Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 241, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 February 1934 — Page 13
FEB. 16, 1931.
Cosmetics ' Favored by Educator Brooklyn Professor Asks for Colle.ee Course in Make Up. BY HELEN* WELSHIMER limn Spwlxl Writer IT IB the surface view that attracts a mans eye. Beauty may . be only skin deep—it may not even be skin deep!—but the men. bless them, are a near-sighted race. If you want a return glance, you must prepare for it. It is the duty of the high schools and colleges to teach girls how to use make-up correctly, according to Dr. Alexander J. O'Neil, assistant professor of education in
Brooklyn college He has openly announced that it is high time that schools taught girls how to make themselves attractive. Cheer leaders should give three hurrahs for Dr. O Neil. He is out to glorify the classroom. For who wouldn’t prefer to be beautiful and passably bright to being brilliant and passably fair?
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For too long girls have washed their faces before they entered the classroom and redecorated when they came out. If they understood that cosmetics are something that are used, sparingly, to assist them where nature failed, they wouldn't have cheeks as red as barber shop poles, mouths like mutilated firecrackers, and eyelashes as gummy as those that are stuck on futuristic dolls. Complexion Preferred Schools teach us how to locate Calcutta, Madrid and Pieping. They teach us that a straight line is the j shortest distance between two j points. But they quite forget to add that a man prefers a nice complexion to a geometric mind. The well-scrubbed look is nice when one i7. But at 17 a silght dusting of power adds something ; dewy and mysterious. A shining I countenance was never meant to in- j elude a nose. The eyes and lips should carry out the luminous de- i sign. After all. girls are going to use i cosmetics anyway, if they need! them, it is far wiser for a school to teach Its daughters how to make themselves attractive than to condemn them for their attempts. Every woman wants to be well groomed and beautiful, especially at; 17. Cleopatra did. Helen of Troy and the queen of Sheba and Eve herself had the great desire. Even the aging dowager empress of China I carried along 2.000 dresses when ; she went on a trip one day. Dancing Wins Dr. ONeil made another provocative remark. He wonders if a ! girl's ability to dance well isn't of ! greater value in getting her a husband than her ability to write well j Os course it is! Unless, of course, the man is a traveling salesman. The rhythm of a dance gets into a man and a maid. If they take their steps together fairly well he ma V suggest that they set their lives to waltz time. But if he steps all over her, unless she has given heed to the cosmetic aids he may try a fox trot with somebody else. ! Education, thank fortune, is sac- ' ing life as it is lived. It is beginning to understand that a normal girl is much more interested in getting a husband than proving that the radius of a circle always equals half of the diameter. It isn’t an isosceles triangle that life will ask her to sole. It is a human one which will demand some lipstick courage. Mrs. Frederick E Matson left yes- : terdav for a visit with her sister, j Mrs. Montgomery Lasley. in Beverly i Hills. Cal. Mr and Mrs. Charles Latham are on a West Indies cruise.
L. S. AYRES & CO. In the Budget Shop—Third Floor Clearance! Dresses! The quantity is limited. Not all sizes in every style. But all are Ayres quality dresses, taken from our own regular stocks and forcefully reduced for quick clearance. Street, Afternoon, Dinner, Evening and Party Types GROUP 1 $0.95 Sizes for Women and Misses W GROUP 2 jC.95 Sizes for Women and Misses W GROUP 3 s£9s Sizes for Women UP GROUP 4 . 0 Sizes for Women and Mr*es . mm AYRES—THIRD FLOOR
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Inclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 142. Size Name Street City , State LIGHT weight woolen, plain or printed crepe are your best material bets for the smart frock illustrated above. It’s designed in nine sizes: 38. 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 52 and 54, with corresponding waist and hip measure. Size 46 requires yards of 39-inch material plus 1 yard of 5-inch lace for the vestee. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.
Contract Bridge
BY W. E. M'KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League THE big swings in contract often come through the mistakes of our opponents—not always by cur brilliant play. However, it takes a brilliant player to recognize an opponent's mistake, and to make the most of it. R. W. Lee, one of the coming young players of Cleveland, lost no time in making six no trump, after his opponents made the mistake rs winning the first diamond trick, employing the play known as the Vienna coup. West's opening lead —as the jack of clubs, which Mr. Lee, in the South, won with the queen. He led the king of diamonds and West made the mistake of winning with the ace.
4 J 4 VAQ J 6 2 4J 5 4 4A 8 6 *KSS ,*1097 *lO5 \V * E ♦ A 10 93 S 4JIO 9 7 L l)p;, . lcr .J 45 4 2 A A Q y K 73 ♦KQ J 6 2 4KQ3 . Durlicate —None vul. Opening lead —4 J. South West North East 1 4 Pass 1 V Pass 2N. T. Pass 4 V Pass 6N. T. Double Pass Pass 9 . .
