Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 311, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1934 — Page 4
PAGE 4
Entries Set New Horse Show Mark Ft. Harrison Event Will Be Held Saturday; Dance to Follow. BY BEATRICE BURGAN. Timet Waratn't P*e Editor entry list is larger than V_J ever before” was the answer Major J. K. Boles gave us when we called him at Ft. Benjamin Harrison yesterday to check on the third annual fort horse show to be held Saturday. Major Boles's precise accents came crisply through the
phone, “Yes, Betty, my daughter, is making her show debut in this year's event. We’re going out for a ride this afternoon.” Sixteen - yearold Betty has learned many equestrian points from her father, who has ridden horseback in many shows and on
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Miss Burgan
his big game hunts in foreign lands. ■'The saddle horse roundup sponsored last fall by the Indiana Saddle Horse Association undoubtedly has stirred up wider interest in horseback riding,” Major Boles continued. “We’re giving it credit for the increased interest in our shows.” Several other youthful riders will appear in classes planned for them. Jo Ann Rice, who won second place in the junior class in every division of the children's riding tournament at Robert H. Brown s Riding Stable, will make her show debut in the class for children under 13. Jo Ann will ride Saucy Susie. In the same class will be Joe Miller and Letitia Sinclair, riding The Politician, who has been defeated only by the famous pony, Irene Castle. In a similar class for children over 13 will be Betty Boles. Lucina Hamilton and Dorothy Metzger, who also will ride Patricia Dare in a women's saddle horse class. Cynthia Test will ride Mitzi in this class, and her mother, Mrs. Don Test,, will ride Nugget o’ Gold. Other Indianapolis entries in this class include Mesdames A. L. Piel, L. V. Hamilton, Clayton Mogg, Frank Hoke and Miss Marcella Lahr. John and Shirley Williams will be up on Heather and Henry in a road hack class, in which Betty Boles has entered. She and Ruth Tyndall, daughter of General and Mrs. Robert H. Tyndall, will be riders in a novice saddle class. Miss Ayres to Compete Miss Anne Ayres will be among the few women in the hunter and jumping classes. She will ride her own hunter, Amazon, in a novice hunter, women's jumping and hunter classes. Betty will ride again in the ladies’ jumping class, also to include Jane Saxon on G. N. Williams' Baron Munchausen: Miss Martha Wheeler on Fred Sharp's Big Canada and Lucy Link on O. N. Frenzels Jr. Up. Other Indianaoplis riders entered in the hunter and jumping classes are Max and Chester Bonham. Nathan Davis. Gyles Anderson. Thomas Ruckelshaus and S. B. Sutphin, who will seek laurels against army competition in polo bending, a polo ponystake and a stick and ball' race. Mr. Rfuckelshaus and Mr. Sutphin will enter the show with outstanding records in Rolling Ridge Polo Club competition. Enter Five-Gaited Event Mrs. Alex Metzger will ride J. R. McNutt’s King Remus in the fivegaited saddle horse class. Miss Audrey Pugh. Miss Janet Baumann. R. H. Brown will be oustanding entries in the five-gaited saddle horse class. From 9 In the morning until 3:50 in the afternoon there will be continuous competition, with the exception of a one-hour lunch period. The army band will play as hundreds gather to witness the show. The day will close with an informal dance at the Officers’ Club for show participants and their guests.
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Became Brides in Spring Weddings
E WRi WOLTCR, BP.feHOB ■ tt *• & phe+o bq brs-tzmon ' Rt It ■ \ \\r*RS <,f PROS wem,'!" MRS. KURT MOROtNSTtRN ~ ::i£—pho-to plott studio izz:. -photo —:: ±z I
'T'HE marriage of Miss Francis Gross and George McHugh took place Saturday, April 28, at the Assumption Catholic church. The bride is a daughter of Mrs. Laura E. Gross, South Bend. Mrs. Walter Brehob, before her marriage April 25,
Manners and Morals
If von are fared wilh an important decision, write to Jane Jordan for more liirht on your problem. Advice from other readers with similar problems is invited. Dear Jane Jordan I am 18 years old and a freshman in college. My father was let out of his job this year and his income will be cut so much next winter that he can not pay for my schooling.
