Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 25, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1933 — Page 12
PAGE 12
Military Air to Rule at Club Ball Notables of Army and Navy Will Attend Annual Event. BY BEATRICE BI.'RGAN Tim** Woman * Paie Kdilor Squared shoulders will be the fashion at the Columbia Club ball Saturday, June 17. There'll be no artifice about the effect, no intricate pieatings or fluting* of couturier designs. The shoulder keynote will be set by the military attaches, who'll assist the club to sound "taps" for social activities at the
annual military ball, usually held in early spring. Invitations were issued this week, stirring a patriotic burst with the red, white, and blue stripes on the inv it a tion sheet and envelope. Enthusiasm was aroused, despite the thermometer gambol, by the promise of the presence of Major-G e n e r a 1 George V. Mose-
Miss Burgan
ley, fifth corps area commander of Columbus, O; Rear Admiral Wat H Cluverius, commandant of the Great Lakes naval station at Chicago, and Brigadier-General F. C. Bolles of Ft. Sheridan, 111. Pomp and ceremony, so lacking in the usual social life here, will have its night. The ranking officer's flag will hang above the speaker’s table, in this case being thp colors of the major-general. After all the speeches and the dinner, Ihe evening will reach the peak. The distinguished visitors will receive guests and lead the grand march, to the blare of military tunes. Besides the braid and metal-trimmed army styles will float the swishing softness of the summer formality for women. Governor Is Honor Guest Honor guests, lending eclat to the hall, will he Governor Paul V. MrJNutt. commander of military forces jn Indiana Adjutant-General Elmer F Straub. Major-General Robert H. Tyndall-of the Thirty-eighth division; Brigadier-General George H. Jamerson of Ft. Benjamin Harrison: Brigadier-General L. R. Gignilliat of Culver Military academy; BrigadierGeneral George H. Healy, Military Order of Foreign Wars, and Lieu-tenant-Commander O. H. Hessler, naval militia. More than active military leaders will be represented, as has been the custom of former military balls at the club. Commander Louis A. Johnson and Adjutant Frank E. Samuels, both of the American Legion, will in the line of honor, as will Major J. H. Davidson, Eightyfourth division: Colonel W. M. Louden, Spanish-American war veterans: Captain Frank S. Clark, Veteran of Foreign Wars, and Commander James Bowden and Adjutant Joseph B. Henninger, both of the G. A. R. The reception will be in the foyer following dinner. The club's idea of the ball isn't merely to end its social season with a "splash." Hope is to cement the civilian life of the city and state with the military establishment in this territory. Preparations for the hall and dinner are being made by R. C. Rottger, chairman: M. L. Mendenhall, vice-chairman, and Dudley R. Gallahue. Wallace O. Lee and Thomas F. Ruckelshaus. Co-operating with this group will be aids of General Jamerson and Major Tyndall. Adjutant Samuels will work directly with the committee and so will Major Davidson and Colonel Louden. ‘Comers' to Give Ball The "coming" business and civic leaders of Indianapolis will frolic at Ihr Columbia Club Saturday night. Many of the young business men, just beginning their ventures, belong to the Junior Chamber of Commerce, which will entertain with its formal spring ball. Special parties have been arranged by several members, including Charles Dernier. Hal Aspey, Frank Jones, J. Russell Townsend, H. Edward Raffensperger, Blavne McCurry and Frank Fee. A list of patrons and patronesses Includes prominent leaders of business and social affairs. Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt have been invited as guests. Shower Is Given Miss Helen Bettcher. 2035 North Meridian street, entertained Wednesday night with a shower for Mrs. Donald Cook, formerly Miss Ruth Mae Bostic. Guests included Mesdames Fred Mohler and Beldon Montgomery and Misses Arlene Allen, Bernice Schnell, Margaret Beckwith, Helen Bradley and Evelyn Carpenter.
