Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 12, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1934 — Page 30

PAGE 30

Veterans to Be Aided by Poppy Sale Legion Auxiliary Will Be in Charge of Benefit ri Work. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Times Woman’s Page Editor IN APPEALING to her workers for poppy day tomorrow, Mrs. Chanes Parker of the auxiliary to Indianapolis post 4 of the American Legion reminds them of the origin of" the poppy as the memorial fiofrer of the legion. She tells th;m, too, what sale of the poppy

means to hundreds of disabled World war veterans. In fifty-eight g o v e rnmental hospitals and special rooms maintained by auxiliaries, unemployed and disabled soldiers make the paper poppies. Miss Moina Michael of Athens, Ga., was moved by John McCroe's poem,

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Miss Burgan

“We Shall Not Sleep,” in which pbppies are described as growing between rows of crosses in war cemeteries, Mrs. Parker recalls. Miss MSchael placed a poppy in her coat lapel; she purchased several more and distributed them among the workers at the legion headquarters where she was employed. At the national convention in Cleveland, 0., in 1920, the poppy became the legion’s memorial flower. Auxiliaries in the forty states where the poppies are made by veterans will sell the flowers tomorrom in an effort to add to the SIOO,000 already earned by their sale. i“Our poppy project not only earns money,” Mrs. Parker points out, “but it serves therapeutic purpose. Making of the poppies aids in the soldiers* rehabilitation by diverting their thoughts from their misfortunes.” Dozens of women will be stationed on downtown street corners tomorrow offering the crimson poppies to shoppers and workers whose donations will aid veterans still fighting the battle against physical and financial handicaps resulting from the war. Mrs. Arthur V. Brown was reelected president of the board of directors of the Indianapolis Propylaeum Club at a special board meeting yesterday. Other officers re-elected were Mrs. Edson T. Wood, treasurer, and Mrs. 'Oscar N. Torian, secretary. Mrs. William Ray Adams was named first vice-president and Mrs. Augustus Coburn, second vice-president. ■Mrs. Brown will announce her committee chairmen and members at a later date. ;Mrs. Warren K- Mannon received the Sally Coleman trophy for the highest accumulative score for the year at the concluding meeting of the Woman's Contract Club of Indianapolis last night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. William R. Cooper was holder of high score for the half year. • Winners in Section 1, north and south, were Captain and Mrs. Calais, first; Mrs. Frank Abbett and F. R. Buck, second; east and west, L. H. Brink, and John C. Turpin, first; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stempfel, second. ;Section 2, north and south. Mrs. Everett Daggett and Mrs. Wayne Warrick, first; Mrs. Mannon and Mrs. Walter E. Rogers, second; east ahd west. Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Morton, first; Mrs. H. W. Messick and Mrs. W. J. Reintzes, second. LUNCHEON GIVEN TO AID MUSEUM Eighty attended the luncheon yesterday at the Woodstock Club given by members of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale for the Children's Museum. ■ Mrs. John N. Carey was made an hbnorary life member of the Matiijee Musicale and Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown was made an honorary artists’ member. Mrs. Brown talked oh the museum at Bangkok, Siam.

I Examination Set ,The St. Mary's academy annual scholarship examination for eighth grade girl graduates of city parochial schools will be held at the afcademy at 9:15 tomorrow morning. Needlework exhibition will be open ty friends and patrons of the school tomorrow and Sunday afternoons. ; Chapter to Give Dance j Miss Lois Hudson is chairman of the annual spring dance to be held by Alpha Nu chapter. Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, tomorrow night at the Highland Golf and Country' Club. Miss Alice O'Donnell and Mrs. Ralph Shingle will assist. Pupil Program Set Pupils of Sister Antoinette Marie will present a fairy folk recital followed by a musical tea at 3:30 Sunday in the hall, 379 North Warman avenue. Eighteen pupils will present piano, violin and saxophone numbers. Club Luncheon Set Women's Municipal Garden’s Club will hold a covered dish luncheon Monday at the clubhouse with Mrs. Robert Shank, hostess, to be assisted by Mesdames George Kohlstadt, Emil Soufflot, C. E. Yarbrough, Charles Mazey, O. L. Shrader, R. J. Johnson and J. H. Prochaska. The program will include a play by members of Theta Taa Psi sorority. Richard Shaffer will present accordion solos. Fur Coats A Relined VV I L s7,so d Indiana Kur Cos. 2 East Ohl* Street Only 15c a Day Buys a New KELVINATOR Pearcnn PIANO co rCul dull 128 N. PENN.

