Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 292, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1934 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Evolution of Bath to Be Shown Indiana Artist Club Ball Will Feature Novel Mural. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Times Woman’s Pare Editor RALPH CRAIG crawled down from a step ladder, stepped back a few paces and tilted his head as he viewed his last touches to the mural on the wall. With Damien Lyman, chairman of the Indiana Artist Club annual ball and bath, we were visiting the studio, shared by Mr. Craig. Ralph Jones and Bird Baldwin, and we had walked into the midst of prep-

~ irations for the i decorations at the % costume party | Saturday night at I he Antlers. 1 The eleven-foot g wall was hung 1 whth two strips of I newspaper stock, I and on it Mr. I Craig and Mr. I Jones had copied 1 a portion of a 1 sketch for one Pj panel of the —mural. On the floor was the original sketch. Mr.

Miss Burgan

Jones unrolled three other sketches and fitted them together. “The evolution of the bath,” he explained. The ball this year will be combined with a swimming party, and the bath idea in decorations has been developed by the three artists. The bath from the Garden of Eden days to the modern era is being depicted, and caricatures of popular artists in the city are seen as the bathers. Guests at the ball and bath will not be admitted unless dressed in costume or in bathing clothes for the swimming party. Tables will be arranged around the pool and the ballroom floor. Mrs. Arthur Woodward has arranged for a party of eight and Mrs. Geraldine Scott will come from Kokomo to entertain guests. Bathtub to be Screen Art King and his orchestra will provide music. The orchestra platform will be concealed by a reproduction of a bathtub. At the other end cf the ballroom another mural will be hung. Mr. Craig designed a huge beer tap. and from the bubbles of the foam emerge dancing figures. “How big is this bath mural?” we inquired. “Eighty feet,” Mr. Craig answered. “The smallest mural requires three widths of paper, and our room is only wide enough to hang two widths. We started painting last Wednesday and expect to complete the job by Thursday.” Complete Traveling Exhibit Mr. Jones and Mr. Craig have been working on projects under civil works administration provisions. Under the direction of Wilbur Peat, direr or of the John Herron Art Institute, they have completed a series of p c ures to be used for a traveling exhibit in public school art work. Ti e artists were permitted to choose th ovn subjects, which include lent' rapes, portraits and other stu :s. Mr. Lyman yesterday received a plaque from Warner Williams of Chicago, and will ward it as one of the prizes for the ball costumes. The outstanding couple in costume will have the choice of the prizes to be awarded. George Mess donated an oil painting; E. E. Spenner, an oil painting; Simon Baus, an Indian head, and Paul Shideler, an etching. OFFICERS CHOSEN RY LITERARY CLUB M’s. H. P. Roesch was elected p dent cf the Friday Afternoon L: ary Chib at its weekly meeting a he home of Mrs. T. A. O'Dell, 31 Rcoscvelt avenue. Mrs. F. T. Tr; r discussed modern poetry; M . J. E. Williamson, English poetry. and Mrs. O'Dell, American poetry. Mrs. Arthur B. Miller was named vice-president, Mrs. E. G. Porsch, secretary, and Miss Alvina Clark, treasurer. Mrs. W. G. Sterns was appointed delegate to the meeting of the general federation of women's clubs to be held in Hot Springs. Ark., in May. The club will sponsor Mrs. Tilden Greer for first vicepresident of the Seventh district

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Spring, Shoes Feature Lower Heels

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BY MARIAN YOUNG N'EA Service Writer NEW spring shoes come down to earth as other wearing apparel flutters cloudward. Though suits, coats and dresses are wind-blown and breezeswept, 1934 bottery features lowered heels. This is one year when you can be comfortable and in style at the same time. And it's grand news for tall girls who go dancing. You can cling to high heels if you fancy them, but how pleasant that you don’t have to! After heels in importance are colors and fabrics. Black shoes, of course, are always good, but many smart little girls are going to be shod in navy blue, yellowish brown, prints and paisleys, depending upon the costume to be matched. a a a AS for fabrics—well, if you don’t look individual, it's your own fault! Nobody says that you must stick to kid, suede or even plain leather, for that matter. Instead, those in the know tell you to go out and be as different as you please. For instance, Palm Beach cloth, gaberdine, silk crepes and tw T eedish linens are used in profusion for street and afternoon shoes. And for evening there are satins, hand-painted linens and piques that are beautiful enough for the feet of queens. Some are cut so low as to reveal heels, toes and indeed everything, but the sole. Cocktail shoes to go with those long, slinky dresses have small glasses and sometimes shakers painted on the gleaming black satin. Because the fabrics and their treatment are so exquisite, there’s an almost complete dearth of clut-

