Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 177, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 December 1933 — Page 4

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Culver Polo Team Loses to Franklin t Fred Sharp, State Horse Association Leader, Is Jubilant. BY BEATRICE BLRGAN Time* Woman'* Page Editor TJ'RED SHARP of Franklin, who became better known to Indianapolis during the recent saddle horse round-up, is elated today. His polo t-:am from the Franklin Polo and Saddle Club beat the Culver military academy team 10-9 in yesterday's match after a 11-6 defeat Saturday. Culver team's record makes the victory important to the Franklin players. Last year the undefeated cadets won the

international championship in New York. They met and downed foreign teams and champion ship players from all parts of the country to gain the championship. The matches last week-end opened the academy's winter season of indoor polo. The invitation to the Franklin team to take

Miss Burgan

part in the opening came as a result of the round-up when Briga-dier-General Gignilliat, academy commandant, sent several horsemen to participate. In the polo matches at the round-up the Franklin players defeated all its opponents. Mr. Sharp refereed the week-end games in the academy riding hall, which is the second largest indoor riding pavilion in the United States. Mounted on the academy ponies, the Franklin players wem at a disadvantage during the first match, but they soon handled the strange ponies as adeptly as their own. Holiday Brings Crowd Ray Adams. Lester Canary, Harry George, Claude Barnum and Curlie McQuinn, who learned the game under Mr. Sharp's training played before a holiday crowd of visitors, parents and friends who had come to spend Thanksgiving with cadets. The games were fast and exciting, Mr. Sharp explained. “We really didn’t expect to win, for the cadet team draws its lineup from forty candidates, who practice an hour every day and play outside teams every week-end,” he said. The academy varsity team was composed of seniors, playing their fourth year of polo. They included Cadets Lampton, Owen, Runk, Vorhees, Fay and Brown, instructed by Sergeant Stone. The academy has a string of thirty ponies. Most of its opponents are teams of other military schools. Next week-end the team will face the University of Michigan team, and will continue the season until late spring. Another Team Proposed The Franklin and Ft. Harrison teams are the only groups in this vicinity which play indoor matches. During the state fair the two teams played exhibition matches in the coliseum with Culver alumni providing competition. Algonquin Riding Club is contemplating formation of an indoor team. Mr. Sharp and his players were guests of the academy officers for the week-end. and attended the special Saturday night show, presented in the school gymnasium. Mr. Sharp, one of the directors of the Indiana Saddle Horse Association. was active in preparations for the first roundup this fall, and his team has played frequently at the Rolling Ridge Polo Club field. CLUB WILL GIVE CHRISTMAS PARTY Elks Cervus Club will entertain members and guests with a Christmas party at Catholic Community center, 1004 North Pennsylvania street, at 10:30 next Monday. Luncheon at 12:30 will be followed by a card party at 2. Members will bring groceries and fruit to fill baskets for needy. Mrs. Harry Wiebke is luncheon chairman. Mrs. John Cronin is arranging the program. Mrs. Clifford J. Richter, president, is general chairman, and Mrs. Carl Neerman. publicity chairman. OFFICERS CLUB AT FORT GIVES DANCE Ft. Harrison Officers’ Club was the. scene of the monthly formal dance of the Reserve Officers’ Association Saturday night. Approximately fifty couples attended. Guidons of military regiments decorated the hall and the Eleventh infantry orchestra provided the music. In the receiving line were Colonel and Mrs. O. P. Robinson, Colonel and Mrs. T. L. Sherburne and Major and Mrs. A. C. Rasmussen.

