Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 126, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1933 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Woman Is Instructor for Riders Mrs. Dudding Is Second of Sex in City to Hold Post. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN TlmM Worn Aft’* Pt* Editor IV/tHS. JEAN PERRY DUDDING, -*•*■*- who began her duties this week as riding instructor for women and children at Meridian Hills riding stables looks forward to each pupil as an entirely new situation. Teaching another person won’t just b another lesson in the days
routine to her. •‘l’ll learn something for myself each time I teach a different person," she said as she lounged in the club room of the stables of the country club. "Reactions all are so varied. Some times a pupil must overcome fear of the horse, or the barrier to success may be self-conscious-ness. That's easy to dispel, for we
Miss Burgan
just become interested in what we're doing, and the rider soon forgets about herself." Mrs. Dudding had her first ex- j perience teaching riding at Forest \ Acres Camp for Girls at Bryeberg, j Me. There her pupils were girls from 5 to 16. and her problems were j as various as their temperaments. Trained Mount From Colt ‘ After I teach my pupils to con- j trol their fear, there’s the horse to j get in hand.” she continued. “When | they learn that the horse really is j easy to manage, they want to begin j to learn all the points that seemed ; impossible at first." Mrs. Dudding rode in the horse j shows of Ward-Belmont School for j Girls at Nashville, Tenn. When ; she completed her two years’ course j she received a certificate to teach j riding. While she was attending j Indiana university she lived with i her parents in Bloomington and trained her own horse from the j time it was a wild little colt. Roundup Is Anticipated Mrs. Dudding will assist Roy J Davis in instruction at the stables, j Like hundreds of other horseman | in the city, she’s looking forward to participation in the saddle horse j roundup this month at Gregg farm. Mrs. Dudding is the second j woman riding instructor in the city. Incidentally, she and Miss Audrey Pugh who teaches at Arlington Riding Club both belong to the titian class. Red-haired and brown-eyed Mrs. Dudding smartly was set up the other day in brown and tan riding clothes. MRS. KIRKPATRICK ENTERTAINS BRIDE Mrs. E. J. Kirkpatrick, 3537 North , Pennsylvania street, will entertain tonight with a crystal shower and | bridge party for Mrs. Gordon H. Thompson, formerly Miss Dorothy Beightol, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Beightol. Guests will include Mrs. Beightol. Mesdames B. F. Lacy, R. I. Boyer Adrian B. Nail, Dale Evans, Merritt L. Thompson, Buford Cadle, John Sloan Smith, Misses Maja Brownlee, Katherine Stanley and Grace Avels. Miss Brownlee will give a bridal shower at her home, 6020 Park avenue. Wednesday night. Oct. 11, for Mrs. Thompson. PRESIDENTS HEAD HOSTESS GROUP Mrs. Joel Wilmoth, honorary president. and Mrs. E. Monty Campbell, president of the Welfare Club, will | head the hospitality committee for j the annual benefit card party to be | given at 2 Saturday in Ayres’ au- j ditorium. Assistant hostesses will be past presidents, Mesdames Frank J. Haight. A. C Zaring. Olin Hatton. Harry Lust and Claude T. Hoover. Reservations are in charge of Mrs. } Robert stokes. MRS. LARSH TO MEAD PROVINCE Miss Gertrude Evans, national j president of Sigma Alpha lota, national professional musical sorority, announces the appointment of Mrs. C. Harold Larsh as president of the Beta province of the sorority. Mrs. Bernard R. Batty, who has | been in office for ten years, is the ! retiring province head. Mrs. Larsh becomes a member of the national board of Sigma Alpha lota with her appointment. Trustees to Meet Board of trustees of the Children's Musepm will meet for luncheon at noon Friday at the Glenn Martin with Herman C. Wolff, pres- j ident. presiding. •
Daily Recipe DELICIOUS COTTAGE PUDDING 2 cups sifted cake flour 2 teaspoons combination baking powder 1-2 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons butter or other shortening 1 cup sugar 1 cup milk 1-2 teaspoon vanilla Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder and salt, and sift again. Cream butter, add sugar gradually, and cream together well. Add flour, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time, beating after each addition until smooth. Add vanilla. Bake in greased pan. Bxßx3 inches, in moderate oven (350* F. forty-five minutes. Serve hot with lemon or chocolate sauce.