Manners and Morals by JANE JORDAN

Jane Jordan will help you iron onl .vour perplexities by her discussions of your problem in this column. Opinions from readers are invited: Dear Jane Jordan—l am 27, married and have three children. I was marrried very young and until the last year I have been fairly well contented. I had my children and my home to interest

me and that v;as enough. I just lived a normal life. "Then my husbrought home a man who -cmed very 'ice except hathe drank i lot. He came :o our house - ften and he end my husband always would get drunk. After a while I started to drink

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Jane Jordan

with them some. During one of our drinking affairs he said something that made me think I cared for him. It seemed very real for a time, but was soon over. Now. I've met another man I feel the same way about. I realize that it's only sham, but I do suffer from it in different ways. I can’t understand why all of a sudden I'm so susceptible to men and so terribly discontented with everything. I seem to be looking for something I can’t find. I wonder what the cause is and what could be done about it. I don't really believe in drinking and that sort of thing, even though Ido it. I can't leave my husband because of the children and finances. Please tell me what to do. FOOLISH MOTHER. Answer —There are few marriages so completely satisfactory that ! neither party ever yearns for a new r person to revive the delightful sen- | sation peculiar to falling in love. | You are not the first woman who has longed for a fresh affection to ‘ stimulate that mad lift of the spirit which the husband can no longer give. In almost every marriage there comes a dulling desire followed by a wish for variation. The imagination runs back to the days when love was young and contact with the beloved something like an electric shock. He wTio has once experienced the exhilaration of new love must always long to have it again. Most women satisfy their wayward desires in weaving day dreams, or they seek a vicarious outlet by identifying themselves with the heroine in love stories and moving pictures. Others, less easily satisfied, fall in love with the family friend or almost any personable male who crosses their path in the period of their discontent. Usually the woman does not wish to break up her home, particularly I when there are children to Hold it j together. Often she still esteems her husband and feels bound to him by psychic ties. Like you she makes futile little stabs to capture the lost delight while trying to keep her marriage intact. Such excursions, even in those rare instances when taken with the full knowledge and consent of the husband, undermine the structure of marriage. Sooner or later the explosion comes. A change of part- ; ners is no solution, for each new j love fades with familiarity, leaving j the lover relentlessly faced with 1 prosaic reality.

tering bows, buckles and gadgets, for which fashion gods be praised! Illustrated here are six pairs of shoes that are chic enough to grace any spring wardrobe. Stock up with these and your foot problems are solved until skies turn gray to announce that fall is on the way. it tt u IN the upper panel, reading left to right, are three daytime models. The first is a grand one-strap sports shoe that is the perfect complement for a very British tweed suit. Later on it will be smart on the porch of the country club. It’s of tan calf with perforated brown calf trimming and has a suave builtup heel of medium height. In the center is a smart street pump. It comes in gray or beige palm beach cloth trimmed with either black or tan calf. This heel, too, is lower. The dressy pump which has been designed for a dressmaker’s suit or a silk dress and coat ensemble is a flattering little number for the Easter parade. Nice enough to wear with any informal costume any hour of the day, it’s of blue kid with a contrasting kid trimming. In the bottom row’ are three pairs of fancy shoes for parties. The first one, left, is made of handpainted pique and was designed to go with cotton or linen summer evening frocks. The heel is extraordinarily low and the toe is completely missing. Cocktail pumps, center, have little gold glasses painted on them. These heels are quite high. The newest w’rinkle of all is the Cleopatra sandal, right, made of tiny multi-colored mirrors appliqued on white satin.

