Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 304, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 May 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Daughter of Boss Loses High Place

Professor Rogers Admits Error in Advice on Marriage. BY HELEN WELSHIMER XEA Service Writer 'T'HE eminent college professor who put marriage on a business basis five years ago has changed his mind. Romance was not a prelude to Mendelssohn. That’s what he told the college boys. Only, of course, he spoke in more constructive language.

H e emplained that the boys might as well marry the boss's daughter instead of bothering with the stenographer if they wanted to get ahead. Marriage. in brief, as Professor Robert E. Rogers saw it, was a success factor. And how he was criticised. B.v the stenographers who were automatically remov-

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Miss Welsh imer

ed from his approval list. By the debutantes who much preferred to wed a man who had strings to their hearts instead of their purses. And now Professor Rogers is saying that he was all wrong. Apologizes Too Late Well, we always like a man who admits his errors. But now that the step-ladder method of success is in vogue again and few men can go sky-rocketing up to the business heights of marrying anybody’s daughter, the apology comes a little late. Besides, think of all the poor young men who thought they were going to be rich young men—and maybe didn’t get the girls they wanted either. If it was the impudent red mouth of a merry, gayhearted stenographer that a worthy young man wanted to kiss, and the lips of his boss's daughter got in the way because Professor Rogers had said that it was more important to acquire a worthy father-in-law than a wife. If he made a choice of purely business reasons and then discovered that the family fortune had a decimal point in front of it, when the economic disgrace came upon the land, think how badly he must have felt. It served him right. Any man who would offer a girl counterfeit love because her father had something he wanted deserves to have every check he writes against the family exchequer come bouncing back at him. The stenographer whose smile made his heart catapult can thank her typewriter that it was the shipping clerk who is on his way to the vice-presidency whom she married instead of the bright young man. How Professor Erred But where Professor Rogers was at fault is his assumption that it is as easy to love one woman as another. Os course, there are certain biological functions which go on forever. But if it is an abiding emotion which makes two persons feel that neither one is quite complete unless the other one is somewhere around, then love is more important than anew spring hat or a game of checkers. No one person can completely fill another person's life. Not if the first person has depth and width of soul. There must, in the very scheme of things, be other interests, too. And no single business interest can penetrate to the crevices, either. No, the time will come when the man who married the girl who saved him a step-ladder climb will wish for the one who made his heart turn somersaults. Can't Price Tag I.ove It is there that Professor Rogers was wrong. He wanted persons to marry for love. Love —and position. He just found out recently that it couldn't be done by mathematics. He has admitted his error. But the girls haven't accepted his apology They are inclined to believe that it is because the stenographer is trained to bring in a pay envelope —and the debutante isn't—that Professor Rogers now gives her preference. Whoever is or isn't right love can't be price tagged. As soon as it is it goVs on the bargain counter. And somebody is bound to be cheated! MAY BREAKFAST GIVEN FOR FIFTY Fifty attended the May day breakfast of the Auxiliary to Indianapolis Post 4 at the home of Mrs. E. S. Barnhill. 4324 Park avenue, today. Guests were seated at small tables which were centered with spring flowers. Assisting Mrs. Barnhill were Mesdames John Downing, Louis Yochem. H. K. Bachelder. J. K. Sangfitt, E. S. Westerveldt and J. R. Steinbach. Bridge followed the breakfast.

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Sheer Fabrics Favored for Dancing

, BY GERTRUDE B A j vorites—organzas, mou { They help to carry out V • w ( 4 , mantic impression of tb toire silhouette in the &' most flatterin S way fo] rn and summer. W' V f ** a a a . -**-. *, /G 1 Vv 'fJ \ CELANESE fabric <> " —T/ X "organsel” is used J dinner and informal ■ Vfy 17 || ? < frock sketched today I \\i f \ I I mt - \l dots, widely spaced, is t |V ' mil (L t J tern which bears out t •\ % (f W\ Ifc t ./\M / tinued smartness o i pol h J I®/ for evening wear as we I 0 v > 1 daytime ensembles. 1 \ /- % ", % / it is smart to wear t J m % jf J >1 dress with a gigantic b 1 & i V ** w/M ml for restaurant dining tl li Ii W - 7 son. College girls wh w . I vjf # # m/i wish t 0 scare the stag || %/ of "cutting in” will le m ’ if big hats home when i ™ l Jig,'] W / dancing. v Another costume idea I A taking hold for inforrr W . m ./ ning wear is the long s m, // / suit or the sheer dre l ™ - //.: M looks like a suit. These Jf V #— . \ feature the dress with H f ff™ yy 2 —' trasting top. sashed or // \ and a jacket. There ffif' \ prints used as accen ™ ' ' t/ "• prints used for entire cc r& ' v j/F 0$ \. Cross-barred tulle and * -Z* N \ get a bigger play as th< ' i-x *% A advances- % , \ \ e \ m 11 # \ - Hf m ■ ■ • 5 P \ S\' : % : = ifm ;/■ / . 'I 1 This fir ess BbH 1 I A W(IS El J ■# jf \ sketcheand mm in a New B JJ | U #7 |s\ York shop M J •; (f \| m \ especially U 1 - j -I' \\ | *|\ far The V f f H | J \ Indianapolis jm /./.! /J " f \fi 1 1 ,\ T* mes ' ' f -s— / *l/ \ \ J A tiilPVt \ € \ *m # V