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Committee Directs Artist Chib Exhibit

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Second annual exhibit of Indiana artists under the sponsorship of the Indianapolis Junior League opened today with a tea at L. S. Ayres Ac Cos. The exhibit, which will continue until Dec. 16, is in charge of the league arts and interests committee, shown above. The committee includes Mrs. Elias C. Atkins, exofficio; Miss Rosamond Van Camp, chairman; Mrs. Stanley Shipnes, assistant; Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr„ exhibits; Mrs. Elsa Haerle, symphony; Mrs. Paul Fisher, glee club; Mrs. Robert Winslow, children's theater; Mrs. Evans Woollen Jr., art institute, and Mrs. T. Harvey Cox, publicity. Mrs. Robert A. Adams, advisory chairman, is not pictured. Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat tr o a tern No. O O D O Size Btreet City State Name

A fr ** wi ju ! n 5366 jF ' y

COLLEGE FROCK The college girl has a special talent for seizing upon the most successful fashions months ahead of time. Pier enthusiastic acceptance of this type of frock, for instance, is positive proof that it is due for a brilliant future. So watch out for. these new dropped shoulders with modified sleeve interest below. Inspired by Paris and launched by the college girl .they'll go far. With its high round collar, its slim skirt and its businesslike air, this frock is just as smart for the office as it is for the classroom. Make it in woolen with a velveteen collar and belt. Emerald green with brown, or putty beige with Patou red are good. Size 16 requires 2 3 s yards 54-inch material, 3 * yard 36-inch contrasting. Width about IT yards. Complete instructions for a crocheted sweater and sports gloves are given in our fall fashion book. Send for it now! Pattern No. 5366 is designed for sizes 12. 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 30, 32. 34. 36. 38. 40, 41 bust, Our new fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern 15 cents. (Copyright. 1933. bv United Features Syndicate. Inc.)

A Day’s Menu SAVORY MEAT LOAF 2 thin 2-inch slices salt pork, sliced 2 pounds round beef, ground i/ 2 cup quick-cooking tapioca 1/2 small onion, finely chopped 2 cups canned tomatoes 2 ! -2 teaspoons salt 14. teaspoon pepper Fry out salt pork until golden brown. Add pork and drippings to other ingredients and mix thoroughly. Bake in loaf pan in hot oven <450 degrees F.) 15 minutes; then decrease heat to moderate (350 degrees F.) and bake 30 minutes longer, or until done. Serve hot or cold. Garnish with parsley. Serves 10.

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Above (left to right)—Mrs. Thomas Harvey Cox, Mrs. Elias C. Atkins, Miss Rosamond Van Camp, Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr. and Mrs. Elsa Haerle. Below (standing, left to right)—Mrs. Evans Woollen Jr. and Mrs. Paul Fisher; seated, left to right, Mrs. Stanley Shipnes, Mrs. George Ziegler and Mrs. Robert Winslow.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Which would you rather be—a dependent or an independent wife? Write your views on this subject to Jane Jor- ! dan and read her comments in this i column. Dear Jane Jordan—l agree with you that wifely virtues have been overestimated, but I wish to shout from the housetops that wifely burdens are grossly underestimated. I feel that the reason wives become narrow and utterly absorbed in their husbands, children and home is due to a system of society which decrees that “a woman’s place is in the home,” and

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refuses a married woman of just average ability a chance to get part or full time work so that she can broaden her interests. If a woman with outstanding t a 1 ent and ability does get such work, the husband is apt to wail

