Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 190, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 December 1933 — Page 18

PAGE 18

| Small Hands ; A~e Busy to Cheer Needy Orchard School Pupils Produce Toys for Less Fortunate. ► $ BV BEATRICE BI’RGAN Time* Woman'* Pare Editor I ' TF Santa Claus were to take time j -*■ to slip into the Orchard school > workshop, his hopes of filling stock - I ings of all good children would rise. : If hp'd spp the line of production ’ turning out its sturdy toys, no doubt • he'd give the shop the honorary ; name of Santa Claus' workshop 11. Since before Thanksgiving, Or-

chard school pupils have been working in their, toy shop which follows up a project started last year. Bob Merrill as foreman reviews the shop's progress ; every momlng and outlines the j program for the day. Pounding/ of j hammers and! the buzz of saws

and drills echo •'rom the shop as

Beatrice Burgan

the various groups take their turns in the line of production. Daily the pupils are assigned their positions, where they experience the monotony of the* piece work method of manufacturing. The next day they undertake another task, and thus learn various types of. work. One hundred and five specimens of the fifteen different articles are being made, and will be given to the Family Welfare Society for distribution to needy children. Phil Sweet, instructor in the shop, allows five substandards, for 100 perfect specimens are expected from the lot. Abundant Crop of Ideas When we visited the shop, the : children were working on a dump cart, being made in accordance with an idea submitted by John Dean. Approximately 145 ideas were submitted by the children before Thanksgiving, and fifteen practical ideas were chosen by the instructor for manufacturing. Ideas accepted were given "patients,” and samples were made and criticized by the children before actual production ■ began. In arithmetic classes the chil- , dren have figured the number of parts, calculated at 3,150, and the 1 cast. Estimate of the cost was figured carefully, for the children decided they wouldn’t make anything that cost 12 cents if it could be duplicated in stores for 10 cents. Parents of the children were to visit the shop today and wntness production. On Thursday night at an open house for any one interested in visiting the school, the toys will be exhibited on the first floor. Eliminate Dust They will see the children working on fire engines with ladders, trains with engine, coal car, tank car and caboose painted yellow, red. blue and green. The children will demonstrate their battleship, which has a mouse trap concealed inside. When a spot is hit on the outside, the trap is contacted and the ship “blows up” with its re- j lease. Early in the shop's activities, a | plan had to be devised to take the | saw dust out of the room. The j children puzzled over the situation j and finally placed a large box in front of an open window with the disc sander in front of an electric fan. which carries the dust out the window. The children will be busy, wrapping the toys on Friday morning. From 11 to 12 during the singing of carols each child will place a package under a large Christmas tree.

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Pupils Make Toys for Needy Children

, ii in „ ' - 1 1 il (i f f) ......

Standing (left tn right)—John Osborne, Charles Zerfas, Ned Merrell and Billy Fishpr. Seated (left to right)—Mary Elizabeth Fletcher, Martha I,ois Adams and Mary Johnson.

Orchard school children have helped solve Santa Claus’ problem of reaching other children, living in homes where need lurks in every corner. In mass production fashion, the pupils have

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

What problem in your life causes you the most srrief? Maybe there is something you can do about it that you haven’, thought of. Write to Jane Jordan for advice. Dear Jane Jordan—l have been married four years. I am 29 and my husband is 35. When we were married he acted as though he loved me. Now he says he married me because he was afraid I might grieve so much that people w'ould talk, or th(H I might commit suicide. I, am completely frigid and have been all along. I have been examined by a specialist who says there is nothing that can be done

about it. Although I love my husband very nuc-h, I don't go iround necking aim all the time. I'm not the kind that expects to love and coo continually. Just to know that I’m useful is enough for me, but as a wife I think parlor maid w r ould be more fitting. No one

