Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 23, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 June 1933 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Artists of State Have Day at Fair Welcome Given to Fifty in Indiana Hall at Exposition. BY BEATRICE Bt’RGAN Time* Woman * Pate Editor "INDIANA artists who have cast their moorings in Chicago received the attention of the Indiana Federation of Art Club today at the Century of Progress Exposition. Fifty or more painters gathered in the Indiana hall at the Court of

States to be welcomed as Hoosier sons. Mrs. John T. Wheeler, gracious and unperturbed with the rush of activities, greeted the honor guests as president of the sponsoring group. Tuesday afternoon she received dozens of Daughters of Indiana and the Hoosier Salon Patrons Association, Mrs. Wheeler

Miss Kurgan

motored up to the fair Monday with Mrs. Leonidas Smith, Mrs. Paul T. Payne, and Mrs. Helen Talge Brown, who are members of the art department of the Woman's Department Club. Today Mrs. Edward L. Pedlow, Mrs. L. P. Robinson and Mrs. Mark Weber arrived for the week. Art clubs from all parts of the state are supplying hostesses for the series of fetes, preambles to the reception, honoring Thomas Hart Benton and Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt on Friday afternoon. More than 300 Indianans, including college presidents, heads of fine arts departments and members of the Hoosier Salon Patrons’ Associaiton were issued invitations to attend this reception. Benton to Receive Guests In the hall where Benton of New York painted the murals depicting the history of Indiana, he will receive the guests. Members of the American Federation of Arts, in convention there, will be presented. One of the busiest Indiana visitors will be Wilbur D. Peat, director of John Herron Art Institute. He will be sharing in the exposition receptions and exhibits and attending three conventions. Following the American Federation of Arts convention, he will participate in the American Association of Museums meeting and attend sessions of museum directors. Paintings of the Indiana school of artists have been hung for the week's activities. Those artists were selected from a list of 143, chosen by various art groups in the state. Exhibit Chosen by Jury A jury chose a collection foi hanging at the exposition, after the pictures were displayed at the John Herron museum. This jury was composed of Mrs. H. B. Burnet, chairman of Indiana Women's Art activities; Mr. Peat and Wallace Richards, exhibits organized and assistant to Colonel Richard Lieber, chairman of tlie exposition commission for Indiana. Worthy of note in the exhibit will be a painting, "Figure Composition,’’ by Miss Lucy Taggart, daughter of the late Senator Thomas Taggart, and active Democratic woman leader. While Miss Taggart’s interest in art lacks professional enterprise, it is none the less keen. Painting, and even sculpture, is a hobby for which she has been trained extensively. Occasionally, she visits the art school and lectures on art subjects. Other women represented with hangings are Marie Goth and Ruth Pratt Bobbs. Joseph Henninger’s portrait, ‘‘My Brother," is included in the exhibit. His painting, ‘‘Dan,” was awarded first place at the last Hoosier Salon exhibit. 'Announce Engagement, The engagement of Miss Betty Gould to Colin G. Jameson of New York and Santa Barbara Cal., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Jameson of Santa Barbara, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Morton L. Gould. 4150 North Illinois street. The wedding will take place July 2. Bridge Party Slated Monthly mixed auction bridge party of the Hoosier Athletic Club will be at 6:15 Thursday night in the Chinese room. Mrs. Grove Weisenberger will be hostess, assisted by Mesdames William Sering, Hal Irons. Fred Turner. Francis Sutton. Harry E. Woods and Evan Weeks.

Daily Recipe SWEETBREADS WITH VEGETABLES .iij pairs sweetbreads 1 cup green peas 1 small-sized onion 1 cup small button mushrooms 1 cup diced carrots 1 cup string beans Kitchen bouquet of herbs i cup meat stock Salt and pepper Prange the sweetbreads into cold water and soak for one hour; then parboil them twenty minutes in water to which one teaspoon salt and one tablespoon vinegar have been added for each quart. After draining, plunge again into cold water. Cook the vegetables separately until almost done. Make a bed in the bottom of a sauce pan with the onion, peas, diced carrots and string beans cut into short lengths, mushrooms. and kitchen bouquet of herbs and lay the sweetbreads on top. Add meat stock, cover, and braise slowly for thirty minutes. To serve place the sweetbreads in the center of the platter and around them arrange the vegetables. Garnish with crisp watercress.

