Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 281, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 April 1934 — Page 4
PAGE 4
Aid Sought for Project of League Funds in Trading Post Solicited by Group of Members BY BEATRICE BI ROAN, Tlmn Untnan!i Mitor Telephone wires win be busy for one group of Junior League members who have begun a campaign for donations to the League Trading Post. Mrs. Chauncev Eno is supervising calling of old and new donors. The intensive campaign during
the spring house- ; cleaning season came coincidentally with the league's decision i to close its shop I at 153 East Four- | teenth street. Sale of merchandise at the shop began yesterday. While members i of the shop com- | mittee are directi ing sale of the me rch an and ise, • other groups will be concentrating on enlargement of
Miss Rurgan
the trading post at 1507 North Illinois street. The trading post began as an experiment five years ago at 1 514 North Illinois street. Its establishment was motivated by the idea of raising revenue for the occupational therapy department at James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children. The post fills a two-fold need. The hospital is benefited by its revenue. and individuals whose pay checks are small may buy the clothing and household articles they need at low prices. The league In closing its shop expects to serve an even larger clientele of individuals who need to stretch a small income. Cynthia Test, Dorothy Metzger and Joan Metzger will defend their first place positions in the junior, intermediate and senior classes of the monthly children’s riding tournament Friday night at Bob Brown's riding stable. The three girls have won first places in the first two tournaments and hope to win the cups to be awarded at the final tournament in May. Date of the stable summer tournament will be decided at a gathering of riders tonight at the stable. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic C. Bartlett will be honor guests at a reception and tea at 3 Sunday with members of the Art Association of Indianapolis as hosts. The reception will be held in connection with the opening view of an exhibition of paintings i by Mrs. Bartlett. Mrs. Charles Latham, chairman of the activities committee, will be in charge. Members of the committee are Mesdames Robert A. Adams, Henry Buttolph, Bowman Elder, Robert B. Failey. Theodore B. Griffith, Elsa Pantzer Haerle and Homer Hamer. Others will be Mesdames Hubert Hickam, Sylvester Johnson Jr., Frank F. Powell, Robert Scott, G. H. Shadinger, R. Hartley Sherwood, W. Richardson Sinclair, Anton Vonnegut, Herman Wolff and Evans T. Woollen Jr. Directors Will Meet April meeting of the Indianapolis Flower Mission board of directors will be held at 10 tomorrow morning in the Architects and Builders building. Mrs. David Ross will preside.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Halves of grapefruit, cereal cooked with dates, cream, crisp toast, milk, coffee. * Luncheon — Cream of onion soup, I croutons, fruit salad, brown bread and butter sandwiches, old-fashioned bread pudding, milk, tea. ! Dinner — Stewed rabbit with gravy, mashed potatoes, French j fried onions, cabbage and green pepper salad, deep dish apple pie, milk, cof- [ fee.
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Aid in Home Show Ticket Selling
£ .....