£

Jane Jordan

can use a lump of ice. I am an excellent housekeeper, and make my own clothes. I married because I wanted a home and things of my own, and companionship through life. My husband owns our home and is an excellent provider. He wants children and I don’t. I feel as though I ought to step out of his way as he has told me to do, but I can’t live on my people, for they are old. I earned my own living until the depression took my job away. I can’t possibly see why he went through with the marriage at all if he didn’t want to, for I am a respectable woman and not the kind that takes anything she can get hold of. WONDERING WHAT TO DO. Answer—You should not take the word of one specialist upon a matter which exerts such a profound influence on your problem. The phenomenon of frigidity is not understood sufficiently even by trained psychologists. It'is entirely possible that your physician has overlooked certain psychological factors which may be accessible to influence, and that one better versed in the twists of personality would be more able to help you. The fear of having children :s one of the causes for the freezing of instincts. Since you mention your unwillingness to have a family, It occured to me that in repudiating children you might have repudiated reproduction in all of its phases. There are various other unconscious attitudes which may contribute to your lack of response. If you discover what they are. they can be cured by a process of reeducation. but it is obvious that you can not work with a problem which you do not understand. I notice a tendency on your part to give up too easily ... to excuse yourself on the grounds that there is nothing you can do. Even if your

made hundreds of toys, which will be given to the Family Welfare Society. Parents will have the joy of selecting the toys they think their children will like. Mary Elizabeth Fletcher, Martha

, trouble is constitutional and not psychological, there still is a lot you can do toward building a more i satisfactory life. It is true that you can not hold your husband to his side of a contract when you do not keep yours. But only a thoroughly discouraged individual quits when confronted with an apparently impassable obstacle. If you can’t succeed in one thing, you can in another. The point is to see to it that you succeed at something, and not be so ready to admit defeat. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l have a brother who met a girl friend of ). mine at a party about two years ! ago. She is married and has a good husband, but it seems as though they fell in love at first sight. I kno\V she is a nice girl. It’s just one of those things. She never says a word about either man to me. She acts like she is stunned. My brother is crazy about her and wanted her to get a divorce I and marry him. but she feels obligated to her husband and is trying to get over this love for my brother. Can you help us out I here at home? He just isn't the | same any more. Thanking you, Answer —Earnest love, even when j thwarted, still may be stimulus to courageous endeaver. A love tragedy does harm only when it is used as an excuse for a flight from real- | ity. Help your brother to tie the i energy generated by his unfulfilled love to the outisde world. Let him j expend it in tasks that interest him. | Point out to him that energy turned inward in useless brooding is destructive and will make him into a useless citizen. For your own comfort, you might remember that men have died and worms have eaten them, but not for love. The normal man is quite able to overcome love- disappointments and live to love again-.

We Announce the Opening of Our Tenth Shop at 2309 EAST MICHIGAN ST. f^^jSSS FINAL TWO DAYS , ~ OF OUR SALE > In celebration of our New Shop we will continue / our super sale for 2 MORE DAYS. A large staff —, \ /—w of EXPERIENCED OPERATORS will be avail- \ \ able for the Holiday Rush. \ (O l/ - 'KSfSSP.EK 1 Special ' “ 'i.;z s; 1 -, ns , ,r;; Permanent rfl to any MeMickle shop. Pay 50c A $3 value elsewhere. S A for our regular SI Wave and and volume alone per- ■H.■ la get a rereipt good until March mils us to quote this low ” L 193 t. price. Wednesday, Don’t De'ay! Act Now! Thursday only. cu .„ nA „ - warning! SHAMPOO. RINSE can’t be done so cheap.’’ They say rmnrn iuoi/i- *hls to excuse their Inefficiency and FINGER nfAVE inability to meet competition. and RINGLET ENDS . _ REGULAR $7.00 ALL ■* [II I PERSONALITY foe C WAVE. INCLUDING ABB Double Shampoo. Rinse, Oil Wed, Thurs. only Scalp Treat- C™ M ment. Trim, M Finger This is not a racket. Do not be fooled with Ringlet by free offers. We really give yon ends. With SB. these bargains as advertised. Every Day Special I Permanent Consult our Hair Stylist and g Wave Sale! ln Zl ~"" J W war as $200.00 REWARD 2 $lO Waves to anv one proving we do for $lO.Ol not nse the finest supplies. Ask About Extra Service SlO Have A half a million women can't COMBINATION SPECIALS a nd"X B rs Jof.owel always led Marcel. Shampoo and Rinse. ALL 3 FOR 490 I°. REASONS for Shampoo, Finger Wave. Ringlet Patronizing XIcMICKLE’S Ends, Rir.se and Eyebrow Arch ea. • 19 Years of Experience. \ F rT i ti Art V I • Lowest Price*—Highest \ Rrfular SI.OO \alue OualitT Shampoo. Marcel, Rinse and ** "* Manicure a. • Convenient Locations. ALL 4 FOR 04c • Beautiful, Sanitary Shops. A Regular $1.25 Value • The Finest Equipment. EVERY DAY SPECIALS! • Conrteon* Service. PIPT nrov ic i . •Experienced Operators. GIFT CERTIFICATES • Th,> ' >r >' B*t supplies. Good for nerrire or • Safest Method* Known, prfhan and i* f. The i • * a,r Healing With the <iiii Fublic. Now —lo Shops to Serve You! MMICKLE’S >'*• 4217 College 8521 E. Wash. 3015 Central 631 Massachusetts i->( r 10th 3808 College 1103 Shelby 952 X. Peon.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Lois Adams and Mary Johnson are among the girls who have worked with the boys in the toy shop. They are seen with John Osborne, Charles Zerfas, Ned Merrell and Billy Fisher, holding some of the toys they made.

