Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 100, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1933 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Ruth Davis Is Bride in Church Rite Marriage Ceremony Is Read in Setting of Fall Flowers. The Rev. Harry T. Graham read the marriage ceremony this afternoon at the Westminster Presbyterian church for Miss Ruth M Davis and Paul T. Spencer, son of Mr and Mrs L C. Spencer. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Helen Cosand. The church was decorated with yellow, blue and white fall flowers Miss Martha Isham, violinist, played bridal airs during the service. The bride, who entered alone, was gowned in white with a tulle and silk lace veil and carried white asters and tuberoses. Attended by Sister She was attended by her sister. Miss Elizabeth L Davis, maid of hone - , and Misses Marian Isham, Lolaine Pendleton. Roberta Maxwell and Catherine Scott. Miss Davis chose yellow and brown plaid organdie for ner frock Her flowers were yellow and peach gladioli. The bridesmaids wore dresses of yellow and peach organdie with white horsehair braid hats trimmed in blue. They carried arm bouquets of delphinium. Leave on Wedding Trip Mrs Cosand appeared in an ensemble of white with blue trim and a corsage cf asters and delphinium. Herschell Deming was Mr. Spencer’s best man and ushers were Roy Collier, Ralph Clark. Francis Hensley and Thurman Ridge. The couple left on a wedding trip and will be at home after Sept 12 at 33 North Kenmore road. The bride is a graduate of Butler university and John Herron Art institute and Mr. Spencer attended Cincinnati university. Bride-Elect to Be Honored by Paul C. Martin Miss Priscilla Miner and Malcolm Tinker of Pittsburgh wall be guests of Paul C. Martin at dinner tonight. The marriage of Miss Miner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Allison Miner, 26 East Thirty-sixth street, and Mr. Tinker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wesl°v Rayner Tinker of Pittsburgh, will take place at 8 Thursday night at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Guests with the wedding principals will be members of the bridal party: Miss Courtenay Whitaker, maid of honor; Wesley Rayner Tinker Jr. of Wheeling. W. Va.. best man. and Robert Isely of New York and Joseph A Miner Jr., ushers. Following the dinner the guests will attend a dance as guests of the ushers. Miss Julianne Campbell entertained with a buffet supper Monday night at her home. 3063 North Delaware street. later taking her guests to Woodstock Club to dance. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Wesley R. Tinker of Wheeling, W. Va.; Miss Dorothy Tinker of Pittsburgh, Miss Whitaker. Thomas Henderson, Mr. Martin and John Watson.

Personals

John W. Williams of the Glenn Martin has gone to Santa Barbara, Cal., to spend a month with his mother. Miss Sue Scollard of Terre Haute Is visiting Miss Emma Dorgan, 5140 Washington boulevard. Miss Margaret Bell of Philadelphia is visiting her brother, Robert C. Bell, and Mrs. Bell. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wemmer, 5744 Washington boulevard, are visiting at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York. Miss Marguerite Wilson of Newport News. Va., has returned home after visiting her brother. Hobson Wilson of the Glenn Martin.

Card Parties

Ladies of St. Philip Neri church will hold a card party at 8:30 Wednesday night at the school auditorium. Mrs. Harry Woods Is in charge. McGrew auxiliary to U. S. W. V. will sponsor a card party at 8 tonight at the home of Mrs. Flora Griffey. 1660 Ashland avenue. St. Man- Social Club will hold a card and lotto party Thursday afternoon in the school hall, 315 North New Jersey street. Visitors Are Feted Mrs Henry Alston and Miss Elizabeth Alston of New York, attended a luncheon-bridge Monday as the guests of Mrs. Badger Williamson. 1855 North Pennsylvania street. Art Students Guests Mrs. Helen Morton entertained forty dramatic art students this afternoon on the lawn of the Gwynn Klee studios. 2634 Station street

Daily Recipe APRICOT WHIP 1 package strawberry flavored gelatin 1 pint icarm apricot juice and water 1,2 pound dried apricots , cooked, sweetened, and drained Dissolve flavored gelatin In warm apricot juice and water. Chill until cold and syrupy. Place in bowl of cracked ice or ice water and whip with rotary egg beater until fluffy and thick like whipped cream. Force apricots through sieve. Fold into flavored gelatin. Pile lightly in sherbet glasses. Chill until Arm. Serve plain or with whipped cream, or with custard sauce. Serves 13.