Fall Brides in Social Foreground
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Left to Right—Mrs. Clarence F. Booze, Mrs. Conrad L. Boardman and Mrs. Frank Shepard.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Write to Jane Jordan when you need advice! And when some letter st-rs *Oll to sympathy, he kind enoueh to reply through this column! Dear Jane Jordan—l have been married twelve years and have three little children. For five years after we married our life was perfectly happy. We loved each other in the old-fashioned way, and I thought my husband was ideal. When the baby was 1 year old he started to drink moderately. I was heartbroken to see him under the influence of liquor. Each time he was sorry and said it would never happen again, but it has been seven years now and things are worse than they ever were. My husband is growing abusive and curses me before the children. He even slaps me and tells me to leave when he is drinking. When he is sober he says he doesn’t mean it, but it happens again and again. I feel duty bound to stay with the children and train them personally through these early years, when their characters are warped so easily. Things could be adjusted if he would only make a change, but it is a disease I am afraid never can be cured.. He says he loves us and yet he treats us as if he
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’ did not. I am so worried and nervous I hardly can sleep. He even has threatened to kill the children. I don’t say there is no ! good in him, for there is, but | drink makes a maniac of him. I am 31 and if I were well I could work, but I’m not. What shall I do? FORGOTTEN Wife. Answer —Your husband functioned | very well until his burdens ini creased beyond his capacity to i carry them. As the family increased
and cares along with it, he sought for ways to relieve the strain. We do not escape into alcohol unless independence from the outer world is sorely craved. Drinking is one method of annihilating disagreeable experiences (temporarily) by making the drinker insensible to them. No two people re-
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Jane Jordan
act to alcohol In the same manner. Some become convivial, some lachrymose, some quarrelsome and brutal. A person's reaction to the cup that cheers depends on what he has pushed into the realm of unconsciousness, upon what he refuses to face when his conscious mind is on the job. It is quite evident that your husband has a weak ego which he seeks to inflate by the use of alcohol. Your burdens increased exactly as fast as did his, yet you faced your problems without seeking for escapes. Therefore, you are the stronger character of the two. The common cure for alcoholism lies in the phenomenon of conversion. You can’t wean a man from his habits without putting something just as satisfactory in their place. William James has said that religion is probably the most powerful substitute for dipsomania, but I do not know how you can bring it about. a an Dear Jane Jordan—My mother-in-law lives quite a distance away and only comes to visit her son once a year. When my husband serves at the table, he has the habit of serving me first. Who should be served first, his own dear old mother or his wife, the hostess? No remark on this ever has been made, but I feel it is not showing due respect to her, or am I wrong? H. B. Answer—l feel that this problem is too trivial to deserve notice from either mother or wife. The habit of serving the hostess first originates in antiquity when the lady had to taste the food to see if it was fit for the guests to eat or not. Emily Post, etiquette authority, laughs at its persistence in present ,day society and says that the guest of honor or the oldest woman should be served first. What difference does it make? a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am a boy of 17. a senior in high school. I have been going with a girl of my own age for about six months. She is very pretty, but doesn't go for petting and other things. Is it because she doesn’t love me, or is it because she is too angelic? Is she just playing around wuth me or might she care for me? WONDERING. Answer—She probably is scared. She might be very fond of you but she has been brought up in a conventional manner and adheres to her teaching. Hollywood Craze in Permanents THE M-Cl'Bl. LIVE STEAM JC Permanent, complete with T | Cocoanat-oil Shampoo S and Push-L'p ■ Our Tonic and Standard Oil Wave. , . Oil. Com- Complete Need pi*** wi,h wi,h ‘‘Risky Shampoo Shampoo less to and* save tO Pay $2 $3 Pay More” friend* rVftd* Less” 2 for 52.01 2 for $3.01 BEAUTE-ARTES 601 Roosevelt Bldg. Illinois and Washington Sts. With or Without Appointment LI. 0670 LI. 0670
THE INDIANAPOLIS TEVIES
—All Photos by Platt. Three recent brides were Mrs. Clarence F. Bcoze, Mrs. Conrad L. Boardman and Mrs. Frank Shepard. Before her marriage Sept. 24, Mrs. Booze was Miss Nora Bryant, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Bryant. Mrs. Boardman was Miss Mildred La Vonghn Rabcurn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Rabourn of Anderson. Mrs. Boardman was a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority at Indiana university. The marriage o? Miss Ruth Shearer to Frank Shepard took place Sept. 17 at the Presbyterian church on Miley and West Washington streets.