Your problem is one for which there is no solution. Just as we can not extend the benefits of childhood into adult life, so an emotionaal edge can not endure forever in marriage. We simply have to face the fact that, as someone has said, life is three-fourths tedium. Perpetual emotional heights are not in harmony with reality. If your marriage is a going concern, you are lucky. If no vicious antagonisms exist, no cruelty is encountered, if excitement is all that is missing, you would do well to put up with things as they are. I wish that your husband had the insight to understand your discontent, tor he could avoid a catastrophe by a renewal .of tenderness and consideration. But most husbands are notoriously dull and inept where the emotional needs of their wives are concerned. Perhaps his indifference accounts for your unrest. tt a a Dear Jane Jordan A few months ago I lost my wife. She left me with two small children. It seems as though there is nothing I do that I get any enjoyment from. My babies are sweet and I think the world of them, but I can't get over losing my wife. The babies do not seem to be enough. I don’t drink or chase around. About all I do is go to the shows and play with my babies. I get so lonesome it just about runs me crazy. The loss of my wife does not seem to wear off any. It gets worse. Please give me some advise. LONESOME. Answer—Time will do more for you than I can. It won't be easy to get over the loss of your wife, and it will take a constant, determined effort to interest yourseif in other things. The more people you see. the better for your state of mind. You should not spend much time alone. I hope your loneliness will not drive you into a second marriage too soon. In your desolate condition you are apt to make an illadvised choice just to break the monotony. Better to be unhappy a little longer now than be permanently miserable in an uncongenial union. Wait. Your heartache will pass as you learn how to occupy yourself alone when you have been accustomed to planning with a partner. u u n Dear Jane Jordan —Mother and I have been discussing the subject of a girl’s wearing trousers. She says the Bible speaks against a girl dressing as a man. I can't see that it is wrong to wear them. I have lots of fun in doing so and find a good many advantages in wearing trousers. Mother doesn’t like them. Which of us is wrong? TOMBOY. Answer—'There is nothing morally wrong in wearing * trousers, but it does detract from your feminine cha~m. Designers have been trying to foist trousers off on women for years, but it rouses such protest from masculine circles that women won’t wear them to any extent. Men do not like to be deprived of this symbol of their masculinity, and arp most attracted to women who stick to feminine dress. Queen Elizabeth chapter, International Travel-Study Club. Inc., will meet at 1 tomorrow for a covered dish luncheon at the home of Mrs. S. A. Snyder. 1005 West Thirty-third street. Mrs. Omer Rose will assist. Mrs. S. R. Artman will talk on Washington And Oregon.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Martha Dorsey Will Speak on Fidac Program

Miss Martha Dorsey will address the regular meeting of the Auxiliary to Indianapolis post of the American Legion at 8 tomorrow night at the Spink-Arms. Mrs. Clarence R. Martin will be chairman of the Fidac program. Mrs. Martin will give a brief talk on the countries studied. England, Italy and France, to be followed by songs by Mrs. Philip Kappes, accompanied by Mrs. Charles E. Bebinger, pianist, and Mrs. L. K. Fishback. Group singing of “The Star Spangled Banner” will close the meeting. An executive meeting at 7:30 will precede the program. Mrs. John Downing, auxiliary president, will preside. Card Parties St. Mary’s Social Club will entertain at cards and lotto at 2:30 Thursday afternoon in the school hall, 315 North New Jersey street. Mesdames Henry Arzman, John Betz and George Schmidt will be hostesses. Marion county chapter. American War Mothers, will hold a card party tomorrow afternoon at BannerWhitehili auditorium with Mrs. J. C. Rybolt, general chairman, assisted by Mrs. J. F. Kutchback. Indianapolis council, Daughters of America, will sponsor a supper and card party tomorrow night at 210 East Ohio street. Sororities Gamma chapter, Rho Delta sorority, will entertain with a supper and bridge party at 6:30 tomorrow night at the South Side Y. W. C. A. Miss Dorcas Morris is chairman of the supper and Miss Emma Kathryn Rupp, bridge chairman. Phi Tau sorority will meet at 8 tonight with Miss Mary Lou Growe, 4162 Winthrop avenue. Miss Nelle May Larakins, 828 Noith Hamilton avenue, will be hostess tomorrow night for a meeting of Alpha chapter, Omega Nu Tau sorority. Miss Helen Dugan, 221 Blake street, will be hostess for a meeting of Phi Kappa Sigma sorority Thursday night. Attention Married Women Widows Pleasant refined work Bea Beautician (Beauty Operator*. Your age is not against you. You can practice in your own home. The field is unlimited. Women are earning SSO to SIOO weekly right in their own home. You, too. can be your own boss. No investment required. Be independent—the demand for expert operators is getting bigger every day. "Night classes for those occupied during the day. Now is the time to start. See Us. No Money Down. ROYAL ACADEMY BEAUTY CULTURE 807 Roosevelt Bldg. Seeing ns may be a turning point in your life.

Fort to Be Sponsor of Horse Show Major J. K. Boles Will Direct Event to Be Held May 10. Equestrians are welcoming early announcements of the first horse shows scheduled for the spring season. Major J. K. Boles of the Third field artillery of Ft. Benjamin Harrison is chairman of the third annual horse show of the fort to be held on May 12 and has mailed memoranda of twenty-eight proposed classes. Robert H. Brown of the Brown stables, formerly Arlington, has announced early plans for the fourth horse show’ on June 2. He has announced afternoon and evening events to be held in the outdoor ring. Exhibitors from Louisville, Cincinnati, Ft. Wayne and Muncie are expected to enter the twenty-five classes tentatively planned. All classes in the fort show with the exception of fiev reserved to members of the military establishment, are open to residents of Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Indianapolis and vicinity. Entries will close May 5, and no post entries will be allowed. Stabling facilities will be free to visiting entries.

