Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 247, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1934 — Page 16
PAGE 16
Camera Club to Sponsor First Salon Event Will Be Only One of Kind Held So Far in America. BY BEATRICE Bt’RGAN TimM Komia'i Pa*r Editor CAMERA club members are preparing for the first club invitational salon ever held in America. In May, at the John Herron Art Institute, approximately 180 prints of recognized photographers will be hung by the club. Accomplishments of the club are 1
tell-tales of the j temperaments of the members Doctors, architects, brokers, housewives, financiers and individuals of other professions turn from their duties to express their artistic inclinations in the pictures they take and develop. They exchange ideas and faithfully attend
Miss Burgan
their educational meetings, motivated by a desire to improve photography. Asa result their pictures are rare examples of pic orial art. many of such skillful workmanship that they resemble etchings. Herman A. Scherrer, president, has become one of the best known bromotl artists in America. Hillary Bailey and W. Hurley Ashby have | been accorded recognition by the Royal Photographic Society in i Great Britian, which awarded them fellowships. Listed in “Who’s Who” Mr. Ashby, Mr. Bailey, Mr. Scherrer, Herbert Salinger, W. B. Trembley, W. W. Bonn* and Brandt Steele have been listed in the "Who's Who of Photography.” Mr. Bailey and Mr. Scherrer have served as judges in shows. For the last five years the club has progressed rapidly in its accomplishments. Members have exhibited in salons all over the world. All j the greatest American photographers invited to exhibit in the May show have accepted. Two rooms of the clubhouse at 110 East Ninth street, are arranged j so that exhibits are hung under glass. A photographic library has j been started in the lounge. A dark j room for development of films and I plates has been equipped for the use of members. Women Join Club Since the nineties, men and women with photography as their hobby have worked together and strived to improve their art. Mrs. Trembley, Mrs. Bailey and Mrs. Richard A. Kurtz have been so impressed with their husbands’ accomplishments with cameras that they have joined the club. “We use any kind of camera.” members declare. “I was fascinated by the beauty of a print on exhibition in the clubrooms. A tiny print less than two inches square had been enlarged more than six times. The detail of shadow and light was perfect. Club discussions at the Thursday night meetings are of a research nature. Group meetings on other nights are divided according to their interest. Technicalities, print anaylsis and motion pictures are subjects for the meetings. Miss Estelle Burpee has gone to New Haven to join the round of dinners and parties incident to the Yale junior prom. She will be the guest of Frederic M. Ayres Jr., and will be a guest at the St. Anthony Club. The prom will be tonight at Woolscy hall. TWO WILL PRESENT MUSICAL PROGRAM Mrs. Louise Spillman Sparks and Mrs. Sidney Blair Harry will present a musical program at the spring luncheon and style show to be given by the Ladies’ Aid Society of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church at 12:30 Friday, March 2, at the church. Style show will be presented by H P. Wasson & Cos. Invitations have been issued to all former presidents of the society. Mrs. W. E Kyle, president, will be hostess. Honor guests will include Mesdames Calvin Mcllvain, Charles Wright. Charles Mueller, E. C. Rubush. Clyde Young. Scott M. Ford. John Murray, George E. Stout and John Vehling. GROUP DISCUSSES CONVENTION PLANS State convention of the Maj Wright Sewall Council of Indiana "Women was discussed at the board meeting yesterday at the Lincoln. The board indorsed the movement of the Indianapolis Business and Professonal Womens Club to raise a Merica E. Hoagland scholarship fund for high school girls. .Mrs. E. Maude Bruce, Anderson, presided, and Mrs. May B. Brown gave a group of readings.