NEWS OF SOCIETY FOLK
Mrs. George Elliott has returned to her home in Rising Sun after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Adams, 1541 Carrollton avenue. Virgil Adams, their son, has returned home after a visit in Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Peterson will spend the week-end in Detroit. Mrs. William Allen Moore has returned from a vacation at Lake Wawasee. Mrs. Clarence Bistham returned to her home at the Spink Arms Wednesday after spending the summer at Bay View, Mich. Dr. and Mrs. Frank A. Hamilton are expected to return the first of the week from Burt Lake, Mich.
Sororities
Alpha chapter, Alpha Gamma sorority will meet tonight with Miss Virginia Hoss, 4801 Park avenue. Beta chapter, Theta Nu Chi sorority, will hold initiation services Friday night at the home of Miss Vida Clarkan. Pledges to be Initiated are Misses Martha Henry, Mildred Robbins, Irene Maguire, Kathryn Dittrich, Ruth Shannon, Virginia Lee Fowler, Pauline Townshend and Frances Elrod. JANE JONES Is WED TO DR. RISK Mrs. Hudson Jones of Ft. Wayne, formerly of Indianapolis, announces the marriage of her daughter, Miss Jane Jones, to Dr. Robert Gordon Risk, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. G. Risk of Libson, N. D. The ceremony took place Saturday in West Lafayette. After Nov. 1; the couple will be at home at 605 South Ninth street, West Lafayette. Mrs. Risk is a graduate of Purdue university and member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Dr. Risk was graduated from Purdue and Northwestern university dental school, and belongs to Delta Upsilon and Delta Sigma Delta fraternities. Pledge Services Held. Beta Rho Sigma sorority held pledge services Wednesday night at the Spink Arms for the following: Mrs. Jesse Herbig, Mrs. Louise Croan, Mrs. Margaret Darnell and Misses Emily Deering and Jerry Powers. To Study Cookery Class in “Technique of Cookery,’ conducted by Miss Stena Marie Holdahl, will open Friday morning at the Irvington Presbyterian church under the auspices of the Irvington Union of Clubs. The class, to meet bi-monthly, is in charge of Mrs. C. D. Vawter and Mrs. Russell Bosart.
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Sororities to Hold Annual Open Houses Butler’s Social Season to Start With Receptions. Annual open houses will begin the Butler university social season with Delta Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta sororities scheduled with receptions i* honor of new pledges i Sunday. Miss Margaret Mattingly, president; Mrs. Josephine Fry, house mother, and Mrs. James W. Putnam, 1 faculty ally, will head the reception s line of the Delta Gamma open house at the chapter house, 269 Buckingham drive. With Miss Grace Barnett, presii dent of Kappa Alpha Theta, in the : reception line will be the new ! pledges and Mrs. Mary Keagan, | house mother. The affair will be j held at the chapter house, 442 West ; Forty-sixth street. Guests to Be Greeted Trianon will honor new students ! with a tea from 2 to 4 Thursday, | Oct. 12 in the recreation room of ! Arthur Jordan Memorial hall. A | musical program will be presented. Sunday, Oct. 15 has been set as the date for the open houses of : Alpha Chi Omega and Kappa Kappa | Gamma sororities. The Alpha Chis j will receive at their house, 4615 ! Sunset boulevard, with Mrs. Bessie 1 Hutchingson, house mother, Miss Nellie Eastbum, faculty ally, pledges and Miss Mczelle Ehnes, president, greeting guests. Home-Coming Slated Miss Virginia Fosler, president of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, Mrs. | Helen Shimer, house mother, dnd | pledges will be in line at the Kappa | tea at the house, 821 Hampton drive. Home-coming festivities of the : College of Education will be held from 4 to 6, Oct. 20 in the recrea- \ tion room, and the university home- ! coming Saturday, Oct. 21, will be culminated with a dance in charge j of the senior dance, the first allI school dance of the season. Frank 1 Reissner is chairman.