I. T. S. CHAPTER PLAY SCHEDULED

Mrs: John W. Thornburgh, 5169 Guilford avenue, will be hostess Friday night for a Christmas party, to be given by Castle Craig chapter, I. T. S. Club, Inc. Entertainment will include carols, numbers by a brass quartet, piano numbers by Richard Clay and a review of "The Other Wise Man,” by Mrs. Morris Young.

QUEST CLUB HOLDS HOLIDAY MEETING

Professor John J. Haramy talked on "Christmas in the Holy Land” at the meeting of the Tuesday Guest Club today at the home of Mrs. J. K. Lang, 2115 Broadway. The hostess w T as assisted by Mrs. Harry Irwun and Mrs. H. M. Reid. Mrs. D. R. Kellum sang Christmas songs and holiday responses were given to roll call. Decorations w r ere in keeping with the season.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Seedless white grapes, cereal cooked with dates, cream, oven toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Scotch woodcock, sliced cucumber and lettuce salad, blackberry shortcake, milk, tea. Dinner — Currant soup, baked veal loaf, twice baked potatoes, creamed carrots, stuffed tomato salad, peach fritters with raspberry sauce, milk, coffee.

Nurses Will Give Dinner to Children Tableaux Included on Christmas Program at St. Vincent’s. Tableaux of ‘‘The First Christmas” will be presented by St. Vincent's hospital nurses Thursday at the nurses’ home. One hundred j children will be given a turxev din- ; ner and Christmas gifts by ‘he Sisters of Charity and St. Vincent’s Hospital Guild. Members of the tableaux include Misses Ann Smith, Elizabeth McCann, Mary Enneking, Mary Thompson. Lydia Casebeey, Mary Johnson. Margaret Schulte, Rosemary Thurman, Marie Acheson, Mary Louise Thomas, Ann Thomas, Mary Joyce Napper, Nancy Van Buskirk and Johnny Lee. Mrs. Duaiw in Charge Dinner will be served at 1. to be followed by a Christmas program and story hour. Many items on the menu have been donated by friends of the guild. Mrs. Ellard Duane, president of the guild, is in charge of thq arrangements, assisted by members of her board: Mesdames John Consodine, Rudolph Aufderheide, Russell White. Gerald Ely, William Freaney, Bernard Larkin, George Potts, Miss Helen Caroll, Sister Rase, superintendent of the hospital, and Sister Andrea, superintendent of nurses. Members of the motor corps who will assist will be Mrs. Walter Brant and Mrs. A. L. Pehrson, chairman; Mesdames George Lilly, Edward Haines, John Leach, David Klausemeyer, L. F. Druschel, J. J. O Hara, C. L. Eisaman, George Kohlstadt, Peter W. Zimmer, William Umphrey, T. J. Blackwell, Joseph Conley, E. D. Fauts, Ray Ruddick, Ethel Cummins. Paul White, Clifford Miller, Joseph Hoffman, Bernard Larkin, Paul Rochford, Carl Sherer, Frank Gastineau, Carl Steinkamp, C. J. Neal. M. V. Kahler. H. C. Ostermever and Miss Mary Virginia Feeney. Choir on Program The choir includes Misses Mildred Alexander, Nora Barton, Mary C. Behler, Mary Carson, Vincentia Conner, Anna Louise Conley, Mary Davis, Mary Ege, Dorothy Fenstermaker, Ruth Hinton, Wilma Hurst, Magdalene Keyser, Frances Long, Marguerite Markey, Doris Oyler, Genevieve Statz, Bernadette Welch, Roberta Zinken and Anna Marie Dugan. Orchestra members are Misses Juanita Alexander, Audrey Burns, Mary Davis, Bernadette Welch, Anna L. Conley, Mary Carson, Mary King, Margaret Doyle, Ruth Hinton and Mary Behler. Newlyweds to Be Feted Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Rosenak will be honor guests at a reception j to be given tonight by Mr. and Mrs. ■ Samuel Rosenak. parents of Dr. | Rosenak, in Terre Haute. Mrs. Rosenak before her marriage last Thursday was Miss Fannie Kiser, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Edgar Kiser. She is a niece of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Feibelman, Terre Haute.