Heads Senior Class

kegon, Mich., Is president of the Igp:' will bold its graduation % exercises Friday night. -A JV |

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Everybody know* the comfort which comes from stating his case. Here is your opportunity to tel! what kind of life you have had and to gain a better understanding of your experiences. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a married woman 42 years old. I was married at 19 and was a mother at 20. I loved my husband dearly, but within three months after we were married he began drinking very hard and hardly drew a sober breath for more than three years. He ran around with girls and passed himself off as a single man. It almost broke my heart then. He left me penniless for no reason whatever except that he was tired of being married. I had no home, as I was an orphan, and I was to be a mother within four months. I persuaded him to come back. About a month before the baby was born he asked me to get a divorce and set him free, but I loved him and felt I needed him and I wouldn’t do it. So he just kept on drinking and running around with other women. When baby was about 5 years old, I began to feel my love for him was dying and I was going to leave, but he promised to do better. When she was 10, he was doing so much better that I began to forget the past, and my sympathy was moved by a poor little homeless baby boy -whom I took to raise. Then trouble started again, although he was perfectly willing for me to take the baby. He started to run with a young widow, and that finished my love for him. I told him to take his clothes and leave, but he wouldn’t do that. I don’t love him any more and am no wife to him, yet he stays. So, what pm I to do? JUST ANOTHER ICEBERG. Answer—l suppose the man feels that since you wouldn’t let him go when he wanted to be free that he won’t go now when you want to be free. You felt you needed him then because you were young and had

no place to go. Perhaps he feels that he needs you now' because he is old and has no place to go. In that case, turn about w’ould seem to be fair play. Your husband’s misspent life lias not fitted him to battle the world alone. He has spent his entire time in running from reality. The

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Jane Jordan

adult problems of marriage, fatherhood and providing have been beyond his powers. He couldn’t meet them fairly and squarely, and found in alcohol a temporary refuge from the struggle of living. Every drunkard has an inner history of conflict unknown to his family and sometimes unknown to himself. I do not know what conflict caused your husband's long years of vacillating between good and evil. The fact that he improved in some periods argues that he isn’t all bad. Yet he did not gain sufficient control to prevent other lapses into drunkenness. I do not know what constitutes the cure for excessive drinking, but I believe that the answer lies in the hands of the psychologist who looks into the mental realm for the cause. Men do not drink alcohol for its taste. They drink because it affords an easy entry into the world of phantasy, and provides a path away from the world of fact. The reconstruction of a defeated personality is a work to be undertaken only by an expert. I do not know what you can do with a man who has made such a wreck of his life, unless you turn your back on him entirely and sue him for divorce. Your letter is signed “Just Another Iceberg." The letter I offered to answer personally was signed, “An-Iceberg-Who-Craves-to-Melt," but her problem is a very different one. I do not have her ir. C. T. V . TO HOLD ■ MEMORIAL RITES Vayhinger W. C. T. U- will hold memorial services for Mrs. Lavona Darby. Mrs. Agnes Keeler, Mrs. Flora Quinn and Mrs. Ella Lashbrook at 2 Thursday at Keystone and East Tenth streets. Tlie Rev. Charles Fillmore will give the address. Mrs. Carl Gruelle will sing, and Mrs. Ira Underwood will lead devotions. Hostesses will be Mrs Gruelle, Mrs. E. P. Messick and Mrs. M. P. Willey. Guild Holds Meeting Children's Cheer Guild of Broadway Methodist Episcopal church, branch of the White Cross Guild of the Methodist hospital, held a luncheon meeting today at the home of Mrs. George Hoagland, 115 East Twenty-fifth street. After the business f meeting, members visited the hospital-

Miss Phyllis Gordan Photo bv Photo-Craft.