Left to Right—Mrs. E. E. Martin, Mrs. I.uther E. Brooks. Yesterday and today members of the Indiana Saddle Horse Association promoted advance ticket sales for the Indianapolis Home Complete Exposition, April 6 to 14, in the manufacturers’ building at the state fairground. Mrs. E. E. Martin, member of the association committee co-operating with exposition officials, and Mrs. Luther E. Brooks, sold tickets yesterday at L. S. Ayres & Cos.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Evervhodv knows the help that comes from talkin? out difficulties with a svmpathetic person. What’s troubling you? Write a letter to Jane Jordan and read your reply in this column. Dear Jane Jordan —I am leaving Indianapolis within the next few days and before I go I want to make one try to straighten things out with a young man. I became interested in him several months ago and he showed some liking for me. We never had any dates, but I used to see him at his work and we would talk for a while. Several nights ago I saw him with another woman at his work and he told me to scram. I just wanted to say good-by to him and when he told me that it made me feel that I should not leave town before I had told him good-by. Please tell me what to do. I sent him this poem yesterday. “Just a wearying for yon Dearest One. Beloved and true Wishing for you, wondering when You’ll be coming back again Under all I say and do, Just a wearying for you.’’ RUTH. Answer—You have overestimated the man's interest in you.* Asa casual acquaintance whom he met at work, he found you pleasant
enough, but had his interest equalled yours, he would have made the effort to see more of you. There is something repulsive to a young man about the girl who makes an obvious effort to win his interest. He is inclined to snicker when she wears her heart on her sleeve. The smart worn-
iIMKR SaPf ~ - Jam
Jane Jordan
an knows how to reveal her interest by a glance, a gesture, an attitude or a chance remark, but she never definitely puts all her cards on the table as you have done. It might be said that for every two steps she takes forward she runs back three in order to stimulate the man to the chase. If you're wise, you'll make no fur-
ther effort to see the young man or communicate with him before you leave Indianapolis. You’ll put him out of your mind and look for someone else. Next time you'll be a little more subtle in your encouragement. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am very much in love with a boy several years older than me. I really care for him a lot, but he says he will never marry. It seems to me if he wasn’t intending to marry that he wouldn't hang around the girls like he does. Should I forget him and go with other boys or continue going with him. You know love is sucn an awful thing. Sometimes I think I wall go crazy. UNHAPPY. Answer —You could have a very pleasant time with this young man if you would give up thinking of him as a potential husband. Can’t you accept the good times the present has to offer without trying to settle the future now? The young man adopts the pose of not being a marrying man in order to protect himself from girls whom he does not wish to marry. His defense is not without widom for women are apt to interpret continued attention from a man as love leading to marriage. They do not realize that men can make loVe madly today and forget it tomorrow. It is not that they are insincere. They simply act as they feel at the moment, but when the moment is gone the feeling is gone, too. The average woman takes love with deadly seriousness. Almost with the first passionate embrace she begins to plan her trousseau and furnish the house. It is’ an extremely bitter experience to her to discover that her lover was only passing away the time. Sometimes the woman is wily enough to pretend to share his taste for temporary affection. Later he awakens to find his heart so hopelessly involved that he must have her at all costs. This is not an inevitable reaction but a very frequent one. Dear Jane Jordan—l have been going with a young girl just 17 years old. She is in high school and will graduate in one year. I have traveled around quite a bit and have had my experiences. I am now ready to settle down. I love this girl and she loves me, but she thinks too much of her school to leave it now and get married. Would it be a good idea to get married secretly? If she really loved me would she marry me regardless? I know we could get along fine and she said she knew it, too. What should I say to her to win her? A LOVESICK BOY. Answer—No, it would not be a good idea to get married secretly. The secret marriage usually is an attempt to enjoy the privileges of marriage while evading its responsibilities. Your girl has more sense than you have. She sees that she hasn’t finished the tasks of her girlhood yet, one of which is to acquire an education. She is not willing to take on anew task until she has completed the first. I imagine she is a fine level-headed girl, well worth waiting for. nan Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young woman of 26. I have been married twice and divorced twice. For a long time I went with a nice fellow who would do anything I asked him to do for me and would take me any place I wanted to go. About a vear and a half ago I started stepping out with a married man. At first I thought it was smart to put something over on the first man. Then I got serious about this married man. I became madly in love with the married man and broke my dates New heels New colors in Nisley Spring Styles all priced at | except Arch Comforts $4.45 44 N. Penn St. *
THE TNDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Card Party and Luncheon to Be Given by Guild St. Francis Hospital Guild will entertain with a luncheon and card party Tuesday afternoon at the hospital in Beech Grove. Mrs. Leo Steffen is chairman of entertainment, assisted by guild officers. A membership campaign is being conducted by the guild, which is nonsectarian and organized to assist the Sisters of St. Francis in charitable work in the hospital. Members sew and prepare surgical dressings for various departments of the institution. Reservations for the luncheon may be made with the officers, Mrs. Leo Steffen, president; Mrs. Ada Roth, vice-president; Mrs. Albert Stocker, secretary; Mrs. Guy Armstrong, Mrs. John Dransfield, Mrs. Edward Dux, Mrs. Edwin Dwyer and Mrs. James Mugivan, directors; Mi’s. A. P. Lauck, publicity; Mrs. Eugene Wodtke, Miss Kate Schmalz and Mrs. Gusc Gatto, district promoters. Applications for membership may be made with these also.
