Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 276, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 March 1933 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Future Debs Prepare for Spring Fete Pupils of Mrs. Gates to Be Guests at Annual Party. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN Time* Woman’ll Pare Editor Debutantes of seasons to come now are enjoying the festivities of their

dancing school days. Spring to them means more than waiting for crocuses to appear in the lawns. Their harbinger of the spring season is the invitation to Mrs. William Bryon Gates’ annual party, which will be held on April 21 at the American Central Life Insurance building. For eight years

.Miss Kurgan

Mrs. Gates has be?n teaching children, whose parents' names make up the Indianapolis social register. With studios at the Proplyaeum she is instructing children from 6 to 13 in the society art. The Merrymakers Club, one of the groups formed by Mrs. Gates’ pupils, will meet April 8 in anticipation of a spring celebration. Mrs. J. William Wright, patroness, guides the members in their activities. Among its forty members are Peggy Chapin, Dorothy Mettenet, Jean Van Riper, Mary Ellen Voyles, .Jane and Mary Wynee and Lou McWhirter. Some of the boys who learn to "glide, point and step” according to the fashion are Felix McWhirter, Henry S. Fauvre, Foster Clippingor, Paul Krauss 111, William McMurtrie and Bill Wright. Sue Anne Eveleigh, daughter of Mr and Mrs. C. F. Eveleigh, 701 North Pennsylvania street, will entertain her classmates with a dancing party tonight at her home. Sixteen of her school friends will gather in the social room for games and dancing. New dancing clubs are formed each season From year to year, the members are graduated into other classes, but the personnel changes little. Last year the Revelers led the parties. Graduates of Mrs. Gates’ classes return to usher at the formal spring cotillion, which includes a recital by the pupils. The grand march ends with ballroom dancing.

Manners and Morals

BY JANE JORDAN

Brins vour lovp alTsirs to Jane Jordan. She will help you handle them to your satisfaction. Write vour letter now! Dear Jane Jordan—l am 23 years old. I live in Indianapolis and practically have l?een engaged to a young man for the last year. Our marriage has been delayed because his work has been slack. Before we met. he went with another girl steady. He told me they could not get along. A whole year passed before they met again. One day she came to his house to ask for the address of a friend, but I think that was a good excuse to see him, don't you? This incident happened about a week ago. She has met him secretly three times since. He told me this himself. She asked him to come to a party where she was with another fellow. She told him she was going steady. While at the party she put her arms around his neck and told him she loved him. He kissed her. too. He told me she was so cute he couldn’t resist the temptation. I told him to decide between us. He said that he loved me, but he still thought an awful lot of this girl. He even asked me to leave town with him so that he wouldn’t see her. Do you think he really loves me if he hasn't enough will power to stay in the same- town where she is. K. K. Answer—ls I were you, I would not press the young man too hard for a decision. Instead of being dramatic and demanding a choice between the two of you, I would be cool, calm, and collected, and urge him to see as much of her as he chose. Evidently the lad is trying hard to be honest with you and is confused by the fact that he feels attracted to two girls at the same time. If you step aside in a huff, how can he make an intelligent comparison? Besides, a huff is so obvious. It is much more effective to keep him in doubt. I suspect the other young lady of being a pretty high-powered flirt. Yes, of course, her request for the address of a friend was only a ruse to make him aware of her again. Evidently she has the art of flattery down to a fine point. You sit tight for a while and keep a poker face. Do not betray yourself by a too rigid indifference or a don't care attitude, easy to decipher. Try woman's favorite pose of inscrutability, but don't betray yourself by overdoing the part. If he does not know where you stand, it will impress you on his consciousness far more effectively than any cheap display of pride. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am 20 years old and very much in love with a girl 18 months my junior. We were both popular at school; she, because of her natural ability to make friends, and I because of my prominence in athletics. Our first trouble came when she corresponded with a friend of mine at college. This soon blew over. Our next trouble was caused by her great desire to go out every evening to a show or to a dance. I don't care much for dancing, but I took her once m a while and to at least two shows a week. All the while we were losing more and more of our self-control, and at last it snapped. About six mon: Its after I was graduated I received a start in life that would make me independent in time. I had to work late and could not go over so often. She wanted to quit going steady; so we did. We promised each other that if

Demountable Lips on Sale for You a o a ana nun Want a New Nose? Easy to Get! Artificial Fingernails, Too

V ■'••' ■', ' 1 • .■■s* -■ xSgeBBBBMS^^^^

Here are some of the new feminine aids to beauty. Upper left—Demountable nails to match your gown are glued on (at right) over the natural nails worn down by typing or housework (left). Upper right—A supplementary coiffure is attached to the business womans hat. Below —A tricky little fountain gadget outlines the initials of your “best beau” on your hair.

