Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 268, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
City Bridge Players to Enter Event Group to Take Part in Ohio Valley Contest for Championship. by BEATRICE BI’RGAN Tim*% Womin'i Pace Editor ON tbv mantel of the quarters of Lieutenant and Mrs. E. A. Routheau at Ft. Benjamin Harrison is the championship trophy of the team of four event in last year’s Ohio valley championship bridge tournament at Cincinnati. They won it. playing with Walter Pray
and F. R. Buck. The cup will go back to Cincinnati this week with a party of bridge players who will participate in this year's tourney. The cup rightfully should come back to Indianapolis, according to tradition. Two years ago a team of Indianapolis Athletic Club players won it. Mr. Buck was a
Miss Burgan
member of that team, too. Mr. Buck. Mr. Pray and Lieutenant and Mrs. Routheau will play in the tournament, which draws players from cities in Ohio and Kentucky, and from Chicago. Champion players from the Woman’s Contract Club of Indianapolis and the Little Knickerbocker Club will enter. Mrs. Warren K. Mannon, Mrs. Paul Biegler, Don Brewer, Edson T. Wocd, Mrs. Grace Buschmann and Mrs. Kay Coffin will play in events opening Thursday afternoon and continuing through Saturday night. Mrs. Clarence Warren, Mrs. Hal Benham and Mrs. Robert Stempfel are contemplating making the trip. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coleman will visit in Atlantic City and New York before returning to Indianapolis after an extended visit at St. Petersburg, Fla. Miss Philena Ha mill will arrive Friday from Rockford college to spend the spring vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James T. Hamill. Mr. and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, Kessler boulevard, are expecting their son, John Sloane Kittle Jr., Friday from Cleveland, where he is a student at the University school. He will remain here during the schools spring vacation. Mrs. John H. Roberts Jr., 2101 North Alabama street, will be hostess for the luncheon meeting of the | Indiana Wellesley Club at 12:30 Fri- I day. Mrs. Henry C. Atkins Jr. and Miss Elizabeth Hisey will assist the hostess.
Card Parties
Ladies' auxiliary to the Firemen’s Association will sponsor a card party at 2 tomorrow at the Polk Milk Company plant. Mrs. George Ream will be chairman. Auxiliary to the Thirty-eighth division will entertain with a card party at 2 tomorrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. H. K. Pruitt. 2352 College avenue. Indianapolis Council No. 53, Daughters of America, will sponsor a card party tomorrow night at 210 East Ohio street. Supper will be served from 5:30 to 7:30. AL TEX HEIM GROUP WILL MEET FRIDAY Auxiliary meeting of the Altenheim will be held at 2:15 Friday at the home, Twentieth street and Capitol avenue, instead of March 30. Mrs. William E. Krieger, committee chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Flora Krieger. Laurence Haskett, Will Shaffer. Chris Karle and Fred Schlegel; Misses Kate Kerz and Elizabeth Cake. Entertainment will be provided by Miss Mae Henri Lane, pianist; Robert Rothman, accordion player, and pupils of the Peggy Lou Snyder dance studio. Among those taking part will be Betty Jane Neff. Joan Reynolds, Mary Virginia Kremer, Eva May McCoy. Wally Hurt, Bobbie Lee Green. Pattyanne Madison, Barbara Sue Beldon. Marilyn Seracy, Patsie Cave and Eleanor Anderson. BRIDGE PARTY SET AT HOOSIER CLUB L. H Riggs, card chairman of the Hoosier Athletic Club, announces Thursday night as the date for the next in a series of duplicate contract bridge parties at the clubhouse. Standing of the contestants for the club trophy will be announced. Hosts and hostesses for the party will be Dr. and Mrs. E. R Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. Larry H. Bring. Mr. and Mrs. O. A Tiffany. Mr. and Mrs Elmer Goldsmith and Misses Margaret Rudbeek. Marian Bruck. Vivian Ely, Mary Hardesty, Margaret Wacker and Naomi Fike The party will be attended by members of the club, the Womans Athletic Club and guests. HISTORY OF TEXAS WILL BE SUBJECT “Texas Under Four Flags" will be the subject of Mrs. S. R. Artman at a meeting of the Castle Craig chapter. International Travel-Study Club. Inc.. Thursday night at the home of Mrs. W. W. Wilson. 47 Johnson avenue. New members of the club who will attend include Mrs. Russell Dotson. Mrs. Virgil Marshall and Mrs. Charles Gisler. Guests will include Mrs. Burt Kimmel. federation president; Mrs. James A. Kreglo, historian. and Mrs. M. A. Dalman. Sendee Club will meet tonight with Mrs. Rose Jones. 3702 East Washington st’—’t. James McDonald will speak. Club Entertained Mr and Mrs. P E. Lamson entertained members of the Olnosi Study Club and their husbands at their home, 356 Good avenue. Sunday night with a scavenger hunt and bridge party.