Miss Laurel Thayer, Spink Arms, is spending two weeks at A Century of Progress exposition in Chicago. Mrs. Edward Toner of Anderson will come to Indianapolis Sunday to attend the concert at English’s and the reception for the artists at the Spink Arms. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Daily have gone to Ft. Wayne and Bluffton and later will go to Miami, Fla., for the winter. Mrs. Caroline Vagen Collins, Spink Arms, returned Monday from California. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Myers have returned from Bermuda. Miss Eleanor Clark accompanied Major and Mrs. Charles E.. Cox Jr. on a trip by plane. They stopped at Cincinnati Wednesday and will visit in New York and Boston before their return home Monday. Miss Rosalie Schell of California, is visiting her father, Henry S. Schell, for several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Daily and sons Wilson and John, are attending the World Series games in Washington. Mrs. Helen Cosand and daughter, Mrs. Paul T. Spencer, have gone to Ann Arbor to attend the wedding of W. H. Munger of Bentonville and Miss Mabel Chapman of Ann Arbor. Miss Elizabeth Davis, another daughter of Mrs. Cosand, who is studying for her master s degree at the University of Michigan, will attend the ceremony. Mrs. Albert D. Davis, 51 West Forty-second street, is home after a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Donald B. Woodward and Mr. Woodward at Washington. Musical Comedy Set Harmony Four will present a musical comedy at 8 Friday night at the Margaret McFarland school 4, East Raymond street, under the auspices of the Willing Workers of Trinity Reformed church. Members of the group include Mesdames Goldie Smith, Helen Von Wilier, Edna Fancher and Cloe Linlau.
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PROVINCE HEAD
Miss 4\’inifred Kavanah Miss Winifred Kavanah will serve as province president of Chi Sigma Sorority. Miss Irene Parrish is secretary. Officers were installed Wednesday night by Miss Mildred Saffell, national president. Baurs Leave to Attend Wedding of Son in N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Baur have left to attend the marriage of their son Edward Baur of Philadelphia and Miss Mary Elizabeth Naylor at 4 Saturday in Scarsdale, N. Y. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Hyatt Naylor of Scarsdale. Attendants for the ceremony include Miss Helena Cox, maid of honor; Mrs. Olin J. Stephens II and Miss Edith Shepard Smith, bridesmaids. George Bancroft of Chestnut Hill will be best man. Ushers chosen are Charles B. Prettyman Jr., Philadelphia; John W. Brandt, Bronxville; John H. Naylor Jr.; William K. Harriman, Philadelphia, and Francis W, Perkins, Boston. The Rev. Alan R. Chalmers will read the ceremony at the St. James church, and a reception at the Scarsdale Women’s Club will follow. The couple will live in Germantown. ELIZABETH TODER IS WEDDED HERE Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Burkhardt, 2757 Allen avenue, announce the marriage of their daughter Miss Elizabeth Anne Toder and Gerald Wallace, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Wallace. The ceremony took place at 2 Sunday at the Olive Branch Christian church with the Rev. Ephraim D. Lowe officiating. The bride was attended by Misses Lizetta Bertels and Edna Gibson, bridesmaids, and Beverley Irene Burkhardt, flower girl. Donald Burkhardt was ring bearer; Norman Eichorn, best man; and Charles Cederholm, Kenneth and Ralph Quinn, were ushers. A reception at the Burkhardt home followed the ceremony. Inspector Visits Here Miss Julia Riser, national inspector of the Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority, attended a breakfast Wednesday in Ayres’ tearoom as the guest of the sorority alumnae club.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Blackberries, ready -to - serve cereal, cream, potatoes hashed in milk, crisp broiled bacon, bran muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon— Dried beef with rice, peanut butter and tomato catsup sandwiches, orange jelly with whipped cream, vanilla cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — Pot roast of veal with vegetables, Chinese cabbage salad, peach shortcake, milk, coffee.