Jane Jordan

that he is neglected, especially if there are children to further divide her interests. Then he goes off on the hunt for the “other woman’’ to fill his needs just as surely as when he feels too dominated or bored by a domestic wife. Often it is the wife who has a profound need for a little separateness to offset the monotonous and deadly grind of never ending housework and children. But usually she has no hope of finding an outlet other than through complexes, neuroses and domineering behavior. The most monotonous office work is not so deadening to the spirit as the duties of a wife and mother without a maid. The former has an eight-hour job, whereas the housewife has a fourteen-hour job, subject to calls from the children in the night. No matter how much one loves one's children, they are nervewracking if they are under foot incessantly. There! It's good to get that off my chest! A Dull Housewife Answer —You’re not so dull, in my j opinion. You’re fully conscious of j the obstacles in the way of your j personal development and are in j rebellion against them. This is considerably more interesting than a state of cowlike animality. As long as books and magazines are available you won't go completely stale, j My quarrel is with the wife who J thinks she is God's chosen creature by virtue of her wedded estate. She feels that the mere legality of mar- j riage is sufficient to guarantee her j husband's devotion as long as they both shall live. Your graphic account of the housewife's plight in a servantless j home is absolutely true. Shaw once described the patriarchal home as the “girl's prison and the woman’s | workhouse.” More and more women are extricating themselves from the j role which tradition has assigned to j them, in search of personal inde- j pendence and more stimulating pursuits. Every emotionally healthy mother admits that there are times when the most beloved child is an unmitigated nuisance. Usually she feels a horrid sense of guilt and secretly condemns herself as an unnatural mother. It only means that her children have a better chance for normal emotional growth than the ones who are stunted by a toofervid maternal devotion. Again I am in perfect agreement with you that work outside the home by no means solves woman's problem, though I think it is better than a lifetime of servitude to dustpan and broom. The working wife and mothers only substitute a brand new set of problems for the old ones. The conflicting claims of love and work are just as hard to settle as the griefs of dependence and domestic servitude. If a woman devotes too much | time and energy to her profession, she may depreciate the importance •of mating and maternity. If she puts the emphasis on the role of wife and mother, she has less energy to devote to personal success. A nice adjustment between the two is hard to make. The jealousy of the spouse is another factor with which the wage

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

earning wife may have to contend, though I think that the difficulties of the depression have made men less scornful of accepting pecuniary aid from their wives. Even so the less intelligent males do quite a little inappropriate winning while permitting their wives to carry the double role of wage earner and home-maker. In spite of these drawbacks, the economically independent wife still has many very real advantages. For one thing, her aggressive instincts usually are worked off on the job, leaving her with less need to take out her managerial instincts on her husband and children. Her contacts with men in business teach her that her husband isn’t the only man on the planet, and if he washes out on her she isn’t so sunk. For one thing her work makes such heavy demands on her that domestic disaster diminishes in importance. At least her whole world doesn’t crash with her husband’s fall from grace. Mrs. Doyle to Preside A. W. T. Club will hold its annual holiday dinner Thursday night at Red Men's hall, Lee and Morris streets, with Mrs. Mary Doyle chairman. New club members will attend the January meeting. Assisting Mrs. Doyle will be Mesdames Homer Dusing, August Fraul, Sadie Garram, Arch Hobbs and Roy Tullis. Noble Grands to Meet Mrs. J. W. Price, 1219 North Alabama stret, will be hostess for the monthly meeting and Christmas party of the Olive Branch, Past Noble Grands Association, Wednesday. Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames M. B. Hall, Ada Staley, Mary Gaskill, J. K. Wallace and Miss Anna Gaynor. Miss Ward to Talk Miss Mary Ward of the Civic Repertory Theater, Inc., in New York will address a meeting of the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays at 11 tomorrow morning in the American National Bank building.

Daily Recipe Breakfast — Chilled grape juice, cereal, cream, codfish and parsnip hash, toasted corn muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Okra and tomato stew, Melba toast, hearts of celery, apple dumplings, milk, tea. Dinner — Flounder In parsley sauce, potato marbles, buttered spinach, beet and egg salad, quince Bavarian, milk, coffee.