Athletic Club Banquet Scheduled
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I-rcnt (left to right)—Jean Scott, Mrs. Harry L. Scott and Phillip Scott; back, Harry Scott Jr. and Nancy Scott.
Annual fathers, mothers, sons and daughters banquet of the Indianapolis Athletic Club will be held Friday night’. Among the club members attending will be Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Scott and Jean, Phillip. Harry Jr. and Nancy.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
If you have some questions you want answered by an impartial outsider, put them in a letter to Jane Jordan. The questions below are asked by women. The husbands are invited to send in their questions next. Dear Jane Jordan—During? a little family conversation a heated argument started concerning the following questions. The topic also has been debated among our friends. These questions come from a group of people who married ycung, between 15 and 20, and w?ho can't seem to get settled and properly adjusted to each
other’s ways. 1. Should j marriage be a 50-50 proposi- j tion? Answer Yes. j Marriage is a job of co-opera- i tion between two people. Cooperation is not possible where one partner dictates and th e j other obeys. 2. Should i a man go as ! he pleases and | then dictate to j
pir
Jane Jordan
his wife where, when and with j whom she shall go? Answer—No. It shows that the j man is interested only in himself | and does not wish to contribute anything to the happiness of his partner. This is not co-operation. It is a dictatorship. Such a man is not prepared for marriage. He has an infantile idea of his own importance. 3. Should a man expect his wife to give up all previous friendships (for purely selfish motives or ; petty dislikes! and yet retain his own friendships? Answer —No. This attitude argues that the man is not fundamentally interested in other people, not even : his wife. He is concerned only with { himself and the people who cater to his own sense of importance. The only reliable basis for a happy marriage that each partner be more interested in the other than himself. 4. If husband or wife should have ! a violent dislike for their in-laws, would he or she be a hypocrite to treat them at least with considers- ! tion. instead of being downright insulting? Answer —Civilized people do not insult each other no matter what they feel. A socialized individual learns to adapt himself to others of his own kind and to associate with them without mutual annoyance. He who feels the urge to insult those who are not in agreement with him. reveals himself as an egoistic infant who has never progressed beyond those early years when the child is not aware of any rights apart from his own. 5. Most of these couples have enough children to prevent the wife from working, thus making her dependent upon her husband for money. How t should this be managed? Answer —The wife should have a definite allowance for the housekeeping and for her own needs. She should not be accountable to the husband for the way she spends it if she is at all reasonable. 6. If the husband goes out by himself at night and enjoys himself (drinking, etc.) how should his wife like it? By that I mean should she be allowed her night out, or be told. “Well you have children to look after.” Should she wait until she is too old to enjoy herself before she has time to do so? Answer—Both husband and wife have a right to some free time away from each other and away from their children. It is a safeguard against that deadly enemy of marriage—ennui. But where a man leaves his wife tied to her post, without thought for her pleasure, in order to escape his responsibilities in drink and careless revelry, she may as well face the fact that he Ihas lost interest in her. No woman can accept the role of inferiority, wherein her rights are