This dress was sketched in a New York shop especially for The Indianapolis Times

A Woman’s Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

DID you read the list of American Dest sellers from 1875 as it was compiled by Edward Weeks for Columbia university? Not a salacious one among them, though "Trilby” in its day was thought very daring and "Huckleberry Finn’ a bad influence for boys. The livery stable flavor, however, was missing. They were exactly the sort of books which are held up to ridicule by the smart critics of the “new school.” Among them was the Limberlost series by Gene Stratton Porter. Innocuous stories, I grant you, peopled by creatures too good for mortal flesh, but stories nevertheless which have something the average reader longs for. They have a sympathetic interpretation and appreciation of nature’s beauty, of trees, birds, flowers, clouds and wind, a belief in the reality of true love, and they deal with the spiritual possibilities instead of the bestial qualities of men and women. I think we are very tired right now of reading how bad we are. We long to hear how good we might be. Our hearts are heavy with desire for iove that will endure; our souls perish for white hyacinths. But the critics are the last ones to find that out. just the moving picture producers are the last ones to realize how greatly we are bored with sex and filth and with jokes that should be deodorized and disinfected before they are trotted out upon the stage. Nothing grows tiresome so quickly as dirt. The vogue for rape, incest, perversions and morons, with which so many excellent writers have occupied themselves, will of necessity die out because the human mind, unless it disintegrates entirely, can stand only so much of that sort of thing. Yet it can feed perpetually upon the aspirational. I agree entirely with Mr. Arage who wrote, "Great books and

great people always will be more interested in the passions, conflicts and sufferings of the human spirit than with the sensations of the human body.” I am convinced of this, too. When the books of our age which survive the erosions of time are listed, they will not be books dealing with the futility and dirtiness of life, but those which relate ihe spiritual conquests of men. MISS BURGAN WED TO URBAN WILDE The marriage of Miss Beatrice Burgan to Urban Karl Wilde Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Urban K. Wilde Sr., took place today at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Allen Kelley Jr., 5154 North Capitol avenue. The ceremony was read by Dr. William C. Hartinger. Attendants were Miss Alberta Alexander and John Scott. The at-home announcement is for 225 East Sixty-second street. Mrs. Wilde is woman's page editor of The Indianapolis Times. Card Parties Division 5, L. A. to A. O. H. will entertain tonight with a card party at the home of Mrs. Michael Conway, 1811 North Talbot avenue. Circle 3, Assumption Altar society, will hold a card party at 2:30 tomorrow at the hall, 1105 Blaine avenue.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BY GERTRUDE BAILEY THE Letty Lyntons of past seasons have given up :heir wnde shoulder ruffles in favor of newer dance frocks, whose flattery' is apportioned to a square neckline outlined in a frill, godets at the bottom, of the long skirt, and soft frills at the wrists of long sleeves. Sheer fabrics are their favorites—organzas, mousselines, chiffons, and synthetic fabrics that look like one of these. They help to carry out the romantic impression of the Directoire silhouette in the airiest, most flattering way for spring and summer. ana A CELANESE fabric called "organsel” is used for the dinner and informal evening frock sketched today. Coin dots, widely spaced, is the pattern which bears out the continued smartness of polka dots for evening wear as well as in daytime ensembles. It is smart to wear the long dress with a gigantic brim hat for restaurant dining this season. College girls who don’t wish to scare the stag line out of “cutting in” will leave the big hats home when they go dancing. Another costume idea that is taking hold for informal evening wear is the long-skirted suit or the sheer dress that looks like a suit. These usually feature the dress with a contrasting top, sashed or debited, and a jacket. There are gay prints used as accents, and prints used for entire costumes. Cross-barred tulle and net will get a bigger play as the season advances.