Wm :o c p* , .<C V> \^ v , FURSSi INDIANA FUR CO. I - B l:. Ohio St. I lnroln '.'.’iloj
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Delta Gamma Luncheon to Finish Season Indianapolis Alumnae chapter of Delta Gamma sorority will close its season Saturday with a picnic luncheon at Hillside, country home of Mrs. Frank L. Churchman, retiring president. She will be assisted by Mesdames George O. Browne, Alfred H. Guyot, and John D. Pitcher. Officers for the coming year will be installed. They are Mrs. Guyot, president; Miss Mary Virginia Clark, vice-president; Mrs. G. E. Morrison, recording secretary; Mrs. Paul D. Gayman, corresponding secretary; and Miss Edna Nowland. treasurer. Bridge sections of the alumnae chapter will have individual playoffs next week. Proceeds will be added to the building fund of Butler university chapter. i reports from the world's great fashion centers. For pique jackets fill a definite need in every woman's wardrobe. Their crisp lines are a clever foil for the frilliness of feminine summer evening frocks. Their tailored look is perfect for sports and tailored costumes. Add to this their washability, their inexpensiveness, their newness, and you have some of the more important reasons for their great success. See how easily the one smart pattern sketched at the right adapts itself to two very different little jackets. Above, you have the perfect summer evening jacket; slim fitted w'aist, wide notched lapels. Gibson-girlish sleeves with the new broad shoulders that make your waist look even slimmer. Below, the same skeleton pattern adds short cap sleeves and a rolled collar to make an ideal little blouse or over-blouse for tailored suits and sports outfits. Both are very easy-to-make. For fabric requirements see pattern envelope. Pattern No. 5254 is designed for sizes 12. 14. 16, 18. 20 years, 30, 32, 34. 36. 38. 40. 42 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. (Copyrißht, 1933. by United Features Syndicate. Inc.l
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Council to Honor Gold Star Group Mothers Will Be Guests at Tea in McNutt Mansion. May Wright Sewell Council of Indiana Women will hold a tea Sept. 28 in the Governor’s mansion in honor of the Gold Star mothers who will be attending the national American War Mothers' convention in the city at that time. Announcement was made at the meeting of the board of directors of the council Thursday at the Lincoln. Mrs. E. Maude Bruce of Anderson presided. Mrs. C. W. Foltz, president of Indianapolis council, will be chairman, assisted by the members of the state board and Mesdames Henry Humphrey of Osgood, Josephine Espy. Harry Neff, and Harry Baldwin of Anderson. Both Indiana and Indianapolis councils will be allowed one official representative in each of the six round tables to be held at the International Congress of Women in Chicago, July 16 to 22. The state board of directors made the following appointments: Mrs. T. J. Louden of Bloomington, se-curity-threugh-government committee; Miss Mercia Hoagland of Indianapolis, seeurity-through-em-ployment; Mrs. Bruce, opportunity-through-leisure; Mrs. Glenn Gifford of Tipton, educational; Miss Emma May of Terre Haute, security-through-buying-power, and Mrs. Espy of Logansport, security-against-destructive-forces. It was voted Thursday to ask permission of Mrs. Paul V. McNutt to be hostess Thursday, July 20, in the Indiana building at the Century of Progress. Mrs. McNutt is chairman of the social activity committee of Indiana's commission. Mrs. J. A. Cejnar was appointed transportation chairman of the international congress. BRIDE-TO-BE WILL BE SHOWER GUEST Miss Martha Worth will be honor guest at a shower and bridge party to be given tonight by Mrs. Paul Spencer at her home, 1951 Park avenue. The marriage of Miss Worth to Kenneth Setty will take place June 21. Guests with Miss Worth will be Misses Pampla Murray. Gladys Setty, Nellie Setty Marjorie Douglas, Phyllis Steinbruegge. Olive Montel, and Eleanor Stoneburner, and Mesdames Edward Musselman, Artist Gant, and Kenneth Swengel.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Halves of grape fruit, cereal cooked with raisins, cream, crisp toast, soft cooked eggs, milk, coffee. * Luncheon — Green peas cooked with bacon in cream sauce, salad of cream cheese and almond balls on bed of cress, strawberry turnovers, milk, tea. Dinner — Chili Con Came, spring salad, deep dish rhubarb pie, milk, coffee.
