Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 26, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

‘Catch Your Dinner’ to Be Advised Unusual Event Arranged for Saturday at Athletic Club. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Times Woman’s Page Editor “'T'HROW out your line and catch your pick” will be the advice offered by the Indianapolis Athletic Club at its “catch your own fish fry” dinner Saturday night around the swimming pool. “There will be no excuse for doleful fish stories,” promise the committee, ‘for there will be a fish for every one.” Veteran

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anglers who have their own pet rods and artificial bait may bring them along. But for the less exp e r i e need fish e r m an. the club will provide tackle. For the diners who aren’t lured by the sport, swimmers of the

Miss Burgan

club will act as retrievers and dive into the pool in pursuit of a fish or lobster pointed out to them. Members whose luck fails with a pole in hand, may join the retrievers and enter the chase. The party was Dick Papenguth’s idea. Such parties are held frequently at coast clubs in the west where live fish from fresh waters are transported easily to the indoor pools. Transportation of fish to the athletic club won’t be so simple; they will arrive in tanks after a several hundred miles’ trip. Fishing will begin at 7. Hosts and hostesses will be Messrs, and Mesdames Oscar Jose Jr., John Shirley, Paul Gelman, Robert Frost Daggett, E. M. Sellers, Clemons Mueller, Manning Norland, Caleb York, Alan Boyd, John Koehler, Charles Brossman, William Walker, R. H. Orbison, Harry E. Scott, John Rau, A. M. Hood, T. Lorin Driscoll, E. L. Woodburn, Wayne Coy, C. B. Sommers, E. S. Retter, J. W. Stickney, G. B. Supple, Ralph Reahard and Messrs. Will Hayes Jr„ Larry'Winegerter, Ted Nicholas, John Parry, R. S. Daily, Philip Sexton, Mick Duffecy, L. L. Dickerson, W. H. Bertermann, O. J. Strayer and L. G. Foster. Mondays for the rest of the summer will be comfortable days for women members of the club. Next week the first swimming, bridge and luncheon parties will be held. Members may begin swimming as early as 8 in the morning. After the dip, bridge begins at 9:30, and luncheon will be served around the pool at noon. Mrs. E. A. Funk and Mrs. H. W. Gante will come from Anderson to serve on the committee for the first party. Other committee members will be Mesdames Joseph Brower, R. C. Fox, E. W. Berger, Floyd Fisher, Robert Zaiser, Elmer Holtgren, A. R. Jones, W. H. Jarrett, E. E. Gates, Marvin Hamilton, F. R. Beck, Herbert S. King, Blodgett Brennan and Vernon Ascher; Misses Frances Lemaux and Betty Wallerich. Betrothal Announced Mrs. John Grande anounces the engagement of her daughter, Miss Clara Grande, to Alfred Aulback, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Aulback, Brookville. The wedding will take place June 27 at St. Anthony’s church. Erustings Honored Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ernsting attended a dinner and dance last night at Whispering Winds as guests of Upsilon chapter, sigma Phi Gamma sorority, of which Mrs. Ernsting is a member. Mr. and Mrs. Ernesting will leave this week to make their home in Williamsburg, Ky. Cardui Relieves Periodic Pains and Nervousness Women who suffer severe pain and nervousness periodically due to poor nourishment as often shown by a rundown condition, may find Cardui as helpful as so many women have reported. Here is what Mrs. Carl Graf, of Georgetown, Fla., writes; “Cardui has been very beneficial to me—having used it as a young girl and since when in a run-down condition. I can testify to its relieving pain during periods and as a tonic for women.” . . Thousands of women testify Cardui benefited them. If it does not benefit YOU, consult a physician.—Advertisement.