Home Garden Inspires Great Community Work

Thi* U the sixth of a series, tellln* stories of Irdltnsaolis women who have accomplished somethin* lr. life bv their own initiative and ambition. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Times Woman's Pate Editor THERES a challenge for a woman to be told, by a group of men, ‘ You may do it.” Their casual assumption of her ability and willingness is provoking, in a way. But their presumption is effective, for it preludes action. It was just that sort of an approach that resulted in Mrs. Perry O'Neal's acceptance of chairmanship of the community garden center. After proposing the project to the

mayor's unemployment committee. she was astounded by its delegation of responsibility to her. She was disconcerted first. Then something in her responded to their confident offer. She accepted. walked calmly across the street, rented an office and began the job. To herself she resolved. ‘l’ll stick to it

Miss Burgan

until the food is in cans cn pantry shelves.” She is doing that, and more than she ever hoped to accomplish in the way of developing the morale of the unemployed. The responsibility has been a revelation to her. for she has learned the vitalness of accomplishing something independent of personal surroundings. a a a A HOBBY providentially resulted in the work of Mrs. O'Neal. If she hadn't found her garden an avenue for creation, she might never have read the report which suggested her proposal If Perry I’Neol. her lawyer husband, hadn’t encouraged her ambitious ideas for unemployment relief, she might never have made her proposal. It all began in January, when her brother. W. J. Holliday of Hammond. sent her a copy of the Lake county report, because he had heard her discuss unemployment needs. Her belief in the feasibility of a similar plan in Indianapolis was ! verified after she read the resume of the steel mill community undertaking. She decided she had found a plan | which would aid the unemployed j materially, as well as providing a means of bolstering their morale, j "If we can renew' faith in com- j munity co-operation, w T e'll have a I new spirit,” she decided. On Feb. 17 she began her job. She : set about organizing her office. She j solicited made-w'ork helpers. She j conferred with newspaper editors for i publicity co-operation. She sought out friends for dona- : tions of seeds, ground, and money, j She gathered data about vacant lots j

Maimers and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Tell Jane Jordan what you are worrylne about and she will taelo you find a way to improve your situation. Letters of comment. suxrestlon. or advice also are solicited. Dear Jane Jordan —My wife and I spend almost all our time at home, because my weekly checks are not enough to provide much entertainment. Except for our quarrels, we enjoy each other, but when I speak of any pleasure in my work, she flies into a rage. I’ll have to explain that most of my fellow workers are girls. I have my jokes with them at intervals during work hours and cut up with them at lunch. My wife thinks it is outrageous. She claims that a decent girl wouldn’t say the things these girls say. In her opinion I ought to be very distant with any woman except her. My idea is to be myself and have as much fun out of life as I can. To curb my friendliness toward these girls would be like shutting myself off from the rest of the world. Should Ido it or not? M. K. K. Answer —Certainly not! But why on earth do you feel obliged to tell your wife what happens during your working hours? It seems to me that a discreet silence about

things you know she doesn't like to hear would be one way of avoiding trouble. However, this method is only palliative in effect and certainly not curative. We have to look far back into the childhood of a person to account for unreasonably jealous behavior. So m e t imes we find that the jeal-

I %

Jane Jordan

ous person has been the oldest in a family of several and has felt neglected because the parents gave more attention to younger brothers and sisters. Sometimes we find the baby of the family pampered to death by older brothers and sisters, or an only child accustomed to stealing the whole show at home. Whichever way it is. jealousy always is a childish motif carried over into adult flife. You can depend on It that it is not the more loving partner in a union, but the weaker one. who is first to indulge in jealous feelings. Your wife always will feel hurt if any one else comes into the picture but herself. Whenever she can. she will succeed in ruining your pleasure if it is taken apart from herself. She will combat your freedom with whatever methods she found successful In her childhood—ridicule, tears, tantrums, sulkiness, and so on. If you love the woman, it is your job to re-educate her. Your first move is to make her feel as secureas possible in your affection. Most married men feel that after they have won a woman they need no longer make any effort. This is not the case, for the happiest women are those who have been won over

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Mrs. Perry O'Neal and daughter Alice. Inset, Mrs. O'Neal with Alice and Perry Jr. on the steps of her home. Mrs. Perry O'Neal's hobby is conducive to her children’s happiness, for it keeps her close to home. Her garden means many hours of happy work to

and unused land, and approached owners for their loans. B B B QHE began the project with 5,000 packages of seed, at first slowly distributed, with only about 500 packages called for the first week. When news of actual distribution spread about, demands became so numerous that 2.000 additional packages w r ere ordered hurriedly.