West returned the ten of clubs, which was won in dummy with the ace. The jack of diamonds was cashed, East showing out, dicarding a spade. Mr. Lee did not now make the mistake of continuing with diamonds, but immediately led a small heart to his king. a tt a WEST'S double marked him with the king of spades, so Lee now led his ace of spades, refusing to take the spade finesse. He next cashed h.s king of clubs, and then started to squeeze West by leading a heart. West followed on the first heart, wjiich was won with the ace in dummy. When the queen of hearts was returned. West discarded the eight of spades. On the jack of hearts South discarded the queen of spades and West let go the nine of clubs. On the six of hearts, the declarer released the six of diamonds, but West was squeezed. If he let go his king of spades, dummy’s jack would be good, while if he discarded the nine of diamonds, declarer w'ould win the last two tricks with the queen and seven of diamonds. When Mr. Lee cashed his ace of rpades. setting up West’s Ring, he made the play known as the Vienna coup. It is necessary to cash this ace so the queen may be discarded on one of the'hearts. (Copyright. 1934. by NEA Service. Inc.) Club to Give Dance So-Athic Club will entertain with a dance tomorrow night at the Christian Park community house with music by Mary Ellen and Her Buddies. The public may attend.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Members of Club to See Two Plays Dinners Will Precede Civic Theater Show; Dance to Follow. Members of the Players Club will attend a presentation of “Whom the Lord Loveth’’ and “Lady in Red” at the Civic Theater playhouse, 1847 North Alabama street, Tuesday night. Mrs. August Bohlen is in charge of productions, assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Otto Janus, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Dale and Dr. Frederick Taylor. Jack Harding is directing the cast. Several members of the club plan to entertain at dinner preceding the plays and the dance to be held later in the evening at the Woodstock Club. Mrs. Robert C. Winslow' will have several guests for dinner at her home, 3224 North Pennsylvania street. Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Pantzer will have as their guests, Blair Taylor, Mrs. Elsa Pantzer Haerle, Richard Mansfield, Dr. Robert A. Milliken and Mr. and Mrs. Talcott Powell. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wild plan to entertain. Magazine Club Founding Will Be Celebrated Mrs. Paul T. Rochford, 5653 Washington boulevard, will be hostess for the forty-fifth anniversary program of the Magazine club to be held from 3 to 5 tomorrow. Mrs. Robert T. Ramsay, president, will be in the receiving line with Mrs. Mary E. Perine, founder and honor guest, and the past president, Mesdames J. L. Benedict, W. J. Sumner, J. F. Edwards, Fred W. Gunkle, C. O. Austin, H. K. Fatour, E W. Stockdale, H. W. Rhodehamel, D. O. Wilmeth and W. C. Bartholomew. Presiding at the tea table will be Mrs. A. Edgar Shirley, Mrs. William C. Balch, Mrs. Rudolph F. Grosskopf, and Mrs. Othniel Hitch, assisted by Mrs. Roy Thurman, Mrs. R. N. Nowlan, Mrs. Albert Henley, Mrs. George A. Van Dyke, Mrs. A. J. Small and Miss Hazel Howe. Miss Victoria Montani will play harp music. Presidents of the literary clubs and friends will be guests. A portfolio containing a history of the club will be exhibited. It has been written by Mrs. Grosskopf, program chairman, and decorated by Mrs. Henley. National Leader of Sorority to Be Honor Guest Miss Virginia Lee Flaherty, Cincinnati, national officer of Trianon Sorority, will be the guest tomorrow 7 and Sunday of the active and alumnae units of the Butler university sorority. A luncheon and business meeting is scheduled for 12:30 tomorrow at the Washington with Miss Edith Barbour, chairman. Miss Barbour will be assisted by Miss Marian Cummins and Miss Esther Huber. Miss Flaherty will be entertained at night at a colonial party at the home of Miss Margaret Harris, 920 East Fortieth street. The committee arranging the party includes Misses Carrie Clapp, Margaret Harris, Irma Murry and Alice Perrine. Honor guests will b-> Miss Martha Kincaid, faculty sponsor, and Mrs. Karl Means, honorary member.
LEADS CAMPAIGN
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Mrs. Dorothy Finn Mrs. Dorothy Finn is chairman of the membership committee of Wayne Township Democratic Club. She is assisted by Mrs. Joseph Long, Thomas Connor, Jack Arsman and Tony Markich.