address, but I will answer her letter when she sends it. a tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—What do you think of a boy who thinks I am too good for him? He is a very nice and polite boy, although I know of a girl who had a date with him who said he was ‘‘ornery.” He has what you might, call two characters. When he is with a group of boys he is silly and cuts up. but w’hen he is with me he is different. He told me when he had the last date with me that I was different. Do you think he really means this or is it just a line? B. B. T. Answer—Almost every one has two or more sides to his character. A man always shows a different side to his men friends than he does to his women friends. It seems inevitable that women should regard the playful behavior of men minus women as silly. They do not relish the spectacle of men having a good time, which excludes themselves. A girl regards it as a great compliment when a man tells her she is different. He is quick to detect her vulnerable spot and tell her what she wants to hear. I haven’t the least idea whether your boy friend is sincere or not. Even if he isn’t, it’s a harmless pleasantry. Why not enjoy it as such, without taking such a serious attitude?

SORORITY FRAMES JUNE PICNIC PLANS

Mrs. R. J. Anderson, 4816 Pleasant Run parkway, will be hostess for the annual June picnic of Sigma Alpha lota sorority at 6:30 Thursday night. Members of Theta chapter, Mu Zeta alumnae group, and the Patroness Club will attend. Miss Ruth Van Matre, senior student at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, will be honor guest. Husbands of members have been invited. Mrs. Russell Whissle, social chairman, is in charge of arrangements-

Card Parties

Prospect Auxiliary, No. 452, O. E. S., will hold a card party at 2 Friday afternoon in Banner-Whitehill auditorium. June circle, St. Patrick Social Club, will sponsor card parties tonight and Friday afternoon at the school hall. Mrs. Harry McHale is chairman. Ladies society. B. L. F. & E.. will sponsor a card party at 8:30 Thursday night at McClean hall, Hoyt and State avenues. PARTY ARRANGED FOR BRIDE-ELECT Mrs. W. O. Setty will entertain at her home, 1309 Gladstone avenue, tonight in honor of Miss Martha Worth, daughter of R. F. Worth, 3942 East Thirtieth street. The marriage of Miss Worth to James Kenneth Setty will take place June 21. Guests will be Misses Margaret Hoyt, Lilly Miller, Ruth Harris, Eleanor Stoneburner, Helen White, Pamela Murray, Virginia McCool, Betty and Isabelle Haessig and Mrs. Dill Robinson. Appointments will be in pink and white. The hostess will be assisted by Misses Gladys and Nellie Setty. Graduates to Dine Methodist Hospital Alumnae Association will give its annual dinner for the graduating class next Tuesday night at Avalon Country Club. Favors of roses, tied with green and white ribbon, will be presented to thfe seventy-four seniors. Dancing will follow the dinner. Miss Irene Girton is chairman of the affair. Auxiliary to Meet Entertainment committee of the women's auxiliary to Sahara Grotto gave a luncheon today at the home of Mrs. Ina Stebbing, 24 West Fortythird street. Mrs. Mae Oliver, president, will be a guest.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Orange juice, cereal, cream fried cornmeal mush, maple syrup, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Beet soup, toasted cheese sandwiches, pineapple and rice pudding, milk, tea. Dinner — Larded calf's liver, riced potatoes, glazed carrots, grapefruit and sweet pepper salad*., caramel pie, milk, coffe#.

: THE INDIANAPOLIS TDIES

Women to Entertain Fair Guests Social Activities Will Be Planned by State Committee. Social activities of the Indiana commission of a Century of Progress will be arranged by the heads of women's organizations, according to announcement made by Mrs. Paul v. McNutt, chairman of the social activity committee of the state. Assisting Mrs. McNutt are Miss Lucy Taggart and Mrs. H. B. Burnet. Indiana Federation of Art clubs is in charge of the activities at present and the Kappa Kappa Kappa sorority will act as hostess from July 9 to 23. Members of the subcommittee assisting the social activity committee are Mrs. Chalmer Schafer of Ft. Wayne, Kappa Kappa Kappa; John T. Wheeler, Federation of Art clubs; Mrs. Edwin N. Canine of Terre Haute, Indiana Federation of clubs; Mrs. Hamet D. Hinkle of Vincennes, Hoosier program bureau; Mrs. Erwin F. Miller of Anderson, Indiana Federation of American Associations of University Women; Mrs. Elias C. Atkins, Junior League; Mrs. W.* J. Hockett of Ft. Wayne, Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers; Mrs. E. Maude Bruce of Anderson. May Wright Sewell council of Indiana women; Mrs. C. B. King of Chicago, Hoosier Salon, and Mrs. Adah O. Frost. Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women.