!; Phone I 1 ■■■■ !; TALBOT ; . RUG 1 0498 1 CLEANING 9*12 l)onirtir Slumpowd, sited. M i-Pifr Furniture Cleaned $* Special Equipment to Clean Carpets on Your Floor. Rocs Expertly Repaired ASKS
COMP \RE OCR TRICES FURS Coats. Swaggers. Jackets The Fur House of Value. INDIANA FUR COMPANY E. Ohio M. I-l JJW
XTTCT pV costly'methods 1 of construction. now ... Arch Com- $441: c ort Styles I Jlwt 44 N. Penn St. 341i
Aid in Arranging Skating Party
<^ w "' % >i 'j I' ' I. ■• •'■■• . jm| f f ;•*' "V i 1 ••'• 4 :-’ife *f| **" mmm IWgmM " i"’!®® £ Wmstm I I ■SdflK ,3fe mm^ i HB^ 11 IfHf, . |g||t :, Tap Ip:? , I ?llliij':\. 's' :': j :J '!||PF ! . ,1 J§gS[.
Left to Right—Misses Dorothy Keene, Catherine Leppert, and Jane O. Flaherty. St. Agnes alumnae will entertain with a skating party Friday night, March 2. at the Riverside rink. Above are three members of the arrangements committee: Misses Dorothy Keene, Cathrine Leppert and Jane O. Flaherty. Miss Virginia Ittenbach is ticket chairman.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
If you are Peking; release from your problems, write to Jane Jordan. But please *ive enough of the farts to *uide her in making a reply. Letters of comment always are welcome. Dear Jane Jordan—l have been married for two years and for the last year or so I have been unhappy and puzzled. About two weeks before my wife and I were married, I caught her with another man. She told me that she cared nothing for him but loved only me. But after we were married she still talked of him continually. He is a musician and plays over the radio. My wife listens to every program and sometimes he dedicates a song to her. Half the time she is cold and quite sharp with me. The other half she tells me that she loves me. I can t help but feel hurt and miserable and somerimes a little jealous. Sometimes I want to hear another program, but she gets angry and moody so I give in to her. She tells her friends how nice and good-looking he is. and that is sometimes embarrassing. I wish you would help me with this problem. We quarrel quite often over it. Answer—You made a mistake In marrying a woman who had her heart set on another man, but of course tha doesn't help you much
now. I have so i'-'w facts to guide me that I only can guess, and you must bear this l n mind in studying the answer. I believe that your wife has fallen in love with a romantic ideal instead of a man. The radio singer is surrounded by a glamour w h i c h ties up with some childish
. mr jl i
Jane Jordan
dream still secretly cherished by the grown woman. I suppose that the majority of women are inclined to cling to some J such romantic dream of love. Jung, the Zurich psychologist, has named this nebulous idea. "The Ghostly Lover." In his opinion, so long as a j woman is held by a phantasy of the perfect lover, she is incapable of falling in love with a flesh and blood man. for no man can compete with a dream. The dream arises from infantile wishes and desires impossible of realization. Its influence is pernicious because it spoils reality for the dreamer. Just as some keenly anticipated event falls short of our expectations because we dreamed of it too long and too ardently beforehand. so the husband is unable to fulfill the rosy requirements of his wife's dream lover. A disembodied voice over the air. singing songs of love, suggests to me this ghostly lover. The frictions and failures of everyday life are in no way associated with him. He is the fairy prince, the knight who comes riding, the serenading troubadour who never existed and never w’ill exist. Your wife needs to awaken from this state of intoxication and devote her energies to the solution of her more prosaic everyday problems, but I doubt if you can do much with her. The opinion of a friendly outsider whose judgment she trusts will carry more weight than yours. Perhaps it will lessen your jealousy and unhappiness when you understand that the man is not your rival so much as the dream. If you take no notice of her conduct, and attribute no importance to her obsession. it may be that it will wear itself out in time. Irritation on your part will only feed the flame. ana Dear Jane Jordan—Why is it that the boys look down on a cripple girl as though she were not human. Four years ago I won third place in a beauty con- 1 test, but, since then I had the I
misfortune to lose one of my legs. I now wear an artificial leg and to tell the truth you hardly can tell it is made of wood. I get a date with some fellow, and as soon as he finds out that I have only one leg. well. I get the air. I have looks, clothes and am not ashamed to go in any company. Why is it, can you tell me? ONE-LEGGED GIRL. Answer —The average young man lays great stress on physical perfection, but the above-average young man takes account of other values, too. The thing for you to do is to prove that you are above average. Then you will attract one of these kindred spirits. People who have been crippled often make marvelous compensa- j tions for their physical defeat. Wit- j ness the case of our own President, j who is crippled. Your loss of a limb will shut you out of some activities which you formerly enjoyed, but it will open other avenues of achievement. It will deprive you of the friendship of some boys, to be sure, but it will win you other friendships which you otherwise might not save.