BY HELEN WELSHIMER NEA Service Writer NEW YORK, March 29.—Beauty isn’t even skin deep any longer. If nature didn’t give you your favorite kind of nose, it’s possibie to buy another, exactly as you buy a powder-puff. If nobody wants to hold hands, because of your worn-off nails, you can be fitted with a better pair. It’s as easy as buying gloves. The International Beauty Shop Owners, who have been conducting their fifteenth annual institute in New York City, are offering the public removable noses, removable lips, removable finger-nails. So—if your present face value isn’t up to par, go shopping for the features you need! Finger-nails that go on and come off are considered the latest boon for the typist whose nails are worn down by her work. The ten nails come in little boxes. There are two shapes, one for fingers, with round cuticle and one for fingers with square cuticle. They are fashioned from a flexible composition which can be filed to any length. The tips and the half moons are perfect and white. All you need to do is glue each nail over its counterpart. Some of the nails feature rose and red shades. Some combine black and platinum, or red and platinum while others are a straight green, red or black. When you take off the frock which the nails matched at night,

Mrs. Hepburn Re-Elected by Spencer Club

Mrs. A. H. Hepburn was hostess for the luncheon meeting of the Spencer Club Tuesday at her home, 4906 Kenwood avenue, when officers were elected for the ensuing year. Mrs. Seth B’cm was re-elected president of the group, with the following additional officers renamed: Mrs. W. A. Pickens, vice-president, and Mrs. H. L. McGinnis, treasurer; Mrs. C. A. Cassadv. recording secretary, and Mrs. Faye Hamilton, corresponding secretary. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Pickens, Mrs. W. E. Leapley and Mrs. L. A. Beem.

we went out, we would tell each other. I found out that she went to a dance and another fellow brought her home. She went to a few more dances and I think had dates without telling me. Later, she went out with a fellow whom she had met at a cheap dance hall, a fellow that no one in her family knew. She had said she was going out on a double date. I wrote her and told her that I never wanted to see her again. Was I too hasty? Is it right for girls to go unescorted to these dance halls? Do you suppose we could ever be happy together? She reads your work which appears in The Times. Tell us which one is at fault. 808. Answer—Your letter makes it seem that the "young lady is at fault, but you must remember. Bob. that I am hearing only one side of the case. If the young lady reads the column and recognizes the picture of herself you have drawn, perhaps she will be willing to write, too. and explain her actions. Then I will be better prepared to help you both. Possibly the fault does not lie in the actions of either of you so much as in your individual differences in temperament. You are a seriousminded young man. bent on the hard work necessary to get a start. Your girl is not so settled. She wants to have fun and lots of it before she marries. If she doesn't get it out of her system, she will not make you a contented wife. The chances are that if you married her the two of you would go on repeating the pattern of your engagement throughout the whole of your married life. Face the facts. You are not the young lady’s type. She's a butterfly. and none too scrupulous in her behavior. She's not quite honest with you. There's no use to write her highhanded letters. Just explain the situation as it looks to you in your courteous manner, and, if there is no change, quit.

or return to your desk after lunch, you merely remove the nails with hot water, place them in your box, and put them away until the next time you want to wear them. Miss Maxine Burke, formerly an actress, is the creator of the new demountable finger-nails, lips, noses and eyelashes. “No woman is more beautiful than her finger-nails,” she says. "If she isn’t born with attractive nails there is no reason why she shouldn’t have them. “There is no more stigma attached to artificial nails than to a bridge in the mouth. When a man loses a leg we expect him to procure a wooden one. Why not replace worn finger nails?” That isn’t all the beauty your hands can hold, either. There are small decorative designs, purchased by the set, which are shipped over each nail and held in place by a coating of polish. One set contains a spade, diamond. heart and club for each hand. By using the right fingers you may signal your bids to your partner—if your opponents will stand for it! Or if you prefer romance to bridge, an eight-word set spells out the phrase, “I love you.” Each of eight fingers take a letter. If you want anew nose, you must submit to a wax impression of the inside of the old one. After that a gold-plated frame is made. Now Miss Burke is working on a standardized edition that will make noses available at low prices. The demountable lips, which fit