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Manners and Morals

If you find it easier to tell your troubles to a stranger, write to Jane Jordan. Read her sympathetic counsel in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l have been married for fifteen years to a man w y ho is as kind and good as he can be. Five years ago he almost broke my heart and destroyed all my illusions about him by getting into trouble with a girl. She accused him of being the father of her child, which he denied. I was going to leave him then, but he begged so hard for leniency that I stayed for the sake of our children. He promised faithfully that it would never happen again. This summer he went on a wild party and drank too mqch and the same scene was enacted again with another girl. Os course I found out about it, but he threatened to destroy himself if I left. He is just the high strung type who would do it. I am staying on but I feel that I can never be happy again. If only I had some work to take up my mind! I could leave and go to my father, who lives alone, but I wonder if I would be more unhappy than I am here at home. My husband is good looking and is a good provider. He is a wonderful man except for this one thing. What do you say? BETRAYED. Answer—Theologically adultery is obnoxious. But biologically there is no reason why married people who still have strong desires toward each

other should not experience strong desires elsewhere from time to time. Disciplined people learn to repress certain needs of the personality in order to protect other needs which are more important. But some, like children, cry

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Jane Jordan

for the gratification of every passing wish. A sexual episode outside of marriage may mean a great deal, or it may mean nothing. In your husband’s case, I believe it means nothing. For the most part he keeps himself corked up for your sake, but occasionally, when alcohol relaxes the censor, the lid comes off. That the man is an amateur in illicit affairs is evident from the fact that he is clumsy enough to get caught. His strong guilt sense afterward proves that he violates his own ego ideal by digressing from conventional behavior. No doubt he devoutly wishes to be free from the tormenting urge for variety and excitement that upsets the

BY JANE JORDAN

domestic peace for which he also yearns. Any woman who is unhappy in marriage has a right to divorce. If she is economically independent she has a chance to rebuild her life closer to the heart’s desire. Where she is not economically independent, her life as a dependent divorcee is apt to be far more unhappy than her life as the wife of a man whose only serious fault is a taste for change. In my opinion there are many righteous men who are harder to live with than husbands who philander occasionally. Philanderers often are very charming people, whereas the excessively righteous are tremendous egotists. Only you can decide whether you prefer a life of loneliness in somebody else’s home to the protection of a husband who is not to be despised even though he does not conform to your early ideal of a lover. tt tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—l have been going with a girl two years. Her mother always has objected. My girl friend is 20 and I am 19. She thinks because I am younger that she knows more than I do. I am always being corrected for what I do. Her mother is always nagging at her. She will listen to her mother but she won’t pay any attention to me. Every evening ends with an argument in which she thinks she is always right. Do you think that I should keep going with this girl or find a girl my own gge? WONDERING. Answer—No matter what I think you will sooner or later find a girl who is content to look up to you. It just isn’t in the cards for a boy to stay in love with a girl who continuously knocks his ego down. The pleasantest thing about love is the tremendous elevation in self-es-teem which it brings.

A Woman’s Viewpoint ' BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON “T CAN make the confession, beX cause my wife is not present,” said one whom we may as well call Mr. Smith. "I would have been 50 per cent better off financially if I had listened to her advice during the years we have been married.” All those of us who know Mr. Smith know he spoke the truth, and we also know—although we never stop to wonder about it—that he would no more take the advice of Mrs. Smith now, excellent though he thinks it is, than he did fifteen years ago. Mr. Smith is a typical American male. His attitude is precisely that of 90 per cent of all the men in the world. Any one of them may have a Minerva sitting at his hearthside, but will he listen to her? I should say not. The only oracles men are willing to consult are those who dwell in shrines. Oracles in the kitchen never get a hearing and for that reason many a husband come to a bad end and finishes his life in the poorhouse when he might have had a comfortable little home of his own with good beef broth three times a day. This state of mind constitutes one of the most interesting psychological facts to be met with in the modern scene; this reluctance of the male to give credit, encuragement or praise to his womenkind. Whether it is an atavistic trait come down from his monkey forefathers, or only a stubbornness developed from the possession of too much authority, adds zest to any speculation on the subject. Whatever be the cause, there stands the fact, plain enough for us all to see. No husband will admit his wife is as good a business man as himself, and even though he may consider the point proved he still will not verify it with words. FOR AU PURPOSES 1