Dancers at Butler Fete

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Left to Right—Misses Afton White, Margaret Koesters and Rosemary Byrket. An English May day is planned by Woman's League of Butler university for tomorrow on the campus. Miss Mary Stierwalt will be crowned as May queen. Miss Afton White and Miss Rosemary Byrket will take part in the milkmaid dance and Miss Margaret Koesters will be in the country dance.

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... Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me pattern No. 255. Size Name * Street City State

NEAT and simple, yet distinguished for its stylish lines. Percale, linen or seersucker are the recommended materials. It is designed for sizes 34 to 42. Size 38 requires three yards of 35-inch fabric plus % yard contrast and 2 yards of trimming. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.

PAST PRESIDENTS ORGANIZE GROUP

A Past Presidents’ Association to the auxiliary to Sons of Veterans was organized yesterday at the home of Mrs. Bessie B. Bowser, past national president. Mrs. Bowser was elected president; Mrs. Emma Stuart Finch, vice-president; Miss Dyke Beals, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs. Hazel B. Owens, publicity chairman. , Mrs. Margaret Anderson. Jamaica Plains. Mass., national president of the auxiliary, will be entertained by the Past Presidents Association on her way to the department encampment of Indiana and the G. A. R. to open in Muncie, June 16. Among others at the organization meeting were Mesdames Susie Thams, Claudia Erther. Lillian Ball, Martha Elson, Minnie OHair, Mary Heninger, Mildred Shinner and Mary Ellen Durbin.

Sororities

Miss Bertha Lammers will be hostess for a meeting of Phi Sigma Theta sorority Monday night. Misses Maurine Stump and Jane Wildey will provide the program. Miss Betty Wendel. 210 North Hamilton avenue, will entertain members of Kappa Gamma Alpha sorority at her home tonight. Plans for a sorority dance to be held June 2 will be completed. Juniors to Give Dance Misses Rose Boland, Frances Bretthauer, Betty Williams and Martina Keller are in charge of the dance to be given by juniors of St. John Academy at the Knights of Columbus hall from 9 to 12 tonight. Card Party Announced Newman Mothers’ Club of Butler university will sponsor a card party Monday at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium with Mrs. John G. Quinn, chairman. All games will be played. Ladies auxiliary to Fraternal Order of Eagles will sponsor a card party at 8 tomorrow night at the I temple. 43 West Vermont street. Mrs. Clara O'Keefe and Mrs. Edith Amick will be in charge. Reunion of the old Columbia Avenue M. E. church will be held Sunday at Forest Park, Noblesville. Members will meet at 2708 Cornell avenue.