Mail Auxiliary Founding Will Be Celebrated

Benefit program at 8 Friday night in Hollenbeck hall under auspices of the executive committee of the Women’s Auxiliary to the Railway Mail Association, will constitute a portion of the auxiliary’s thirtyfifth anniversary celebration. Students from the Irvington School of Music will present the operetta, "Trial by Jury,” with the following cast: Mary Elizabeth Colter, Chester McLaughlin, Allen Hamlin, C-el Rice, Clyde Foster and a jury composed of members of the ensemble. Dance numbers will be given by pupils of Hanna Beck of the school staff and vocal impersonations by Harold Bujant. A sketch, "Southern Romances,” by a double trio, composed of Pauline Mogle, Ruth May Kirk, Clessa Brae, Elinore Sinke, Gertrude Stahmor and Elthleen Johnson will conclude the program. Members of the executive committee of the auxiliary are Mrs. W. H. Vinzant. president; Mrs. E. H. Hughes, first vice-president; Mrs. Abert Morgan, second vice-presi-dent; Mrs. Fulton Smith, secretary; Mrs. Noble Reed, treasurer; Mrs. Floyd Doddridge. corresponding secretary; Mrs Jerauld McDermott, Mrs. Charles Webster and Mrs. Noble Shute.

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Garden Club State Group to Convene Arrangements Made for Meeting at Conference Held in City. Indiana State Federation of Garden Clubs met yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Perry' O'Neal, 1041 West Forty-second street, president, to discuss plans for the annual convention of the federation in Muncie. Mrs. W. D. Hamer was named legislative chairman and Mrs. M. S. Goulding delegate to the national council of federated garden clubs to be held June 5 to 8 at Grand Rapids, Mich. Mrs. Clarence Hughel will be alternate. Registration for the state convention will be held at 9:30 Tuesday, May 24, at the Muncie Y. W. C. A. followed by a luncheon at 1:15 at the Hotel Roberts. G. G. Holley, landscape engineer for the state highway commission, and James D. Adams, commission chairman, will be speakers. The group will visit the gardens of the following Muncie residents: Miss Elizabeth Ball. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ball, Mrs. E. F. Kitselman, Mrs. C. M. Kitselman, Miss Mary Louise Carmichael and Otto Carmichael. The afternoon program will be concluded with a tea at the home of Miss Mary Louise Carmichael. Wednesday, the members will motor to Ft. Wayne to visit the gardens. Announcement was made yesterday of the entrance of garden clubs of Middletown, Montpelier, Rushville, Middlebury, Delphi, Evansville and Berne into the state federation. Mrs. Simon Reisler has, returned from visiting Mrs. Margaret Weymouth Jackson in Spencer. Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Gabe will return Saturday from an extended visit in Miami, Fla.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Perhaps a word of wise counsel will save you from making a serious mistake. Just, your problem before Jane Jordan before you take action. Your letters are always welcome. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a married woman of 35 and have a son, 19. I have always been happy and loved my husband. We have everything in common and are constant pals. We three are in-

separable, s o much so that we went with our son to college in his freshman year. I am taken for my son's sister, and even once was taken for his wife, I am that young looking. Last fall when our son enrolled in a university w'e went with him and took an

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Jane Jordan

apartment where w r e lived all winter. Across the hall were two medical students. I discovered that one of them was following me on various occasions and doing little things to attract my attention, even going so far as to flirt with me in a dignified manner. Now, this fellow is not a kid. He did not take up medicine until he had worked for a few years. I judged him to be around 27, He tried me out in every way he could think of. I like him and know that he liked me. Since coming home I can not sleep at night for thinking of him. I decided to write to him and wrote two letters, but he does not answer. I have been married for twenty years and never before did I ever feel toward another man the way I do toward him. I love my husband and family and wouldn't trade places with the queen of Siam, but I want this man’s friendship. Don’t tell me it is just an infatuation for I can not forget him. I know he feels the same way. There was something that just kept pulling us together, yet there was nothing out of the way between us at any time. The only thing that worries me is the fact that I cheapened myself to write first. But I simply could not help it. Why doesn't he answer. Should I write and ask him to send my letters back, or should I see him? i ANOTHER FOOLISH WIFE. Answer —You haven’t been singled