a a a Dear Jane Jordan —I am 15 and have been going steady with a boy of 20 for two years. He is jealous natured, but has been the ideal boy friend. Now the gossip has started that I am in trouble. Os course, it is a lie, but how many will believe that it is true? Will it gradually die down, or will people continue to point accusations at us? Would it be better for us to go with other': '-'■casinnally. or would that stimulate town talk? We both have good and it hurts to have such things told. TOWN TALKED BETT if. Answer—Richard Le Gallienne says that gossip is the social reward of personality. Jt doesn’t prove that you are either black or white, but merely interesting. Time is bound to prove to your friends that they have made a mistake. They are expecting something to happen which will not happen. What can they do except change their minds? It is possible that you are overestimating the extent of the gossip about you. If your skirts are as clear as you say they are, why worry about it? It ought to amuse you to prove the gossipers wrong. I should not change my way of living to please such fair weather friends, not go out of my way to divert their suspicions. Why bother when nature herself will exonerate you? Note —I am holding several letters for Disgusted Seventeen and will send them to her upon receiving her address. MRS. HALLOCK WILL ENTERTAIN CLUB Arabian chapter, International Travel-Study Club, Inc., will be entertained Tuesday at the home of Mrs. W. O. Hallock, with Mrs Kathryn Bayne and Mrs. Laura Craig Poland assisting. Program will be presented by Mrs. Poland. Mrs. Hallock. Mrs. W. R. E. Payne and Miss Ellen Schloemer. Mrs. S. R. Artman will lecture.
LAST DAY—LAST OPPORTUNITY ft —LAST CHANCE TO GET n OUR FAMOUS LIVE STEAM m I <£}% Permanent wavE I j TRUES BRING A FRIEND—SPLIT THE COST I ’[* ZZ 'd 2 PERMANENTS 4 nOVT O • Croqulgnole Effect Cftnil V M • p,fn,T pf Cur ” ftft Ul l \ *^9J’/') • New Pads • Fresh Solution / Brin* • Expert Operators \ / Friend Hurry! \ / Divide the - *- ®'l I I Cost 2—' ** Oil Wves. *3.01. ||g W 7 ' 2—ss Oil Wires, $5.01. ™ and rereive shampoo and finger BEAUTE ARTES | 601 Roosevelt Bldg. Necessary I
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Washington Day Celebrated by D. A. R. Group Annual George Washington luncheon of the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution, was held yesterday at the chapter house. One hundred members and guests attended. The luncheon tables were centered with a Martha Washington cake and lighted with white tapers in glass candlestricks. Members of the executive board and Mrs. Charles F. Voyles were seated at a table in the center. Mrs. Ralph W. Showaltqr, chairman of the flag committee, was in charge of the flag presentation. Mrs. Charles G. Fitch and Mrs. S. E. Fenstermaker presented two scenes from the opera “Nanon.” Mrs. J. A. Matthews told the story of the opera. Mrs. James C. Catter, luncheon chairman, was assisted by Mesdames George Caleb Wright, Orland Church. George Scott Olive, Walter B. Smith. Edward C. Kriel, William F. Kegley, Joseph P. Merriam, Hughes Patten, James M. (3gden, Claus Best, Roy K. Coats, O. Harold Hershmann, Robert D. Armstrong, J. Francis Madden, Noble W. Hiatt, Howard E. Nyhart. A. W. McDonald. Henry E. Todd and O. S. Stout.