MRS. KELLY TO BE CHAPTER HOSTESS Mrs. Walter C. Kelly. 5359 Forest lane, will be hostess for a meeting of the Lincolnian chapter. Interna- J tional Travel and Study Club, Inc., | at 12:30 Friday. Mrs. S. R. Artman will conclude her series of talks on j the United States. Mrs. Herbert Rhein will present a j group of vocal solos, accompanied by Mrs. John P. Lucas. Mrs. Harley Warner will be guest. New officers of this chapter are president, Mrs. Rudolph Roller; vicepresident, Mrs. Charles J. Mclntyre; secretary. Mrs. W. R. Harrison, and treasurer, Mrs. R. H. Boyd. Supper Party Set New members and officers of the Women’s Auxiliary of Sahara Grotto and their husbands will be entertained at a buffet supper tomorrow night at the Grotto home by the auxiliary membership committee. Mrs. Daisy Hollingsworth will be hostess. Obedience to Be Topic Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks will talk on ‘What Is Obedience?” at a meeting of members of the Fall Creek Mothers’ Club of Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society at 2 Tuesday in the Kindergarten, 903 East Thirtieth street. Mrs. Syrus G. Haig will preside. Club to Initiate Initiation services will be held by Lo Sin Loy Club tonight at the home of the president, Miss Virginia Ittenbach, 4826 Park avenue. Misses Jean Lang, Frances Alien, Virginia Ewing. Kathryn Barrett and Margaret Barrett will be initiated. Bridge Club to Meet Woman’s Contract Club of Indiapolis will meet at 1:45 Thursday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. with the single man. I got by with it twice. Then he got wise and we quit. Now the married man’s wife is always hanging around where he works and this makes me feel terrible. Now I am through. I know he doesn't care for me. I knew it was wrong to go with him but I just went anyway. What can I do to make up for this? Do you think the other fellow will forgive me? A MARRIED MAN S FOOL. Answer—l'm sure I don’t know. In your present state of emotional instability he'd be foolish if he did. I wonder if your main kick in going with the married man did not lie in the fact that you were taking him away fi-om somebody else. You’ve made two mistakes and seem bent on making plenty of others. A little self-searching would do you no harm. Don't you often wonder what is wrong with you to prevent | your achieving any continuity in your love life?
Third Play to Be Seen by Children Cast of Thirty Begins Rehearsals; Dates April 21 and 28. Rehearsals have begun for the third presentation by the Children's Theater of Indianapolis. A cast of twenty-eight will stage the children’s favorite, "Jack and the Beanstalk.” Saturday afternoon. April 21. and Saturday morning and afternoon, April 28. Members of the cast met yesterday afternoon at the playhouse for rehearsal with Miss Rosamond VanCamp, director. Adaptation of the story was made by Miss Marion Barnard, who is staging and designing the sets for the presentation. Miss Barnard, graduate of RadclifTe college, has been designing scenery for plays at the theater during the past year. This is the third play staged this year, to be written for production in children's theaters by affiliates of the Children's Theater. The opening play, “Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves.” was written by Miss Van Camp, and "Secret Garden” by Lawrence Hill. Leading roles wall be taken by Billy Shirley, Dick Fitch and John Wildack. Others in the cast are Betty Soehner, Mary Allen, Martha Hill, Mary Furscott, George Gaston, Lawrence E. Hill, Bunny McDuffee, Annis Spring. Hugh McDuffee, Bill Wright. Paul Krauss 111, Suzanne Ramey, Dorothy Ann Yates, Betty Carter, Carl Lieber 111, Vachel Anderson. John McElwee, Suzanne Leiber, Warren Atkinson, Bob Jackson, Carter Tharp, Dick McDuffee, Emily Mac Nab, Jane Carter and Barbara Brown.
