Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 173, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1932 — Page 10

PAGE 10

Vote League Will Honor Two Women A luncheon, to be given Friday at the Columbia Club by the executive board of the Indiana League of Women Voters, will honor Miss Bess Bobbins, member of the general assembly from Marion county, and Miss Emma May of Terre Haute, recently elected reporter of the supreme court. Mrs. Virginia Jenckes of Terre Haute, recently elected congresswoman from the Sixth congressional district, also was invited to the luncheon but will be unable to attend as she is in Washington to attend the short session of congress. The board will meet in the state office in the morning to select the legislative program, to be sponsored during the 1933 session of the general assembly. The legislative program was adopted at the convention in March. The board of directors will decide on specific measures to sponsor. The Indianapolis League will hold a luncheon meeting Wednesday at the Columbia Club when the subject of ‘ Probation Needs in Indiana," will be discussed by Professor Charles R. Metzger of Indiana university. Solon Vial, chief probation officer of 'the municipal court of Marion county, will speak at the meeting on ‘ How Probation Sdves Money.” Mrs. Dorothy Goodrich, chairman of the child welfare committee of the local league, will preside. Reservations may be made by telephoning the office of the Indiana League ‘of Women Voters.

Corpse Club Is Arranging For Holiday Dance Asa part of the Christmas holiday festivities, the Corpse Club will hold its annual dance Dec. 23 at the Woodstock Club. Jack Appel is president; Homer Lathrop, treasurer, and Daniel Morris, secretary. Among the active members are: Irvine W. Lemaux Jr.. .Joseph Miner Jr.. Card Remv. Allen and Alex Carroll. Tom Mumford Gcoree Snvder. Bingham Booker, Geddas. John Ray Newcomb Jr. and William McMurtrie. More than 300 persons are expected to attend the affair.

EDUCATOR TO TALK AT TUDOR. HALL

Burton P. Fowler president of the Progressive Education Association and headmaster of Tower Hill school at Wilmington, Del., will be presented by the mothers’ group of Tudor Hall at a 1 o’clock luncheon at the school Monday, Dec. 5. Fowler’s subject wiil be “Can Education Face Facts?" He was one of the principal speakers at the convention of the association in Baltimore in February and a discussion leader in the regional meeting in New York this fall. SOPHOMORES WILL HOLD COTILLION The sophomore class of Butler university will hold its annual cotillion Saturday night at the Marott when it will elect the most popular man and woman in the class. Candidates have been selected, but the names will not be announced until the night of the dance. Connie and his orchestra with Henry Watkins will provide music. Howard Campbell is chairman.

WOMEN’S ROTARY TO FROLIC DEC. 21 Mrs. Ida Strawn Baker, 1635 North Delaware street, will be the hostess to the annual Christmas party of the Woman's Rotary club, which will be held Dec. 21. Miss Frances Beik is chairman of the arrangements. Plans for the party were announced at the luncheon meeting of the club Monday at the Columbia club. Speakers were: Judgfc Delbert O. Wilmeth, who spoke for the sale of Christmas seals, and Mrs. Edwin F. Walker, who spoke on “Desert Experiences.” MRS. SHE ROW IS FETED AT BRIDGE Mrs. M. J. Sherow, 3034 North Delaware street, was the honor guest at a farewell bridge party Monday night, given by-Mrs. Max Finkelstein, 2903 North Talbot street. Mrs. Sherow is leaving soon with her family, to live in Chicago. Guests with Mrs. Sherow were: Mesdames Simon Kaplan, Harrv Berner. Nellie Barnett, Samuel Alpert, Harry Sn.vder and Morris Stein. RUTH HOLLOWELL TO WED CITY MAN The engagement of Miss Ruth Hollowell, 530 Rochester avenue, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Hollowell. Miss Hollowell is to be married to Paul William Millholland, 3940 Rookwood avenue. Course to Be Resumed Contract bridge lessons, sponsored by the Woman's Athletic Club will be resumed at 3:30 Wednesday at the Hoosier Athletic Club. The teachers are Mrs. Louise Brooks and Edward Wolf. ,

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Honeydew melon, cereal, cream, browned hash with tomato sauce, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream of onion soup, croutons, fruit * salad, brown bread and butter sandwiches, old-fashioned bread pudding, milk, tea. Dinner — Fricassee of rabbit, mashed potatoes, creamed new turnips, apple and celery salad, pumpkin .pie, milk, coffee.