However, m y mother left me a little under $4,000 and I want to use it to go away to college and learn to be somebody. My father has a friend who is fifteen years older than I am, and he wishes to marry me. My father wants
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Jar.s Jar.lan
me to do it, too. I like the man pretty much. I know he is a successful business man who can give me a good home, and he is probably a better chance than I'll ever get again. But you see I want to go to college. and I don’t want to marry anybody just yet. I can’t make them see that. They think I want to be obstinate, or anyway my father does. The man thinks I am crazy about a boy I go with who plays tennis with me and takes me to college dances. He is nice, and I like him. I wish I could beat him at tennis, but I wouldn't marry him for anything. Besides, he’s only a boy, and being with my father and his friends so much has made me like older men best, I guess. My father says I can do as I wish, but he thinks I will be foolish if I don’t marry his friend, and he lets me see it. Would I be foolish if I spent all my money going away to college and lost John, my father's friend, entirely? My father says no man is going to wait three years for a silly little girl to grow up and know what's good and lucky for her. My father and I have always been awfully good friends and it seems so odd to be at outs with him. I don't like it. And I do like John, but don't you think you have to like a man more than the ordinary amount if you want to marry him?
BY JANE JORDAN
| My father says I must think it j out for myself during this vacation, and I have tried, but all I can think of so far is that I want to go to Wellesley or Radcliffe, where I know it is expensive, but it certainly sounds nice to read about in the catalogues. Maybe I’m just silly, like my father says. What would you do? PUZZLED PATRICIA. Answer —No one can make your decision for you. I should hate to have a daughter of mine marry a man for whom she feels .so little ; enthusiasm. At 18 you do have to like a man more than the ordinary amount to make a successful marj riage. The marriage of convenience | succeeds best when it solves a 1 pressing problem for both parties, and when there is no other attractive alternate. But where one of the two puts aside a major desire in order to do the convenient thing, the marriage starts under a handicap which it seldom survives. If you marry for economic security without being deeply in love, you are apt to feel cheated, and your frustrated desires for romance, 1 for adequate education and for a period of freedom will cause you trouble later on. Subconsciously you will blame your husband for taking advantage of your situation and your secret resentment will vent itself in countless ways, big and little. I do not think it foolish for you to spend the money your mother left on an education, provided it equips you to earn your own living. If you are independent, you can afford to take your time about choosing a husband. The money that you have will not see you through either of the two colleges which you mention unless you are earning something as you go along. If you have a good level head, you will get out pencil and paper and do .some scheming to make your capital last until you are ready to take a job. Your father is right in placing the responsibility for the decision on you. If it tvere not for his economic fears, and his attachment for his friend, he would not be so optimistic about the wedding of 18 to 33. Apparently he does not realize that there is much more to fear in an unequal marriage where a young girl eats her heart out for the things, real or fancied, which she has missed. As long as you are emotionally attached to your father, you will find it difficult to make a wise love choice. Perhaps a period away at school would teach you some of the independence which you need to get through life successfully. ts tt Dear Jane Jordan—l date a fellow who has been going steady for two years with another girl with whom I know h§ is intimate. Now I am a decent girl and he respects and admires me for it. What I want to know is which do men prefer for wives? Let us have some letters from men on this subject, if you don't mind. DOES IT PAY. Answer—This question has been put up to our men readers before, and we get as many varieties of answers as there are varieties of personalties.. The average man will I .insist that he wants chastity in his
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, was Miss Marie Losche, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Losche, 3411 Madison avenue. Mrs. Kurt Morgenstern was Miss Marie Fitzwater. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Fitzwater, be--1 fore her recent marriage. Mr. and Mrs. MorgenI stern are at home at 1020 West Thirty-fourth street.
