Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 296, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1933 — Page 8

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Groom New Horses for Riding Show Honors Will Be Sought at Arlington Club on June 10. BY BEATRICE Bl ROAN Woman'll Pace Editor PETS of local horse shows who are stabled at the Arlington Riding Club are peering from their stalls this spring with inquisitive noses. "Who are these spirited newcomers?'’ th ,/ sniff Several equestrians with eyes on the June 10 Arlington show have

bought new prospects, which they are grooming. Mrs. Frank Hoke recently went to Topeka. Kan., and returned with a small, danity creature, appropriately named Dresden Lady. This horse will vie for honors with Kentucky bred, Dotty Pat, which Mrs. Hoke acquired last summer. Experience in the Chicago show

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Miss Burgan

last year will prepare her Statesman for competition in the local arena. Children to Participate Mrs. August Bohlen is looking forward to showing Rayon D'Or and her new Heather Princess, sired by Edna Mays King of the Annacacha ranch stables in Spofford, Tex., from a half-sister to Roxie Highland, champion three-gaited mare of the country. Bobbie Bohien, her son. is as active a horseman as his mother and father. He and Dottie Metzger are two of the children who are making ready for their ponies to show 7 . Miss Audrey Pugh pridefully is eyeing her month-old colt, "Hoarded Gold," sired by her stallion, "Golden Whirlwild.” The stallion will be one of the prize prospects of the third annual show, expected to be the largest ever held. Night Rides Popular All the horsemen are not interested in winning prizes. Many are satisfied with pleasure horses—goodlooking, well-mannered, and nicely trained. New ones this year are owned by Mrs. Dorothy Alford, Mrs. William Mooney, Mrs. A. L. Piel, and Hubert Hiekam. The Wednesday night rides by husbands and wives and the monthly breakfast rides at the club are popular activities for the riding devotees.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

If vou are unhappily married write to Jane Jordan, uho will help you straighten out your difTicultie , or at least give you anew point of view. Dear Jane Jordan—My husband and I are 27 and have been married more than six years. Our first years of married life were one wild oarty, drinking and passional'' love-making. We never nail s care for anything or anybody. I loved my husband then, and to be away from him was torture. We both worked and made very

good money. ’ Now we have a baby 2 years old and his daddy adores him. But baby stands in my way so that I can not keap pace with my husband. I can't dash out any time of the night or go to the parties we used to. People still ask my husband, and I found out that he was

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Jane Jordan

taking someone else in my place. I also found that this affair went the limit. I made my husband pack his clothes and get out, but he came back and said it was all over, that he loved only me. I know he doesn't care as much for me or his home as he does for his baby. He just couldn’t leave him and I don't know how I could either, not even long enough to make a living. My husband is so restless and nervous that he can't spend an evening at home. I have to leave the dishes, get ready and take baby and go out to keep pace. We can’t continue to keep the baby out all hours of the night. How can I make my husband enjoy his family and home? WILDFIRE. Answer —Today I was talking to a wise Indianapolis doctor. I asked why so many marriages which started out with high hopes for happiness ended in disappointment and disillusion. He said that where two people began their lives together on the same plane, all went well until one of them shifted to another plane with which the other one had no sympathy. I thought of you. You and your

Daily Recipe BAKED HAM 1 whole ham 1 cup brown sugar 2 tablespoons hour Whole cloves Put the well-scrubbed ham on a rack in an uncovered pan with the fat side up. A ten and twelve-pound ham requires twentv-flve minutes per pound. Half hams require thirty minutes per pound. Forty-five minutes before the ham is done, remove from the oven and take off the rind, except a collar around the shank bone. Cut diagonals across the fat to form diamonds. Moisten brown sugar and flour with some of the fat drippings and rub on the ham. Stick with a whole clove in each diamond. Return to the oven to finish cooking. During the last ten minutes of cooking increase the heat to brown the ham.