|kingD ||IRJEAT| | SEE PAGE 11
Manners and Morals
Jan* Jordan alwar* i* willinr to print , an adverse comment. Both side* of a controversv deserve a hrarinj. Where do vou stand in this argument? Write your letter now! Dear Jane Jordan—On reading "Manners and Morals," I smile, j Why not make it "Manners and Immorals?" Apparently you stand for immorality and the destruc- j tion of home and family life. You j advocate that men and women descend to the level of the brute creation. Your mind wallows in putrid filth. The Chinese have a proverb. "The virtue of a vase lies not in j the potter's clay but in the potter's skill." Evidently you believe j this and are doing your best to j mold poor, ignorant women who i haven't the intelligence or com- ; mon sense to form an opinion of ; their own, You admire the lives led by the j Russian ladies. May the ilk you \ admire remain in Russia. We have i enough prostitutes through people with opinions like vours. M. E. CLARK. Answer—l do not stand for the destruction of home and family life.! On the contrary. I believe in both quite fervidly. But unless marriage j
is rid of its sham and hypocrisy. I tremble for its future. Human be- | ings no longer | will submit to marriage as a torturous bond. Men and women will not remain sh a static relationship, more productive o f pain than of pleasure. I do not believe that men and women should de-
f| IfchrX Jane Jordan
i scend to the levels of brute creation, j though I often see them doing so jin marriage. I see brutal husbands domineering over crushed wives. | hopelessly handicapped by the eco- ! nomic needs of little children. I ! see women who hold the title of i wife who are nothing more than I prostitutes bartering their sex cap- ; ital in exchange for economic support. There are no prostitutes in Russia. Maurice Hindus in his book. "Humanity Uprooted," writes: "The revolutionaries regard the exploitaj tion of a woman’s body for commerj cial gain as a vicious insult to wom- | anhood. Nowhere in Russia are pornographic pictures peddled i around openly or secretly—they are j not to be had. The Russian pubj lie does not crave and does not de- | mand vicarious forms of sex excitement.” I believe in the sort of love which the senses share and the soul en- | nobles. I respect it wherever it is j found, in or out of marriage. If this be filthy, then I am indeed filthy. I think the Chinese proverb is lovely. n n h Dear Jane Jordan—So you are I being challenged! May I enter the lists? Let us grant that ; monogamy is a form of marriage in which the highest possible relationship can be attained. But our loyalty to monogamous mar- ! riage must be predicated upon an j honest evaluation of the contri- ! bution it makes to spiritual growth, 1 to social usefulness and to hap- ; piness. So must any extra-legal relationship be evaluated. Is there decency in loyalty to the empty shell of an institution? In many instances, marriage represents nothing hort of legalized prostitution. On the other hand. I have seen in practice many extralegal relationships, which, if honestly evaluated, must be consid-
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BY JANE JORDA
ered among the finest and most worthy of human relationships—where loyalty to the best, to decency and a high purpose were the chief motivating factors. If you are to guide folks to a better way of living, you must develop in them an ability to evaluate the situations in which they find themselves. You must guide them to a desire for the higher values which are possible in human relationships. This, it seems to me, you are doing. The general trend of your advice is toward the guiding of passion and desire in the right direction. through a love for something higher and better, something contributory to the development of a well-rounded personality. in which the tilings of the body, the mind, and the spirit shall be blended in a wholesome way. Virtue lies not in self-abnega-tion. but in self-development for the good of oneself and of others. Sometimes as you meet these problems you will parallel current conventions, sometimes violate them, sometimes transcend them. But as long as you try to teach people to face the facts of life honestly, and to seek a better way of life as you now are doing, why more power to you! P. V. B. A. Answer—lt was extremely interesting to find two letters containing such widely varying opinions in the same mail. Because I do not regard familiar notions as sacred, I am not understood by those who do. I am for marriage when it is a blessing and a delight, but against it as a conventiona coercion. Throughout long and dirty generations, society has sought to cast aspersions on love barred from finding its fulfilment in marriage. Plays like Philip Barry's "Animal Kingdom” have shown us situations in whch the wife has the qualities of a mistress and the mistress the qualities of a wife. r hope that these two letters will stimulate others to write the column, telling on which side of the fence they stand, and why. MRS. 'JOHNSTON IS PARTY HONOR GUEST A bridge party and shower was given for Mrs. Morris L. Johnston Thursday night by Mrs. Horace R. Riggs. 42 North Oakland avenue. Mrs. Johnston formerly was Miss Evelyn Boyd. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. L. C. Schwartz. Guests included Mesdames Daniel Culman, Margaret Andrew, Frances Snead, Sadie Hollingsworth and June Hartzog and Misses Helen Louise Perkins, Pansye Gladish, Anna Daringer, Natella Scamahorn, Dana Scamahorn, Helen Bettcher, Christine Butt. Dorothy Fallon and Mary Margaret Kohnle.
Daily Recipe CHERRY JELLY WITH CREAM Dissolve one package cherry gelatin in two cups boiling water, and cool. Add the syrup from an 8-ounce can of pitted black cherries. When the mixture starts to set, add the sliced cherries, and pour into a large mold or six small ones. Chill. Serve with one cup of light cream.
Special Children’s Day Is i Arranged at Ayres’; Talk ; on ‘Spies’ to Be Feature ‘Story Lady’ Will Tell Indian Tales in Book Shop; Beach Department to Have Formal Opening:.