, Violinist to Appear Donn Watson will present Violet Albers, violinist, assisted by Ramona Wilson, pianist, in a recital at 8:15 Monday night in the auditorium of the Central Avenue M. E. church.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Miss Jose Honored at Club Today Two Other Brides-Elect to Be Feted Tonight and Tomorrow. Miss Catherine Frances Jose, Miss Elizabeth Hurd and Miss Isabelle Early are among the brides-elect being feted by Indianapolis hostesses. Mrs. Allan Shimer entertained today at the Woodstock Club with a luncheon-bridge in honor of Miss Jose, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Jose Sr., whose marriage to Canning Rogers Childs, Pittsburgh, Pa., will take place Thursday. Pink and white appointments were used on the luncheon tables. Guests with Miss Jose and her mother were Mesdames James Miller, James Shimer, W. C. Harrison, George S. Dailey, Horace O. Wright Jr., Myron McGeehan, Oscar Jose Jr., Fletcher Hodges Jr., Howard Hartman, and Clarence Morgan, Terre Haute. Couple to Be Feted Miss Hurd and Robert McMurray, whose mai’riage will take place June 2, will be honored at dinner tomorrow night to be given by ' Mr. and Mrs. Arthur O. Pittenger at the Columbia Club. Guests with Mr. McMurray and his fiancee will be Miss Jeannette Harris, James Lohr, Lieutenant and Mrs. Robert Parker Hollis, and Messrs, and Mesdames Louis Cooper Wilson, Hugh Carpenter, Paul D. Moffett, Russell McDermott and Edwin Hurd. A linen shower and bridge shower to be given tonight by Miss Anita Brownlee at her home, 545 North Jefferson street, will honor Miss Early whose engagement to Dr. Henry M. Schmidt has been announced. Guests Listed Guests will include Mrs. B. E. Early, mother of the bride-elect; Mrs. James Cook, grandmother of the bride-elect; Mr,'. T. W. Schmidt, mother of the bridegroom-elect, and Mesdames Robert B. Berner, Frank Miller, Henry Talbott, Harold Davidson and Clifford Walters, Greenfield, and Misses Josephine Ready, Maxine Scherrer, Lois Young, Annabelle Swager, Maxine Quinn, Mary Catherine Campbell, Mary Carriger, Louese Headrick, Maxine Foltzenlogel and Dorothy Duesenberg. Mrs. Harry M. Brownlee will assist her daughter. Appointments for the party will be in blue, yellow and white.

PRE-RACE DANCE TO BE GIVEN AT CLUB

Three hundred reservations have been made for the pre-race dance of the Indianapolis Athletic Club to be held Tuesday night at the clubhouse. Supper will be served members and their guests. Music will be provided by Paul Ash and his orchestra. Hosts and hostesses will be Messrs, and Mesdames P. O. Ferrell, J. A. Brower, John Rau, D. D. Cutricht, Ralph Knode, E. E. Whitehall, Sam Allen, Harry Herff George Hilgemier. E. W. Berger, Leroy Sanders, A. M. Hood, W. B. Williams, Mark Warrender, Otto Eisenlohr, A. E. Baker, A. V* Grossman, Blodgett Brennan. Russell Williams, Dr. and Mrs. Paul Kernel and Messrs. Frederick Matson Jr., James Watson, Edward Harter, Charles Rauh, J. F. Lindley, E. Waldo Stein and Tom Mahaffey. Qualifying round in play for the Indianapolis pair contract championship, sponsored by the United States Bridge Association, will be held at 7:45 tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Play will continue tomorrow night. Players who qualify will play in the finals June 8 and 9 at the club. Mrs. Grace C. Buschmann is in charge. Gives Surprise Party Mrs. J. L. Valentine entertained with a surprise tea and shower for Mrs. Godfrey D. Yaeger this afternoon at her home, 3934 Central avenue.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

If you can’t think out your problem alone, ask Jane Jordan to help you! Put your troubles in a letter today and read your answer in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—When I was very young I fell in love with a nice boy and we expected to be married. Mother didn’t like him very much and wouldn’t let him see me at home. Two years later he was mar-

ried when I met him again, and his wife was in the hospital with anew baby that was not his own. I willingly did the first bad thing I ever did. In a little while I found I was to be a mother. Just five weeks from the day I met him I married