‘Debutante. u CONFESSES S.Every night was party ri:!r'. revealsthe lose "I was a pirl who took chances"; Too Free and Easy; and / K, j3 Sff others of equal force. / —- v W SBr True ' UwLm M Confessions "sES/ust NOW ON SALE IW

Tea Opens State Art Exhibition Wilbur D. Peat Gives Gallery Talk at League Show. Informal tea this afternoon at L. S. Ayres & Cos. featured the opening of the second downtown exhibit by Indiana artists under the sponsorship of the Indianapolis Junior League. Presiding at the tea table were Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres, Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith. Mrs. E. C. Atkins and Miss Rosamond Van Camp, assisted by Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr., exhibit chairman. Another feature of the exhibition, which will extend through Dec. 16, was a gallery talk at 1, by Wilbur D. Peat, director of the John Herron Art institute, before league members, who will be ushers during the show. One hundred twenty entries have been received from Hoosier artists for the exhibition. A popularity contest will be held this week to enable visitors to vote for their favorite pictures. Mrs, Thomas Harvey Cox, publicity chairman of the arts and interests committee, announce the possibility of a second contest the following week.

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Crane are spending some time in the east. Before her marriage Wednesday Mrs. Crane was Miss Marjorie Helen Wilcox, daughter of Mrs. Russell A. Wilcox. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Wheeler, Noblesville, are spending the winter in St. Petersburg, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Lilly Jr. and Miss Ruth Lilly are in New York. Mrs. Frank B. Hunter, president of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs, attended an annual district convention of the association Saturday at Young America. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus are visiting in New York. Miss Polly Pierson has returned from a. visit in Chicago. Mrs. John Bertermann II returned yesterday to her home in Detroit after spending several days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Minnick. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Stonehouse have left for a month’s visit in Miami, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Olive and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Barker attended a buffet supper last night in Lebanon, as guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. C. Fosdick. REVEALS MARRIAGE OF MISS DE VANEY The marriage of Miss Marjorie De Vaney and H. Gregg Ransburg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harper J. Ransburg, 4902 Park avenue, is announced by the bride’s mother, Mrs. M. O. De Vaney. Dr. Thomas R. White read the service Thanksgiving morning at the De Vaney home, 3970 Broadway. The couple will live in Indianapolis. Both attended De Pauw university, where the bride was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Mr. Ransburg was a Beta Theta Pi. PHI DELT MOTHERS SCHEDULE BANQUET Parents and sons banquet of Phi Delta Theta Mothers Club of Butler university will be held at 6:30 Thursday night at the house, 705 Hampton driv£. The banquet will take the place of the regular meeting. Christmas colors and decorations will be used and in charge of the arrangements are Mesdames George O. Stewart, George W. Horst, Blanche Harber, Urban K. Wilde Sr., J. C. Moore and Hiram J. Raffensperger. ALLIANCE TO HOLD CHRISTMAS PARTY Singing of French Christmas carols, and holiday music will feature the dinner and party of the Alliance Francaise Thursday night at the Washington. Miss Virginia Lindstrom and Ralph Decker are in charge of the evening’s entertainment which will include music by Mrs. Jacqueline Ulbrich, acompanied by Miss Telsie Madden. * Mrs. Garten to Talk Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review ‘'Mellon’s Millions” by Harvey O'Connor and “Oil for the Lamps of China” by Alice Hobart at 10 Wednesday at the Kirshbaum center in the second of a series of book reviews sponsored by the Indianapolis chapter, Council of Jewish Women. Church Club to Meet \ Girls Friendly Society, Christ church, will meet at 5:30 tomorrow at the parish house, with a business meeting following 6 o’clock dinner.