ignored by a self-centered husband, without anger and disgust. Where comrades are equals, they yill always find a way to arbitrate their differences. The marriage of dictator and domestic is always unhappy. 7. Do you believe in birth control. Answer—Yes. Note—These questions are quite obviously asked by the wives in the case. The husbands are requested to come back with their side of the story. tt tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—My husband and I were very happy until about a year ago when he started drinking. He drank some before but not much and I didn't care. But now when he gets drunk he causes a stir in the household which we never had before. Maybe I’m jealous of his drinking. I hate to think of his letting anything take his time and money as drink does. We have two dear little girls. Any more I can not stand to see him drink, and simply hate him when he does. At other times I love him more than anything in the world. He is in hot water now, so deep that he wants to sell the car which is one of the few pleasures I have. Sometimes I think he drinks to forget his money troubles, but it only makes matters worse. I have begged and pleaded with him to stop. I was nice about it, then mean, then indifferent. Nothmg makes any difference. Please tell me how I can get him to stop. SO WORRIED Answer—You can’t do anything for him. The desire to stop must come from within himself. It is obvious that the man drinks to avoid responsibility. He can not be helped until he is willing to accept the responsibilities which he has incurred and cope with them. As it is he thinks only of flight when he is under pressure. Reality is not to his liking. Hence his attempt to find some cozy retreat of his own closer to the heart’s desire. Alcohol blurs the sharp edges of reality. The drunk man no longer cares. He loses his painful sense of inadequacy for the nonce. It’s a temporary escape, to be sure, but one that he seeks again and again in preference to the tougher task of proving himself master of his difficulties. tt tt u Dear Jane Jordan—l'm having a little trouble with the boy I’m going with. He is 20 and lam 17. He doesn't want to go to church with me on Sunday nights, and that doesn't go so good with my mother, and I don’t like to go with any one like that. What shall I do when he doesn’t want to go to church? About the fourth week he stood me up. I would just sit home and wait on him. That’s where I did wrong. I guess. Other boys ask me for dates, but I always refuse. M. L. F. Answer—You would be wise to go with other boys. Any girl is foolish to cling to a boy who forgets his date with her. It is an infallible indication that he isn't much interested. I do not think any boy should be required to become a church goer to please a young lady. It would be wiser for you to choose your boy friend from the ranks of those who attend church because they want to. DATES CHANGED BY CIVIC THEATER Performance dates of “Three Cornered Moon” at the Civic theater. have been changed from Wednesday through Saturday, to Thursday through Sunday. NTT 1C Y coidymethod* JL \| \ 1 I—' X of construction now . .. Arch Com- $4 AC fort Styles I JL--44 N. Penn St.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mrs. Carper to Be Honored at Party Tonight Mrs. Carleton Heiberger will be hostess tonight for a kitchen shower and bridge party honoring Mrs. Harold Carper, formerly Miss Virginia Greeley. Mrs. Heiberger will entertain at her home, 3736 North Pennsylvania street, assisted by Mrs. Edward Kirkpatrick. Appointments will be in green and orchid. Guests with Mrs. Carper will be Mesdames Harry Craig, Merlin Bailey, Robert Greeley, Robert Shideler, Adrian Nail, A. M. Porter and Karl Hardey; Misses Helen Wood. Margaret Godfrey and Eleanor Moran.
Mrs. Hardey and Miss Moran will entertain for Mrs. Carper.
Announcements
Bread Ripple chapter, Q. E. S., will entertain with a dinner tonight. Past patrons of the Marion County Association will entertain with “Heroes of the Bible.” the Bible.” Kappa Alpha Klub will meet tonight with Miss Catherine Kirkhoff, 12 South State avenue. Olive Branch Social Circle will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Nellie Demaree, 1519 Sturm avenue. Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames Clara Taylor, Margaret Seaney and Lillian Miller. Mrs. Opal Foltz, president, will be in charge of the program. Women’s Glee Club of Sahara Grotto will hold a supper and card party Thursday night at the Grotto home. Thirteenth street and Park avenue. Supper will be served from sto 7:30. The public may atttend.