Clothes Go Summery Hollywood Breaks Out in Fluffy Wave

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Maureen O’Sullivan till NEA Service HOLLYWOOD. April 21. —Clothes are getting summery and charming. Maureen O'Sullivan has anew white lace frock with cape sleeves and flaring skirt and makes a completely lovely picture by topping it with a picture hat of white straw adorned with band and flowers of white patent leather. Joan Crawford, dancing at the Cocoanut Grove with Franchot Tone, w'ore a starched chiffon dress and a huge spray of orchids. She’s gone in for orchids since she separated from Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Used to wear gardenias all the time. Wera Engels, at the Cocoanut Grove with Colin Clive, wore a powder blue embroidered organdy dress with its own little matching three-tiered cape, all rippling around her. Patricia Ellis has anew dinner dress of white organdy with butterfly sleeves, very short, a cute high collar and butterfly bow of organdy under the chin and the dress itself form-fitting and smart as can be. She wears fancy white organdy gloves with it, with flaring three tiered cuffs. Marlene Dietrich, always startling, has a handsome new spring suit of black linen, with striking Rodicr blouse and a vei-y pert matching hat. Marian Nixon, dining with Buddy Rogers at the Brown Derby, wore the most summery print seen to date. It was beige chiffon, with bright colored field flowers splashed gaily all over it.

husband started on the same plane. Your lives were an equal division of work and play, and you played together. The coming of the baby shifted you to another plane. You no longer were a sweetheart and playfellow, but a mother as well. However fond of ihe baby he may be. he does not want to move over to your plane. Still a playboy, he doesn’t want the close confinement of baby tending. I know of no sedative which will quiet his restlessness or curb his desire for amusement. I know' cf no formula which will mold your husband into the kind of man you want him to be. The only suggestion I have to make is that you employ some reliable woman to sit w'ith your baby in the evenings and go with your husband as before. That was -he plane upon w'hich you married him. That was the plane upon which you married him. Perhaps—and I only say perhaps —as the two of you grow older, this desire for incessant amusement. for incessant stimulation, will leave him gradually, and he will turn to the more peaceable pleasures of home. Until he does, he will insist upon ga.vety with you, and if not —without you. tt a tt Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl ;17 years old. You’ll probably say I'm too young to think of marriage, but I don't think so. I don't go steady. In fact, I have no boy friends at all. I am very pretty and attractive, but can't seem to meet any one who will fall for me. I have great hopes of getting mar- | ried some day and wish to have a j little home and children. I think about it most every day ! and imagine what my children will be like. I fear that I may be disj appointed sorely and never get mar- ! ried at all. I nearly cry when I think of having to spend my whole life an old maid. You’ll tell me to wait and someone will come along, but I've heard that too many times. Can you give me any advice? SYLVIA. Answer—lt would be an unusual girl indeed who did not put in a ! few very bad hours fearing that she would live to be an old maid. Later in life she sometimes wishes I that her fears had been realized. Seventeen is a little early to begin fretting because a husband has | not materialized, and it is far too young to get married. If any of : our readers who have married at 17 find wedlock an unmitigated blessing, will they please write to me and say so? | Your dreams, hopes and fears are natural and normal. Neither you nor I can make a sweetheart materialize out of thin air. You may hate waiting, but what else is there to do?

MOTHERS' CHORUS WILL GIVE PLAY

A playlet. ‘ Fifty Years Ago. - ’ written by Mrs. J. T. Robinson, and directed by Mrs. Irvin Hessel. will be produced by the Mothers chorus of School 81. at 7:30. April 27. in the school auditorium. Proceeds are for the benefit of the ParentTeacher Association of the school.

BEAUTE ARTES SPIRALETTE PERMANENT C 4 CA COMPLETE *T I with Shampoo and I ■' l Fin*rr Waves ■ 601 ROOSEVELT BLDG. • OR. ILLINOIS * WASH. LI. 0670

MRS. BORN ELECTED BY SISTERHOODS Mrs. Isaac Born was elected pres- | ident of the Indiana Federation of | the Temple Sisterhoods Thursday Jat the annual convention wffiich j opened Wednesday in Evansville. Other officers ai'e Mrs. William Stearns of South Bend, first vicepresident; Mrs. Jerome Salm, Evans- | ville, second vice-president; Mrs. j William Ellison of Indianapolis, secI retary; Mrs. Abe Ottenheimer of j Hammond, treasurer, and Mrs j David Lurvey of Indianapolis, dele- ! gate at large to the national conl vention.