ST, MARY STUDENT ENTERTAINS
Miss Mary Gertrude Cregor entertained with a buffet supper last night at the home of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Frank W. Cregor, 5220 North Meridian street for Miss Audrey Kaltanbach, Baltimore. Miss Kaltanbach is the house guest of Miss Marguerite Blackwell, who, with Miss Cregor is home from St. Mary-of-the-Woods college for the week-end. Miss Berenice Brennan. a classmate at St. Mary’s, will entertain at luncheon tomorrow. Guests last night included Miss Brennan, Misses Anna Margaret Durkin, Dana Wilking, Rosemary Delaney, Lillian Schlussler and Marie Blackwell.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Stewed prunes, cereal, cream, crisp bacon, toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Rice croquettes with cheese sauce, sliced tomatoes, cornmeai muffins, sweet cider and doughnuts. Dinner — Stuffed cabbage rolls, scalloped potatoes, celery, apple and nut salad, steamed cranberry pudding, milk, coffee.
Balance of Work With Play Urged Business Women. Advised on Mode of Life to Acquire Charm. It takes more than efficiency to make a business woman successful in her field. What that extra somethin* is. Frances Robinson-DufT describes in the accompanying article, the last of her series on ' Tne Way to Charm. BY FRANCES ROBINSON-DUFF Written for NEA Service NEW YORK, Feb. 23.—Charm has been the chief weapon of some of the most successful career women the world has known. It often avails more in the end than judgment and skill and always handsomely supplements the sterner attributes of its possessor. An unfortunate tendency of the modern business woman, anxious about her job, beset by competition, compelled to restrain her natural emotions, is to grow unbecomingly hard and brittle. That does away with charm instantly, since in its very essence this fugitive quality is just the opposite—soft, warrr, soothing, comfortable. All the same, the business woman can have charm and still be efficient. Fairness an Asset Granted that to get ahead she must work hard, must take advantage of all opportunities, even then she need not be ruthless. Indeed, she will progress all the faster if she remembers to consider her fellow-workers, to deal fairly with her equals and generously with those weaker than herself. The business woman who knows how to listen intelligently and flatteringly has learned one of the great secrets of charm as well as success. Any man is grateful for being drawn out and if the woman ( who draws him out is intelligent, she will avidly store away such wisdom as she may glean from him.
The girl in business needs to read unceasingly—the newspapers and magazines to keep up with what is going on in the world, the best that is written in history and biography„to add to her general information. A mistake that many otherwise clever and attractive women make is taking their business worries ' home with them. Men
Frances Robinson-Duff
seldom do that and the result is that each morning they arrive at the office with fresh insight and courage to meet new problems. The woman on the other hand is harassed, tired and far from charming before the day begins. The thing to do is so to organize life as to keep a perfect balance between work and play. Appearances count for a lot in professional life. The girl who is neat, clean and well-groomed, other things being equal, is given presence over her untidy sister. Good Will Essential Your employer won’t care whether or not your dress is, the latest model —men notice clothes much less than women think—but he will be interested to see that your face is washed, your eyes are bright and your hair in place. One of the first lessons the girl wht> takes a job has to learn is that her work is important in proportion to the gotd-wiil and effort she brings to it. No honest task belittles and the nearer the bottom you start, the greater wilt De your opportunity for climbing. Above all, never feel inferior because somebody else earns more money or has a more impressive desk. The inferiority complex that you hear so much about is one of the greatest handicaps you could have in the pursuit of charm. If you have one, it generally means that you focus too much of your attention on yourself. Stop thinking in terms of "I” and I pay attention to your work. You've no idea what a change it will make j in your power both to charm and to succeed. Checks in Favor The season of bad checks is upon us, as is the annual brith of the blues. Almost every store on Fifth avenue, New York, is promoting checks and plaids as \the logical means of tearing yourself away from glum winter. Federation to Meet Federation of the International I Travel-Study Clubs. Inc., will hold | a business meeting at 7:30 Tuesday j night at the Lincoln.
i: VW’ ; ■ mgagojagsM pi; JKKNtmn wßwiPi ICKLE'S
HOSTESS
i „
—Photo by Voorhts.