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Jane Jordan

a man I hated, without telling him. A lovely little boy came to me. He is the sweetest boy who ever lived, and all the excuse I have is. that I loved his father. My husband never knew until about a year ago when I got mad at him and told him. He won’t work, and I have to make a living. He is very jealous of even a friend. That one thing is the only wrong thing I ever did, but he thinks I do wrong every time I am out of his sight. I wouldn’t have told him except that he threatened to take the little boy and leave. I went crazy, I guess, and told him the child was mine and not his. He has hated the poor child ever since. He won’t even let him sit on his lap or play with him. He swears at him until I am nearly crazy. He can’t be kind and never could. I want to do right no matter what it takes. I would die for my child and I love his father, only I never see him any more. I never told my husband who the father was and I never will. Please help me. NUMBER 85. Answer —Whatever you do must be done for the good of the little boy and not yourself. If you were a child would you like to live with a man who hated you? A harsh, unreasonable father, or father substitute, is always an influence for evil in a child's life. He is worse than a disease, and wherever it is possible to live without him, he should be cast out of the house without mercy. It is too late to rebuke you for the tangle you have made of your life. In your frantic efforts to deliver your child in matrimony you only made matters worse, for a mean father is worse than no father at all. It would have been much better not to jeopardize the child’s welfare by telling the truth until you were prepared to leave your husband’s house. The man has a right to resent your deception, but no right to abuse the child who is innocent. Your reason for hanging on to him puzzles me. You are self-support-ing and not dependent on him for bread and butter. He is not the father of your child and contributes nothing to the household. He is a liability and not an Why do you live with him? Dear Jane Jordan —I am 22 and have loads of friends. I hate to hurt people and am very sympathetic. I am engaged to a nice fellow twelve years older than I am. Before I met him I was interested in another young man. Recently he came to see me again and that has re-awakened my love for him. He is my ideal, has everything, wants everything I had hoped and prayed for. But

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my folks object to him. The reason. they will not tell. The one I am engaged to has a heart of gold and worships me. We have broken np twice, but I called him back because I had hurt him, never thinking of the hurt I am causing myself. I just can’t get around to telling him that I don’t love him enough to be his wife. If my folks know that I love the other one dearly, is it possible for them to change towards him? What advice can you give me? SMILES. Answer—The best advice that any one can give you is not to marry any one whom you do not love. No matter how much you hurt him now, it will not be as bad as hurting him after you were married, and that you would most certainly do. I do not know what to tell you about the other boy. I think your family ought to tell you exactly what their objections are and not expect you to heed an unreasonable prohibition. After all, you are the one who has to live with him and not your family. If they expect you to respect their judgment, they must be rational.

Betrothal Fete of Miss Williams Set for Tonight Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Mullins will entertain tonight at their home in Greencastle to announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Imogene Mullins, Indianapolis, and John A. Reddel. Miss Mullins is a graduate of De Pauw university and a member of Phi Omega Pi and Delta Theta Tau sororities. The marriage will take place June 30 in Greencastle. Mrs. Lois J. Arnold, sister of the bride-elect, will be matron of honor and J. Walter Reddel, Burley, Neb., will be best man. Among the Indianapolis guests to attend the party tonight will be Messrs, and Mesdames Edward W. Lollis, Don L. Coy, Ermal Brown Hedden and Edward J. Hecker Jr., and Misses Elsie Wiley, Grace Holloway, L. D. Warren and Roy Sandy.

HUNT MEMBERS WILL ATTEND BREAKFAST

Members of the Traders Point Hunt and their guests will attend the annual breakfast party of the hunt to be held Sunday at the Indianapolis Country Club. Several will ride to the club from the hunt kennels at 10:30. Mrs. Cornelius O. Alig, Mrs. Bowman Elder and Mrs. Russell Fortune are in charge of the program. PROGRAM WILL BE GIVEN BY STUDENTS Louise Schellschmidt Koehne v’ill present a group of harp students at 3 tomorrow afternoon in the Sunday school room of the Unitarian church. Taking part will be Martha Burns, Dorothy Carey, Joan Eberhardt, Elinor Frenzel, Reva O’Hair and Margaret Spencer. Nancy Hurt, pupil of Pauline Schellschmidt, w’ill play several piano numbers. Inspection Scheduled Mrs. Marie Leonard, grand guardian of Job's Daughters in Indiana, will hold her first official inspection of Bethel 1 at 2 tomorrow afternoon and install anew Bethel council. A covered dish supper will conclude the program.