by their husbands seventy times seventy. After you have made an honest effort to reassure ner as to your love, you must gently point out the causes for her mistrust, explaining that they arise from her own inner conviction of insignificance rather than from anything you do. She is partly right in her belief that off-color talk between men and women has ,a sexual significance. Freud has compared the lewd joke to an indirect method ol stripping another person in public. The original aim is inhibited. Talking about it, then, is the next best thing. However, any sensible woman will realize that this roundabout method of airing secret desires is tw be found throughout the w’hole of life. Close study will reveal the same mechanism in her own makeup. So long as the aim is neatly inhibited, nobody comes to grief. Direct sexual outlet has been likened to the short circuit in electricity. If the short circuit is cut off. electricity can be made to light the whole house, run the vacuum cleaner, washing machine, refrigerator, percolater, fan and whatnot. Sexual energy, when cut off from the short circuit, finds its power released for brilliant conversations, barrels of bright ideas, witty wisecracks, and oodles of charm. After all, what is there to worry about in it? Wouldn’t the world be ever so much duller without sex on the long circuit? n n u Dear Jane Jordan—l don’t drink, smoke nor chew. I am twice 12 years of age, have good job and am good looking. But here's where I'm stumped. I don’t own an automobile and the girls don’t go for me. What method would you use when a car is half of it? I. B. DURN. Answer—l'll let the girls answer you. What qualities must a young man have to make up for his lack of a car, and why is a car so important to romance? Paper to Be Read Mrs. Joe McFarland will read a paper. ‘ Cut Flower Arrangements,” at a meeting of the Forest Hills Garden Club at 2 Wednesday at I the home of Mrs. Fred Cunningham, 524 East Fifty-ninth street.

The best VALUE “When you are offered a substitute for genuine Kellogg's, remember it is seldom in the spirit of °* BATTLE CHEEK

; THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

her, and a beautiful environment for Alice and Perry Jr. This hobby led her to a great service for her community, for last winter she organized and managed the community garden center, which gave food and occupation to the unemployed.

Mrs. O'Neal, w'hose experience in gardening w r as limited to her owm yard and clubs devoted to garden studies, organized a smooth-work-ing system for her mass-scale undertaking. There were few' oversights which led to interference in its progress. ‘ Nature alone disrupted continuity of the project. When floods rushed over Hooverville and the Butler university tracts, gardeners who had

Luncheon to Open Season for Alumnae Beta Beta alumnae chapter of Alpha Chi Omega will open its season’s activities with a luncheon Saturday at the home of Mrs. S. B. Walker, 3454 East Fall Creek parkw'ay. Mrs. George L. Clark, new' president, will preside, and will announce the following committee chairmen: Program, Mrs. George Jeffrey; hospitality, Mrs. Verne Trask; nonresident, Mrs. J. Voris Tobin; telephone, Mrs. F. C. Tucker; press, Mrs. H. R. Haught; rush, Miss Norma Davidson; scholarship, Miss Helen Murray, and card tournament, Mrs. Robert Mason. An honor guest will be Mrs. Dale S. Boyles of Alvo, Neb., national toreasurer, w'ho is spending a w'eek in the city. Following the luncheon, the senior degree will be given to Alpha Chis graduated in June from the four Indiana universities’ chapters, De Pauw', Purdue, Indiana and Butler. The ceremony of affiliation ol new members also will take place. Hostesses assisting Mrs. Walker will be Mesdames Claus Best, Albert Campbell, J. W. Dorrell and Verne Trask; Misses Lucille Hurd, Rea Bauer, Betty Martindale, Georgianna Rockwell and Dorothy Lambert.

Sororities

Alpha chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, mil meet at 7:30 tonight in the Washington. Pi Sigma Tau sorority will meet Monday night at the home of Miss Mary Branham, 1022 Newman street. Omega Chi sorority will meet Wednesday night at the home of Miss Maxine Dale. Beta chapter of Phi Gamma Tau sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Katherine La Garde. Alpha Beta Chi sorority will hold a business meeting at 8 tonight at the Lincoln.

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been generating pride and ambition in their work found their spirits sinking in despair. It was Mrs. O'Neal w T ho pulled on her galoshes and set out in a cheering mood. As the gardeners looked disconsolately at their washed out gardens, Mrs. O’Neal concealed her own disappointment, to encourage them. “We'll have some more seed for you when the flood is over. Be

BRIDE LAST WEEK

—Photo by Voorhis. Mrs. Charles C. Voorhis Jr. Mrs. Charles C. Voorhis Jr. was Miss Beatrice Jullman before her marriage last Saturday. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Jullman. Guests Are Honored Mrs. Badger Williamson. 1855 North Pennsylvania street, entertained Monday with a luncheon bridge party for Mrs. Henry Alston Sr. and Miss Elizabeth Alston of New r York.