Slenderize Your Thighs tt a tt xx st tt New Straight Skirts Give No Quarter

For knees and thigh .... keep back straight and knees apart

This is the fifth of twelve daily articles by Jar Acer, wide y known New York body building expert, outlining a series of simple exercises to improve your looks and health. Clip the articles dailv. each dav going through the exercises previously outlined and adding the new ones. BY J VC AUER Written for KEA Service EVERY woman wants slender, straight thighs this year. The new straight-skirted suits give no quarter to bulges. After you have concentrated on slenderizing your waistline—bending. stretching, reducing the amount of food you take—give a thought to your thighs. This exercise is excellent, both for reducing your thighs and for giving you balance that is the foundation of the poise you need to carry your Easter clothes royally. It also is excellent for insomnia. Stand on your toes, feet together. facing a straight chair. Rest just your little fingers on the top of the chair and do not lean on them. Keeping your body balanced on your toes, bend knees slowly until you sit on your heels, keepine your oack straight and your knees apart.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

over your own pair, are only 1,100,000th of an inch thick, of flexible material. They aren’t expensive. A dollar buys several. If you want your hair to stay in place, the spray lotion designed by Louis Parme of New York city will crystallize your coiffure. Hair this year is being worn higher to create an illusion of height. When the waves are set this lotion is applied either with an electric spray or a hand atomizer. Metallic powder, which given either a silver, gold, pink or green radiance, may be placed in the fluid. The crystallization, which lasts twenty-four hours, is removed by brushing the hair with a stiff brush. Beauty experts have designed hats which have a row of provocative curls attached to bands at the back of them. Hair matches the color of the wearer’s own locks. But keep your hats on, ladies! Otherwise the wig impression will get cut. Ear tacks of flesh-colored plaster are anew contrivance to hold ears close to the head. One is attached to the side of the head, the other to the back of the ear. It’s the thing to let the world know the one you love, too. Not by wearing your heart on your sleeve but by carrying it in your hair. A little fountain gadget outlines the initials of your best beau on your coiffure. The effect is a little clearer on blondes, but by using a lighter fluid brunettes may gain some publicity for current heart interests ,too.

Then rise, very, very slowly, making your thighs do all the work. Do another deep knee bend, very slowly this time and rise, being sure that you don't wabble around on your toes and that you don't have to take a step this way or that to hold your balance. This exercise gets at all those little muscles running down your limbs that get almost atrophied from lack of exercise. It is over these lazy muscles that fat accumulates. Get the muscles to working properly and the fat will be worked off. You can't reduce your thighs without proper exercise and even if you use heavy muscles, this exercise gets at the underlying muscles that can be reached no other way. , Stand upon your toes and lower your body to the squatting ; position ten times, slowly up ana ! slowly down. You will feel it the first day. Persevere. In three days’ time, you will fin*_ that you can do it with alaciu. Add this exercise to your daiiy routine. NEXT: Reducing hips.