Furnish Room for Your Child; That Is Best Present for His Christmas

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This room for a little girl is done in lipstick red and sapphire blue. The furniture is left unpainted, and the couch is covered with a blue plaid linen with red and yellow lines.

BY JULIA BLANSHARD NEA Service Writer YORK, Nov. 2b' -Santa Claus, being practical this year, suggests that you give your child a room of his or her own for Christmas. No toys, trips, clothes or gadgets could give as much pleasure as a little haven that the child and nobody else has the right to enter. You don’t need to spend a fortune on it. If you start now, you can have it complete in time for Christmas morning. Children’s rooms this year have

IMANNEWHVOALS) ffiy By jANfc JokpAn ypj

WORRIED wives are invited to bring their problems to Jane Jordan, who will help them to see the masculine viewpoint and to understand the puzzling husbands better. Dear Jane Jordan —What do you think of a husband who wants his wife to drink? Mv husband and I have been married a short time. X would be happy except for this. Before we were married. I knew he drank and liked wild parties. He knew I did not drink or ,smoke or go on those wild parties. So. before we were married, he promised me that he would stop going around with that crowd and settle down. But now he wants me to go and do as he wants me to. I don’t think any wife should expect her husband to sit home night after night, for they don't do it in this age. But it seems to me there are more good times than iust drinking. Mv husband is very intelligent, in some things and he has a good education. One night I went with him and drank as he wanted me to. I thought this would disgust him. but it didn’t. I love him and I don't want to leave him. I’m so unhappy. He is 25 and I’m 20. Would someone please give me some advice? H. W. Dear H. W.—Have you ever asked yourself why your husband wants you to drink? It is not the alcohol per se which he values, but its effect on you. No man wants his wife to become a liquor addict, but if she tr.kes life to seriously and does not know how to play, he hopes that a little drink will help her to escape from herself, from the staid, the stupid, the conventional, and the dullness of everyday living. Alcohol is in disrepute because people so often abuse it. think that since a little has such a pleasant effect that more is bound to be better, ami herein lies the great delusion. One or two drinks are relished by the best of people. Liquor starts Abuse, jNot another reaction TTse Ts Its going in the or " use, is its ganism struggling Failing to £ et along in a hostile universe. Living loses its serious aspect for, the nonce, and the temporary relief is welcomed by the drinker. So far. so good. If drinking never went any farther than this it would be a godsend to the human race. To people who knew how to use it, it is, in fact, a valuable aid in moments of trial, when the mind revolves around its problems like an electric fan and will permit no surcease from thinking. Who among us, caught in a snarl of circumstances, has not longed to drop his Tad for a few hours’ rest? The danger of. a drink lies in the fact that it dulls the judgment and many of us do not have the strength to refrain from another, another, and another. An o\fr- Digitalis ■dose of alcohol T r . turns us from en- '- xlven tertaining people as Example into holy bores j who can be tolerated only by other inebriates. The effect of too much liquor is so revolting that people like yourself have turned from it with fear and fury. They forget that "it is not the use, but the misuse, of alcohol which is bad. A little digitalis is a life-saver to a physically sick heart. Too much produces the vilest kind of nausea. Is the drug bad because the patient took too much? Or is ignorance the particeps criminus? Do doctors throw it out because an overdose makes people sick, or do they seek to control its use by educating the patient? Now I am not advising you to . . . drink. Far from Entertain it. iam striving Him! ThatV only to hel PJ 0U see your problem Solution through clear, unprejudiced eyes. , Above all, I want you to understand why your husband drinks, and, like a wise wife, seek not to take away that which is productive of some easement to him, but only to help him control its use. Your husband works hard all day. He is, no doubt, beset with a thousand business difficulties with which he never thinks,, to burden you. When he comes home at night he hopes to leave all that behind. He ! wants to play, for men are play- * boys who are happiest when they

austere simplicity, but a cheery at>mosphere, induced by gay color. If you buy new furniture, you can leave it unpainted or simply varnished. If you want to use things you have, scrape off the finish and paint it all some good gay color. Brilliant blues are fine for girls’ rooms. They can be used with more somber colors, to tone them down. Soft greens are excellent and combine with any color you want to accent them with. Instead of figured wall-paper, plain surfaces will give you more sense of space. Creamy yellow walls make a piace sunny.