Daughter of Pastor to Wed Tennessee Man Miss Mary Elizabeth Hunt, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. T. N. Hunt, will become the bride of Robert Phillip Leach, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Leach of Chattanooga, Tenn., in a ceremony tonight -at the Seventh Presbyterian church. Mr. Hunt, father of the bride-elect, will officiate. Mrs. Samuel E. Garrison, organist, will play bridal airs, and Raymond Forbes will sing ‘‘Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life” and "At Dawning.” Miss Marian White, maid of honor. will wear blue organdy and carry pink roses. The bride will wear her mother’s wedding gow r n, which is made of silk embroidered net over satin. She wall w’ear a veil and carry a bouquet of bridal flowers. Mrs. Hunt will be in grey silk. Harold Strait will be best man and Norman Cary and Ray Cox, ushers. Following the ceremony, a reception will be held at the Hunt home, 1318 Pleasant street, for members of the family and the bridal party. Out-of-town guests will be Miss Clare Wallace of Omaha, 111.; Mr. and Mrs: W. H. Hogan and daughter, Miss Margaret Hogan of Springfield. 111. The couple will leave on a motor trip and will be at home at 1209 East Thirty-seventh street, in Chattanooga. Both are graduates of Maryland college. Tennessee.

SORORITY HONORS GO TO STUDENTS Circle degree of Delta Delta Delta sorority .has been conferred on five Butler university seniors by the Indianapolis Alliance. They are Misses Jane Cartwright, Mary Harvey, Caroline Hofft, Eleanor Marshall and Lavon Rice. Crested bracelets have been given members of active chapters holding highest scholastic standings during the year. They are Miss Dorothy Barr of Franklin college, Miss Marjorie Carr of Butler. Miss Louise Link of De Pauw university, and Miss. Edith Alice Prentice of Indiana university. TWO CITY GIRLS TO GET DIPLOMAS Two Indianapolis girls will receive degrees from Sarah Lawrence college of Bronxville, N. Y.. at commencement exercises Saturday-. Miss Amelia Cheek, daughter of William F. Cheek, Seventy-first and Meridian streets, and Miss Janet Holliday, daughter of Mrs. Alexander Holliday, 1235 North New Jersey street, will be graduated. Both have been active in extracurricular affairs. Five to Be Initiated Initiation services will be held for five rushees of Rho Zeta Tau sorority at 8:30 Thursday night at the home of the president. Mrs. Clarencet Sullivan, 1013 Chadwick avenue. Rushees to be initiated are Mrs. Frank Guyer, Mrs. Clay Edwards, Misses Katherine Kimmel, Lucille Ritter and Helen Marquis.

Sororities

Regular business meeting of Sigma Phi Delta sorority will be held at 6 tonight at the home of Mrs. Kenneth Gossett, 1623 Allison street. Alpha Tau chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, will meet tonight at the Antlers. Miss Esther Owens, 336 Whittier place, will be hostess tonight at a meeting of Chi Tau Alpha sororoity. Guests will include Misses Sally Larner, Catherine Conwell and Peg Gordon, and Mrs. J. R. Scott and Mrs. Elmer Shockley. Beta chapter, Alpha Beta Gamma sorority, will hold a busin&is meeting tonight at the home of Miss Louise Schuesler, 101 North Elder avenue. Miss Gertrude Henn wall be hostess for the meeting of the Omega Chi sorority tonight. Chi Beta Kappa sorority will meet at the home of Miss Lola Belle Venable tonight. Miss Margaret Welch will assist the hostess.

PERMANENTS , THERE IS A BEST! DI/R-O-LISTTC” (Method and Frooes*) #I.OO to #IO.OO Does Not I*lrolor White Hair BEAUTE ARTE3 601 Roosevelt Bldg. LI. 0670—N0 Appointment XeeesMt?.