Mrs. W. E. Kyle
Spring luncheon and style show will be held by the Ladies Aid Society of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church at 1230 Friday. March 2 in the church community rooms. Mrs. W. E. Kyle, president of the society, will be hostess.
Miss Gause and Fiance Will Be Honored Guests Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Gause will entertain tonight at the Columbia Club with a bridal dinner in honor of their daughter, Miss Katherine Gause, and Henry S. Bray. The marriage of Miss Gause and Mr. Bray, son of Mrs. Florence Q. Bray, will take place at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon at the North M. E. church. Covers will be laid for members of the bridal par.y: Miss Gause, Mr. Bray. Mrs. Maurice Gronendyke, Miss Betty Cring. Walker M. Bray, letroit, Mich.. John Bray and Dr. Evanson B. Earp. Other guests will be Mr. Gronendyke, Mrs. Walker Bray, Mrs. John Bray, George Shaw, Mrs. Earp. Mrs. Kate Maxim, Newcastle, and Mrs. Bray, mother of the bridegroom.
FIFTY-EIGHTH DATE OF WEDDING MARKED
Fifty-eighth wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Andrews, Manchester - by - the - Sea, Mass., parents of Mrs. Fletcher Hodges, was celebrated at a dinner given by Dr. and Mrs. Hodges last night at the Propylaeum Club. Mr. and Mrs. Andrews are spending the winter with the Hodges. Twenty-two guests were seated at the table, centered with an arrangement of white freesias. purple violets and anemones. The table was lighted with white tapers: MUSICAL PROGRAM ATTENDED BY 300 Three hundred attended the musicale tea of the Cheer Broadcasters yesterday in Ayres auditorium. Mrs. Walter H. Geiscl and Mrs. Wilson B. Parker presided at the tea table. Ushers, in colonial costumes, were Mesdames C. V. Sorenson, Ruth Brocks, Robert Mottern, Harry McDonald, Cecil Vestal, Charles Campbell and F. G. Bush. Hostesses included Mesdames Elsie Brubaker. William H. Hodgson. William Birk, Otis Carmichael, T. William Engle, M. Earl Robbins, Elnore Prange. John Downing Johnson, C. K. McDowell. W. F. Holmes, Warren Harrell, Wayne O. Hill. J. W. Esterline, E. L. Hayes, Edward Niles, Edna Potts, Edna Sharp. Ruby Stricklcr. Basil Vaught and Jerome Prochaska. ORPHANAGE TO BE OPERETTA SCENE "When Betsy Ross Made Old Glory” will be presented by children of the Indianapolis Orphan Home at 7:30 tomorrow night at the home for members of the board and friends. This is the fourth operetta to be presented by the children. Members cf the cast, which numbers fifty-five, will be in costume. PAREN T-TEACH E R GROUP TO MEET Orchard School Parent-Teacher Association will meet at 8 Monday night. Hillis Howie will speak. A playlet will be presented w 'i th Mr. and Mrs. Perry Meek and Mrs. Robert Failey in the cast. Mrs. Guy Wainwright will preside.
Off-the-Face Hats Hold Place of Prominence in Valle Display at Block’s Designer of Millinery for Three Broadway Hits Shows Partiality for Blue as Color for Headwear. BY HELEN LINDSAY THE upturn in our spirits is making itself felt in an upturn in our hat lines.” explained Marion Valle, young millinery designer, in a fashion talk to a group of women at the William H. Block Company store yesterday. Miss Valle gave this explanation of the off-the-<ace hats. In her own collection, which was modeled yesterday by Mis. Hem\ Frenzel, Mrs. Walter Williams, Mrs. Paul Mathews and Mrs. Gaylord Millikan, the off-the-face trend was seen in smart black models. One which had an individual simplicity, was of b'.ack toyo, and was tucked across the front, where the brim turned smartly away from the brow.
