Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 55, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1933 — Page 10

PAGE 10

Social Set at Peak of Vacationing Leisurely Pursuits Mark Activities in Clubs and Homes. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN Timrs Woman * Pa** Editor rUMMER brings a. lag in activity. EveA’one is casual about doing things. Tomorrow is another day to be considered onjy when it arrives. It's much more fun to let things happen unexpectedly. Country’ clubs and summer homes are the centers of much of summer’s

vagabonding. Someone in pursuit of a pastime motors to the clubhouse, and soon a party of friends has gathered. Mrs M. Stanley McComas and her sister, Miss Ruth Peterson, frequently go to Meridian Hills Country Club to swim, and usually they find Miss Charlotte Twitty and Miss Margaret Hair waiting

Miss Burgan

to share an afternoon. Miss Peterson has acquired a tan which puts to flight any serious thought of our advocating fashion’s latest decree of paling. Her rubber bathing suit of green and white is a becoming contrast to her golden toned skin and hair. Mrs. McComas creates a startling effect with her electric blue suit, setting off her tanned skin. Miss Hair chooses black and Miss Twitty red for their suits of severe simplicity. Later, they are joined by Misses Jean Underwood and Barbara Oakes, who refresh themselves with a dip after a match of tennis. Swimmers Train for Meet Miss Anna Marie Dungan, who spends her mornings in summer school at Butler university, resorts to the attractions of the club to entertain her houseguest. Miss Mary Virginia Warren of Tampa, Fla. With Miss Frances Louise Dungan, they share the pool with other members. There’s one group of swimmers who frequent the pool with serious intentions. They are training for the meet Saturday, when all the family will join in the day's program. Henry Holt, thanks to his Culver military academy training, has received a noteworthy award for his faithfulness. He is the' Sharks club president, vice-president, and whatever other officer it may have. Stiff Tests Are Passed He’s the only swimmer at the club who has passed all the stiff membership requirements of Bill Weiss, instructor. He can perform all the feats within the specified time limits and has received the gold medal and felt sharks emblem for his suit. Flo Mary Foreman will have the attention of the visitors Saturday. She's only 4 years old, but she’s going to perform some tricks which some of the pleasure swimmers would like to include in their accomplishments. Martha, Betty and Mary Ann Pearce desert their home to hasten to the pool to practice for the meet. Jean. Bob, and Dick Stackhouse also engage in interfamily competition. Seashore Is Copied Other outstanding swimmers in the list of twenty-four entries are Martha McConnell. Lucille Jamieson. Claire Patten, Joan Binkley, George Mahoney, Jack and Bob Ochiltree. In the eighteen or more race events, ribbons will be awarded for the first three places. Wallace O. Lee has brought the seashore to his swimming pool at Wallywood. his country home. Bags and bags of glistening white sand create the effect of a beach. Misses Luana and Mary Louise Lee are spending their summer at the place, finding plenty of diversion with the pool, miniature golf, and their horses. Moonlight evenings provide the setting for steak roasts in the outdoor oven, in a valley between two hills. annual Reunion to BE HELD IN PARK Rush-Fayette County Association will hold its thirty-fifth annual reunion at 2:30 Sunday afternoon at the Brookside community park Members of the Fayette club will provide the musical program, with Mrs. Ador Krueger in charge. Former residents of the counties will give talks and William E Jeffrey, president of will take charge. Residents of the two counties are invited to attend. LIQUOR CONTROL TO BE DISCUSSED Mrs. J. S. Holliday. kl5O West Forty-third street, will be hostess thus afternoon for a meeting of a committee of the Woman's Organization for National Prohibition Reform. Members will discuss their findings in studies ©f various svstems for liquor control, which is being emphasized in the organization's summer work. Mrs. Holliday is chairman. Other committee members are Mrs. Meredith Nicholson Jr.. Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr. aud Mrs. Elias c Atkins. LUNCHEON WILL BE GIVEN FOR GUESTS Mrs. Austin Brown. 4401 North Illinois street, will entertain with an informal luncheon today for Mrs. Robert Henry West Jr. *of Cincinnati and Mrs. Robert Henry West 111 of St. Joseph, Mo., who are visitiqg Mrs. West's daughter. Mrs. Meredith Nicholson Jr., 4515 North Delaware street. The visitors will return to their homes at the end of the week.