Crashing Into Fashion

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The white crash linen jacket, completing the black linen dress, is brand new- this summer. This little jacket has unusual chic, with its buckled fastenings, its wide revers and easy sleeves. The dress is black linen skirted and has black and w’hite polka dotted linen for the waist.

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- 5 19 2 tern No. Size Street City State Name ...

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SMART APRON

A New York reporter with a nose for fashion news tells us that, because many society women these days are preparing their own tidbits. it has become the fashion to wear aprons that reach from the shoulders to below the knees. The rule seems to be: Be your own cook, but ruin no frocks—big aprons are chic. If you’re the kind of woman who plays hostess and cooks her dinner at the same time, you know what a good rule that is. It’s good news to learn that it’s smart to whisk back and forth from pantry to buffet with a generous apron of natural-color crash or gay checked gingham covering all but the tip-top and the very bottom of a fluttery chiffon frock. The apron we’vp sketched here not only meets the requirements for size, but in addition has a pair of flippant pockets that are very handy. Make it in crash, gingham or percale, and finish the edges with binding. You’ll need several for all the summer parties coming on, and they're easy to make. Size 16 requires only 1*; yards 36-inch material. 7’i yards binding. Patern No. 5192 is designed for sizes 14. 16, 18 years, 34. 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 bust. Price for pattern 15 cents. New summer fashion book is out! Send for it —put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book.

I king's^ |TRfAT| I SEE FRIDAY’S TIMES j

Alumni Day to Be Celebrated at Butler U. Special features of the Butler university Alumni day celebration Saturday will be numbers from the May day pageant and senior class activities. John Fuller is general chairman of the reunion, which will be attended by representatives from all graduating classes. Beginning at 3, the program will continue through the day. The senior class of the university will present its class day exercises and dedicate the “senior grove,” gift of the class to the university. Ralph Moore, president, will be in charge. The dancing numbers will be presented at 4:30, followed by a concert by the band and a class parade. Supper will be served a' 6 on the campus. Dr. Daniel W. Layman, president of the alumni association, will preside at the business meeting, scheduled for 8. Robert R. Batton of Marion w’ill be speaker. John F. Mitchell, of Greenfield, will give a report of the nominating committee and officers will be elected. Sorority to Picnic Annual family picnic at Forest park in Noblesville wifi be held by Beta Beta alumnae chapter of Alpha Chi Omega sorority Sunday, June 18. The regular meeting of the chapter has been postponed, Club to Close Season The Parliamentary Club will close its season w'ith a tea Monday at the Y. W. C. A.

Purchase and SALE!..BOYS’ WASH— - sum So‘ are sketched! Sleeveless or jj# with sleeves! Many with basque shirts and suspender trousers! Famous “Peter * Pan” quality . . . with the “Peter Pan” guarantee B -■ _ FAST COLORS AND ABSO- [) I f II f LUTE SATISFACTION! At- fS | I ) I YJ tractive color combinations! Sizes 3 to 3. •* BOY’S SHOP—Third Floor.

Whitney House Maple Is Used for Furnishing of Ayres’. Colonial Rooms Rough-Hewn Boards Form One Floor; Drapes of Tiny-Checked Green and White Chintz Are Striking*. BY HELEN LINDSAY WHITNEY House Maple has been used for the furnishing of the new colonial rooms at the L. S. Ayres store, recently planned and executed by Burns and James, architects. In one room a simple, garden pattern of wall paper, featured this month in "Home and Field.'' been used. The design is developed with red flower pots, and brightly colored wheelbarrows and garden implements. Lighting for the room is individual, coming indirectly from a small trough at the top of the wide door sills. The room is furnished as a bedroom, with the dressing table draped in red chintz. White tie-back curtains are held in place with large red chintz bows. The bedspread is white, designed in red and white candlewicking. Dead white woodwork brings out the unusual coloring effectively.

