Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 271, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 March 1934 — Page 12

PAGE 12

Groups in Boxes Will See Relays •J Butler Event Among Four Given National Recognition. BY BEATRICE BURGAS’ limn Woman * Pa*e Editor AMONG the pastimes of pleasure seeking New Yorkers on weekends are the relays at Madison Square Gardens. First are the Millrose games, a tradition of the Millrose Athletic Club, and only last week relays were promoted by the Knights of Columbus of New York. NVw Yorkers dress up in toppers and formal silks and furs and crowd

into boxes to cheer excitedly for their favorites. We slipped over to the sports departm e n t and checked up on ;he vernacular. We admit we nave been so absorbed in basej a 11, basketball ind football that ve know little ibout relays. We cheered when we learned that the annual

Miss Burgan

Butler university relays are listed among the four leading national events In relay circles. In Madison, Square fashion Indianapolis society will dress up for box parties tomorrow night when Butler will be host for its second annual indoor relay carnival. Five boxes will be filled by members of the Indiana University! Alumni Club, who will cheer the Indiana stars. Other boxes have been reserved by University of Michigan Alumni Club members. Governor and Mrs. Paul V. Me- j Nutt will witness the relays in a box. A1 Feeney, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Wilson, Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Briggs, Dr. and Mrs. David W. Fosler and Judge W. A. Pickens will be in box parties. > The carnival will be one occa- j sion when the university fieldhouse i will be decorated festively in col- j ors of the various universities and j colleges participating. Flags will i flutter from the balconies. Loud speakers will amplify reports of officials. Processional Scheduled Modeled after the Roman gladia- j tors’ processional, four trumpeters | will announce the arrival of the j athletes, officials and Governor Paul | V. McNutt. Miss Janet Jerman. queen of the J relays, and her court will follow, the trumpeters. The Governor will be next in line. The thirty-five officials wall precede the athletes ;.nd their coaches. From her throne at the west end of the fieldhouse Miss Jerman will award medals and trophies to the winning participants. Champions to Appear Besides the Butler and Madison Square Garden relays, the Kansas and Drake outdoor carnivals in June are rated as the other leading relays. In fourteen events at the relays Sill appear world or American lampions. Even if we don't know the rules, we can trust our eyes. The events mostly are matters of getting places the quickest, jumping the highest or throwing the farthest. Perhaps that's why women in New York have become so interested in the relays. We can be as intelligent a sportsman as our male escorts. We can see for ourselves who's out in front.

Announcements

A supper will be given at the : Speedway Boulevard M. E. church. Sixteenth and Medford streets, at 5:30 Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence C. Moon will entertain the members of the Past President’s Club of Harold C. j McGrew auxiliary. United Spanish J War Veterans, and their husbands at a dinner Sunday at their home. 3620 North Illinois street. Members of the club will meet at 5. International Travel and Study Clubs. Inc., will hold glee club rehearsal ?t'7:3o Monday night at the Sunshie studies, 12 ’ West Market street. Walter R. Shiel and daughter. Mar> r Louise, and Mrs. R. R. Shiel j have left for a trip to Texas and Mexico.

Daily Recipe POTATO PUFF 2 cvps mashed potatoes 3 eggs 1 cup grated cheese Beat whites and yolks of eggs separately. Beat yolks with a dover beater until thick and lemon colored. Add with cheese to potatoes and mix thoroughly. Beat whites of eggs on a platter with a wire whisk, beating unui stiff and dry Fold into mixture and turn into a well-buttered baking dish. Bake thirtv minutes in a model ate oven and sen e from baking dish.