Daily Recipe PORK CHOPS WITH APPLE RINGS Have pork chops cut at least 3 *-inch thick. Dredge with flour and brown in a hot, heavy frying pan containing a little fat. Season with salt and pepper. Pare and core apples there should be one appie for each two chops. Cut the apples into rings about 3 4-inch thick Place 2 or 3 rings on top of each chop. Add a few tablespoons of water, cover closely, and cook in a moderately hot oven, 350 degrees, for forty-five minutes. Serve on a platter with apple rings.
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President of Clubs to Keep Place Parliamentary Group at Luncheon Re-Elects Mrs. Johnson. Members of the Parliamentary i Club yesterday re-elected Mrs. John | Downing Johnson presided at the luncheon-meeting at the home of Mrs. Rochard E. Brann. 54 Ridgeview? drive. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Richard Brooks, Mrs. Willard S. Boyle and Mrs. G. R. Cruzan. Roses and spring flowers appointeed the luncheon table. Mrs. C. F. Voyle was re-elected as third vice-president. New officers include Mrs. W. S. Tomlin, first vice-president; Mrs. Cruzan, second vice-president; Mrs. Willard S. Boyle, recording secretary*. Mrs. William Meheany Moore, treasurer; Mrs. C. L. Brunger, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Volney E. Huff, parliamentarian. Committees named by the president include Mrs. J. Norman Bailey, publicity; Mrs. Rex. P. Young, telephone; Mrs. Brann, membership; Mrs. Frank B. Hunter, finance; Mrs. E. Monty Campbell, program, and Mrs. Maude Russell, legislative. SKIT PRESENTED AT CLUB’S MEETING Mrs. Walter E. Jenney directed a skit, “Incurable Optimist,” presented at the luncheon meeting of the Woman’s Research Club yesterday at the home of Mrs. A. W. Bowen, 5202 Washington boulevard. The cast included Mesdames J. W. Noble, Charles Compton and Frank E. Floyd. Mrs. Robert A. Hicks, Cambridge City, president of the Indiana Federation of Clubs, was a guest of the club.
Miss Storck to Be Hostess for Club Committee Miss Adele Storck will entertain members of the legislative committee of the Indiana Woman’s Republican Club at luncheon at 12 Thursday, March 29, at the Columbia Club. A discussion of the committee’s plans will follow the luncheon.’ Guests will include Mesdames Ella Van Sickle Gardner, Linton Cox, Phoebe Link, M. B. Spellman, Allan T. Fleming and Miss Ella Groniger. The committee's luncheon meetin* will precede a founder's day observance by the Indiana Woman's Republican Club at 2. The founders to be honored are Miss Katrina Fertiz, Dr. Amelia Keller and Mesdames Ovid Butler Jameson, Wolf Sussman, Jacob Reidel, O. A. Hobbs, Louise Weisenberg, May B. Spellman, Martha L. Huggins and Edward Hecker.
Sororities
Alpha chapter, Omego Nu Tau sorority, will meet at 7:45 tomorrow night with Mrs. Ross Morgan, 1115 North Butler avenue. Miss Hilda Hildw r ein, 1501 South East street, will be hostess tonight for a meeting of Delta Kappa Theta sorority. Mrs. Betty Pense, Beech Grove, wall entertain members of Alpha chapter, Pi Omega sorority, Thursday night at her home. Mrs. Thomas Selmier, 515 Middle drive, Woodruff Place, will be hostess for the meeting of Phi Tau sorority at 8 tonight. Pledge services will be held for Missses Elaine Finley, Mary Lou Van Ness and Marian Jackson. IRVINGTON CLUB HOLDS ELECTION Mrs. Guy E. Shadinger was elected president of the Irvington Woman’s Club at a luncheon-meeting yesterday at the home of Mrs. H. E. Barnard, 5050 Pleasant Run parkway. Mrs. J. Willard Bolte and Mrs. R. F. Davidson were in charge. Mrs. Louis Bruck was named first vice-president; Mrs J. W. Atherton, second vice-president; Miss Lola Conner, secretary, and Mrs. George Buck, treasurer. TWOWILL DANCE AT BENEFIT PARTY Betty Jane Mitchell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward V Mitchell, and Phil Parsons, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parsons, will dance at the benefit bridge*party to be given Saturday night at the Woman’s Department Club. The party is under the auspices | of the Mothers’ Club of Pi Beta Phi j sorority of Butler university.