Another black toyo off-the-face had a shiny black patent leather bow at the front, marking the up-turn of the brim. Miss Valle has the distinction of having designed hats for three current Broadwav productions. The millinery seen in ‘'Roberta,” "Let 'Em Eat Cake” and the “Follies" is all of her creation. The cover of the February Vogue shows Miss Valle's peon set, in black, dusty pink taffeta and gray. The set was modeled at Block's yesterday. The hat is a wide-brimmed one, the crown of black, and the brim of pink. The scarf, which wraps around the throat, is fastened with bright clips, and the wide flared ends spread across the chest. It is pieced in the three shades of faffeta. Miss Valle has used much black taffeta in the hats she designed for this season. One Breton sailor which showed an unusual quilted design across the top of the crown was of this fabric, and was made with a small strap bandeau of the material.
Another of the black taffeta models was tilted down over one eye, and turned smartly up at the back. Its trimming was a small cluster of white and gray pompoms. nun a a a Three Models in Nary Blue Shown THE Breton sailor is one of Miss Valle's favorite designs. She showed it in rough straw, in navy, with mottled red quills as trimming. One of the quills formed a bandeau in the back, while another was curled around the crown. Another rough blue straw was shown in navy, with a red, white and blue band around the crown. Navy blue also was seen in a hat made with a milan brim. The hat, which was in sailor style, had a pieced crown of bright Mexican colored fabrics, and was worn with a matching scarf. One of the most unusual sets shown was a heavy' blue sailor, with a white stitched pigskin band around the crown, and matching white pigskin gloves. A hat designed originally for Lyda Roberti was shown in black toyo. It had a wide brim, from around the edge of which black net veiling was dropped. Black cire ribbon around the crown was the only other trimming. * n a tt tt u Knitting Becomes Popular Pastime TAKING as their example Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who carries her knitting bag and yarn with her wherever she goes, American women are becoming serious about the knitting fad. Miss Sidelle Aaronson, knitting expert at H. P. Wasson's this week, says that women have found two kinds of comfort in knitting: that of relaxation in making the garments, and the comfort which the finished garments give in wearing. "Many doctors have advised busy women to take up knitting as a means of relaxation,” Miss Aaronson says. "When they have learned to do it for that reason, women soon become interested in the new designs and stitches.” Miss Aaronson will be at Wasson’s through tomorrow, and will advise customers on rew styles and stitches. The newest yarn she is showing is "angel crepe,” a soft yarn which has an almost suede-like texture when knitted. Among new colors in the yarns are Burmuda tints, including coral, aqua blqe, lemon, amber red and ash rose. Wasson's is showing in the new yarns a three-piece swagger suit In diagonal stripes, combining royal blue and champagne in colors, and tweed yarn and Shetland floss in yarns. The new colonade stitch is shown in a surplice dress, particularly suited to large figures, which is cone in ivory and rustic green. Instructions in knitting are available in the knitting department in the Monument Circle building.
LUNCHEON AT CLUB FOLLOWS LECTURE Mrs. Isaac Born and Mrs. Frederick Meier entertained at luncheon at the Columbia Club yesterday following the Town Hall lecture by Mortimer J. Adler. Guests included Mrs. Florence Smith, Lowell, Mass.; Miss Gertrude Feibleman; Mrs. Louis Wein-
We Stress "Proper Fitting" We owe the outstanding success of our nationally known children’s department to the skilled and specially trained salespeople who know how to fit shoes correctly . . . and to unusual values such as are obtainable in Poll Parrott Shoes Poll Parrot ‘ Shoes Misses' and Child's - Oxfords @1 1.9 5 Growing Girls and 2.95 and 3.95 Smart Black Patent Leather, Dull Black Calf, Brown and Two-Tone Brown Combinations.
FEB. 23, 1934
I
Mrs. Lindsay
er and Mrs. Matilda Weil, both of Rockport; Mrs. Isadore Feibleman, Mrs. Charles Efroymson and Mrs. Richard Efroymson.
SILVER BEAUTY SALON “A Complete Service in Heaulp Craft ” 302 Merchants Bank Bldg. RI. 0460