FUR COATS CI*\XED . <■ I.A/.t. I> / __ , 8 ,r,, SK.SO NNRED w Oa.iruntrril Not lry ClmiiH INDIANA FUR CO. “■** E. Ohio ht. LI tuoln S2o*

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Wife Cheats to Avenge Self on Mate; Finds She Has Wrecked Her Home Couple Now at Odds, Each Trying* to Beat Down Prestige of Other, and Both Are Losers.

Jane Jordan's interest in you never ends with the first letter. When the circumstances of jyour life beset anew problem, write again! Dear Jane Jordan—l wrote you a year ago and told you how happy I was. Now, I am just as unhappy as I was happy then. I found that my husband had been going with a woman in another town. I was hurt so badly I cried for a week. Then, like a fool, I went and did the same thing, mostly to see if it would hurt him as badly as it had hurt me. I told him what I had done, and he was was like a mad man. He beat me, choked me, and blacked my eye. He got over it in a little while and we forgave and said we'd forget. Ever since then he has been mean to me. He slaps me and says the most terrible things. He always threatens to beat me as he did before. I am afraid of him every time he comes near me. I have three lovely babies and I love every bone in their precious little bodies, but do I have to stand all this ill treatment just to be near them? I hate him more every day. OH, SO LONELY. Answer—ls you and your husband had a sympathetic advisor to act as mediator, I have no doubt that you could readjust yourselves and be as

happy as before. Somehow I do not feel that love is entirely dead between you. You’re merely going through the first crisis. Let's face the facts. You and your husband were in love. When you became thoroughly familiar to him and the domestic routine grew duller, he

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Jane Jordan

was confronted with temptation in another town and indulged in a bit of a fling. If you never had discovered his misdemeanor, you still would be in love. But your ego received a blow which it could not brook. You felt humiliated and inferior. You strove to put your ego back in power by becoming the cheater instead of the cheated, thus reversing the positions of yourself and your husband. The two of you now are engaged in a sort of psychological wrestling match. For the moment you have your husband on the bottom. To get back the top position, he resorts to physical violence (always a favorite gesture of superiority with the male). After giving you a good beating he feels his strength again. Now the two of you have built a whole new system of reacting to each other, and it's bad. Instead of happy co-operation, each of you is struggling to maintain his personal prestige by batting down the prestige of the other. When one makes mean remarks, the other must be meaner or go down to defeat. And so you go round and round in a vicious circle. All your energies are used to destroy instead of to construct. You can stop it if you are willing to let your pride go unavenged. Wipe the slate clean. Forget the past. Remember how you behaved when you loved each other. Instead of tearing down your husband's ego by disparaging remarks, build it up by the opposite method. It will take a long while to regain the lost ground. Patience and forbearance on both sides will bring you back into harmony. But if such a miracle is to take place, both of you will have to give up this constant struggle to avenge his own ego wounds by making the other suffer with equal intensity. a o a Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl of 19. My problem is a very diffi-

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cult one. Don’t think me bad, because I don’t regret what has taken place. I am going to have a baby and the father wants me to marry him. I know he is crazy over me and will be wonderful to me. He is 26, but there is another boy 21, and we really are in love. He knows all about the baby and wants to marry me( but lie has one more year in college and I feel that it would be unfair to him, because he is so square and swell. His folks have money and if he tells them it belongs to him, they will give him a swell position. What must I do? Marry and give the child its real father and be unhappy, or marry and be so very happy with the other boy? Please help me at once, as me time is drawing near. BLUE-EYED SUE. Answer—lt hardly seems just. to saddle so young a boy with a child which is not his own before he has finished his education. Neither does it seem honorable to deceive his parents about the child's paternity to benefit by their influence. I can not imagine much happiness proceeding from such a hazardous situation. This boy has no idea what he is bargaining for. There is nothing in his experience to teach him anything about the strains and struggles of marriage and premature parenthood, and he has absolutely no preparation for such heavy brudens. Something in the situation makes him feel like “big boy,” or he wouldn't be so willing to assume problems which do not belong to him. When confronted with the actual facts, which his imagination will not now encompass, the chances are that he would break under the strain and blame you for his predicament. So far you’ve thought chiefly of yourseif and your own happiness. How about considering the baby's right to know its own father, and the father’s right to care for his own baby? Let the responsibility be assumed by those who incurred it. MISS EDWARDS IS FETED AT SHOWER Mrs. J. Nelson Marks, 2605 College avenue, was hostess Wednesday night for a miscellaneous shower and bridge party, given for Miss Beatrice Edwards, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otis Edwards of Gosport. Miss Edwards will be married to W. C. Lobdell on Saturday. Guests included Mesdames Thomas Selmier, Clell Dodd, George Bork, John McGuire, F. C. Bakemeier, H. L. Holmes and Misses Martha Brandon