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Miss Mary Elizabeth Cordes Business and professional women’s groups of Young Women’s Christian Association will hold an observance tonight at the central association building. Miss Mary Elizabeth Cordes with Miss Martha Hill will lead a group interested in music.
Card Party and Dance Scheduled by State Group Preparations are being made by the Young Women’s Democratic Club of Indiana for its annual card party and dance April 10 in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. Henry Steeg is chairman. Assisting her on the general committee are Mrs. John Kelly and Mrs. H. K. Cooper, Misses Anna Hunt, Fern Swanson and Kathryn Clements. • Decorations will be in charge of Miss Ora Gillette, chairman; Misses Katherine Fletcher, Peggy Gordon, Betty Geldmeier, Ruth Haefling, Mary Mclllvaine, Mary Husey and Caroline Foltz. The card committee is composed of Mrs. Paul Watson, chairman; Mesdames James E. Deery, William F. Dudine and Harry Finn, Misses Marie Sexton, Frida Wegner and Ann Brodey. Miss Juanita Wickliff is in charge of prizes, assisted by Miss Frances Latz and Mrs. Florence Salb.
VOTERS’ LEAGUE TO HEAR SUMMARY
Miss Florence Kirlin, executive secretary of the Indiana League of Women Voters, will summarize the points of the discussion groups being sponsored by the Indianapolis league at the final of a series on March 28 in Rauh Memorial library. She also will describe nomination methods. Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin will discuss political practices at the third meeting at 10 tomorrow in the library. Mrs. William P. Snethen will discuss personnel management in government, and Mrs. Alex R. Holliday will speak on tne merit system and patronage in Indiana. All the speakers are members of the efficiency in government committee.
MRS. WOOD TO BE BRIDGE HOSTESS Mrs. Edson T. Wood Sr., 4310 North Pennsylvania street, will be hostess Friday afternoon for the third of a series of bridge parties, being sponsored by the finance committee of the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, D. A. R. She will be assisted by Mesdames Giles Smith. Merle N. A. Walker and Obie J. Smith. MRS. FORD TO BE REVIEW HOSTESS Mrs. Alice Baxter-Mitchell will review “Charles Dickens,” by Steven Leacock, and “A Tale of Two Cities,” by Dickens, in the second of a series of book review’s tonight at the home of Mrs. Marie Reynolds Ford. 3157 North Delaware street. The series is being sponsored by the Indiana unit. Women’s Overseas Service League. All women who served overseas during the World w’ar are invited to attend.