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CITY GROUP FETED AT GREENCASTLE

Dr. and Mrs. G. Bromley Oxnam and Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette Porter entertained a group of Indianapolis visitors at a picnic luncheon Sunday at Greencastle. The following group attended a concert by Walter Vassar. baritone. Philadelphia, and were iuncheon guests: Mrs. Demarchus Brown, Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Chappell; Mr. and Mrs. S. K. Ruick. Dr. and Mrs. E. E Voyles, Mr. and Mrs. Frank McKibben, Mrs. Charles Greathouse Sr., Mrs. John R. Wilson. Mrs. William Allen Moore, Mrs. Jed Pearson. Mrs. Marton Rehfuss, Mrs. Ella Gilsen. Portland, and her daughter. Miss Reona Gilsen. Miss Ethel M. Moore. Miss Emily Pearson. Miss Jean McKibben. Miss Helen Chappell and Mrs. Henry Warrum and De2n Thompson and Wilton Clarey. The group also attended a reception at the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house on the De Pauw university campus. Bride-Elect to Be Honored by Bridge-Shower A personal shower and bridge party tomorrow night will honor Miss Marian Alice Fiscus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Z. C. Fiscus, whose marriage to Robert M. Houston. Albany, N. Y. will take place May 16. Misses Kathryn Haugh and Mary Birmingham will entertain at the home of the former, 902 East Fortysecond street. Appointments will be in peach and blue. Guests with Miss Fiscus will be Mesdames R. B. McKinney, Ferd Graf. Jack Turner, Chauncey Grass. Lawrence Kloepper, L. B. Shick and Robert Nipper; and Misses Marthalee McCreary, Mary Fuller, Harriet Applegate, Lois Pruitt, Marian Whitney, Laura Fiscus, Genevieve Moore, Ruth Buck and La Vonne Wright. Mrs. Harold Erner will entertain with a bridge party Saturday night in the bride's-elect honor.

out for a strange and unusual experience. The second blooming of the mature woman is quite a common spectacle, although yours has come a little early. You've had a happy and well-filled life and have the jitters because you see forty in the offing. That's about all there is to it. When middle age approaches, and the dulling effects of time have taken the edge off mariage, there often comes a wild rebellion of the senses, and a desperate wish to recapture the blaze of youth. At this point the mature man falls in love with his young stenographer, and the mature woman yearns for some ruddy youth in whose arms she hopes to rekindle her fires. Thus we find the mother of grown children so inflamed that she is ready to throw overboard the ties of family, duty, the past and the future for the deceitful lure of some rendezvous. But no matter how we struggle, we can not turn back the clock. We can not break open the closing door. We must accept the fact that the irresponsible period of adolescence is over, and that another, none the less fruitful, has arrived. To part with youth in a dignified way is one of the most difficult tasks that confronts a human being. I do not mean that you are dead with old age at 35. Far from it. But your interests lie with people your own age and not with your son’s friends. May I suggest that you do not identify yourself with your son too closely? Free the boy from his family and let him go his own way. I do not feel that it ever is advisable for parents to follow their children to college. Part of their job in education is to break their emotional dependence upon parents His virile youth, his young friends and romantic interests make you regret that you are 16 years older. It is flattering to be taken for your son’s wife, but it tends to keep you fighting for a lost position. You must recognize the fact that a woman’s sole value in life does not lie in the fact that she is an attractive sexual object. Look for another aim in life, like some useful occupation, to use up your energies. As for the young medical student, do not pursue him even by friendly letters which fail to conceal your underlying hunger for a stirring experience. Nothing hurts the mature woman more than the knowledge that she has made herself ridiculous. Would you give this youth a chance to laugh at your roundabout handling of forbidden desires?