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BY ELIZABETH CLARK Times Special Writer INDIVIDUALITY is the abracadabra that is supposed to have settled the long and the short of the hair argument for the moment. And that means pitfalls for the girl with a passion to “be different.” She must chart a middle course between the definitely tousled and the too pasted-down effect. It is something of a trick, as every woman knows, to make those tailored ringlets, sculptured waves, curies, swirls or what-have-you, behave as if they grew that way with nothing more than a

! Daily Recipe j RUM ROLLS | sy 2 cups flour . 1 tablespoon salt 1/2 cup butter j j 1,4 cup evaporated milk | { 14 cup hot ,water j 2 cakes compressed j yeast j 1 tablespoon sugar | 3 eggs 1 tablespoon vanilla ] 1 tablespoon rum * flavoring * 1 tablespoon evapor- ? ated milk \ 14 cup confectioners' ' sugar •! * Sift fjour. then measure. To j I IV2 cups flour add salt and ! | butter, combining as for pie | ! crust. Combine milk and hot jj I water. When lukewarm add * | yeast and 1 teaspoonful sugar, I = blend well, then stir into first i ! mixture. ’ { Cover and let stand twenty j j minutes, then add well beaten } = eggs, vanilla and remaining 2 , { cups flour. Stir until smooth. ? j The dough will be stiff, but I ? slightly sticky. Put dough in j I greased bowl, cover with a ! j cloth and let rise in a warm | j place, free from drafts of air, j ! until double in bulk, about j j one and one-half hours. j Knead lightly in bowl. | ! Pinch off piec 1 about the j | size of a small egg. Shape ! | into buns and place in abut- { | tered pan. Cover, and let rise j ! until double in bulk. Brush = j lightly with a mixture of rum I j flavoring and evaporated I [ milk. ‘ j Bake in a hot oven (425 de- ! j grees F.) fifteen minutes. As j ! soon as rolls are taken from j I oven, spread with frosting ? | made of the rum flavoring, I j evaporated milk and confec- j ! tioners’ sugar. This frosting j j should not be as thick as that j j used on cake. j

lick of the brush and a twist over the finger of a morning. But that is what these six individual coiffures that should pass muster among the best-groomed heads of two continents manage to do. n a tt THE old fashioned chignon takes on anew guise in the sketch at the left, especially designed for the white haired woman. The hair is arranged in soft waves on the sides and with a side part. Instead of the bun or psyche knot, the ends are arranged in a rosette of loose curls vertically placed. If you are already, or aspire to be, the round-faced, demure looking little girl, the next headdress State Couple Is Married in City Residence The marriage of Miss Helen Rhoadarmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rhoadarmer of Greenfield, to Dr. John Showalter of Waterloo, took place at noon today at the home of the bride’s brother, Paul Rhoadarmer, 5020 Kenwood avenue. * The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of white crepe with a bouquet of yellow and white roses. Lucy Rhoadarmer, niece of the bride, was flower girl, wearing a yellow dotted swiss dress and carrying a basket with rose petals. David Rhoadarmer, nephew, was ring bearer and wore white. The couple left for a wedding trip, the bride traveling in blue crepe with white accessories. They will live in Waterloo. Dr. Showalter is a graduate of the Indiana university school of medicine aud is a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. The bride attended Indiana university and belongs to Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. FORMER CITY GIRL'S TROTH ANNOUNCED Word has been received of the announcement of the engagement of Miss Ruth Earll Roberts, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Roberts of Dobbs Ferry, N. Y., to Lieutenant John S. Davis of Ft. Benjamin Harrison. Lieutenant Davis is the son of Mrs. R. H. Davis of Leavenworth, Kan. Miss Roberts is the granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Junius B. Roberts of Indianapolis. Miss Roberts was educated at Misses Masters school at Dobbs Ferry, Miss Beard's school at Orange, N. J., and New York university. Lieutenant Davis is a graduate of West Point. The wedding will be in September.