Foot Experts S#;y.. >^\ tKeep Children’s Foot Bones - a * * * ** * i jlp j *i j % | BWei Hfe mmr SHIM 3j|wß jjSHj ampBHHHBH jhv • Tru-Posture Shoes That KEEP Children s Foot Bones Straight! Mothers! Protect your children’s feet from infancy to Right Wrong gills i h high school! Insist on Billiken shoes—the shoes with the r \ v flex-steel arches and scientific lasts. Billiken shoes have #1 * I natural-fitting lasts. They give plenty of room to grow- T / \l ing feet and keeP the tOeS straight ahead! Correct shoes, • y iRp v broken arches and many other ailments. fßSkzstfS Sizes 6 to 8 si 79 Young bones are soft bones. They do not Modern Miss, Sizes 3* oto 8; widths AAA to C 53.95 f “* be , ro T , d : formed , J “ chi,dhod- ~ ’ u j.m Mothers! Protect your childrens feet at o|/ 11 co 7Q least until they set into the shape they oIZCa 0/2 11 vZ. lu should be. Put them in Billiken shoes Cl . 111/ , 0 and KNOW you’re giving them the best Sizes 114 to 3 52.98 foot protection there is. ™ i Big Boys Billikens $3.48

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Tri Kappas Hosts for Exposition Convention Prepares for Indiana Day at Chicago Fair. Tri Kappa sorority will act as the hostess group on Indiana day, July 13, at the world fair in Chicago, according to an announcement made today at the opening meeting of the two-day state convention at the Claypool. In addition to appointing all committees, sponsoring receptions and entertainments, and furnishing guides, the sorority will arrange a James Whitcomb Riley collection, gathered from all states in the Union. Volters, who illustrated Riley’s books, will .lean his original collection. Five hundred members throughout the state are expected to at- , tend the banquet and ball tonight, when Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt will be honor guests. McNutts Honor Guests Other special guests will include I Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dailey, Dr. ana ; Mrs. J. E. P. Holland of Bloomingjton; Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Leslie, Dr. and Mrs. Merrill Davis of Marion, Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Kinnison of Goshen, Mrs. Paul Fry of Linton, Mrs. John Wheeler, Mrs. D. D. Dean of Rensselaer; Mrs. Fred Bechdolt of Portland, Miss Mary Stotsenburg, Mrs. Jan? Stotsen,burg Marshall of New Albany; Mrs. M. L. Fansler of Logansport, Mrs. Edward Barce of Fowler, and Mrs. Sherman Minton of New' Albany. The program will include music by a trio from Martinsville comI posed of Misses Nina Hayes Dutton, Martha Schmaiter and Virginia Leyenbergcr, and by Lorna Doone Jackson, formerly of the Chicago civic opera. Mrs. McNutt will be hostess Saturday afternoon for a tea at the Governor’s mansion. The grand council will be in the receiving line, headed by the hostess. Assistants from Alpha chapter will be Mesdames Alan Buskirk, Alex Hirsclj, Merrill Talbot, George Henley, Lynn Lewis, Frank Elliott and Clyde Hare. Other assistants will be Mrs. John Wheeler of Crown Point, Mrs. Michael Fansler of Indianapolis and Mrs. William Kunkel of Bluffton. Trio Will Play Miss Ruth Erehart, Chi of Huntington, was named chairman of the nominating committee by Mrs. Chalmer Schafer of Fort Wayne, grand president, at the session today. Miss Erehart will be assisted by Mrs. Fred Conkle, Beta Epsilon chapter, of Noblesville, and Mrs. Jean Griffith Marr, of Columbus. The committee will make its report at the Saturday afternoon business session, followed by election and installation of officers for the ensuing year. Other committee appointments were: Mrs. Allen Buskirk, Alpha of Bloomington, chairman of the audit and finance committee; Mrs. Chester Lawrence, Delta lota of Mooresville, and Mrs. Robert P. Lane, Mishawaka, associate member. Members of the ritual committee are Mrs. Catherine Trueblood, Beta Lambda of Kokomo, Miss Josephine Grosscap, Gamma Zeta of Vincennes, and Miss Hermina Colsen, of the Anderson association.