Primitive rough-hew’n boards form the floor in another room. Saw marks and attempted smoothing of the heavy boards by an adz are evident. The nails used are large studded ones, and the entire floor has been stained dark, to achieve an old appearance. The rug used is a copy of a New England hooked pattern, made in China. Prominent in the decoration of this room are the drapes, which are of tiny checked green and white chintz, lined with a plain color of the same material. Milk glass made from the old colonial molds has been used on shelves and an old maple Cape Cod rocker is covered in sturdy looking figured denim. a tt tt Floor Coverings Are Different THE rooms have been designed particularly to showdifferent kinds of floor covering. In one room the

floor is made of maisonite, which is pressed wood pulp. Linoleum in a plain color, with a set-in border of a lighter, contrasting color has been used in another. Colored and figured carpets are shown in some of the rooms, with the color which predominates in the carpet design carried out in the molding. Such an air of homely comfort has been reached in the new rooms that visitors often spend much time there, resting. A jigsaw puzzle ha* been placed on a table in a coi-ner of one of the rooms. Employees of the store find it necessary to disarrange its pieces many times a day, in preparation for the next guest’s entertainment. a a tt REALIZING that no “keepsake” has the sentimental appeal of a baby’s first shoe. Marott’s is offering to mothers whose children are growing up anew- service. The first shoe, with all its creases and worn places intact, now- can be covered with a silver coating, perpetuating it as a memento for years. tt tt tt City Planning Exhibit Arranged BEGINNING June 12, an exhibit of city planning, with its possibilities and advantages, will be offered to Indianapolis citizens on the second floor of the Architects and Builders building, 333 North Pennsylvania street. The display has been prepared by the American Institute of Architects. It consists of more than 200 drawings, showing actual communities before and after being made sanitary and habitable by proper planning and reconstruction. August Bohlen, head of the Indianapolis chapter of the American Institute of Architects, in charge of the exhibit, is urging local clubs to hold their meetings in the building during the display. The arrangements for the exhibit are being made by Leslie F. Ayres, architect who designed the model home for the 1933 Home Complete Exposition. tt a tt MONDAY marked the opening of a new’ tearoom. “The Cupboard," at 46 West Twenty-seventh street, under management of Mrs. Edith MacLeod. Mrs. MacLeod formerly was proprietor of "The Corner Cupboard.” Her menus will feature home-baked pies, cakes, and other pastries, and simple, w’holesome foods. She will serve special luncheons and dinners, at moderate prices.

NURSES ’ CHORUS TO PRESENT PROGRAM Mrs. Jane Burroughs and Mrs. Helene Harrison, accompanist, assisted by Marguerite Baihle Steinhart, will present the Nurses’ chorus of the Methodist hospital in a program at 8 Wednesday night at John Herron Art institute. Members of the chorus are Katherine Myers, Orpha Williams, Margaret Wilhite. Betty Tapscott. Margaret B. Dailey, M. Rafferty, Zella Weist, Catherine Smith, Alice Holzhouse, Kathleen Hayworth, Helen Overstreet, Wanda Plunkett, Rosalie William, Josephine Smith, Mary Sutton, Helen Ruth Rica, Gertrude Kirckhoff. Ruth Landis, Mildred Bliss Harting, Ogarietta Cross, B. Zirckle, Jeanne Scott, Wilma Price.

-TONE 7, 1933

Mrs, Lindsay

Virginia Holloway, Inez Williams, Cara Nelle Summa. Jean Hine, Nola Stevens, Vera May Evans. Marie Kaellner, Marguerite Thackery, Jean Clark. Mary Frances Leach, Gladys La Rue, Helen Goodpasture Betty Barrett. Lucille House, Helen Schlesinger, Grwilda De Lay, Ruth Myers, Charline Thornburg, Helen Ault, Lora Vawter, Kathryn Griffith, Mary Mildred Powell, Carolyn Davis, Frances Van Pelt, Eleanor Brown, Pearl Murray, Emma Beaver. Tea Is Arranged Mrs. Thor G. Wesenberg will entertain members and alumnae of Scarlet Quill, honorary organization for senior women at Butler university, with a tea from 4 to 6 Saturday at her home, 429 Buckingham drive. Mrs. Wesenberg is sponsor of the group.