Book on Life Story of Dillinger Offered Today; Winchell Lauds Volume ‘Very Exciting,’ Columnist’s Appraisal of Biography Written by ‘Red’ Gallagher of Indianapolis Times Staff. BY HELEN LINDSAY RED" GALLAGHER'S book on John Dillinger went on sale at the Indiana Theater News and Magazine stand today. For months, Red" has followed tne career of Indiana's bad man and his gang at close-hand range for The Times, and the book has been received enthusiastically by the public all over the country, it deals with facts of Dillinger escapades which "Red" gained in close contact with members of the gang. In Saturday’s issue of the New York Daily Mirror. Walter Winchell

paid tribute to the book in true Winchell style. “I think Red’ Gallagher's book on Dillinger is very exciting.” Winchell wrote. "Dillinger gave him plenty of ’inside' when they met after the Tucson capture. His book would make a honey of a serial for any paper. It came out April 15, and even had the Warsaw jail robbery which happened two days before!” The book is illustrated with newspaper photographs, taken by Times photographers. ana ‘Gretna Green' Wedding Stationery ANEW idea in wedding stationery has been introduced by she manufacturers of Rytex paper. It comes in a pale shade of green, which the manufacturers call "Gretna Green.” Invitations, calling cards, informal announcements and stationery are all

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Mrs. Lindsay

made to match, in tne same delicate color. The ensemble is on sale at Stewart's, Inc. a a a a a a Flexwood Fashioned Into Handbags DERBY day costumes will be completed this year by unique new bags made of fiexwood. They are shown by the Wm. H. Block Company, and are in unusual shapes, with zipper closings. The wood shows a variety of grains, and is in a dull finish, and mounted on fabric. Large gingham checks are shown in these mountings, and also in the linings of the hags. The edges are bound with narrow leather strips. nan a a a Goyas Paintings Inspire Schiaparelli IN her midseason showing, Schiaparelli has done the unusual again, and turned to the canvases of an early Spanish painter for her inspiration. The creations which she has presented copy the impressive simplicity of the Goya paintings. Madame Schiaparelli has used this design in both day and evening clothes. Goya’s period was from 1746 to 1828. He was appointed painter-in-ordinary to Charles IV and to his successor. Ferdinand VII. Among those who sat to him was the Duke of Wellington. Goya's best work is considered his satirical studies of society and church. The British Museum has a fine collection of his etchings and aquatints. The influence of the Spanish painter on clohting is recognized in the bell-shaped silhouette, curving up at the front, showing the feet. One Schiaparelli frock is made with lace trimming which is arranged in a wired fashion that covers the lower part of the face. Schiaparelli's mannequins also wear adaptations of the Spanish toreador hat, emphasizing the forward tilted line of the brimmed style, and berets pulled foAvard.

Rath Suzanne Adams to Be Bride of Dr. Matthew on June 1

Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Adams announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Ruth Suzanne Adams, and Dr. W. Burleigh Matthew, son of Mrs. E. B. Matthew, Gary. The Rev. W. E. Gillett will read the ceremony Friday, June 1, at the Methodist Episcopal church in Beech Grove. Miss Adams attended Indiana university, where she was a member of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority, and Dr. Matthew, a graduate of Indiana and Indiana university school oi Miss Knight Weds William Knight announces the marriage of his daughter. Miss Lois Ethel Knight, and Ellsworth Reed, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Reed. Mr. and Mrs. Reed are at home at 1122 West Twenty-ninth street. Garden Club to Meet Forest Hills Garden Club will hold a guest day program tomorrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. Thomas Jackson, 527 East Fiftyninth street. Miss Anna Hosea will read a paper on “The Poetry of the Garden.” Dean Bailey to Speak Dean Albert E. Bailey of Butler university, will give an illustrated lecture on Palestine Thfirsday night at the First United Lutheran church under sponsorship of the Martha Society. Church members and their friends are invited. Bridge Club to Meet Woman's Contract Club of Indianapolis will meet at 1:45 Thursday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Council Board to Meet May Wright Sewall Council of Women will hold a board meeting at 11 Thursday at the Washington.

Good News for

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medicine, is a member of Kappa Sigma and Phi Rho Sigma fraterSeveral parties are planned in Miss Adams' honor, the first to be given May 19 with Miss Margaret Smith entertaining with a miscelMiss Mildred Geshwiler will entertain at a later date with a personal shower and bridge party. MRS. YOUNG TO BE HOSTESS FOR CLUB Mrs. William T. Young, 5009 East Washington street, will be hostess for a 1 o'clock luncheon meeting of the Southern Club Auxiliary Friday. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. W. B. Browning and Mrs. Edgar Blown. The afternoon’s program will include a dramatic reading bv Mrs. G.?orge Nagle. n.Ti i ;i uxn BUTTER CRACKERS “The World’s Best” HEPW/IHb ' Get This Big: Value Red, White and Blue Package at Your Grovers

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MAY 1, 1934