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Extend Beauty Treatment to Feet, Is Advice of Jane Cloud, Cosmetician Prepares Special Cream and Gives Directions for Exercises; Products Offered by Charles Mayer. BY HELEN LINDSAY COME lines in women's faces may be caused by eyestrain; some by worn’, and some by age. But Jane Cloud, young and modern cosmetician, believes that many of them are caused by what the inimitabS Will Rogers characterized in one of his pictures as “hurty feet.” Because she is convinced that it is impossible for a woman to appear at her best unless she has foot comfort. Jane Cloud has been the first of the manufacturers of toilet preparations to create a cream for the feet. In addition to this, she has prepared a series of foot exercises which she incloses in a pamphlet with this unique cream. According
to Miss Cloud, it is just as necessary to give your feet a “daily dozen” as it is to bend and stretch to retain a girlish figure. The exercises which Miss Cloud recommends are those w’hich are taught in .her exclusive salons in New York and Easthampton. L. I. She contends that "toe exercises” can be taken similar to those which a musician uses for his fingers. And every morning, she suggests, the woman who wants to have lovely feet should walk around her bedroom on the outer edges of her feet, with the toes curled under. Visitors at the fashionable summer colony at Easthampton last June admired Miss Cloud's slender, graceful beauty. In addition, they marveled at the beauty of her own bare feet, showing through summer sports sandals. And Miss Cloud insists that any woman can have feet which will appear well in beach or sports sandais if she takes the same care of ner feet as she does.of her hands ana face. Jane Cloud taught
physical education in the Knox School for Girls at Cooperstown. N. Y., one of the most fashionable girls’ schools in the east. Following that experience, she studied bone structure in one of the larger orthopedic hospitals in the east. It was there that she concluded that women’s beauty treatments should include the feet. a a o a a a Offered Exclusively by Mayer's y T'HE salon in Easthampton is one of the most attractive sites in the town. It is situated among a row of attractive buildings in the design of rustic English shops. On the window, trade-marking the owner's name in a clever way, is a reproduction of a realistic-appearing, misty cloud. The wall paper is a Japanese design, showing pastel pink and blue morning glories. The woodwork is of a darker shade of blue. The salon was opened in June and in November Miss Cloud opened her New York establishment. The Jane Cloud preparations are being shown now in various stores throughout the country. In Indianapolis, they are exclusive with Charles Mayer. According to a representative of the New’ York salon in Indianapolis last week. Miss Cloud herself is one of her own best customers. “She takes excellent care of her own personal appearance,” she said, pointing to a picture of a slender, tall figure, in becoming costume. “Often, after the salon is closed, she remains, exercising to keep her weight where she thinks it should be. She fights an extra pound of flesh at its first appearance.” a an tt e u All Movie Styles Not Acceptable IIfARNING against the acceptance of all styles shown in motion ™ ’ pictures has been issued to American women by Travis Banton. creator of fashions at the Paramount studios. “It is essential that w?ould-be purchasers of ready-to-wear garments be careful in the selection of screen models, lest in seeking to be smartly clothed, they become very badly dressed,” he says. He explains that seme screen clothes worn by the stars are purposely designed in poor taste, because, in many instances, the character portrayed is an uncouth one. “Any woman, unless she has a flair for clothes, is likely to parade herself in such an outfit firmly believing she is chicly turned out, because the style had its origin on the screen,” Mr. Banton says. “In appealing to women to use discrimination in their purchases, my only interest is this: So long as the screen is to exert an influence over the fashions of the day, it is most important and desirable to have our designs intelligently and correctly interpreted. “Otherwise, instead of having smart costuming, we will have a veritable flood of costuming with little or no distinction.”
% ,'i AM lIP 0^ -tiii IlSilff T' ■ -
~~)lie uju.i/uay cliatm oj lovely EVELYN VENABLE taLej tw hcluLaij! A refreshing new personality . . . Evelyn Venable—the lovely Grazia of ‘‘Death Takes a Holiday.” We wondered as we gazed at her how it would be to play hob with hearts by the mere act of looking so lovely. After all, it isn’t necessary to be a siren of the screen and hold thousands enthralled; you can just be yourself and still have heaps of fun—if you’re smart enough to achieve a superlatively lovely complexion. Follow the lead of the lovely Hollywood stars, those specialists in heavenly complexions. They know tlat on or off the screen—to be a success you miist hi- ve a beautiful skin. And they’ve learned "the surest way to guard complexion beauty is with a balanced diet. Skin beauty really comes from within. The basis of a balanced diet is MILK No matter what else you eat . . . your body picks up from milk the elements missing from the rest of your food. Milk, and milk alone—gives you balanced diet. Drink it regularly—see how much clearer your complexion becomes . . . how much better you feel. And dirink pasteurized milk . /. . it’s SAFE. INDIANAPOLIS DISTRIBUTORS PASTEURIZED FRESH MILK
MARCH 20, 1934
IkL*
Mrs. Lindsay