Repeated by Special Request The demand was so great for these perma-l fe—'Wfr'—nents that we decided to continue this SALE y FOR SATURDAY. ~,%V' MODERNISTIC V-/ PERMANENT^ This wave is superior ■ ' ' 1. It iv a TONIC WAVE and it re-lJ 3|s ° r ' r I renditions the hair. I Brin* a Friend *it produces a deep, stron*. natural*!! ... I Split the Cost wave on every texture of S. No Oil TREATMENTS are neees. Ifi . . _ vary before or after this wave. SHI I Standard Tome and , . ... .. . . H I Oil Oil Wave 1 11 * ,, T* until the hair trows nut. I Wave Complete ■>. Masses and Masses of Rintlets. ®rleitil Oritina' ———— SJ value j \ alue Brint a Friend—Spitt the Cost e. A e. Com pie ts I $2 $3 LEON OIL WAVE $5 or 2 for $5.01 " i,h 2 fer s: ..a s for v< m Nnampoo I Ori;inal SIO.IW Vafue—Complete and Set I .l 0 ..’, BEAUTE-ARTES jwi Wd|. So Appointment Necessary Bide. 1 1.1. IXl*O ’ -n r Illinois anil Wa.hiniclon Streets LI. twin t

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Left lo Right—Mrs. Claude Fletcher, Mrs. Ira C. Lee and Mrs. Kennedy Reese.

Members ol the Fail Creek Kindergarten Mothers’ Club have completed arrangements for the presentation of Elizabeth Ray’s puppets at 10 tomorrow morning at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church.

Manners and Morals

Would you like a just, impartial summiner up of your problems? Write to Jane Joruaji who will reply to your letters in this column. Readers are inyited to exrhanee experiences whenever it would be helpful to do so. Dear Jane Jordan —My husband and I are confronted with a problem which threatens to destroy our happiness. A year ago my husband’s father died, leaving his 74-year-old mother to be cared for by seme one. There

was a small amount of property to go to the one assuming th is task. My husband's older brother and his wife said they would not have her around if she had a million dollars. I had never been in close contact w i t h my husband's mother, and I thought this

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Jane Jordan

statement rather harsh, so I took her in. She was very sweet and submissive until she was thoroughly established. Then she began and ’she's been going in high gear ever since. About seven years ago she fell and broke her hip. Since she is immense in size, it left her lame. She gets a big kick out of her crippled state and never allows any one to forget it for one minute. Otherwise, it would be hard to find a person of her age any more robust than she. She eats like a lumberjack and never has an ache or a pain. Our first trouble began when we tried to reprove her for her negligence in personal cleanliness. My husband told her as tactfully as possible, but it did not register at all and she takes special delight in emabarrassing us by being dirty. She tells the most terrible and absurd lies to people who call while we are out that people just stay away rather than listen to her. She has even attacked my character in a most malicious

A Woman s Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON -

THE most encouraging sign of human progress is the alleged wickedness of modern woman. We have suffered terribly from the theory that ladies should have the right of way in moral leadership. Although the men have insisted upon heading the procession in all other directions, it is curious and remarkable how gallantly they have bowed themselves aside to permit us to ret examples in splendid behavior. Indeed, this peculiar . form of masculine politeness is the most amazing inconsistency in all history. and one which. I am sorry to say. most of the gentlemen have not developed a sufficient sense of humor to laugh about. \ By leaving the sole practice of the major virtues to us, man has persistently weakened his own moral sensibilities and. at the same time, augmented the general smugness in feminine ranks.

BY JANE JORDAN

way when she knows she must depend upon my earnings for everything she has. She never allows us to have one minute to ourselves, but sits in the most prominent place in our living room every minute she is awake and does not leave no matter who comes or goes. She even insists on sleeping in the same room with my husband and myself. If we plan a little recreation and arrange for someone to stay with her, she takes suddenly ill and lays speechless, seemingly unconscious until she is sure we have given up going. Then she gets up and struts out as smart as you please. She has even steamed open our mail while my husband looked on. vJust prior to his father's death my husband had a complete breakdown in health, but I have a fair paying profession and have always contributed largely to our needs. With this extra burden it is getting to be more than I can bear. Her behavior has harassed and tormented my husband until he is getting worse every day and he has reached the point of simply despising his mother. I love my husband and am sincerely sorry for him. but I do not think it is my duty to sacrifice the best years of my life to this woman who shows by her every action that she appreciates nothing. I might add as a touch of humor that her father lived to be 92 and her grandmother to be 97. There is no place else for her to go. Won’t you please tell me what you think of the situation? WORRIED. Answer—Why don't you sell the old lady's property and use the money to support her in an institution? i have no sympathy for those who darken the lives of others by wilfui self-indulgence and bad temper. I do not believe that she can be helped or made happy by any one. She has never learned to co-operate with others or to consider any one but herself. She is a mischief maker who can not get attention from