Daily Recipe ESCALLOP OF LEFTOVERS 2 Cups cooked flaked fish 2 Cups cooked diced potatoes 1 Cup cooked diced celery 1 Green pepper, chopped 2 Cups prated American cheese 11-2 Cups cream sauce Salt, pepper Fresh tomato Green pepper Combine fish with vegetables. Add 1H cups grated cheese, the cream sauce, and seasoning to taste. Place in a casserole, sprinkle with remaining cheese, and decorate the top with % sections of tomato and strips of green pepper, radiating to the center. Bake about thirty minutes in a moderate oven, 350 degrees.
Hftook Nofjv
BY WALTER D. HICKMAN 'T~'HOSE who are interested in what has been—and is—going on in Soviet Russia will find much to discuss and think about in “ Broadway to Moscow, ’ by Marjorie E. Smith, author of “No Bed of Roses.” In 1931, Miss Smith went to Russia with her husband, Ryan Walker, American Communist and cartoonist. “From Broadway to Moscow” is not a novel but a heart-to-heart chat of a woman who did not understand the Communistic ideals of her husband until he lay dying in a Soviet union hospital from pleuro-pneumonia. It is really the story of the remaking mentally of a woman who at first turned up her nose to wha*- was go : ng on v Russia. In the end she w r ent “native” in Russia but returned to America to write this book. The ashes of her husband who — 4 the Communistic state of the Soviet Union first in his affections, remain today in a vault in the Soviet Union with others who died thinking only of Communism. a v MISS SMITH writes at times in a flippant and even a mocking manner. She admits she possesses a redhot temper and it flashes forth many times during her recital of what she saw and experienced in the SovW Union. Her sharp ’ and keen observation in a great description of what women workers as well as men undergo in Russia. Her story is e of gradual melting into a follower of the new order and at the same time she was planning a way to get her husband tp return to America. In her own words: - “But I was planning secretly. I was banking everything on this Crimean journey. It meant to me the first step toward our return to America. I wanted to go home. I wanted to bring Walker back. The Russian people had been very kind to both of us, and I appreci~ 4 e this kindness from the bottom of my heart. Still, I longed to go back home, among my own people.” Here is a splendid account of the
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Orange sections, cereal, cream, crisp bacon, oven toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Creamed Spanish onions with croutons, hearts of celery, cranberry sponge, vanilla wafers, milk, tea. Dinner — Cannelon of beef, scalloped potatoes, baked squash, grapefruit an and green pepper salad, toasted crackers, steamed fig pudding, milk, coffee.
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Edward C. Boykin
One of the most unusual items on the Blue Ribbon Spring list is “Facsimiles of Famous American Documents and Letters” as edited and arranged by Edward C. Boykin. This collection is unique in the history of American publishing. It sells for $2. Each facsimile is suitable for framing.
mental suffering of a woman who just couldn't make the grade to the Communistic heights to which her husband ascended. It is a tragic story. It is also humorous. It is filled with remarks which are acid. Yet this woman has caught the spirit of not only the workers but the leaders in Russia today and she has placed it on the printed page. Published by Macauley, it sells for $2. Take it or leave it.
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Children Will Offer Program at Sanatorium John Robert Schom will be mastetr of ceremonies for a program to be presented by the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon at the Sunnyside sanitorium. The hall and dining room will be decorated in keeping with George Washington's ’ '’.day. .Mrs. Alav Cradick is in charge of the party, assisted by Mrs. W. J. Overmire, entertainment chairman. Pupils of Elinore Hopwood, with Mrs. J. K. Hopwood as accompanist.
LENTEN NOTICE Change to LENTEN DIET at SEVILLE If the regular patron of Seville were asked. “Where is the Restaurant you'd recommend during lenten season?” his answer, “Seville,” would be based on the following substantial facts: (a) Cleanliness. (b) Individuality In preparation of appetizing dishes. (c) Expert selection and buying of raw foodstuffs. (and) Efficient, experienced supervision of kitchen and dining room. (e) Excellent sendee and attractive, comfortable surroundings. Sensible Prices that allow Purses to go “Lenten,” too! SEVILLE • tre w Meridian at Washington Excellent Foods Sensible Prices
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will 2nt a -’“’ncing program. Dances will be given by Janet Gregory, Lydia M-C-ny, Ellen McCray, Irvin McCray, Jean Bosson, Betty Rector. John Robert Schom, Virginia Lee Thomr m. Ruth Dackert, Betty Rrth Lyon, Mary Smymis and Phylis Jean Orwieler. TARUM COURT TO BE ENTERTAINED Mrs. Lloyd L. Tucker, high priestess of Tamm Court 14, L. O S. W. A. will be hostess at a ceremonial and birthday party to be held Thursday at the Lincoln. Mrs. E. E. Rockwood. Toronto. Canada, will be honor guest and Mrs. R. L. Craig also will attend. Members and their families will attend the banquet at 6.