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Miss Barker Is Bride in Home Rite Ceremony at Thorntown Attended by Group of City Folk. By Times Special THORNTOWN, June 11.—Indianapolis guests witnessed the marriage of Miss Margaret Barker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert J. Barker, and John L. Richardson, Omaha, Neb., son of John T. Richardson, Clayton, yesterday at the Barker home. Among the guests were Dr. and Mrs. Russell Spivey, Messrs, and Mesdames Gordon Engeler, George Miller, Jack Gulling, Royer Knode Brown, Philip Johnson, Everett Schofield. Joseph C. Matthews, Austin Clifford, Elmer Applegate and Mrs. Ralph Davis and Mrs. Helen Shimer; Misses Grace Buchanan, Joan Johnson, Bernice Grant, Mary Elizabeth Search, Elsie Hancock, Myla Smith, Margaret Schumacher, Nancy Kalleen, Elizabeth Hisey, Dorothy Grimes and Vera Snodgrass. The bride is a Butler university graduate and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Mr. Richardson, a Purdue graduate, is a member of Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity. Maid of Honor in Blue Palms, ferns and baskets of pink peonies and blue delphinium banked the east end of the dining room. The improvised altar was lighted by two three-branched candelabra. The Rev. W. Edward Stokesberry officiated. Preceding the ceremony, Mrs. Raymond F. Millikan played “Venetian Love Song” by Nevin, “Meditation” from “Thais,” “Liebestraum” by Liszt and “To a Wild Rose” by MacDowell. Mrs. Jack Gulling, Indianapolis, sang “O Promise Me” and “I Love You Truly.” “Annie Laurie,” played during the ceremony, was played at the bride’s mother’s ceremony thirty-four years ago. Miss Mildred Barker, maid of ■ honor, wore blue lace over blue taffeta fashioned with a long skirt and wore pink slippers and mitts. She carried an arm bouquet of pink roses. Lucille Flaningam, cousin of the bride, and Betty Canan, Lafayette, niece of the bridegroom, held pink and blue tulle ribbons to form the aisleway for the . wedding party. Lucille wore a blue organdy frock over blue taffeta with pink hair bow and Betty wore pink with blue accessories. White Satin Gowns Bride Rosemary Woody, cousin of the bride, was flower girl. Her dress was of pink organdy. The bride, given in marriage by her father, chose white satin fashioned on princess lines with a high cowl neck fastened with a diamond clip, gift of the bridegroom. Her tulle veil was edged with lace and fell from a lace cap edged with orange blossoms. She carried white roses, gardenias and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Barker wore rose crepe with a lace yoke and a corsage of pink roses and gardenias. Ferd E. Christen, Harrisburg, Pa., was best man. A reception followed the ceremony, with the bridal table centered with the three-tiered wedding cake. The couple left on a motor trip through the east, the bride traveling in a light blue wool suit with navy accessories and a silver fox scarf. They will make their home in Omaha.

MYLA HERRMANN IS WED AT CHURCH

The Rev. H. M. Dorn read the marriage ceremony this morning at St. Paul’s Lutheran church for Miss Myla Herrman, daughter of Mrs. John P. Herrmann, and Erwin Luessow, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Luessow. Pink carnations and blue delphinium against background of palms and ferns formed the setting for the service. Clarence Elbert was organist, and Mrs. Charles Scearcy sang. The bride wore pink mousseline de soie with a picture hat and carried Swansonia and white roses. Mrs. John A. Herrmann, matron of honor, wore turquoise blue mousseline de soie with blue net hat and carried Briarcliff roses. Wilfred Rafert was best man and Harold Luessow and Herbert Hanson were ushers. A wedding breakfast followed at the Herrmann home. The couple will be at home after June 17 in Indianapolis.