It’s hard to determine which of the two has been most harmful —man’s determination not to be good, or woman’s assurance she could never be anything else. Now, at least, we bid fair to rid ourselves of this erroneous idea that all females are born with a natural instinct for chastity and housework and maternity. When we make up our minds that the ability to be a good homemaker, wife or mother is not an inherited trait, but a cultivated talent, we shall develop a better appreciation of what such qualities mean to civilization. After all, there’s no particular credit in being good if it comes easy and natural for you. We venerate the saints mainly because we know they are reformed rascals and sinners. If we ever want tto attain a better social, economic and domestic state, we have got to expect a little more of men and a little less of weman in the way of- good behavior.

Dr. Hal P. Smith Dr. R. E. Tanner Registered Podiatrists Foot Ailments 316 Merchants IVmi, Bid*:. RI. 1688 w -■ w -w- -| —v w-r Due to more I I |h y methods IMULyL/ JL of construction now . . . Arch Com- |/ir fort Styles I jL. 44 N. Penn St. COMPARE Ol R PRICES FURS Coats. Swaggers, Jackets The Fur House of A’alues INDIANA FUR COMPANY 29 E. Ohio St. LI 22*0

Children will see performances of “The Little Rabbit Who Wanted Red Wings” and ‘ Little Red Riding Hood.” Mesdames Claude Fletcher, Ira C. Lee and Kennedy Reese are oil the arrangements committee.

her environment except by causing trouble. • Unless I am greatly mistaken, she is an unadjustabie personality and the only thing to do for her is to put her in the care of those who are trained to handle the mentally unfit. I do not believe that this decision is harsh or unjust or that it will result in anything but good for all concerned, even the patient. The kindest thing you can think of the woman is that she is mentally sick and in need of some form of hospitalization. She won’t like it, it is true, but then she won’t like anything. When this evil influence is removed from your home, it is my belief that your husband will get well. At least he will improve greatly when peace is restored. Nothing but ruin can result from the present situation. The removal of the old lady is an unpleasant operation, but it must be performed for the health of your household. non Dear Jane Jordan —I am a young man of 24 going with a girl 18 years old. People who know her tell me all sorts of things about her. They say she used to run around and have a wild time. Every time I have a date with her she tells me about her other dates and how they went out and got drunk and made whoopee. I tell her I don't want to hear about them and it makes her mad. She says that if I don’t want to listen to take her back home. I want to be with her, so I have to listen. I want to tell her not to have any more dates and that she has to go with me alone, but I’m afraid I’ll lose her. I wouldn’t know what to do if all these things are true about her. And I don’t know if I should tell her it has to be the other fellow or me. UNDECIDED. Answer—You are not in love with this young lady but with an image which you have built up in your own mind and identified with her. You wilfully blind your eyes to her real character simply because you do not wish to see it. Asa rule it is folly to listen to the opinion of friends, but this young lady seems to corroborate their statements by her own behavior. She is arrogant, selfish and unfeeling. Why hang your dreams on her? DINNER SCHEDULED PRECEDING DANCE Burton Beck, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Beck, will entertain at dinner tonight at his home, 5265 North Meridian street, preceding the Varsity Club dance at Park school. Dinner guests will be Misses Harriet Patterson. Barbara Noel. Helen Griffith. Jane Carter and Jeanne Ottinger and Harold Cunning, Jerome Noel and Alien Beck.