DINNER TO PRECEDE DANCE AT CLUB
Misses Harriet Jane' and Anne Holmes will entertain at dinner tonight at the Meridian Hill Country Club, preceding the junior dance. Guests will be Misses Helen Griffith, Jane Adams, Harriet Patterson, Betty Hutchings, Laura Sheerin and Barbara Noel; Messrs. Donald Test Jr., James Darlington, Carter Tharp, Paul Fletcher, Robert Jackson, Jerry Noel. George Mahoney and George Wooling.
Personals
Miss Barbara Herrick and George Haw’ley Todd, Cincinnati, will be week-end guests of Miss Barbara Fowler, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Frank Fowler. Mr. and Mrs. George C. Grinsteiner and Miss Mary Jo Pavey have returned from Miami, Fla. Mrs. J. Drover Forward, New Albany, has returned home after a visit with her aunt, Mrs. I. N. Daniel, 3433 Graceland avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Daniels will return this week from a visit in New York. Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Searle have returned after spending the winter aboard. Mrs. Oscar N. Torian and Miss Anna Torian are at home after a trip to Virginia and North Carolina. EVANSVILLE COUPLE WED AT CATHEDRAL The marriage of Miss Agnes Forester. daughter of Mrs. Malinda Forester, Evansville, and Joseph Zimmer. Evansville, took place at 7 yesterday morning at the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. The Rev. Joseph Tieman read the service. The bride wore aquamarine blue crepe with black accessories and carried white roses. She was attended by Mrs. William Glaska, W’ho wore a printed chiffon gown, and carried Sunkist roses. Mr. Glaska was best man. A breakfast at the Glaska home, 2206 North New Jersey street, followed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Zimmer are at home at 2206 North New Jersey street. SORORITY LEADERS WILL ATTEND DANCE Grand officers of Omega Nu Tau sorority from Muncie, Alexandria, Anderson. Indianapolis and Alliance,. 0.. will attend a dance Saturday night at the Lincoln. Music will be given by Bob McKittrick and his orchestra. Officers and members will attend a dinner at the Seville Tavern at 6. Officers of local Alpha and Gamma chapters have charge of arrangements. BURPEE HOME TO BE SCENE OF TEA Miss Jane Weil will entertain w r ith an informal tea Sunday afternoon at the home of her aunt, Mrs. Hortense Rauh Burpee.
Announcements
U. D. Bethel, Job's Daughters, will hold a pitch-in dinner at 6 tomorrow night at the home of Miss Naomi Manley, 55 North Kealing avenue. Miss Manley is the honored queen.
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STUDENT OFFICER
Jr ' '
Miss Margaret Powell
Student body at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music recently elected Miss Margaret Powell vice-president. Other officers are Miss Gene Chenoweth, president, and Miss Lois LeSaulnier, secretary-treasurer. Miss Powell is enrolled at both the conservatory and Butler university.