Artistic Efforts Enrich Life ofMuncie Woman

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BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON Times Hobby Editor HOBBIES are where one may tur.’i from an uninteresting routine of daily life and find contentment in research, quest and achievement. Fortunate are the individuals whose God-given talent may be developed into a career, but to be envied also are those who at least may enjoy the expression of their talent as a hobby. To be able to transcribe to canvas or parchment a graceful pose or beautiful scene undoubtedly is an enjoyable and soul satisfying hobby. One so gifted is Mrs. J. R. Marsh, Muncie. She has courageously and willingly subjugated her desire to develop seriously an artistic talent —that she might rear a fine family of five. However, as she says, she. “always has kept the art fires burning” and the excellent quality of her work shows that she has kept them burning brightly. She has been honored by having hen painting hung in the Hoosier salon. On the third floor of her home she has made a charming studio where she has added to her life the romance and delight of self expression. One of the charms of Mrs. Marsh’s work is the range of her subjects-portraits of her family, floral groups and landscapes—as the spring scene shown here. Every where she travels, whether in Indiana or Europe, she makes sketches in a notebook, and when the Marsh family members spend a day in the open, instead of fishing rod and gun, they take pencil and brush. Mrs. Marsh says she is convinced that the underlying cause for fishing expeditions is the love for beautiful spots, because there always is a fisherman sitting at the stragetic sketching point. tt a tt I ''ROM this family communal in- ' terest, Mrs. Marsh has had the satisfaction of watching her daughter Alida develop artistically until today, living in Chicago,jshe makes many of the sketches used in Marshall Field advertising, especially for the Field magazine, “Fashions of the Hour.” On a recent trip to Europe, replete with happy incidents, Mrs. Marsh and Alida had, at Lake Como, an unusual and pleasing experience. They were surprised after a storm by.the natural phenomena of two distinct rainbows. With their room overlooking the lake and their painting materials at hand, they immedately captured the rare and beautiful scene. While motoring in Mexico, Mrs. Marsh and her son Rodney were halted on the road to Monterey by the funeral procession of a native

Out of Town Guests to Attend Hospital Guild Event

Additional parties to attend the St. Margaret’s Hospital Guild annual dinner dance Saturday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club were announced today as follows: With Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Hindsley wifi be Mr. and Mrs. Fred Asay, Kokomo, and Messrs, and Mesdames James R. Blacklidge, T. K. Shade, W. C. Parker, E. T. Kline, C. J. Kushell, Marvin T Kahl, George Binger, Lee Wood, C. L. Knoerle and Miss Frances Keller.

In a party with Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Fields, will be Dr. and Mrs. Wayne S. Hill, Messrs, and Mesdames Charles S. Thomas, R. L. Petit, Dave Layton. H. C. Fuerstenburg and Wavne S. Hill.

Lieutenant and Mrs. L. A. Singer, Lafayette, Lieutenant and Mrs. Robert Hollis, Captain O. C. McIntyre and Mrs. Irma McClure plan to attend, and in another party will be Dr. and Mrs. R. J. McElwee, Dr. and Mrs. S. G. Bush, Miss Mildred Horn, Miss Ada Rielly, Charles Paige, Chalmers Warren, Messrs.

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-Have a Hobby

child. To snap such a scene with a camera would have been an indignity, but Mrs. Marsh sketched the simple pathos of the native tragedy, adding an unusual scene to the log of her Mexican visit. Mr. Marsh's hobby is photography, and on journeys he snaps the scenes which Mrs. Marsh hasn't time to sketch. On returning home they make a log in book form, illustrated with photographs and sketches, the cover being a water color of the most beautiful view. For her present project, Mrs. Marsh is preserving on convas the picturesque old churches near Muncie. She has completed sketching the one which stands in the small community called Orange. Fortunately, it was painted before the trees, which added to the beauty of its setting, were cut down. Those who have had the privilege of visiting Mrs. Marsh in her studio, enjoying her paintings, and seeing the happiness and satisfaction she obtains from this fascinating word, realize that to her a hobby has paid attractive dividends of recreation and creative enjoyment. a a a THE Indiana Artists second annual exhibition opening today at the L. S. Ayres & Cos. store and the Indiana Artist's Club showing throughout December at the SpinkArms should be inspirational material for those interested in art as a hobby. The Art Association of Indianapolis offers as one of the privileges of membership the opportunity to study sketching in a class conducted by Wilbur D. Peat, director of the John Herron Art Institute. The class meets every Wednesday night at the museum and the object merely is self expression and enjoyment. The project was launched three years ago upon the theory that tne layman would enjoy sketching under competent supervision. It is not a training school; only sufficient instruction is given to enable the hand and eye accurately to register impressions. The class sometimes numbers forty members who often continue together during the summer. Their summer activities consist of sketching trips to city parks and other points of scenic beauty. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burns and Miss Margaret Shipp are among the enthusiastic members this year. Possibly among these hobby lovers may be discovered a “Christopher Bean.” However for the present, by yielding to the latent yearning to sketch, they have opened for themselves the door into a wonderful new world of form and color; they have an awakened interest in nature and a pleasant pastime for leisure hours.