Two Groups to Be Honored at Sorority Event Patronesses and new members of Sigma Theta Tau, scholarship society of nursing, will be honored at a banquet tomorrow at the Athenaeum. Patronesses include Mesdames W. W. Thornton. W. D. Gatch, J. W. Fesler, U. H. Smith, R. W. Clark, J. W. Carmack, J. O. Ritchey, W. H. Coleman, J. K. Lilly, C. P. Emerson and Matthew Winters. Initiates are Misses Marjory Guthery, Catherine Parks, Joy Wright, Monette Springer, Wilma Smith and Lavon Hite. Miss Velda Barnhart is president of the active chapter and Mesdames C. Severin Buschmann. John Drake, Carl Lugenbill and Miss Margaret Bruce, chairmen of the banquet. BUSINESS WOMEN TO HOLD ELECTION Officers to serve next year will be elected by the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’s Club tomorrow night at the annual meeting at the Woman's Department club. Chairmen will present reports. and Taylor Gronninger and C. V. Sorenson will speak on “Municipal Ownership of Utilities” at a dinner-meeting at 6:15. Miss Louise R. Ford will preside. Besides officers three board members will be elected for threeyear terms, and a director 'Will be chosen to fill the unexpired term of the late Miss Merica Hoagland.
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Miss Elaine Oberholtwjr Miss Elaine Oberholtzer is a member of a committee arrangeing a Kappa Alpha Theta pledge dance, to be held Friday night at the Highland Golf and Country Club. Miss Kathleen Rigsbee is general chairman and Misses Betty Frazier and Barbara Jean Holt, members of the committee.
wife, even though his behavior leads one to the opposite conclusion. I shall be glad to publish any letters that deal with the question in a thoughtful way. a a a Dear Jane Jordan —I am 18 years old and have been going with a fellow steady for two years. He says that he loves me. but here is the way he does. All the time that we have gone together up until I have stayed at home. Now I am only home on the weekends. It seemed great to come home and have him waiting for me. but he got so he wouldn’t com?. I left him alone and started going with others, thinking he would come back. I never saw him for about two months. Then I called him up and asked him to come and see me that week-end. He came. We had a long talk. He said he was glad to see me but he wouldn't say anything about going back together again. That hurt me; so I asked him what he intended to do. He said that I was doing all right and enjoying myself; so what was the difference? He thinks I am, but I am not. I only go out to forget him. He says that he still loves me, but if he did would he do like that? WORRIED. Answer—He might, but I doubt it. Men usually go after what they want without being coaxed. If the chase is taken up again you would do well to let him take the in-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
DANCE AID
Aid Society Elects and Sets Party l Mrs. Ruckelshaus Heads Christamore Group for New Term Christamore Aid Society yesterday elected Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus president at a meeting at the home of Mrs. Russell Fortune on j Michigan road. The group will hold a luncheon June 5 at the Woodstock Club, concluding the season's activities. Others elected were Mrs. Erwin Vonnegut, vice-president: Mrs. R. Kirby Whyte, secretary, and Mrs. Ernest Baltzell, treasurer. At a tea following, Mrs. Fortune was assisted by Mrs. Earl B. Barnes, Mrs. W. I. Longsworth, Mrs. William Griffith and Miss Marjorie Kittle. CHURCH GROUP TO ATTEND LUNCHEON Mrs. Carl Keyler will be chairman of a luncheon to be held tomorrow at the Foodcraft shop by the Willing Workers of St. John’s Evangelical church. The luncheon will be followed by "Le Petit Revue,” staged by Miss Alberta Speicher and Miss Josephine Mangold, with the following cast: Misses Rosemary Keyler, Betty Limp, Anne McCoy, Betty Jo Meeker, Cecilia Mootz, Rose Douglass. Mary Ankenbrock, Virginia Rose Perry and Ray Barnes. Music will be provided by Rosemary Commons and Georgia Douglass. 1 1 ' 1 M ' " ~' CLUB WILL MEET ' WITH MRS . TAYLOR Mrs. F. T. Taylor, 2414 Station street, will entertain members of the Friday Afternoon Literary Club at her home at the weekly meeting. Mesdames H. O. Rettig, E. F. Brown and R. J. Kemper will assist at the meeting. The club’s activities for the year will be concluded with a pilgrimage Friday, June 15, to Foster hall. Mrs. W. G. Stevens, Mrs. E. F. Sunderman and Miss Alvira Clark are members of the transportation committee. CLUB DISCUSSION MEETING SLATED Mothers’ Club of the Clifton Kindergarten of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten will meet at 2 tomorrow for a discussion on “Guidance Toward Emotional Stability.” Speakers will be Mesdames Harvey Talbot, Norman Wise and Forest Lytle. Mesdames Emmett Alexander, Worley Hensley, Carl Henry and Conard Rogenbeck will be hostesses. GUILD BOARD WILL ATTEND LUNCHEON Mrs. Rudolph H. Aufderheide will entertain directors of the St. Vincent’s Hospital Guild at luncheon tomorrow at the Propylaeum Club.