j NANCY HART-i CANDIES for Christmas Made Fresh Daily in Indianapolis Os Finest Ingredients Obtainable. Your Guarantee of Freshness. I Luscious Fruit and Nut Centers .... Caramels - t \ [j and Creams / 2 POUNDS 78c 3 POUNDS $1.17 5 POUNDS $1.95 Nancy Hart Has Served Indianapolis for 10 Years With the Best in Candies EXTRA FINE HARD CANDIES FRUIT FILLED M MIXED J fIQ OLD-TIME MIXED I ■Jf RAINBOW I chips SUGAR CREAMS 19c lb. PEANUT BRITTLE 19c lb. Our Out-of-Town Customers Please Add Postage Nancy Hart Candy Shop 102 MONUMENT CIRCLE

RECENT BRIDE

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a Mrs. Louis Wabnitz —Photo by Kindred. Mrs. Louis Wabnitz was Miss Evelyn Hohn before her recent marriage. After Dec. 10, Mr. and Mrs. Wabnitz will be at home at 5627 Julian avenue. Club Will Hold Reception and Supper at Hotel Prospective members of the Mar- ! ion County Democratic Women's j Club will be guests at a reception to be held at 8 Thursday on the mezzanine floor of the Claypool. In the receiving line will be Mrs. Frank T. Dowd, president; Mrs. Samuel M. Ralston and Mrs. George We,rbe, vice-presidents, and Miss Mary Sullivan. Mrs. Leroy J. Keach is in charge of buffet supper and will be assisted by young daughters of members. Members of the board who will assist are Mesdames John Bingham, Albert Losche, David Newman, Smiley Chambers, Leland Davis, John Donnelly and Albert Dugan. Others are past presidents, including Miss Julia Landers and Mesdames William H. Bobbitt, William C. Smith and John W. Trenck, Chicago. Other hostesses will be Mrs. Carl j Wood, Twelfth district chairman: j Mrs. Marcia Murphy, Eleventh dis- | trict chairman; Mrs. Anna Owen. ] .city chairman, and Mesdames H. i Nathan Swaim, William E. Clauer, E. Kirk McKinney, Martin Walpole, Edward Barry, Alice Weaver, Joe Williams, Henry Commiskey, Marie Westfall and Miss Bess Robbins. DOLLS FOR ORPHANS DRESSED AT PARTY Inter Alia Club held its Christmas party this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Roger Williams. Members dressed dolls which will be sent with other toys to the Indianapolis Orphans home. Mrs. Ross Coffin, president, and Mrs. Douglas White, program chairman, presided at t'|e tea table, decorated in silver and blue and lighted with -white tapers in silver holders. Team to Give Play Barbara Frietchie Council 76. drill team will present a Christmas play at 7 tonight in its hall, West Washington and Addison streets.