Officers to Be Chosen During Dinner Meeting Mrs. N. Taylor Todd has been announced as candidate for the presidency of the Indianapolis branch. American Association of University Women, by the nominating committee, headed by Miss Mary Rigg. Election will be held at a dinner meeting at 6 Tuesday in the Foodcraft shop, 36 South Pennsylvania street. The committee, which includes Mrs. Marvin E. Curie and Miss Dorothy David, has named Mrs. A. D. Lange, nominee for secretary, and Mrs. Wilbur Appel and Mrs. Gordon Batman, directors. Nominations also may be made from the floor. Miss Jenna Birks, chairman of the legislative committee, has arranged a panel discussion program by Misses Belle Ramey, Frances Grainey, Evelyn Carpenter, Vera Morgan and Belle Scofield. The committee whose research subject during the year has been “The State Support of Public Education” will lead discussion of the following topics: Sources of revenue for schools; what bears the tax burden?; distribution of taxes; comparison of school expenditures with other departments; proposed plans of other states for a greater base of burden; accomplishments of Indiana to date; comparison of rating with other states; federal government and proposed support, and future dangers. Proposed constitutional revisions, planned by Mrs. Arthur E. Focke. Mrs. Albert 11. Hinkle and Mrs. John T. Wheeler will be voted on. Proceeds from the dinner, arranged by Miss Rigg, also fellowship chairman, will be added to the fellowship fund. MISS SCHEEFERS, W. C. MANY WED Bishop Elmer J. Ritter read the marriage ceremony this morning at the SS. Peter and Paul cathedral for Miss Leona Mary Sheefers and William C. Many. The bride is a daughter of Charles Joseph Scheefers, 1621 North Delaware street, and the bridegroom is a son of Mrs. Nell Many. Miss Helen Shepard, organist, played during the ceremony. A breakfast at the Charm house followed. The couple left on a motor trip west. Mrs. Many traveled in a navy blue outfit with a gray fox trim and gray accessories. Mr. and Mrs. Many will make their home in Indianapolis. The bride wore light blue matlesse crepe with matching hat and carried calla lilies, and her attendant, Miss Cyrilla Scheefers, wore ashes of roses crepe and carried Briarcliffe roses. mrs. Hughes to be BRIDGE CHAIRMAN • Mrs. Frank Hughes will be chairman of the luncheon and bridge party at Hillcrest Country Club at 1 Her assistants will be Mrs. W. H Bridges and Mrs. J. H. King. A bonus of 250 points will be given guests arriving promptly. Both auction and contract bridge will be played. Auxiliary Elects Mrs. Ralph Cradick was chosen president of the women's auxiliary to the Railway Mail Association at a meeting yesterday in the Woman’s Department Club. Mrs. Eugene Thompson is first vice-president; Mrs. Theodore Caldwell, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Fred Hendrickson, executive committee member. Mrs. C. J. Finch was indorsed for the presidency of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs.
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Modern Drug Store Stock Is Vastly Different From That of Apothecary Shop Units in Haag Group Offer Food, Household Furnishings, Sports Goods and Automobile Supplies. BY HELEN LINDSAY WHEN the modern householder finds on a holiday or Sunday that he is in need of something for his home or automobile, there is one store where he knows he can obtain it. It is the corner drug store. Differing greatly from the old-time apothecary shop, where only drugs and medicine were dispensed, the drug store of today has departmen s where merchandise of almost any kind can be purchased. In the Haag Drug stores in Indianapolis, from 10.000 to 12000 different
articles are on sale. There is a hardware department, where carpet tacks, screw drivers, and other articles are kept. For the sportsman, there are golf balls, clubs and bags; basketball equipment, swimming suits and accessories. With the spring house cleaning season approaching, mothballs and wall paper cleaner are available. Foods are kept for the housewife who finds i:t the last minute that she is in need of some essential for a meal. For the motorist, the Haag stores carry headlights, motor oil and radiator anti-freeze. Grass seed for the replanting of lawns and fertilizer can be bought in the drug store. Paints and varnishes are available there. Practically all Haag stores have lending libraries and magazine stands. At the fountain, cooling drinks and light lunches are served. Electric appliances vary from irons to heating
pads. Since repeal, all kinds of liquors and mixers for them are to be found in drug stores. BBS BBS Metal Case Hospital in Miniature FOR a proper appreciation of the modern drug store, the average person should visit the 104 northern posts of the Hudson Bay Company, according to a recent article in the American Druggist. The Eskimos and Indians living in these regions bring in a harvest of rich furs, bud they have only a limited store of medicines from which to draw in illness. To these still primitive people, the standard medicine chests maintained by the Hudson Bay Company are magic chests, to be resorted to when the tribal medicine men fail. Three centuries ago, according to Goodrich MacDonald, writing in the American Druggist, the only medicine brought to Hudson Bay was Jamaica rum. Today, when the supply ship pays her annual visits to the Canadian Arctic, she brings calomel and quinine, pills, castor oil and argvrol. Copper cement is brought to stop toothaches and catgut to sew wounds, for these factors of the company must be dentists and surgeons, as well as dispensers of medicine. The company has become the great medicine man of the Arctic. BBS B B B Treatment Prescribed by Radio THE standard medicine case maintained by the factors is of heavy Japanned metal, which is a miniature hospital. If the factor can not cope with the particular case, he goes into consultation by mushing to the nearest government radio station. This may be several hundred miles away, as there are only three stations in the straits. From one station, probably at Resolution Island, the trader broadcasts the symptoms which baffle him. Hundreds of miles away to the south in Ottawa, the Dominion capital, a health department physician listens in. He makes a diagnosis, and from a medicine case similar to the one kept by the trader, outlines directions. Hf> directs an ounce of one number, so many times a day, or an application of another. In an emergency, he even can supervise an unseen operation, with the certainty that the requisites are there in the medicine case, numbered just as they are on the list before him.