Tudor Hall ‘Prop Hands’

Left to right. Miss Mary Wildhack and Miss Martha Hammerschmidt.

Stage setting and scenery for “Pygmalion" by George Bernard Shaw to be presented Saturday night by the Masquers club of Tudor Hall are being made by the members of the group under the direction of Miss Charlotte Thompson, dramatic coach. Misses Mary Wildhack and

Bride-Elect to Be Honored at Bridge Party ‘ Miss Eleanor Moran and Mrs. Robert L. Stevenson of Crawfords-’ ville, will entertain tonight at Miss Moran’s home, 3933 Carrollton avenue, with a crystal showier and bridge party in honor of Miss Helen Weyl, a bride-elect. Appointments will be in blue and yellow, with jonquels used as a table decoration. The hostesses w'ili be assisted by their mothers, Mrs. J. T. Moran and Mrs. William Lilly. Guests wuth the bride-elect will be her mother. Mrs. Carl H. Weyl, Mesdames Henry Earker, T. E. Fischer, William Forsythe, Perry Meek, Frank Moore. Richard Bunch, Russell Smith, Ruell Moore, Vernon Ascher, Misses Gertrude Guyor, Virginia Lloyd, Bertha- Jane Mueller, Emma Louise Reeves, Juanita Miller. Elizabeth Martin, and Mary Lynn Weyl. WEDDING WILL BE AT BRIDE’S HOME The marriage of Miss Mildred Louise Brown of Crawfordsville to Isaac Lane Muse of Indianapolis will take place at 4 Saturday at the home of the - bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Brown. Mrs. Mary Schlemer will he the bridesmaid and Kester Donald Jewell of Indianapolis, best man. Charles Muse of, Indianapolis will sing "Beloved, it Is Morn’’ and "Mary.” Miss Mary Wolfe of Summitsville will play the violin accompaniment. Show to Be Given A variety show will be given at St. Francis de Sales church at 8:15 Sunday, with Nelson Marks as master of ceremonies.

Martha Hammerschmidt are converting soap boxes, oil cloth and black paint into modernistic furniture. Miss Betty Tharp is the property chairman and Miss Mary DePrez, captain of the crew of workers. Miss Ardeth Mettenet designed the scenery.

SIGMA RHO CHI TO SPONSOR DANCE

Miss Mildred Caylor is chairman of a dance to be given by Sigma Rho Chi sorority Friday night at the Athenaeum. She will be assisted by Miss Margaret Schneider and Miss May Kendall. The Indiana Vagabonds will furnish music. FRENCH ALLIANCE GIVES MOCK TRIAL A mock trial in a French court was presented by members of the Alliance Francaise at their meeting Thursday night at the Washington. Professor Ernest J. Leveque of Indiana university, gave a talk on "1933; Anne Bourgeoise. Anne Romantique.’’ Members of the play cast included Edward E. Petri, president; Alexander G. Gavins. Mrs. R. G. Lazarus, Miss Betty Lutz, Miss Virginia Lindstrom, Louise Prince, Wallace Buchanan, Edward Meunier, Adrian A. Reiter, Ralph Decker and Rolland Lambert. LITERARY CLUB IS GIVEN LUNCHEON Mrs. Grover T. Slider, 2211 Station street, was hostess for the luncheon meeting of the Brightwmod Literary Club Thursday. The May meeting of the group will be held at the home of Mrs. Charles Sellers, 2266 Stewart street. The program was given by Mrs. Loy Alber, Mrs. Francis Artist and Mrs. Sellers. Mrs. Fred Jurgensmeyer presided. The luncheon table was centered w’ith a miniature rock garden, surrounded with spring flowers. Mrs. William Tyner was appointed to make arrangements for the annual lake trip taken by the group.