are escaping from any consideration of themselves, their work, and their worries. Women are not half so playful. They are realists, who find it difficul to forget themselves and things as they are under any circumstances. They make a f atal mistake when they strive to persuade their husbands to settle down to the dull domesticity upon which they seem to thrive. If you wish to lessen your husband’s need of alcohol, remember that playing is more effective than preaching. Entertain him. Before your marriage his sex curiosity about you provided the escape which he needed, and even tricked him into a rash promise to settle down after marriage. Now that curiosity is gratified, and his thoughts turn wistfully to the gay parties of yesterday. The average wife has too few csources for interesting her husband. After she presents him with her chastity, she has no surprises left. She’s married now and that’s all there is to it. She sees no necessity for laying intriguing plans to her husband’s love each day, and feels no urge to add anything new and exciting to their common life. Happy is the man who marries a woman who is perpetually interesting, whose mind is alert to his interests, and who is full of bright ideas about ways to keep him occupied in his spare time. The one and only answer to your problem is “Keep your husband entertained.”

GUEST ARTIST

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Miss Alma Igelman

Miss Alma Igelman, lyric soprano. will be guest artist at the Mu Phi Epsilon concert Thursday night at Caleb Mills hall. She will be accompanied by Mrs. Louise Mason Caldwell. Assisting Miss Igelman will be the Mu Phi singing strings, directed by Miss Jeannette Orloff. The concert is for the benefit, of the scholarship fund.

Personals

Miss Dorothy Johnston, daughter of Mrs. Samuel A. Johnston, 2127 North Alabama street, is visiting Miss Madelyn Stroup, at Hallidaysburg. Pa. Mrs. Paul H. White, 1321 North Meridian street, is the guest of her daughter Mrs. John S. Loomis, in Winnetka, 111. Mr. and Mrs. t. E. Woodward, 5104 Orth Meridian street, spent the Thanksgiving holidays with their daughter, Alice Ann. at the Westtown Boarding school at Philadelphia. Miss Anne Ayres, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres, 5700 Sunset lane, will return soon from a visit in the east.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

A figured border, in the color of your furnishings, ties into your color scheme handsomely. For this room, the smallest room in the house will suffice, if you are crowded for space. Just enough width to put a studio couch across one side. Just enough length to have % work table or desk and a few easy chairs and a bookcase or two. An ideal room for the modern girl does its color scheme in a lipstick red and gay sapphire blue. It uses unpainted furniture for the which flank the little desk-table, the low table by couch and the rocking chair. It covers the arm chair with a neat plaid linen, in the blue of the floor with red and yellow lines in it. This same linen makes the tailored slip-cover for the couch and the rag rugs combine the same gay colors in their patterns. Walls Are Cream The w r alls are painted cream with a two-foot baseboard effect of clear white. Where this meets the cream, there is a little narrow, but colorful, border of the blue and red. If your room is very small, it is better not to use this, unless you put it neaj- the bottom of the floor or the top of the wall, near the ceiling. The floor is the sapphire blue of the linen. One of the nicest things about such a room is the closet opening off of it. P’or a young girl, paint the entire sides of the closet red, have the floor blue and the ceiling cream. A chest of drawers shotßd be placed at the end, if room is afforded. Use hangars that are the red or the blue. And. most important of all, have a mirror in the door, if you possibly can afford it. The growing girl needs a full length mirror to help her look her best so she will not be bothered with self-consciousness. “Studios" for Boys The same good workmanship characterizes these new rooms for girls that goes into boys’ rooms. They are studios, rather than bedrooms. This atmosphere invites them to seek repose there for reading, writing, for entertaining friends. If you can’t afford to fix such a room entirely, why not set the room aside, have the walls and floors done and then give just a piece or two of furniture to start the room? Your girl or boy will turn proudly to and help paint and even help save money to finish up the room. For children appreciate the dignity a room of their own gives them. Asa Christmas gift, it can not be excelled.