SORORITY TO HONOR RECENT BRIDE

Miscellaneous shower will be given : tonight by Delta Sigma sorority for | Mrs. James B. Schutt, Ligonier. Mrs. Schutt formerly was Miss Marie | Wurster. Indianapolis. Mrs. Albert Wurster will entertain at her home, 1216 East Fiftyninth street, assisted by Miss Lillian Sprecher and Miss Elsie Reid. Guests will include Mrs. Schutt and Mesdames John Crawford. Virgil Harriman, C. J. Hart, Henry Hollenbeck, C. P. Kottlowski, D. F. | Lewis, E. Paul Nelson, Harold M. Trusler, R. E. Whinery, Thomas A. Hansen. Francis Knox, Kenneth S. Mann, William M. Moore, S. H Sellers, Fred Virtue, J. Wilson Cull, Julius Caesar, Herman Hendren, William McCrory, Voss Mueller, Angeline Montfort. Earl Stuckey, Paul Thomson and Arthur Tiernan. Other guests will be Misses Valeria Bryant, Madonna Campbell. Eunice Deckart, Allen Hoch, Anna Maire Kendrick. Charlotte Kendrick, Emma McCord, Martha Olsen, Peggy Waggoner, Laura Webb. Wanda Carpenter, Gladys Kennington, Florence Schwankhaus and Marjorie Williamson. Birthday Circle Meets Mrs. J. F. McGuire entertained the Birthday Circle with a 12:30 dinner recently at her heme. Members present included Mesdames Louisa Everhart. W. F. Bornkamp. G. W. Nickels, Charles Cox. Susan Fleck, J, V. Carter, Flora Williamj son, Anna Luebking, A. B. Wilson ; and J. D- Setzer. Mrs. Guy Moore and Mrs. Earl Everhart were guests.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Pi Beta Phi Bridge Aids to Convene Chairmen Will Discuss Tournament Set for May 19. Section chairmen of the Pi Beta bridge tournament will meet April 14 before the monthly luncheon oi the Indianapolis Alumnae Club. Mrs. Ellis B. Hall is chairman of the tournament, which will be played May 19 at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium. Proceeds from the tournament are for the benefit of the Pi Phi Settlement school at Gatlinburg. Tenn. Section chairmen are Misses Sara Birk, Ethel Curryer, Annette Hedges, Martha Scott and Mesdames S. O. Brewer, W. K. Gearen, Lewis Smith and Roy Lee Smith. Mrs. Frank Hatch Streightoff will be hostess tomorrow afternoon for a meeting of chairmen and committees for the annual founder’s day luncheon and dance April 28 at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. Roland V. Burt. Ft. Wayne, province vice-president, and Mrs. Robert S. Wild, assistant to the grand vice-president, will be in charge of an informal alumnae reunion program from 11 to 12 preceding the luncheon. Mrs. Demarchus Brown will be the principal speaker at the luncheon. Other Cities to Be Represented at Concert Here Among the out-of-town reservations made for the performance of Lawrence Tibbett Sunday at the j Murat are Howard Bell, Mr. and Mrs. E. Arthur Ball, Miss Barbara Ball, Mrs. M. E. Block and Miss Norene Alice Warren, all of Muncie; Mr. and Mrs. Lothair Teetor, Hagerstown; Mr. and Mrs. John A. Hoadley, Captain and Mrs. Floyd Marshall, Mrs. Merrill S. Eaton and Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Nye, all of Bloomington; Robert L. Hampton, Miss Ruth E. Anderson and Miss Rebecca Theeg, all of Richmond; Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Charles and Miss Elizabeth Price, Marion; Misses Anna Keelum and Ruth A. Palmer, South Bend; Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Fldra and Miss Helen J. Newman. Kokomo, and Mr. and Mrs. Ben H. Petty, Lafayette. Others planning to attend are Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell E. Power, Lebanon; Mrs. J. J. Moorehead, Terre Haute; William Pearlman, Crawfordsville; Miss Katharine Hatton, Winchester; Carl B. Birmer, Veedersburg; Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Smith, Portland; Miss Clarice McKinney, Auburn, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Baker, Bedford. Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Teetor, Hagerstown, will have Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Lichtenberg and Mr. and Mrs. F. Delbrook Lichtenberg in party. The concert is under the sponsorship of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters, with Mrs. Oscar Baur general chairman.