New Accessory Shop at L. S. Ayres’ Offers Up-to-Minute Fashions Feminine World Is Invited to ‘Match l p Costumes in Department Especially for Women; Ensembles Featured. by HELEN LINDSAY TECHNOCRACY may have had nothing to do with it, but the establishment of Ayres ’ Accessory Shop has all the ’ear marks' of that late fancy. . . . No longer need the woman who desires to match up gloves, neckwear. jewelry, and other accessories with the individual frock walk endlessly from one department to another, trying to find just the things to bring out the best points of a striking costume. Under the direction of Miss Elizabeth Prutzmann. Ayres' stylist. Misses Kathryn Roeap and Lena Gallegher have been established in a new first floor department at the L. S. Ayres store, and iniite the semi-

nine world to “match up." "We not only watch all the newest fashion indications from the east, but we have 1 a strong desire to bring out some of the latest ideas, even Before Harper’s Bazar and Vogue mention them," Miss Rocap confesses. And any fashion-smart woman can tell you that that is the highest ambition that could be expressed. Though only recently established, the Accessory Shop has been accepted by the feminine public with open arms. There's little wonder, for the ensembles concocted there would mak<? any woman giddy with pleasure. n u tt Neckwear Gircs Spring Touch THERE’S a white and red checked ascot scarf, teamed up with bag. belt and flower of bright red patent leather.

A yellow pique vest and gloves, to be used with a yellow knit belt, and a heavy Patou rope bracelet and ear rings of yellow composition, are on display. The frilly yellow neckw'ear which is accepted as the brightest spring-* time touch is arranged strikingly on blue and on brown. The newest idea for dressing up about the neck is the chiffon square, which is to be worn tied in careless cowboy fashion at the throat. With one of these, the color scheme of which is a red and white center, with large patterned black and white border, the Accessory Shop shows hat, bag, and gloves in red and w'hite small checked rayon knit. tt tt tt Derby Day Accessories Offered MATCHED with some of these accessory ensembles are cigaret case'! and lighters, companion pieces, in enamel finishes to blend with i gloves, purse and scarf. "Horsy" jewelry hints of interesting Derby Day ideas, with leather bracelets and leather straps used as pins, bearing a tiny horse-head in metal. An ensemble featuring this idea in the Accessory Shop has a small red purse, and a handkerchief with the print design of a "Ken* tucky thoroughbred” on it. Special vacation ideas will be carried out in the new shop. There will be Speedway ensembles; Derby ensembles; and later in the season bathing suits, with all the matching accessories. tt tt Colors Enliven Bathroom NEW decoration ideas for the home are being developed in important color schemes at the William H. Block Company. Many w'omen w’ho through the winter have practiced color application and designing in the various painting classes are putting their knowledge to practical use by . painting their own w'oodwwk, w r alls, and furniture. Apricot w'alls and ceiling may be used attractively with green woodwork in refinishing the kitchen, according to H. Sharlow, manager of the paint department. Another important color scheme suggested is azure biue ceiling, slightly darker blue w'alls and still darker blue woodwork. Bathrooms no longer need be reminiscent of a clinic or hospital. Use of color has advanced in this field, with orchid, ivory, and black or green taking a popular place. tt u “Buy American” Accentedl MEMBERS of the Hoosier Athletic Club were introduced to ona another this week in a novel way, with a “Buy American” business show 7 . Displays of the various business connections of the members of the club w'ere shown at the club, with prizes for the most attractive exhibits. First prize was won by the Gutzwiller Bakins Company; secona by the National Display Company; third by the Hlgn-Red Oil Display, with first honorable mention given to the Marott Shoe Store.

APRIL' 21, 1933

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Mrs. Lindsay