McNutts to Be Feted by Art Leaders Reception at Institute Is Final Event of Year’s State Exhibit. Evans Woollen, president of the board of directors of the Art Association of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Woollen will head the reception line for the open house, to be held Friday night at the John Herron Art Institute in honor of Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt. Assisting will be Wilbur D. Peat, director of the institute, and Mrs. Peat, and Messrs, and Mesdames J. I. Holcomb, William H. Insley. Henry Kahn, Frank Shields, Louis Wolf, William Ray Adams. Roy Adams, Frederic M. Ayres, Evans Woollen Jr„ Jack Goodman. William Rockwood. Archer Sinclair, W. Richardson Sinclair, Joseph J. Daniels, Benjamin Hitz, Booth Tarkington. D. L. Chambers, Sylvester Johnson. Hugh J. Baker, Albert Baker. Theodore Griffith, Thomas D. Sheerin, Hartley Sherwood. Bernard Cunniff, Russell Sullivan, Charles W. Chase, George C. Calvert. Herbert Foltz. Herbert Woollen, Frank Cregor. William H. Coleman, Fred C. Dickson, Noble Dean, Clarence Coffin, Alfred Glossbrenner, Leo Rappaport. Hilton U. Brown, William Forsyth, Anton Scherrer, Kurt Vonnegut, George A. Ball, Frank C. Ball, Clifton Wheeler, Robert Sinclair and Frank P. Manly. Mesdames: Hugh McGowan, James E. Roberts, H. B. Burnet, W. W. McCrea. Albert M, Cole, Alex R. Holiday, St. Clair Parry. William Bobbs, Edward L. McKee, Minnie Edenharter and R. P. Van Camp, Drs. and Mesdames W. D. Gatch, and Vernon Hahn. Misses: Edna Mann Shover. Anna Hasselman, Blanche Stillson, Anna C. Reade, Rosamond Van Camp, Lucy Taggart and Julia Walk. Others will be Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks, Dr. Carlston B. McCulloch, William Fortune, Albert L. Zoller, William G. Sullivan, Elmer Taflinger, Hugh McK. Landon. William G. Irwin and Walter Milliken. Musical entertainment will be provided by the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music. The reception is being held in connection with the twenty-sixth annual exhibition of Indiana artists, which closes Sunday. Pledge Rites Conducted at Conservatory Pledge services were held by Sigma Alpha lota, national professional musical sorority, at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, Monday night. Mrs. Ethelwyn Arnholter was in charge of the arrangements for the affair. The following were pledged: Mesdames Rosalee Spong. Holland Dorsey, Helen Vance, Mary Zried, Edith Pile, Elizabeth Whistler, Edna Short, Misses Mildred Lawler, Mary Frey and Dorothy Merrill. Mrs. Lenore Brant Roberts, sorority president, presided at the services. She was assisted by Mesdames Irene Jarrard, Helen Plaxton, Ruth Jones, Marian Green, Opal Larsh, Lissa Cox, Misses Eugenia Magidson, Louise Spillman, Gertrude Whelan, Irma Mae Steele and Mae Henri Lane. Following the dinner and services, the new pledges gave a stunt for the entertainment of the members. PARTY ARRANGED FOR STUDY CLUB Mrs. Fred Wilson, 3821 Central avenue, will be hostess for a bridge party to be given by the Norwegian chapter of the International TravelStudy clubs Saturday. Mrs. Samuel Artman will attend the party and the entertainment will include a reading, “The Belle of Carrot Corner,” by Mrs. George Burns White. BOOK- OJJB Is HOST AT GUEST DAY TEA The Late Book Club held a guest day tea Tuesday at the home of Mrs. H. B. Millspaugh, 3505 Guilford avenue. Mrs. William Clifford assisted the hostess. The program included a talk on “Pictures of England,” by Miss Demarchus Brown, and musical selections played by Miss Loydlavilla Cook. Mises Laura Duffy and Miss Virginia Goldsboro presided at the tea table and Miss Ann Clifford and Miss Lois Thomas assisted in the dining room.

Daily Recipe OMELET 5 eggs 2 tablespoons flour 1 o tablespoon salt Dash of pepper 1 cup evaporated milk 2 tablespoons butter Separate eggs. Beat yolks until lemon colored and thick, and whites until stiff but not too dry. Add flour, salt and pepper to yolks and mix until smooth, then add milk. Fold yolk mixture thoroughly but lightly into whites. Heat butter bubbling hot in large frying or omelet pan. Pour in egg mixture. Cover and cook over a low flame until bottom is well browned, about twenty minutes. Uncover and set in moderate oven (350 F. > to brown top. With a spatula or pancake turner fold omelet and slide onto a hot platter. Garnish with parsley. Serve immediately. Yield; 5 to 6 servings.

1 ■permanents T>,. French lonic | s*7 strain PBX 2 Iff Wave, now fIH BEALTE AKTEsJR fo| Kot>*v*it Bldg.—6ol OHiriatt Studio Entrance. Ll-06.0. _

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- r i a i tern No. Oil/ 4 * Size Street City State Name

tj ) | view l Wsiot

SLENDERIZING TYPE This season’s fashions are happy fashions for the woman who just can’t bother to watch her sweets. The chic of this frock, for instance, speaks for itself, and a very slenderizing message it tells. There’s that surplice closing with a fashionable applied collar, not to mention those new panels skirt seams. And, as every one knows, diagonal and vertical lines like that have a marvelous way of adding to the height and subtracting from the width of the silhouette. The sleeves, too, are puffed but not extreme—just right for the fuller figure. It’s very spring-like in gray or string beige crepe dotted in black. Size 34 requires 4 yards 39-inch dotted material, Ue yard 39-inch material for collar. Width about 2H yards. New spring fashion book is out! Send for it—just check here □ and inclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern, 15 cents. Council Holds Meeting Executive board of the Indianapolis section of the National Council of Jewish Women met at 9:30 today at the Kirshbaum Community Center with Mrs. Sultan G. Cohen, president, presiding.