Personals

Mrs. Thomas H. Mclnnerney, New York, is the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McGibeny, Golden Hill. Mrs. McGibeny and Mrs. Mclnnerney will leave Monday for Hot Springs, Ark. Miss Jane Cooling. 5636 Washington boulevard, has Miss Helen Golding, Oak Park, 111., as her house guest. NEW GIRLS' GROUP TO BE RETAINED White Cross Children’s Cheer Guild will entertain the newly organized high school girls’ White Cross Guild at luncheon tomorrow in the nurses’ home of the Methodist hospital. Following the luncheon, the girls will hold a business meeting. Miss Mary Catherine Ashton is president and Mrs. Arthur E. Vehling, sponsor. Late Jewelry Offering There are already necklaces and bracelets that look exactly like collars and cuffs. They may be seen in lightweight aluminum like Jeanne d’Arc armor, or in the more romantic lazy-daisy treatment.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Halves of gr2pe fruit, cereal, cream, toa.-ted codfish, corn bread, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Baked dried lima beans with tomatoes, new onions and radishes, Boston brown bread, sliced bananas, ginger cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — Boiled fish on n bed of chopped ana buttered spinach, hot tartar sauce, mashed sweet potatoes, French endive with Roquefort cheese Dressing, oherry up-side-down cake, milk, coffee.

(Between Freshens the mouth X ..Soothes the throat —\ J/ iPhone TALBOT w 0498 1 CLEANING Qyl9 Furniture anti DraperiesCO flp 3a I L Domestic Shampoo & Size Oriental Rugs shampoo 6c sq. ft. —Rusr* Expertly Re [mired— Soft Water L'rd Exclusively ASHJIAN BR(K I*E.t RUG CO I>a”vj Main Office St Plant. 456 W. 16;h PI.

HEADS SORORITY

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Miss Elizabeth Gadient

Miss Elizabeth Gadient. president of the De Pauw chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, will attend the luncheon tomorrow at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. State Luncheon of Delta Zeta Set for May 5 Miss Frances Westcott will be chairman of the eighteenth annual state day of Delta Zeta sorority May 5 in the Columbia Club. The anniversary will be marked by a rose luncheon and dance. Miss Westcott, appointed by Miss Harriet Kistner, president of the j Indianapolis alumnae chapter, will be assisted by the following com- j mittees: Luncheon, Mesdames Byron G. ! Sunderland, Robert E. Allen, Misses j Louise Rundell and Marguerite j Bader; dance. Misses Helen Miller. Eldena Stamm, Maxine Quinn, and supper, Mrs. Roy Peterson. Decorations will be arranged by Mesdames Robert Hueslein, Franklin W. Abel, Colin V. Dunbar, Walter C. Smuck and Misses Blanche Sizelove and Pauline Howard; reservations, Miss Anita Brownlee, Mesdames Robert Berner and Frank Miller; entertainment, Misses Josephine Ready, Maxine Scherer, Isabelle Early, Delores Vestal and Elizabeth Sharp. Other committees are program, Misses Anne Stuprich, Mary Carriger and Louese Headrick and publicity, Miss Dorothy Wright. Mrs. S. M. Koby and son, Leon- j ard Allen, 5340 North New' Jersey street, are visiting at the Deauville Plaza at Miami Beach, Fla.