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patient,” she pleaded, as she estimated the damage and hurried back to her office to order more seed. Mrs. O’Neal's resourceful spirit during this trying period is only one example of her successful leadership. From the beginning she organized her work in compliance with dictates of her orderly nature. BBS FROM a map of the Council of Social Service agencies she worked out the basis of allotment of ground. She chose engineers to plot and stake the gardens. From Feb. 17 to June 1 she spent the entire day in her office, where she directed woikers in management of the innumerable details. She appointed watchmen in each community garden to guard the tracts day and night She selected supervisors for each district to aid and check up on the activities. She worked all day with forty made-work men, packaging 300.000 tomato and cabbage plants, w'hich were sent to the district stations for distribution. Mrs. O'Neal still works one day a week in the office, attending to details. Other days she is out looking at the gardens and conferring with workers. Mrs. O’Neal originally had planned to w'ork in the city, but w'hen the mayor's committee was taken over by the Governor, the territory extended to Marion county. At the end of the year, Mrs. O’Neal will submit a detailed report to Fred Hoke, chairman. ‘‘l’ve learned enough about humanity to write a book." Mrs. O’Neal said. “Id never done any social welfare w r ork. My contacts this winter revealed a spirit, not unlike our pioneering forebears.” e n n "npHESE unemployed are ingeniA ous. One rainy night during the ploughing season. I fretted and worried about Joe. who guarded the tractors. I hurried out to the tract next morning and found him warm and dry in a three-cornered shack which he had constructed from ‘odds and ends’ picked up from a nearby junk-pile. “They improvised tools from the crudest materials. They w'ere untiring, too. Three men plowed all the community gardens, and they worked with enthusiasm." Seeing many men made shiftless by the force of economic distress become independent, industrious, and impelled by community trust has made Mrs. O'Neal believe in the w'orth of the community garden system. Her observations have given her faith in the prospects of another year. When Mrs. O’Neal returns from a trip to the gardens, she more than likely turns to digging in her own yard. Her hobby is cultivation of annuals, and her collection includes some rare and unusual species. Evenings find her in her greenhouse, built this spring by made-work helpers. M tt tt “'T'HERE'S no better rest than 1 being in my garden," maintains Mrs. O’Neal. “It certainly is a hobby to keep you close to your family.” But she hadn’t limited her interest to her own yard. She’s followed closely the activities of the Indianapolis Garden Club and heads the Indiana Federation of Garden Clubs. She w r as largely responsible for the latter’s affiliation with the National Council of Federated Garden Clubs, which insures its continuity of activities. Mrs. O’Neal has managed harmoniously to fit together demands of her time as a wife and mother of Alice, 6, and Perry Jr., 4. and as a leader of gardening projects. She has served the Junior League and the Orchard school. Mrs. O’Neal is satisfied that Marion county has made a creditable showing in its community garden project. Lake county, the pioneer, ranks first in the number of relief gardens in Indiana, but this county probably comes second, a record which Mrs. O'Neal has achieved in a year. Statistics show' that Indiana is one of the leading states in promoting this measure of unemployment relief. “I think $1,500 would cover the actual expenditure for the project,” said Mrs. O’Neal. “Purdue university experts have estimated that I from 50 cents of average seed $25 worth of food is produced. What better return would you w'ant from relief money?”

Executive of Chinaware Firm in City Gains Name of Authority on Pipes Ferd Hollweg Gives Smokers Pointers on Choice of Tobacco, Care and Handling of Briars. BY HELEN LINDSAY TWO hobbies hold the interest of Ferd Hollweg. president of the Mutual China Company. The first is the business which he conducts, and which was founded by his father in Ohio, in 1868. The other hobby is his pipe. Hollweg still retains the earthen jar which was displayed by his father as a trade-mark. Inscribed on it is the name of the firm which Hollweg’s father founded, and the date, 1868. Another treasure which he prizes is a fragile china cup. manufactured by J. Pouyat and Cie, Limoges, France, in 1902. It is the only one of Its kind that Hollweg has ever seen. It was brought to his mother as a gift by his father many years ago, and has been treasured carefully by th*

family since that time. The cup is made with a design worked out in different colored bits of enamel around the top. Each bit of enamel is a perfect concave lens, through which objects are made to appear smaller. The cup is made without handles and is of the finest ware. It is marked as having been offered for patent rights in the year of its manufacture. 1902. Holding a place of equal honor on Hollweg’s personal desk is the latest favorite in his collection of pipes. Though at various times in his life he has been interested in the collection of unusual pipes, both in design and material, Hollweg confesses now to an allegiance to only one type. Hollweg is known to pipe smokers throughout the city as an authority on pipes and pipe tobacco. B B B Tobacco Selection Requires Caution