1,200 Boys' BROADCLOTH # SHIRTS Guaranteed Fast Colors a . MOTHERS! HERE'S A REAL "BUY!" M Every shirt is full cut, well made .. . jSjfja jMM ..J and there's a splendid assortment of new Mm fancy patterns for spring, also whites, jSFBSBm S tans, blues and greens. Collar attached B XgS Jw Ml style. Youth and junior sizes. J Boys* \\ ash Suils 59® Attractive styles and color combinations. wt-Jl ‘fiPS Sizes 3 to 8. Boys* Play Suits 49c YOUR BOY'S NAME monogrammed on without charge. Sizes 3 to 8. Boys'Spring Caps 49 f^l New spring patterns and colorings. I ■ ■ £ KCfcT Boys* Sweat Shirts 49® Your choice of Mickey Mouse, Skippy or DCAVO’ CUTAD * 7 U 7 Popeye sweat shirts. Sizes 26 to 36. -t>U I o oiiv/I 1 HtVCI t LOOT

Housewife Goes Shopping for Beer Gadgets; City Stores Fill Her Wants Bars of All Sizes and Descriptions Are Available; Mugs of Every Type Shown; Canapes Come Back. BY HELEN LINDSAY THE promise of "legalized beer " which has brought back before-prohl-bition memories to many cf the old .liners, has sent the younger modern housewife out on a prolonged and interested shopping tour. She has discovered that the ser\ing of a legal beverage presents the possibility of equipping her home with furniture, glassware, pottery, and various amusing "gadgets," many of which were to be found only as clandestine items in former years. For the "beer explorer," the initial purchase seems to be one of the household bars. These have been made with an eye to smaller homes and efficiency apartments, and can be dismantled and folded up into a size that

will coincide with limited home space. They come in different finishes, with a plain and beautiful oak grain predominating, and the brass foot rail which is found on most of them is as substantial and comforting as the remembered ones of the famous old cases and rathskellers. Designs vary, from John Held paintings of former bar interiors, to modernistic motifs in bright colors. A linoleum covering is used on several of the bars shown at the Banner-Whitehill furniture store, with this same composition protecting the base. a tt tt Canapes Again in Limelight CANAPES and canape fillings come into their own in the new Deer regime. For the hostess whose knowledge of these is limited, or who would like to delight her guests with “something different.” there is a book at L. s. Ayres’ Epicure Shop, titled "Canape. Parade.”

Included are one hundred hors d'ouevre recipes, with the most entrancing marginal decorations. Canapes m the shape of hearts, clubs, diamonds, and spades give a subtle suggestion for spring bridge luncheons! The Epicure Shop offers canape fillings of caviar, anchovies, and antipasto. tt XX tt Mugs of Hob-Nailed Class "DEER mugs show the influence of the antique glass collectors, with -U small ones of colored hob-nailed glass shown on the fifth floor of the William H. Block Company. For drinkers of great capacity, there are reproductions of the oldfashioned steins, in pottery and earthenware. Some of these are heavily decorated with rotund “Pickwickian” figures, while others depict homely German drinking scenes, and carry traditional drinking inscriptions, tt tt a Spun Aluminum Used for Trap 'T'HE.new spun aluminum has been adapted to a cheese and cracker A or pretzel tray, which is shown at Charles Mayer’s. Natural finish wood forms the center of the tray, with a roomy trough surrounding it for crackers or pretzels. Accompanying this tray is a cheese knife, with a reed handle, and spun aluminum drinking mugs, with wooden handles and glass bottoms—the inference being “bottoms up.”

Shrine To Give Party Ladies Oriental Shrine will give a card party Saturday night at the home of Mrs. J. W. Danner, 1510 North Delaware street. Mrs. J. E. Clinton is chairman.

I A Day’s Menu j Breakfast — j Grapefruit juice, cereal, j cream, soft cooked eggs, j crisp toast, milk, coffee. = Luncheon — Cornmea'l soup, toast j sticks, cress and orange -- salad, jelly roll cake, I lemonade. j Dinner — j Pot roast of beef with ! vegetables, endive salad, j dried apple pudding, milk, j coffee.

.MARCH 29, 1933

Mrs. Lindsay

TEXAS GIRL BRIDE OF MICHAEL LOGAN Mrs. Anna Landau of Colorado, Tex., announces the marriage of her daughter, Miss Martha Laudau of Indianapolis, to Isadore Logan, son of Michael Logan. 1214 Union street. The wedding took place Sunday at the bridegroom's home with the Rabbi Milton Steinberg and Myro Glass officiating. After their return from a wedding trip to Chicago, they will live at 1214 Union street. MRS. MARIE CRAIG IS GUEST OF GUILD Mrs. Marie Craig of Noblesville, was a guest at the luncheon meeting of the Creswell Guild today at the home of Mrs. Benjamin F. Kinnick, 5619 Winthrop. Covers will be lead for eight and the appointments will be carried out in yellow and green. The club meets every two weeks.