TIMES READERS NOTE! Mrs, Helen Lindsay, the Times Fashion Writer, in her column todays reviews our Schiaparelli Shoes.

lip . • Direct from the Spring Paris Opening of the I WM world’s favorite couturier Schiaparelli. The SB/ six new shoe styles that belong in every smart Say wardrobe. Personally selected by Schiaparelli and now shown here bv exclusive arrangement. CAL ANA—Tie, Slencla Last, Ma- „ . ", tr- • . rine Blue Calf. Black, Brown and Come, try them on today. Wear them just as White SS 10 they were worn in Paris. • SWAG o—Taupe scuffed Porcupine. ' Biota. i. 'i .. .7.:,, •7 CABAN A*- —Perforated Mack calf. (Design Pat. D91349) $8.50 FOX SONOMA BUCKLE STRAP— Also in white Berwyn Last, Cream White Glazed Raccoon with Biscay Brown Calf Trim, $7.50 Olympie Leaf. Cltaff Beige and RUM BEAO <iOBK BHB —17a Part, lilaek Sport Calf 56.50 Kid. Brown and Blue Kid $7.50

Walk-Over "Shoes Again Chosen by Schiaparelli to Complement Attire Noted Designer Selects Footwear With’ Windblown Silhouette in Mind; Cabana Still Popular. BY HELEN LINDSAY SELECTED for the second time by Madame* Elsa Schiaparelli to be worn with her costumes in her Pans opening, Walk-Over shoes are again “out in front” in spring fashions. Women in France, England and the United States wait each year to learn what this designer decrees as the mode, and wearers of Walk-Over shoes will be pleased to know that she has made this selection. Schiaparelli for. years has dominated the feminine fashion trend. Seven years ago she took sweaters out of the class of mere active spc-rts

wear, and gave them designs which placed them among proper attire for many occasions. In 1929, she sprained her thumb during the busy days of preparing for her fall opening. She had to wear it bandaged. With her genius for turning adversity into profit, she gazed upon that gauze bandage, and decided that a rough crinkly fabric would be attractive in silks for dresses. Today this rough surface material appears in velvets, woolens and cottons. This year, Madame Schiaparelli has chosen rough surface leathers to follow thus vogue. The shoes which she has selected from the WalkOver designs this spring carry out the windblown idea evident in her opening collection of gowns and costumes. Most outstanding of these is the Cabana of 1934. Like the Cabana of last year’s Walk-Over collection, it promises to be the most popular shoe of the year. By the first of this month, 175.000 pairs

had been sold. It is being shown in Indianapolis at the Walk-Over shop, in a main spring shoe, as well as other lasts. n n n n n n Perforations Form Decoration MORE than perforations are shown in the Cabana. The tiny holes forming the decorative design of the shoe extend from the toe to the heel. It is shown in black, white and colors. While navy blue is leading in sales at present, white promises to be better than ever before. In the east, according to news received in Indianapolis, women already are being seen in white shoes on the streets. Madame Schiaparelli chose the Pekin tie in allover Mandnicca. with perforations and a smartly shaped heel, for an all-dav shoe, showing it with appropriate costumes in her opening. For sports w T ear, with tweeds and woolens for town or country, she selected the Swago tie in scuffed porcupine and crisscross lacing around three pairs of bronze hooks. For the younger person, who likes a shoe with a short vamp appearance, Madame Schiaparelli chose the Chico in raccoon. The short vamp look is achieved with perforations in a moccasin design. The Chico has form-fit leather strappings that terminate in loops through which the laces pass. n n n n n n Kiel Chosen as Most Feminine TO be worn with the costumes which are thoroughly feminine. Schiaparelli showed her mannequins wearing an open throat tie in kid. with feather-like stitching In addition to having shoes selected by one of the leading designers, Indianapolis women who choose Walk-Over shoes have the advantage of a veteran shoe man in Thomas Bailey, proprietor of the city Walk-Over store. Mr. Bailey served in the World w'ar as a captain. He formerly was connected with one of the Walk-Over stores in England.

3IARCH 23, 1934

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Mrs. Lindsay