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Cameo, Originated in Antiquity, Still Popular

BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON Times Hobby Editor THE word cameo brings to the mind’s eye not only a beautiful carved patrician medallion but also a daguerreotype of grandmother with the lace fissue on her hoop skirted dress held in place by a lovely cameo broach. Assuredly, the cameo portrait of the man in the high stock, here shown, served such a purpose, since John Bellinger, M. D. of Charleston, S. C., had it cut from Vesuvian lava in 1850 and set as a brooch for his wife while the two were traveling in Italy. Mary Pinkney Bellinger, doubtless wore it with justifiable pride as her handsome husband was a man of great distinction in his native state. He occupied the chair of surgery in the South Carolina Medical college, and in 1847 demonstrated his surgical skill by performing four abdomnal operations with out the use of a general anaesthetic. Ether first had been employed for surgery only the fall of the previous year and was not as yet universally accepted. Dr. Bellinger (1804-1860) was of illustrious ancestry, being descended from the first Landgrave Edmund Bellinger who owned Tomotley and Ashepoo baronies in lower Carolina in 1698. He was also the brother of the prominent author and attorney, Edmund Bellinger, whose great-grandson, Charles Edward Thomas of this city, editor of the Sigma Nu fraternity magazine, inherited this unusual heirloom cameo. Because of the material from which it is cut and because it is an actual portrait and not the classical or mythological design usually employed, this cameo is extremely interesting and valuable. At the time that Dr. Bellinger’s portrait was cut and the fascating legendary gambler “Cameo” Kirby, so-called because of his passion for cameos, was plying his trade upon the Mississippi river boats, cameo jewelry had its greatest vogue in America. Many excellent artists devoted their talents to cutting the gems and through this medium Augustus Saint-Gaudens began his ascent to the position of foremost American sculptor. tt tt tt CAMEOS have been defined as small, exquisite sculptures executed in relief on some substance precious for its rarity or adaptability, thus giving the finished product the quality of a jewel. Queen Elizabeth ordered her portrait cut upon a beautiful turquoise and the Field Museum in Chicago has a diamond cut as a cameo, the rarest of all carvings. The majority of the important cameos, however, both ancient and modern, have been cut upon banded onyx. When J. H. Brown, jewel expert SPONSOR WILL BE RECEPTION HOSTESS Initiates of Scarlet Quill, senior honorary organiaztion for women at Butler university, will serve at a reception to be held by Mrs. Alice Bidwell Wesenberg, sponsor, from 4 to 6 Saturday. Graduating seniors will assist in the reception of alumnae members. Club Will Hear Two By Times Special PLAINFIELD, June 11—Mrs. Fred Herrick, Logansport, state president of Home Economics Clubs, will speak before home economics club women of Hendricks county at the Plainfield Friends church tomorrow. The meeting is sponsored by the Union Home Economics Club of Plainfield. Miss Bertha B. Cook, Cass county home demonstration agent, will discuss “Fads and Fancies in Foods.” Society Meeting Set Martha M. Society of the United Lutheran church will hold an al fresco meeting tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. S. L. Hecathron 7045 Central avenue, with Mrs. K. M. Koons and Miss Bertha Ilg, assisting. A program will be presented on “Gardens.” Chaplain to Speak Mrs. W. H. Rohr, president of the Newman Mothers’ Club, will preside at its meeting at 2 tomorrow in Newman hall. The Rev. Henry F. Dugan, chaplain, will speak.