Sororities

Delta Rho chapter of Phi Pi Psi sorority held a dinner party Sunday at Whispering Winds. Pi Sigma Tau sorority entertained with a rush party at 8 Monday night at the Washington. The regular business meeting of the Alpha Nu chapter of tfffe Alpha Zeta Beta sorority has been changed to 6:30 tonight,, at the Lincoln. The Psi chapter of Chi Sigma will sponsor a bridge party tonight at Cooper’s restaurant. Miss Irene Parrish will be chairman of the committee in charge. The regular meeting of the Thesi club will be held tonight at the home of Miss Janet Hill, 6051 Central avenue. The next meeting of Alpha chapter of Sigma Phi sorority will be in the form of a spread, at the home of Mrs. Helen Sinnett, 717 -North Grant avenue.

BROOKSIDE O. E■ S. TO GIVE PLAYLET Members of the Past Matrons and Patrons Club of Brookside O. E. S., 481, will give a playlet entitled “White Rose School Dayze” at the annual meeting of the” Brookside auxiliary today. Mrs. Anna Mason is president of the club, and Mrs. Josephine Fortney is vice-president of Brookside auxiliary. Alumnae to Gather Butler club of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will meet at the chapter house Friday night. Mrs. Vincent Ball is general chairman of arrangements.

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Y. W. Will Hold Bridge at Center The weekly open house evening at the Central Y. W. C. A. will feature a bridge party tonight, under the direction of Miss Dorothy Lang, 2115 Broadway. Swimming may be enjoyed between 5:30 and 9. Games such as ping pong, shuffle board and table games will be played. Entries in the ping pong tournament to be held Dec. 6 and 13- may be made tonight. Miss Nellie Slate, 59 North Layman avenue, will direct the tournament. On Tuesday, Dec. 13. family night will be celebrated, with special free entertainment, following the showing of a motion picture, for which there will be a small admission fee. On Wednesday night Mrs. Bjorn Winger will give the w r eekly book review at the Y. W. Mrs. Winger will review “Far Away” by J. B. Priestley and “Charlotte Bronte" by Benson. This group is open to single admission, and meets from 7 to 8.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- *5073 tern No. i Size : Street - r City Stat Name

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EASY SEWING DETAILS MARK THIS NEW MODEL

Slim, young and modern, here’s an “easy-to-make” frock that belongs in eyery wardrobe. It boasts some of the newest details of the season—the dropped shoulders, for instance, and the puffed sleeves that are caught at the wrist by fitted sections. The slim skirt is widened by pleats introduced in a panel effect. It’s the height of chic, this season, to substitute gray for the usual touch ’of white on brown woolen frocks of this type. This sophisticated color combination dates the frock months ahead. Size 16 requares 2% yards 54-inch material, % yard 39-inch contrasting. Width about I*4 yard. Pattern No. 5073 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 bust. Price 15 cents. Are you planning a wedding? Would you like the latest news in fashions for home dressmakers? Order a copy of our new Fashion magazine. Price 10 cents.

OFREE 1 -lb. Package of OATS When You Buy a One-Pound Can of KO-WE-BA 1 Coffee at Its Popular / Price This special offer is good k/ ' i for a short time only. Ask YY / your Independent Grocer

What’s in Fashion?

Two Costumes in Pinafore Dress Directed By AMOS PARRISH

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NEW YORK, Nov. 29.—Practical. That’s what the girls are getting to be. So they’ve taken to wearing aprons over their dresses and creating the smart young fashion of the pinafore dress. Not that these aproqs are intended to keep the dress clean. They’re not starchy, ruffly white ones, of course. They’re made of the same material and in the same color as the dress beneath them. And they’re a very definite part of the costume. Without the apron, the dress wouldn't be the smart pinafore fashion that the ytjung folks like. Whole Dress Beneath The apron never is used with any other dress. But there's a whole and complete dress beneath . the apron part. Usually a very simple affair with little if any decoration of its own. But . . . add a scarf, a belt or a bit of jewelry—whatever it needs . , . and this simple dress is transformed into a second complete smarUfOstume. So, you see, the idea of the pinafore dress really is practical. Two dresses for the price of one. Occasionally you find a combination of a sleeveless or short sleeved dress under a long-sleeved pinafore. With the pinafore the costume is smart for any daytime wear. Ready for Dinner But take off the pinafore .. . . at the end of a day at the office, perhaps . . . and you’re set for dinner or theater. The more usual thing, though, is the simple, long-sleeved dress with sleeveless apron. Then the apron ... or pinafore . . . ties or buttons around the neck and again around the waist. And it hangs to within about two or three inches of the dress skirt length. In the dress sketched, the pinafore part both ties and buttons and the buttons make a smart decoration in back. We had it sketched from the back to show you how it fastens. But pinafore dresses are just as smart front-w’ise as backwards. (Conyright. 1932. bv Amos Parrish) Next: Mirrors give pleasure that lasts year through. BENSON IS BENEFIT RECITAL SPEAKER Dr. John Benson will talk on “That Boy of Ours” at 8 tonight at a benefit organ recital sponsored by the Circle 6, Second Presbyterian church. Proceeds will be used for the Mayer chapel fund. VASSAR CLUB TO STAGE BREAKFAST The Indiana Vassar club will give its annual breakfast Dec. 30 at the Propylaeum. Miss Carolyn Richardson is president and will preside.