ONE of the first principles of correct pipe smoking, according to Hollweg. is the selection of a tobacco. “I recommend to each smoker that he find a tobacco that is strong enough to allow him to smoke his pipe so that he can hold the bowl in his hand for five seconds without its burning him." Hollweg says. He believes that the tendency of pipe smokers in late years is to stronger, and less expensive tobaccos. “Latakia or perique, or both, always add strength and flavor to any tobacco,” Hollweg advises. "A little of the Kentucky ‘long green' puts a wallop into it.” In the thirty-five years that he has been a pipe smoker, Hollweg has initiated more than a hundred pipes, he believes. He now has a collection of about fifty, all the same type of briar, which he prefers, and which he keeps on a home-made pipe rack in his home. All of them have been remodled by him, in a manner which he contemplates patenting and putting on the market. "I cut the stem shorter than the manufacturer makes it," he explains. "Then I file it into notches on the under side, which makes it easier for a person with dental bridgework to hold the weight of the pipe. I have planned to patent a pipe with this stem some time, calling it some descriptive name, such as ‘Grandad's Pipe’ or 'The Old Man's Comfort.' " a B a Model Bedroom Shown at State Fair L. S. AYRES & CO. has prepared a model bedroom and a model kitchen, for display at the state fair this week. They are in the woman’s building, just next to the space where the Ayres’ fashion show is held. Bone white finish is shown in woodwork and furniture in the bedroom. The walls are yellow. Glazed chintz, in a blue plume pattern, is used for draperies, with peach colored rayon glass curtains.

AMICA CLUB WILL INSTALL OFFICERS Mrs. Earl Spiegel will be installing officer at the president's day observance of the Arnica Club Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. W. R. Burcham, 2002 West Michigan street. Mrs. Bert Everhart, outgoing president, will preside. The following will take the oath of office: Mrs. Earl Everhart, president; Mrs. John C. Lee, vice-presi-dent, and Mrs. Paul .imeter, secre-tary-treasurer. The club will resume its Bible study under leadership of Mrs. Bob

Judge Nisley’s by quality —not by price (Autumn^ in, St|€A. to- 10 Longer, narrower footwear Mil jgINKBP is the order of the day and "-'‘-■v. what a world of comfort it has brought to women! I This season all of our shoes Ksi \ are made in sizes 2VI to 9 J I ' & and almost a third of them / j JkjL’VbS, M in sizes to 10. The woman /-'-•// who requires larger sizes lw/1 1 therefore has an excellent assortment to choose from \ inasmuch as there are more f ' our shoes are made in'* J AAA to C and a great Improved Nisley Quality! The Nisley factory presents ad- I X •• fir]L_ ditional improvements in quality, \ xv, J particularly anew flexibility 1 Nl/ . . TSe Today's Miss Webster and Autumn Colors her f am ;|y coat -of- arms. Gun gray, new Admirality blue, if y OU „ e , Webster just step into our Indies or Fawn brown and store and ssfc for a leaflet giving a short Raven black. *V st °7 “ and <*n this family. It is free for the asking. This style and about 20 others in sizes nr Service The Cook is an all purpose tie that quickly developed a great demand. Black or brown 79c suede in sizes to 10. Gun gray m sizes to 9. 2 PAIR $1.50 Soon also in blue. lev tU .exact 44 NO. PENNSYLVANIA ST. „ ■ . —————————-—— Hail Orders Filled Promptly whea aceompaaied by purchase price and 15 ceets for sailing

.SEPT. 5, 1933

■MmI

Mrs. Lindsay

Shank, with special papers read by Mrs. Louis Shott and Mrs. John P. Kinney. Mrs. Martin L. Conrad and Mrs. Robert Flutro are in charge of the social hour and Mrs. Roy Egbery. devotions and music. Woodruff Fete Slated Mrs. John Dils is chairman of the covered dish supper and card party to be held tonight in the clubhouse at Woodruff Place. Residents of Woodruff Place will attend. The women’s organization will meet at 10 Wednesday morning in the clubhouse to discuss the year’s plans.