MRS. MARTIN HOLDS CLUB PRESIDENCY New Era Club elected officers at a meeting Monday at the home of Miss Blanche McFariden, 967 Lexington avenue. Re-elected officers include Mrs. Thomas F. Martin, president; Miss McFadden, first vice-president; Mrs. I. W. Riggins, second vice-president; Mrs. Cora L. Mason, recording secretary; Mrs. E. E. Padgett, corresponding secretary; Miss Amy Champ, treasurer; Mrs. W. L. Tillson, delegate to Seventh District Federation of Clubs, and Mrs. Eva Donson, alternate. Newly elected officers are Mrs. Payne Clark, assistant recording secretary and press correspondent; Mrs. John W. Jacobs, delegate to Indianapolis Council of Women and Mrs. J. D. Davy, alternate. CANDIDATES WILL BE LEAGUE GUESTS Candidate meetings of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters, which had been scheduled to start today, will open instead next Wednesday at the Rauh Memorial library, it was announced yesterday at a. meeting of league directors at the home of Mrs. Sylvester Johnson, 3666 Central avenue. Mrs. Lee M. Gardner, chairman of the efficiency in government committee, announced that there would be no study group meeting this week. Board Will Meet Mrs. Robert A. Dennis will preside at a meeting of the board of managers of the Indianapolis Day Nursery at 10:30 tomorrow at the home, 542 Lockerbie street.
£S§'Your icture I the i((liffl T)i n n cf -PliotolveiJex \i will *j|| the dearest dlf* • • • dßi price W r<M,V,notwilhMortier ( OTHER'S DAY your photograph will be and / iJ Jl lAI L you want that photograph to l tell her that she is 'the dearest ( Golden Sepia (A Cfl mother in the world’. Only in V K PortraitsofYou Photoßeflex can you be of 5x7 Gift Size getting such a picture, for Photo- V . . one of them Reflex enablesyou to choose the \WAND COLORED IN OIL* f very pose and expression you \REGULARLY f 7 want and see just bowvour pic- J—ture will look before it ’ la 7 enl TRY PHOTOREFLEX. v < 7 W, < r*o Appointment AtfOM PHOTO-REFLEX—EIGHTH FLOOR L. S. Ayres & Cos.
.APRIL’ 4, 1934
Mrs. Lindsay
Society Awaits Circus Ball of Civic Theatre Indianapolis society, costumed for a circus carnival, plans to attend the annual ball to be held Saturday night in the basement of the Athenaeum with the Civic theater as sponsor. Among the boxholders to date are Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Goodman, Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Pantzer, Mr. and Mrs. R. L Robinson and Mr. and Mrs. Irving M. Fauvre. Others include Mrs. Lafayette Page. Miss Bftty Vanderbilt, Miss Jane Weil and Miss Lucille Morrison; Messrs. Dick Grotendick, Charles Wells. Stedman Pearce, Boyd Brown, Dan McDuffee, William Ramey, Charles A. Seidensticker, John Henley and L. E. Dimond. Candidacy Indorsed Mrs. Tilden Greer, nominee for first vice-president of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs, was indorsed by the Monday Afternoon Reading Club at its meeting Monday at the home of Mrs. W. H. Ball, 950 Congress avenue. Board Will Meet Board of managers of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Association will hold its monthly meeting at 10 tomorrow morning at the nursery home. Mrs. R.- A. Dennis will preside.