Trees Made of Grass Will Light Christmas Tables; Wasson Display Is Large Charles Mayer Store Offers Doll Copies of Characters from Books Girls Cherish; Include ‘Alice in Wonderland.’ BV HELEN LINDSAY TABLE decorations have become so important that Marshall Fields includes those for Christmas in its style bulletin. At Wasson's one of the largest collections in the country is displayed. Among the new id->as for Christmas centerpieces are trees made of white visca. a grass which grows in Switzerland, and which nas been used extensively in the manufacture of women's hats. The tiny trees are

mounted in small silver buckets, and some have red berries brightening the gleaming white foliage. Tinsel trees also have red berries peeping through the silver branches. One of the newest of these table decorations is a slender holly berry tree, with shining brown trunk and shaped foliage of curling holly leaves and red berries. Frosted white decorations probably are the newest idea in Christmas table decorations One tree of this kind at Wasson's has small red bows of ribbon tied about among the branches. Red and green lacquer has been used to make poinsettias. The lacquer is stretched over wire, and is effective under the soft lights of Christmas candles. A tiny lighted Christmas tree, made of white visca. has twenty-one tiny lights shining through it. They are the rounded ends of small glass tubes inserted through the branches. Light comes from one electric bulb, which is inserted in the hollow center of the tree.

For the decoration of Christmas packages, there are sprays of mistletoe, holly and spruce, imported from Saxony. e a a a a a Dolls Like Book Characters THE newest dolls this Christmas are those which are suggestive of popular children’s books. At Charles Mayer's there are the "Three Little Pigs,” which Walt Disney has immortalized. They are as mischievous looking as they were in the movie, and are clothed in the briefest of bright colored trousers and jackets. An "Alice in Wonderland” doll will be an attractive accompaniment to the book, as a gift to any little girl. This Alice doll is wide-eyed, as if she were constantly seeing the wonders of the world inhabited by White Rabbits. Mad Hatters and Cheshire Cats. She has flaxon-colored woolen hair, caught back from her face with a colored band, and her dress is in the popular "Alice in Wonderland" pinafore style. The three "Little Women" are seen in doll figures at Charles Mayer's, too. They are charmingly quaint in their long full dresses, with hair in demure braids. tt tr a ana Shaker Tells How to Mix 'Em THERE'S no need to worry if you are not familiar with mixing the drinks now available. The Tell-U-How shaker at Block's will settle all of your problems for you. It has slots in the sides, with measurements engraved on them in red letters, .-.round the rim at the top are the names of many of the popular drinks. An arrow set at any of these names sets the shaker with the corresponding slots on the sides, giving directions for the ingredients necessary for the mixing of the drink.

.Y)| Judge Nisley’s by quality not by price 1 £J V, I Hard-to-find bargains in | Chiffon or Service wi All —full fji Way under the market price for such sujyL perb quality—4s gauge dull sheer chiffon. J /; A fX Service weight has mercerised top. I f All our $1.25 CHIFFONS also <f sale priced until Christmas, Vy; f'i 2 pairs $1.75 wX Nisley Christmas Gift Certificates Good in any Nisley store from Hollywood to Boston. Send her one for shoes, hose or slippers. |Give Nisi ey $ 5 Shoes h SALE PRICED $‘V) r j ENTIRE I •5 STOCK Arch Comfort strap? and ties have built- For partiea or to wear with your black gly in metatarsal pads and steel arch aupport. aatin drew we offer pumps, tie* and saaIM/ Shown in suede or kid. dais of Skinners black satin. y Kid or Satin r- ■ ■ ,01* l/ m excellent bhppers \ Black Satins and Dull Black Kid in hard sole Os \j / styles only. Colored Kid and Patent in soft O I / \ jf j sole styles only. You'll (-St L.| "N V* find I iC J *\W slippers and value 1 most unusual. SlvcyeY \ J A/ in iiie .exact siyt ajosa |J W 44 NO. PENNSYLVANIA ST. Rail Oriera Filled Froftly wWi fcy pwtkaae price ist 15 ceats (or ■ailiK

DEC. 19. 1933

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Mrs. Lindsay