Card Parties
Mineola Council will hold a card party at 8 tonight at 1609 Prospect street. All games will be played. Marion county S. B. A., will hold a card and bunco party at 8:30 tonight at the hall, 116 East Maryland street. Hcosier auxiliary. V. of P. W„ will hold a card party at 8:30 tonight in the hall 143 East Ohio street, with Mrs. R. R. Cook, chairman. Social Club of St. Patrick church will hold card parties at 8:15 tonight and 2:15 Friday afternoon in the school hall with Mrs. Charles Pfarr. chairman. Relief Committee. Gold Mound Council, D. of P., will hold a covered dish luncheon and card party tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Shartel, 4209 Schofield avenue. Third annual benefit card party will be held by St. Anthony Sewing Circle at 2:30 and 8 tomorrow at the parish hall, 369 North Warman avenue. Supper wil be served from 5 to 7. Mrs. John Collins is chairman. Division 7, L. A., A. A. H., will hold a lotto, bunco and euchre party at 7:30 tomorrow night at the Washington. Three Will Entertain Mrs. Q. G. Noblitt will be honored at a luncheon tomorrow at the Highland Golf and Country Club with Mrs. Norman H. Gilman, Mrs. Howard J. Lacey and Mrs. A. E. Early, entertaining. Mrs. Noblitt will leave soon with Mr. Noblitt and their daughters to take up residence in Columbus.
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A Woman’s Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
npHE book shop proprietor, who recommended to me Ray W. Sherman's "If You Want to Get Ahead” (Little. Biowni, offered the suggestion that it was a book women should buy for their husbands. "It's crammed with practical ideas.” he said, "which can help men to improve whatever they may be doing. Women see when their men are falling into a rut and beginning to stagnate. They could offer this book tactfully and I'm convinced they would get good results.” You will notice his use of the word “tactfully.” According to the accepted idea, a good wife is always a "yes-woman.” She never tells her husband the straight truth. With feminine finesse she must never startle him by comipg directly to any given conversational point. Mr. Sherman's little book, though quaintly reminiscent of a Coolidge column, has a splendid chapter on “Woman’s Part m Man’s Success” which brides might profit by reading. But more women might be a help instead of a hindrance if they began their married life by speaking the truth occasionally. A grownup man, having passed the period of childhood and adolescence, should be able, now and then, to stand some straight talk from the woman who loves and lives with him. It’s a mistake to believe the male animal, merely because he is married, should feed perpetually upon the soft taffy of coos and compliments. Such edibles invariably impair and ruin the digestion and can reduce the strongest individual to a state which makes him incapable of coping with an inimical world. I feel sincerely that a part of the worry, fear and misery we have been enduring for some years has been created by the stubbornness and egoism of the masculine mind. And that, stubbornness and egoism ain fostered and augmented constantly by women who have been told they must soothe, flatter, applaud and eulogize the men of their households. Come spring, children need sulphur and molasses. And husbands need some honest comments which will act as emetics to costive minds. A good stiff dose of the truth, once or twice a year, does no man any harm. BETROTHED COUPLE WILL BE HONORED Mr. and Mrs.. H. C. Fledderjohn Sr. will entertain the young people’s class of the Sutherland Presbyterian church tomorrow night in honor of Miss Virginia Louise Saalmiller and Riley Bartel Fledderjohn, whose engagement has been announced. Mrs. Fledderjohn will be assisted by Mesdames H. B. Saalmiller. Herman Kent,, William Kopp and Delbert Saunders. MOTHERS' CLUB TO ENTERTAIN GUESTS Brightwood Mothers’ Club of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society will meet at 2:15 tomorrow with members of the Mothers’ Club of the Oak Hill kindergarten as guests. The Rev. F. T. Taylor will talk on “Learning by Doing” and Barbara Meade, Betty Jean Fraundorfer and John Paul Jones, all pupils of Mrs. Helen Morton, will give readings.