DRAMATIC CLUB IS TO GIVE COMEDY

Mrs. Laurel Hendren will have the leading role in “Nora Wake Up.” three-act comedy-drama, to be given Thursday and Friday nights

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by the Kendall Dramatic Club. The performance will be given in the auditorium of School 62, Wallace and East Tenth streets. Harold Ar nholter is the director. The other members of the cast include: Mesdames Katherine Fontaine, Fretta feeitz and

Mrs. rtenuren

Pearl Gwynn and Paul Keller, Paul Driscoll, George Joslin and John Nicholson.

MUNCIE WILL -VIEW JR, LEAGUE EXHIBIT

An exhibit of articles of the Junior League shop will be taken to Muncie Wednesday and Thursday where 'it will be displayed in the parish house of the Episcopal church! This is the first of a series of special exhibits in various Indiana towns. , Those to make the trip are Mrs. Robert A. Adams, chairman; Mrs. Edgar S. Gorrell, Mrs. Chauncey Fno, Mrs. G. M. Williams and Miss Julia Brink. Bridge to Be Held Woman’s Contract Bridge club of Irfdianapolis will hold a duplicate game at 1:45 Thursday at the Indianapolis Athletic club.

Frizziness all gone “I found a Pinkham book on my porch, so I sent for your Tablets. That’s how I started taking the Vegetable Compound. It has improved my appetite and given me more pep. I do not have dizzy spells now like I used to.” MRS. C. R. MORJORK 501 Fourth St., Struthers, Ohio. Try this medicine. Find out for yourself why more than half a million women say, “Ithelpsme”.

Gives a dean, cool shave making daily ) a comfort. It is economical, a -*7 r* small amount making a good lather f 1 'v; which soothes the skin, doing away —/CENTS X with r.hc necessity of using lotions.

NOV. 29,1932

Butler Dean ‘ to Present Travel Talk A travelog by Dean Albert Bailey of Butler university will feature the all-university recreational evening at 7:30 Friday. The woman s council, headed by Mrs. Alice Bid* well Wesenberg. has arranged the program. Dean Bailey, head of the evening and extension division, will Ulus-* trate his talk with slides. He will describe his adventures in countries bordering the Mediterranean sea, including Italy, Greece, Constantinople, Palestine arid Egypt. Dean Bailey has traveled extensively, having made eighteen trips aboard. A series of recreational evening programs is being held by the council for the students, faculty arid their friends. J

Cheer Workers ■ to Give Party for Auxiliary Mrs. J. Burdette Little, 2309 Broadway, will be hostess for a covered dish luncheon, to be given Wednesday by the newly appointed Christmas cheer workers of the auxiliary to the Indianapolis post 4, American Legion. Assisting Mrs. Little are Mrs. Ralph Hessler and Mrs. Eugene Westervelt. The work of the committee is done primarily by junior members, directed by this committee. Mrs. W. R. McGeenan is chairman of the annual Christmas party Tuesday, Dec. 6, at the home of Mrs. A. H. M. Graves, 5879 North Delaware street. NURSERY BOARD TO GATHER AT HOME Members of the board of managers of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Association will hold their regular ,monthly meeting Thursday at the nursery home, 542 Lockerbie street. The meeting will be presided over, by Mrs. Robert A. Dennis, president. MARY LUX WEDS MILLER L. KELLER The marriage of Miss Mary Catherine Lux, 535 East Forty-second street, to Miller L. Keller, son of Mrs. Minnie E. Keller, 1840 Central avenue, has been announced. The wedding took place July 2 in Greenfield and the couple is at home at the Seville.

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