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in charge of the August Rossweiller collection of cameos at the Chicago hobby show last fall, explained to me the process used in carving cameos, I readily saw that the skill of an artist was required. The stone is affixed by wax to a wooden handle, and in this manner is held against a steel-cutting point charged with diamond dust which revolves rapidly by means of a foot treadle. Cameos have been favorite jewelse since before the Christian era, but the highest perfection was reached in the work of the ancient Greeks and Romans. Not many shell cameos, however, were made before 1600—at least, few have been preserved, possibly because being soft the shell has not withstood the erosin of time. tt a >t SHELL cameos are Very lovely, the white portions showing a creamy softness not found in the hard onyx, yet few excellent shell cameos are found in collections, a striking exception being the portrait of Napoleon I in the British museum. Avery large and handsome shell cameo is a part of the collection of Miss Edith Robinson of this city. It was purchased years ago from Horace Comstock, an Indianapolis jeweler, and from its cutting, Mr. Comstock judged it was very old. It is unusual because of the two portrait designs similar to a Greaco-Roman onyx cameo owned by the British museum. The portraits may be representations of pagan gods or of an emperor and his consort since on ancieht cameos living persons often were represented as dieties. Fashions in jewelry have changed w'ith the years, but cameos never have lost their allure. The exquisite artistry of these delicate and charming jewels is so appealing that they have continued to hold a place in both masculine and feminine hearts throughout the centuries and cameo carving today continues as a fine art.

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Helena Rubinstein Will . Visit Russia for Study of Cosmetics Situation Embarks on First Trip of Kind by American’ of Her Profession; Soviet Women Advance in Makeup Skill. BY HELEN LINDSAY THOUGH she has crossed the Atlantic ocean more than 150 Madame Helena Rubinstein probably considers the trip on which she embarked Saturday the most interesting she has undertaken. Madame Rubinstein will visit Soviet Russia for the first time gaining for herself the distinction of being the first American cosmetician to make such a tour. While in Moscow, she will consult with Madame Molotov, wife of the Soviet premier, who is head of the Soviet cosmetic trust known as Tezh. Madame Molotov recently commented that Russian women are

rapidly acquiring the same skill in makeup as American and European women, and Madame Rubinstein therefore is interested in studying the cosmetic situation in Russia. With Madame Rubinstein on this trip will go her older son, Roy Titus, who just has finish at the Harvard school of business. He will travel in Europe with his mother, preparatory to entering the American business next fall in an executive capacity. When this son enters the business, one of Madame Rubinstein’s ambitions, expressed on a visit last year to Indianapolis, wiU be realized. On this trip she will visit the French and Italian rivieras, as well as the watering places of Europe. tt tt tt Mae West's Complexion Rated Best MADAME RUBINSTEIN’S European trip culminates a four months’ stay in America, dur-

ing which time she made a cross-country tour, the first in ten years. Among the cities she visited was Hollywood, where she opened anew beauty salon for movie stars. She will compare her study of American film stars with those of Soviet Russia. During her stay in Hollywood, she vis*ted socially with a number of the well known stars, and spent some time on the studio lots. She watched Mae West making her new picture, “It Ain’t no Sin,” and has passed upon Mae West’s complexion the outstanding compliment of "the most beautiful in Hollywood.” Other opinions which she formed will be of interest to movie-goers. Madame Rubinstein visited Norma Shearer, in the setting of her forthcoming picture, “The Barrets of Wimpole Street,” and found her both charming and clever. She felt that Claudette Colbert, with her large eyes and French charm, expressed sophistication in every gesture. tt tt a . tt tt tt Autumn Coats to Be Colorful 1 TV/T ORE color will be seen in coats this fall than ever before, according to the prophecy of Miss Charlotte Williams, stylist for the American Woolen Company. Brown, green and blue will be accepted as leading colors, although black still will be of outstanding importance. In the new browns, which will be shown in fall coats, rose mahogany will be featured. This is a dark brown with a distinct rose cast. Ebony, a dark rich brown with no red in it, will be another color, and Jamaica, a brown with a slightly yellow cast, will be important. Recent experiments with fur dyeing have proved successful, and color developments will be shown in furs to harmonize with the coat colors. Important new colors already shown in furs are a sable tone that blends well with browns and a gray-blue which compliments the military blue.

Chapter to Initiate Mrs. Martha Wade, worthy matron, and Dr. Cleveland Noell, worthy patron, will be in charge of initiation services of Englewood chapter, Order of Eastern Star, tonight at the Englewood Masonic hall.

.'JUNE 11, 1934

IShipi. yII -T J

Mrs. Lindsay |

Eim MAN 1119