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Unique City Magazine and Newspaper Business Wins Firm Place in First Year Service Ideas of K. A. Walsh and Manager, A. Schwartz, Prove Successful in Indiana Theater Stand. BY HELEN LINDSAY K. A. WALSH and A. Schwartz, owner and manager of the Indiana Theater News and Magazine Stand, take a bow. On Monday their unique business celebrated its first birthday, and a check showed instead of an expected loss during the first year, a profit. More than 1.000 different magazines and 300 different newspapers from all parts of the world are shown in the shop. Many of them can not be obtained elsewhere in Indianapolis. So rapidly has the business increased during its year of service to readers of Indianapolis that new shelves have been added, with spotlights trained on them, to show they: covers clearly for the convenience of customers. Mr. Walsh and Mr. Schwartz have definite ideas about serving their public, and they have clung to them. They have grouped magazines to-
.gether in classifications, displaying them plainly, so the customer can make his own selection. No one magazine has precedence over any other, according to their records. Some persons want one j kind of reading matter, and others want something different. But movie and radio magazines seem to lead, Dealing with newspapers and magazines has made Messrs. Walsh and Schwartz recognize the value of keeping up with timely and current topics of the day. So. when a convention is scheduled to n eet in InI diar.apolis, the persons attending will find on prominent display at the news stand publications concerning their ! particular interests. (Three weeks before the Kentucky Derby subscriptions were taken at the news stand for the souvenir ‘•edition of the Louisville Courier-Journal, giving full details of the race.
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Mrs. Lindsay.
Preceding the Indianapolis Speedway Race, the shop displays publications of interest to race drivers and spectators. Last year foreign drivers entered in the 500-mile race bought their native newspapers at the stand during their stay in Indianapolis. nun ts n a Mother's Day Cards ami Stamps Offered IN addition to newspapers and magazines, books and greeting cards are shown. This year there is an unusually large selection of Mother's day cards displayed, and the special Mother's day stamps, issued for the first time by the postoffiee department, are on sale. Among the new books scheduled to appear this week at the stand is “The Life of Our Lord,” Charles Dickens’ book on the Bible, written for his children. The book was published in The Times and has been placed in'stock because of requests of The Times readers who wish to add the book to their Dickens’ libraries. m tt tt tt tt tt Costumes in Film Follow Acceptedl Trend THE fashions of the Directoire and Empire periods, seen in “The House of Rothschild,” the motion picture which will close at the Palace today, are particularly suited to styles for women as accepted for this season. They are seen in the creations of many of the famous designers, such as Patou, Mainbocher, Lelong and Augustabernard, Loretta Young, who is seen in the picture in eleven beautiful costumes of these periods, is particularly suited to them. In the final scene of the play, a spectacular view of the royal court of England in a celebration of Wellington’s victory over Napoleon, there is a complete picture of fashions of that time. They show transparent >'kirts, high waists, low bodices, all of which are prophesied for a revival in current fashions by many of the leading style experts.
English Numbers Will Close Music Week Observance
English music will be featured on the morning program of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale at 10:30 Friday morning in Ayres auditorium. The program has been arranged by Mrs. Wendell P. Coler as a closing event in observance of music week and the year’s activities for the Indianapolis Musicale. A short business meeting will precede the program and officers will be elected. Guests will attend. Regular series of twilight musicales will be held Sunday afternoon at the John Herron Atr Institute with members of the musicale giving excerpts from Massenet’s opera, "Manon.”
MAY 9, 1934
The morning musical program will be as follows: Instrumental Trio—“ Petite Suite”.... St. Geore* Miniatures —“Valse Russe,” and “Horn Pipe” Prank Bride# Mrs. Christine Wagner Roush, violin; Miss Marcena Campbell, Cello; Mrs. Frances Rybolt. piano. Voice—“ Summer Is I-Cumpn In.” “Should He Upbraid,” “Have You Been But a Whyte Lillie Grow,” “A Piper,” and “The Little Fairy Hong. Mis. Earl B. Barnes, soprano: Mr*. Loui ;e Mason Caldwell, accompanist. Piano—“ The Kings Hunting Jig.” “Govotte and Slow Ayre.” “Valse Caprice,” and “A Marionette Show.” , Mrs. Bertha Haines Matthews. Voice Ensemble —“The Lass With a Delicate Air.” and “The Country Garden.” Mu Phi Epsilon Patroness Club ensemble.