Meeting Marks Anniversary of Club’s Founding Forty-ninth anniversary of the Catharine Merrill Club w’as observed Saturday at the home of Mrs. Carl F. Walk, 4375 North Meridian street. Mrs. Samuel H. Fletcher was reelected president at a recent meeting. and Mrs. Margaret Segur, reelected vice-president; Miss Josephine Herron, recording secretary; Mrs. Ethel M. Rathert, treasurer, and Mrs. J. Emmett Hall, corresponding secretary. The executive committee is headed by Mrs. Charles B. Campbell, W’ho is assisted by Mrs. James C. Carter, Miss Catherine T. Dunn, Miss Jessie Moore and Mrs. David F. Smith. The membership committee is headed by Mrs. Perry H. Clifford, w’ith Mrs. Evans Woollen Jr. and Mrs. Hugh H. Hanna. Mrs. Frank M. Fauvre was appointed literary chairman, ' with Mrs. John H. Oliver, Mrs. Sara C. Ewing and Mrs. J. T. McDermott, assistants. Mrs. Myron Williams, retiring chairman of the executive committee, W’as in charge of the program Saturday which included a sketch ox the late Katharine Merrill Graydon, by Mrs. Thomas C. Howe; a tribute by Miss Dunn from the Katharine Merrill Graydon Club. Mrs. Hilton U. Brown, one of the first members of the club, gave a sketch of the club’s early years, and former members W’ere guests. Mrs. Carl Stone of the Irvington Shakespeare Coterie Club read a paper on “Gardens.”

TRIO MEMBER

! I.

Miss Violet Albers

Concert trio will present a musical program at 8:15 tomorrow night at Cropsey auditorium. The trio includes Misses Violet Albers violin; Mary Lohmann, cello, and Ramona Wilson, piano. Books to Be Reviewed Miss Hazel Dickens, 1615 North Talbott avenue, will be hostess for a meeting of the Indiana unit of the Women's Overseas Service League tonight. Mrs. Alice BaxterMitchell will review “James Shore’s Daughter,” by Stephen Vincent Benet and “Riptide,” a novel in verse, by William Rose Benet. Betrothal Announced Mr. and Mrs. F. E. McCormick announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Mary Loretta McCormick, to W. Orville Wilson, son of Wiley Wilson, Bristol, Tenn. The ceremony wil ltake place in June. J \ $5.00 Comf Value ■ plete \ I PERMANENT L WAVES M L s|.4o fit COMPLETE ' COMPLETE ) Oil-O-Flowers T / l W3V6 5 Shampoo, FingerCOMPLETE ? ins £ *. nd _____ End Carls. Regular Tonic Finger- R r J‘ e *&; . vßl* wave, shampoo, * ow all 4 for Rinse and End ALL WEEK at Curls. Our Reg- Downtown & Mass, ular price 90c. Avenue Shops. Dther Shops—Mon. P _ Tors.. Wed. Only. OUC < Sat.. —an Over Town__

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Miss Lenora Bemloehr Annual costume ball of the Indiana Artists Club promises an evening of gayety at the Antlers with its costume theme, “Ball and Bath.” Table reservations are in charge of Damien Lyman, general chairman. Miss Lenora Bernloehr is pictured above in a Grecian costume.