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is your meat. It manages a nice balance between the tailored and the too fluffy. There is almost no wave on top. neat clusters of curls over each and airy bangs that look careless, but which demand their quota of attention. The fortunate possessor of a widow’s peak never will hide nor lessen its come-hither potentialities by scallops of hair out on her cheeks. The left center sketch gives plenty of rein to the desire for curls, but they do not encroach on the face. It looks difficult, but that friend of woman, the permanent wave, reduces efforts in its behalf to the task of combing ringlets over one's finger between visits to professional hands. tt tt tt AT the center right is a coiffure only for the classical feature. With its center part, exposed ears, two rows of tailored curls, and general smoothness, it brims over sophistication and good grooming. The little sketch next shows the 1933 version of the wind-blown bob, that joy of the summer sports girl. There are no straggling ends to annoy the persistent water sprite, only a few nicely amenable strands at the sides. For the rest, it is cut short and straight across the back of the neck. Next it is another but less severe arrangement for the short bobbed addict to outdoor sports. A few careless curls held in place by a ribbon band, and that is all, except that the curls are not quite as casually brought into line as they look to be. SORORITY CHAPTER WILL HOLD PICNIC Kappa chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, will entertain w r ith a swimming party and picnic at 2 Wednesday. Members will meet at the home of Mrs. Selma Zahl Scearcy, 1121 North Leland, swim at the Ellenberger park pool, and return at 5 for a picnic supper at the home of Mrs. Scearcy.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Blueberries and cream, cooked rice cereal, crisp broiled bacon, whole wheat toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Chocolate flip. lettuce sandwiches, apple sauce, molasses cookies, tea. Dinner — _ Baked bluefish, potatoe au gratin, buttered Bermuda onions, cottage cheese salad, compote of fresh fruits, milk, coffee.

Bidding by Mail Marks Auction of Paintings in Art Gallery at Lieber’s Novel Sale, First in Firm’s History, Is BeingConducted to Build Interest in Works of State Artists. BY HELEN LINDSAY 'T'HE first auction of paintings ever held by H. Lieber's began July 1. Novel because bids are being received only by mail, the auction is being conducted in an effort to foster the cause of art in Indiana. Paintings included in the auction are framed original oils, water colors, and pastels. They may be viewed in the gallery. Bids offered by mail will be posted on the identification blanks. Starting bids, often less than half of the original price of the paintings, also are

marked. At the close of the auction, this month, ihe paintings will be delivered to the highest bidder. In the event of two or more bids received for like amounts, the painting will be awarded to the first bidder. Included in the paintings, besides those of foreign artists, are works of De Haven, William Forsyth, T. C. Steele, J. E. Bundy and other Indiana artists. Brown county artists are well represented. Paintings from the brushes of A. Sliulz, G. La Chance, E Williams, Will Vawter, C. Bohm, D. Bessire, L. O. Griffith, V. J. Cariani C. Graf and Mrs. M. O. Stoddard are for sale. Mrs. Stoddard is the only woman artist represented. She has offered one painting of the exterior of a hooked rug shop, done in colorful poster-like technique. Bids already have been received on many of the paintings.. One has been submitted from Kansas City,

Mo. Most of the paintings by the group of Brown county artists are landscapes of the native country near Nashville, and in the Brown county hills. Will Vawter, known for his many illustrations of Riley’s poems, has offered two oils, one "October Days," and the other, "Barnes Cabin." Vawter now is in Chicago, with his collection of twentytwo illustrations from the Riley poems. A scene at Brookville is shown in a painting by Steele, “Mysterious River." It is a softly tinted water scene of the river at that spot. C. Bohm, another of the Brown county group, has an outstanding painting, “Leaf Burners.” The highest priced painting in the collection is one by a Zwann, a Holland painter. It is a Dutch interior, called "Contentment.” The original price on this painting was SBOO. The lowest bid which will be accepted on it is $425. At the end of the month, the paintings which have not been sold will be returned to the artists, or their owners, and will be placed at their original price. ft u tt nan Net Flowers for Afternoon NEW starched net flowers, to be used on afternoon and dinner dresses and for formal wear, recently were received at H. P. Wasson’s. They come in pairs, with tiny hand rolled edges, and are in white and pastel shades. Other flowers, intended for use on sport clothing, are of linen and pique. For wear with summer sheers, organdy is most popular. Twotoned effects in organdy are featured in a jonquil-like flower, the coloring painted on with water colors. A large petaled flower, the petals cut into stenciled designs. ar shown, also in organdy.

Warming Over Meat In warming over game or any kind of meat in gravy, don't let it boil. Boiling toughens it. Get the gravy to the boiling point, then turn off your burner and put the meat in just long enough to get it steaming hot from the gravy.

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.JULY 14, 1933

Mrs. Lindsay

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