BY HELEN LINDSAY IN celebration of the close of public schools. Indianapolis children will be entertained all day Saturday at Ayres. Special programs have been arranged. The most exciting of these are three talks to be given by Major Yardley author of "The Black Chamber." During the World war. Major Yardley was employed in the United States secret service, where he gained fame as a specialist in decoding secret messages. He will talk at 10:30, 2:30. and 4:30 Saturday in the Ayres store auditorium, on "Spies,” and will give demonstrations of secret ink writing. At 11 and 3 Miss Myrtle Snyder, known in radio circles as "The Storv Lady.” will tell Indian stories in the book shop. She will be dressed in
Indian costume. Miss Snyder has been in Indianapolis before, telling stories under auspices of the Book House corporation, in schools and public libraries. The children's department of the Ayres Beach Shop will have its formal opening Saturday, when all the summer bathing and play costumes are to be exhibited. Indications are that the youngsters will be organized into their own particular "nudist colony" this year. Bathing suits are wool trunks, although for the more modest, strap tops are provided, which conceal little. These are made to button on to the trunks. Sun suits for children this year are mere patches of cotton print. They are designed for youngsters from 3 to 6. and have large matching hats, to protect faces from freckles. If guests arrive, and it is necessary to bring chil-
dren in from the play yard to greet them, flattering aprons are provided, in matching material, to be donned over the sun suits. These are made with straps over the shoulders, and ties in back. Like other summer wear for young children, the aprons are backless. Older girls will be interested in wrap-around beach dresses, made of striped cottons, which can be worn over bathing suits. One-piece bicycle dresses, made with divided skirts, are suitable for this wear, since most, girls prefer boys’ bicycles. They are made of striped cottons. Bright colored canvas sport shoes have composition soles. They can be laundered in the washing machine. a a a IN the toy department at Ayres, new dolls are waiting tu greet little girls on Saturday. Each doll has an individual name. There is Dollv Varden, Sunflower Sue, Bettina, Katrina, and Gretchen. They have soft bodies, hand-painted faces, and hair made of colored yarn. Little colored dolls, made in the same fashion, bear characteristic names such as Dixie Lee, Ginger, and Dixie Bell. ana TEK-NO-KRAZY" is the new game offered at Ayres to keep active children interested and quiet on hot afternoons. It is played with thirty pegs and a board made with thirty-two holes. ana ANEW contest offering trips to the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago for the first ten winners has been opened bv the People's Outfitting Company. With each dollar purchase ten votes are given. These may be assigned to the buyer or to some friend entered in the contest. The first four awards are cash and round trip tickets to the fair. The other six winners will be given round trip tickets to Chicago. The contest will close at 5 on July 31.
LUNCHEON HONORS LODGE OFFICERS Retiring officers of Job’s Daughters, Bethel No. 1, will be honored at a luncheon Saturday at Castle hall, followed by election of new officers. Mrs. Marie Leonard, past guardian, and vice-grand guardian, will be a guest. Retiring officers are: Misses Virginia James, honored queen; Riddel, senior princess; Marjorie Ferree, junior princess; Beulah Hopping, guide; Mary Bell, marshal; Maryalice Folkerth, chaplin; Regina Koch, treasurer; Margaret Taylor, recorder; Helen Warriner, pianist; Frances Morgan, fifth messenger; Dorothea West, fourth messenger; Betty Burkle, third messenger; Dorothy Haas, sec-
L. S. AYRES & CO. Formal Rings That Look Twice the Price 61 THE DAHLIA . . I\ MARCASITE A best seller in a slightly larger size at about twice this price. One of a handsome group of real marcasite rings, including bow-knot and other popular designs. % SEMI PRECIOUS STONES Richly colored, highly polished, and surrounded with a circle of glittering marcasite. Onyx (black) Lapis (blue) t'hrysophrase (green) Carnelian (reddish brown) Hematite (gunmetalish gray) To Wear With Your Chiffons AYRES—JEWELRY—STREET FLOOR.
JUNE 9, 1933
Mrs. Lindsay
i ond messenger; Mary Ellen Shellburn, first messenger Jeanette Fickle, senior custodian; Mary Ellen Billeter, junior custodian; Frances Bratten, inner guard; and Lorraine Boyden, outer guard. Luncheon for Teacher Miss Emma Leonard of the faculty of Western college at Oxford. 0., will ! attend a luncheon Saturday, given by the local alumnae club at the home of Mrs. Robert Aldag, 5740 Pleasant Run parkway. Mrs. Harry J. Weil is in charge of reservations. Engagement Announced Engagement of Miss Eleanor Wolf to Allan W. Kahn, son of Edward A. Kahn, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Wolf, 5432 North Pennsylvania street.