Republican Club Will Be Hostess for Candidates Republican candidates are invited to attend a luncheon meeting to be held by the Indiana Woman's Republican Club at 12 Thursday at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Samuel H. Fletcher will preside. Mrs. E. E. Nelson, chairman of the ways and means committee, is general chairman of ticket sales for the luncheon, with Mrs. Wolf Sussman, vice-chairman of the ways and means committee, assisting. Members of the ticket committee for candidates are Mesdames Ellen Heidergott, Ruth Marshall, Harlan Ratliff, Omar Hawkins, Martha L. Huggins and Josephine Fairhead. General committee includes Mrs. Sussman, Mesdames E. L. Burnett, Louise Wisenberg, Hazel Workman, Martha Blackmire, Ida Schneider, Pearl Riddle, Henry Campbell, Frank Cones, Reuben Miller, Edna Pauley, Edward Hecker, Bert Thurman, Jack Tilson, Eileen Kidd, Taylor Groninger and Love Benefield. VISITOR IN CITY TO BE HONORED Miss Mildred Arnholter will entertain with a. bridge party tonight at her home. 4319 Guilford avenue, in honor of Mrs. Clarence Wanderscheid, Grand Rapids, Mich. Mrs. Wanderscheid, with her daughter Barbara Ann, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Falvey. Appointments will be in spring colors. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. William H. Arnholter. Guests will include Mrs. Wanderscheid, Mesdames Charles VanBuskirk, John Grob, Carl Hanske, Donald Hirschman. Harold Englehardt and Miss Dorothy Arnholter. PEN WOMEN WILL CHOOSE OFFICERS New leaders for the Indiana branch, National League of American Pen Women, will be chosen at the luncheon meeting Saturday in the Spink-Arms. Reservations for members and guests are being made with Mrs. L. D. Owens. Miss Blanche C. Young will give an illustrated lecture on “A Little White on a Little Isle.” Miss Young is a native of the Lsle of Man, songs of which will be sung by Mrs. Clyde E. Titus.

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Knitters at Block Store Use Feminine Prerogative in Changing Directions Desire to Experiment Very Evident While Giving Reign to Creative Impulse; Artistic Ideas Get Chance. BY HELEN LINDSAY' "T>UT these are larger needles than the instructions call for the knu--15 ting instructors at the Wm. H. Block Company store said to the eager young woman knitting the'bright yellow sweater. “Do you think the sweacer will fit?” “Oh ”es.” the knitter answered, never dropping a stitch as she explained. “You se*’, I just changed the directions.” And that led to a discussion of the psychology of a woman knitter. • “Well, there are a lot of women who like to knit because they still

.vant to see something that is a product of the skill of their hands.’’ the knitter said. “And that changing the knitting instructions isn’t strange either—you know a lot of women who alw’ays have to experiment with recipes. If the cake is supposed to be made with sour milk and soda, they wonder if it wouldn't be just as good made with sweet milk and baking powder. It's the desire for creation—they like to see what will happen if they inject a few of their own ideas into the baking. And that spplies to knitting, too. “Women like to see if the sleeves wouldn't be -ore effective if they are straight, though the inructions call for puffed ones. They like to try an ,:tra row of purling, and put just a little different Kind of collar on the coat to a suit. “Though a knitted suit a woman buys may be effective, sometimes it doesn't combine the colors that she desires. Knitting gives her an opportunity to see

whether she really is as artistic about color schemes as she thinks she is. a m a a m Knitting Provides Relaxation BUT there are women who won’t knit. Yet they do admire the knitted frocks and suits that have become increasingly popular within the last season. They realize that knitted suits and dresses not only are smart, but practical. For them, there are attractive knitted suits in the sports department at Block's. tt a a a a a Ready-Made Garments Offered BUT there are women who w’on't knit. Repudiating many of the feminine arts with their acceptance of suffrage and continued energy in the business world, they shudder at clinging wool, clicking needles and the feminine chatter around the knitting circle. Yet they do admire the knitted frocks and suits that have become increasingly popular within the last season. They realize that knitted suits and dresses not only are smart, but practical. For them, there are attractive knitted suits in the sports department at Block’s. One is in aquamarine, with a drawstring neck through which a knitted tje is laced. Others are show’n in one or tw’o-piece styles, in bright or pastel shades. In the blouse shop, there are attractive sweater blouses, showing all of the new yarns that are carried in the knitting department. One in blue is a boucle blouse, with a tiny edging around the neck of soft white angora w’ool. Buttons are covered with angora, too. Another blue sweater is in a wide-meshed crocheted design, with smart rolled collar a a a a a a Graduation Fashions to Be Shown A GRADUATION fashion show for high school girls will be held in the L. S. Ayres auditorium at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon. Regulations of all city schools have been considered in the type of clothes shown. In addition to graduation dresses, costumes for attendance at pr ef? graduation gatherings, Sunday nights and sports events will be shown.

Club Luncheon Set Mrs. Elmer Piel is chairman of a luncheon to be given by the Kappa Kappa Gamma Mothers’ Club of Butler university at 12:30 Friday at

DON’T SUFFER with poor fitting shoes

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APRIL 17,1934

IL.

Mrs. Lindsay

the chapter house. Others on the committee are Mesdames Fred Johns, Fred Pettijohn, W. L. Pruett. Edward Hisey, George Miller. Henry Woesner and Fred Ballweg.