Floersheimer Costumes Modeled for Prominent Women at Ayres’ Shop Elegant Fashions for Daytime, Afternoon and Evening Wear Are Paraded; Simplicity of Lines Outstanding Feature. BY HELEN LINDSAY CLOTHES with an elegance disdaining the theatrical note which marks many of the modes of the day were shown yesterday in the Little Shop at L. S. Ayres. They were the presentation of Floersheimer of New York and were shown on models brought from the salon of the designer. The Little Shop, which has been refinished and enlarged for the fall
fashion showings, was the setting for an informal group of leading women of Indianapolis during the entire day. Prominent in the group were Mrs. W. A. Atkins, Mrs. Charles Sommers, Mrs. Bernard Kirshbaum, Mrs. Richard Fairbanks. Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus, Mrs. George Ball of Muncie, Mrs. Frank Binford and Mrs. Evangeline Shank. Mrs. Norman Perry, who leaves next week for a European trip, was an interested spectator. The modes shown were for daytime, afternoon and evening wear. They were marked by their simplicity of line, sumptious fabrics, unusual trimming and suitability to occasions. One afternoon dress which caused particular comment was of black mellocrepe, the accompanying coat making it suitable for street wear. The coat, when removed, revealed that the vestee and cuffs, made of Alencon lace, were really an entire top of the dress, making it adaptable for semi-dress at night. A day-
time frock of dark green, all-silk material showed an interesting fab"ic feature, in a metallic thread which was woven into the cloth. u a u Tunic Effect in Day Model AN unusual feature of another daytime model was the combination of metallic cloth in a gibct, with the ribbed woolen material which formed the dress. A tunic effect Was achieved with an accordian pleated ruffle at the bottom. This dress buttoned down the back with shiny black buttons, and was worn with a waist length cape of Persian lamb. The cape had the modified monk’s hood back, and buttoned high at the throat. Bagherra cloth, in black, was shown in another dress with an extreme high neck, caught at one side with a handsome jewelled pin. This, too, featured the monk's hood in the back treatment. Real carved jade clips were shown at each side of the neck of another dress of rust colored Bagherra cloth, which is really a sheer uncut velvet. a a a Jade Used for Clips on Coat ALONG coat of rust colored Aurilla cloth, a woolen fabric, was shown with a dress of matching material, made with ,sapn top and sleeves. Real jade also was used in the clips on this dress. The coat had a cape trimmed with a wide banding of blue fox. Sable kolinsky trimmed a cape which was made with twisted shoulder lines and worn with an evening dress of white satin. The only other decoration on the dress was the huge mirror buckle at the belt. The silhouette, like many of the gowns in the collection, was slender and fitted, almost princess in line. . Designs for Screen Stars Shown TWO interesting costumes shown in the collection were ones originally designed for Constance Bennett and Norma Shearer. Miss Bennett’s gown was of black velvet, almost backless, with the Mainbocher neck line, at which white gardenias were clustered. With it a short fur coat of Russian ermine was worn. The coat had short, wide sleeves. Ice grey satin was used for the development of the costume which i originally was planned for Norma Shearer. It carried out the princess silhouette, and was made with an extremely low back. The gown had a fish tail train, and a belt of sable kolinsky, with a huge buckle of Chinese cinnebar, which is a lacquered wood. Worn with this was a swagger coat of matching satin, lined with brown velvet, and trimmed in the sable kolinsky, to match the belt of the dress.
DORIS CRAIG TO BE HOSTESS AT PARTY Miss Doris Craig will be hostess tonight at her home, 26 North Tacoma avenue, at a bridal shower honoring Miss Dorothy Riegel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ross R. Riegel. The marriage of Miss Riegel and Everett M. Whiteman of Elwood will take place Saturday at the Riegel home, 414 Parker avenue. Appointments will be in pink and green, and guests with Miss Riegel and her mother will be Misses Alice
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Yates, Mary Bell, Margaret Riegel, Alice McClain, Margaret Wilson, LaVerne Doty, Rose Marie Bales, Helen Warner, Rose Ellen Doll, Dorothy Haas. Ruth Hoskinson, Dorothy Carrol, Mary Katherine Mills, and Susan Hull. Auxiliary Will Meet Ladies Auxiliary to United Commercial Travelers will meet at 7:30 Saturday night at the Woman's Department Club. Following the business meeting, the group will meet with the council members.
