I,ry Clou nod > INDIANA FUR fO. 138 W. Market St., Est. 38 Yrs. ’Tve-n ” - • • * :mi'| *•“ lehouse
Men’s Swim Suits Are Briefer Directed by AMOS PARRISH
W I l li AST I l r
Bridge-Shower Arranged for Future Bride At a bridge tea and linen shower this afternoon, at the home of Mrs. Claude C. Sprurrier, Miss Lorinda Cottingham. bride-elect, will be honor guest. Mrs. Spurrier will be assisted by her daughter, Miss Mary Jo Spurrier. Decorations and appointments
SRMBST^n J I
riotft CLIP COUPONS AND SAVE-BUY NOW! Our Regular $19.75 B Combination” SAVING ■I Cos pon I CLIP THIS COUPON AND SAVE 85.55 Our Regular $12.50 LADIES’ OR GENTS’ WRIST Wfgeggm I Watches s^^9s I $5.55 'savibig |; WM .11*1 It . sij l ( lin Thi, (’miinm < tit ~FREEI” ENTER OUR BULOVA CON- G”'" J” 7^*7. test: sin.oon in prizes: |C#3 if TIM . Today B ,n n' l t Buy!
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
will be in the bridal colors of green, yellow and orchid. Garden flowers will be arranged on the serving table and in the house. Guests with Miss Cottingham will be: Mesdames C B Cottingham. J. O. Cottingham, C. Richter Castle. J. W. Noble, Harold Haught, George Dailey, Isa Morris and the Misses Helen Noble, Dorothy Peterson, Martha Baker, Helen Hartinger and the Misses Isabelle and Asberene Morris, and their house guest. Club Calls Session Lambda Gamma club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the home of Miss Doris Winthrop avenue.
Hibben School Pageant Is Set for Saturday Annual pageant presented by pupils of the Hibben school, will be given at 7.30 Saturday night at i the Irvington public school auditor - ! ium, Ritter and East Washington 1 streets. This is the fifteenth year ■ in which the pageant has been presented. The title this year is "Gardens and Kindergartens." Miss Helene Hibben, director of the school, will be assisted by Miss Hazen Hibben, and the following
REM! REALIZE! ACT QUICK AND PROFIT on SATURDAY at First Block Mass. Ave.* 23 Years Great Going-Out-of Business Sale ) REMEMBER Come THERE MEN’S SUITS I ——Bunched for Final Disposal at— Included in This Come to p ri. Are I■■ ■ I First RAIN Jp JH Saturday COATS 1 Mm wmmm I And You Won’ PANTS All Mm ___ HATS Si*®* Mm others _. _c -All AaMMi |7O Fixtures CAPS Modeled* <“’l1 7 For Salc m + at Lowest FULL, Suits Prices speed Ov6PCOBtS You Ever AHEAD . |p| Heard of All Must * OpCOoIS all must BE SOLD And Will ___ Ail will be found in this great group m sizes Be Sold to fit. Men, Young Men and Students. We SHIRTS must turn this stock into cash in the shortest possible time. Our loss is your gain. Make HOSE no mistake about the values, for you are buyPANTS! ing fine all-wool clothing in the latest New I Underwear York styles at less than factory cost. An op- q , PANTS! portunity like this may never happen again, I Sweaters P A MTQ f a * you k now that depression has put prices HATS r AIN IS. at a sub-normal level and we are dropping way below even the maker’s cost today. CAPS At Prices That Will Startle At Sensational the Town | Read! Realize! Act Quick!l Price> | Store open TONIGHT till 9 o'clock
members of the faculty: Mrs. Robert Insley, Miss Phyllis Nordstrom, Miss Katherine Hurlbert, and Miss Anna Faussett. Hostesses for the evening will be Mesdames Kenneth Badger. Homer Eichacker. O. R. Basico, Carl Spies, W. J. Weesner, C. F. Auman, Lionel Chandler, and Carl Niesse. Ushers will be Misses Zeredla Rubush, Ada Rubush, Gertrude Insley, and Mary Insley. Sorority To Initiate Rho Gamma Chi sorority will hold initiation services tonight at the home of Miss Virginia Wechsler, 2022 Mansfield avenue. Initiates are Misses Eleanor Shultz, Kathleen Connor, Martha Ruwe and Rosaline Frieji.
Sorority Gives Luncheon for Butler Seniors Senior members of the Butler j university chapter of Kappa Kappa i Gamma sorority were honor guests at a luncheon today at the chapter j house, 821 Hampton drive, and will be entertained tonight at the commencement dance, to be held at the : Highland Golf and Country club. Miss Delight Morrison was ehair- - man of the luncheon committee, asI sisted by Misses Betty Lou Poley, j Mary Stierwalt and Kathryn Fit-
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chey. Spring flowers were used in the decorations Gifts were awarded seniors, who are: Misses Adelaide Gouid, Cosette Scholl. Dione Kerlin, Cosette Hutchinson and Myla Smith. of the dance assisted by Misses MarMiss Jane Williston is in charge garet Lewis, Jean Underwood, Betty Dodds, Miss Fitchey and Miss Morrison. Chaperons will be Mrs. Edna M. Christian. Dr. and Mrs. M. D. Baumgartner, Dr. and Mrs. T. S. Reavis and Miss Helen Shimer. Use Your Leftovers You can buy patty shells for very little money that will enable you to use leftover meat, in a creamed or cheese sauce, in a de luxe manner.