and Mesdames Robert Pike, Durward Staley and Glenn Warren. Reservations have been made for a party of six, including Mr. and Mrs. Willis Conner, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Prestoi McNurlen and for a party of eight, including Messrs, and Mesdames Harry Schroeder, E. A. Crane, Robert T. Sanders and F. H. Naegele. With Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Fenstermaker will be Dr. Charles Meyers and Messrs, and Medames Charles Hagedon, Walter Curt Brown, H. M. Bennett and Earle Wolfe. Other reservations include Messrs, and Medames D. J. Roy, Otto Meyer, Fred Shumacker, Henry Dithmer, Charles Arensman, Lewis Ward, H. W. Todd, S. R. Staley, W. O. McDaniel. Marvin Curie, Charles Legeman. Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Bibier, Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Powell, Miss Gladys Gieseke, Paul Doane and Cecil Crabb.

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Women Still Center Lives on Homes Despite Changed World, Mate and Children Most Important. BY GRETTA PALMER Timet Special Writer. YORK, Dec. 4—lt is one columnist’s cliches that if the modern woman were to meet her own grandmother the two women would find themselves with hardly a word to say. The difference in point of view, one is given to understand. is so great that each would regard with a certain horror the fact that so contrary and unreasonable a person should ever have disfigured the family tree. We columnists have perhaps exaggerated. The women of all generations could find a common meeting ground in their interest in the home. They might disagree with some violence about the proper way to cook a steak or fold a diaper, but they would, at least, feel a deep and personal interest in the subjects. Woman's primary concern, no matter what the feminists may say. is still the welfare of her husband and her brood. Liberality Crowns The distinctive quality of the modern woman—the thing which sets her apart from grandmamma • and all the good housewives who went before—does not lie. In the least, irt the fact that modern woman has shifted her enthusiasm from the home to the office or the rostrum. For the vast majority of modern women have done no such thing. They are as completely wrapped up in their families—as impervious to ambitions in the arts of the industries—as the women of the old Stone Age. And yet the emancipation of ■women is no myth. Woman today is a more liberal person, a creature of greater gusto than the women of any respectable class have been for many centuries. It is not her entrance into business offices which has effected the change. It is far more aptly traced to the changes in the social system which permit a woman to emerge, quite unescorted, from her home. The woman of former years knew men but they were the men of her own class. She knew servants, but her acquaintance with them was limited to the formalities of giving orders and receiving thanks. She had none of the opportunities which life vouchsafes the modern girl before she is well out of her teens for finding out what people very differently situated think about. Knows Many Classes The old-fashioned woman knew all there was to know about the mental operations of the men of her clan. But had she ever sat at midnight with a large party who discussed the ways of life with Pete across the counter of the hot dog stand? Had she ever entered into long, involved political conversations with a taxi driver while the lights were red? The modern girl has emerged from the cotton wool of aristocracy which safeguarded her grandmother from life. She has found it passible to talk tq people of twenty different classes on a plane of true equality, simply because the conditions of modern life make such gadding about as hers necessary. She no longer looks upon men who do not have a traditionally “society” background as so many potential butlers. She and her friends have found that Jake, the bartender, is something of a philosopher in his way. And the knowledge that all Intelligence. all wisdom and all chivalry are not restricted to the limited circles of her friends has done the modern girl a world of good. That is true emancipation. And that is something which the girl of 1933 could teach her grandmother.

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