Women Learn of Thrift in Electric Refrigeration at Show Times Sponsors Various Makes on Display Afford Wealth of Features; Sizes Suited to All Homes Are Available. BY HELEN LINDSAY IT’S just as difficult to choose from one of the many makes of electric refrigerators as it is to make a selection of an afternoon dress from the collections offered by one of the well known designers. Hundrds of Indianapolis women, visiting The Times refrigerator show at 1525 North Meridian street, Wednesday, yesterday and today, reached that conclusion. For every refrigerator presented in the show has some particular features which make it individual. One thing was convincing, however, to these women visitors. Following statistics compiled by The Times, they learned that it is possible to save $8.22 a month by using one _________________ of the new electric refrigerators.

The survey covered 155 homes in Indianapolis, where refrigerators had been installed during the past year. Through lower cost in electrical consumption, ability to take advantage of special food sales, and decreases in food spoilage, the saving has been accomplished in these homes. Ellen Beard, formerly Patricia Cook, demonstrated to visitors frozen salads and desserts which could be made easily in the refrigerators. Foods prepared in the show were served to guests each day. Entertainment was given by juvenile pupils of Mrs. Louise Pursell Schilling. Each refrigerator displayed at the show has outstanding features. Women learned that the Grunow is the only refrigerator at the present time in which earrene, liquid used in large air conditioning equipment, is employed successfully. They w’ere shown the advantages of the sealed monitor top of the General Elec-

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Mrs. Lindsay

trie, which makes it possible for this refrigerator to carry a five-year guarantee. Approximately $6,000,000 was spent in perfecting the unit on this refrigerator. nun nun Shelf Convenience Stressed THREE new compartments have been added to the Crosley Shelvador, giving added storage space. One is the shelvabascket, at the oottom of the door of the refrigerator, in which foods may be kept which do not need refrigeration. Another is a storage bin for vegetables under the refrigerator, and the other is a hinged tray, which is placed at the top of the refrigerator door as an aid in removing quantities of articles from the refrigerator at one time. The number of different models offered by the manufacturers of Frigidaire assures one suitable to the needs of any size home. Coldspot, the refrigerator presented by Sears, Roebuck & Cos., is equipped with a single valve control, which has been accepted by leading engineers as one of the outstanding achievements in electric refrigeration. This refrigerator also presents an individual feature in the removable section of the bottom shelf, which gives more space for tall articles when it is needed. The Norge refrigerator, equipped with a rollator unit, presents laboratory tests which prove that the refrigerator will last in the average home for a period of twenty-nine years. Tests have been made in a ’‘marathon’' refrigerator in the Norge factories, which has run continuously since 1926, with the exception of one day each year. On this day the mechanism of the refrigerator is stopped, taken apart, examined, reassembled and started on its time-test again. n n n nun Blue Color Combats Flies FLIES shun anything blue. Proof of this has been made by the research department of a British metal box manufacturing company, although scientists are unable to explain it. Following the production in a number of colors of domestic utensils and food containers, such as meat safes and tins for sugar and tea, the investigators discovered that flies disliked blue. Accordingly, the widest range of domestic utensils and containers sold empty now on the market is produced in various shades of blue.

HOME PROPOSED FOR CLUB UNION Mrs. Fred D. Stilz was named chairman of the newly authorized clubhouse committee to plan a permanent home for the Irvington Union of Clubs at the eighth annual meeting of the union Wednesday. Mrs. Walter Montgomery, Mrs.

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_MAY 25, 1934

Edgar Rennoe and Mrs. J. E. Louden were announced as cochairmen of the study courses for women, to be resumed in the fall. A portrait of the union’s founder, Mrs. Elijah Jordan, painted by Simon P. Baus, was unveiled by Miss Katherine Laymen. Reports were given by standing committees. More than one hundred attended the meeting.