Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1934 — Page 7
JUNE 20,193 J.
Rest Period Annoying to lW ork Lovers Psychiatrists Use Term of ‘Vacation Neurosis’ to Describe State. BY GRETTA PALMER Times Special Writer NEW YORK, June 20.—Did you know that there is such a thing as a “vacation neurosis”? Well, there is. Psychiatrists have discovered that there are many persons to whom Sunday is a day of real horror because they can not go to work. There are many men
and women who are looking forward to their annual t w o-weeks-with-p a y with the deepest gloom. We have inherited the tr ad i t ion that work is a curse —something that Adam inconsiderately let us in for—and that holidays were to be treas u red. But a holiday, if it means nothing but a chance
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Miss Palmer
to sleep all day. may be very wearisome and boring affair. The difficulty with the forms of recreation that New York offers is that they all require initiative. And that is just what the sufferer from a vacation neurosis lacks—and ■ what no leisure time committee can g've him by bland little lists of hobbies, either. You have to put forth a great deal of effort to have a gay time in this town. You have, for instance, to telephone your friends. If the first two or three fail you, you may get discouraged and begin to mope. You may go to the movies alone—always a morbid form of fun —or give up the whole idea of enjoyment and go back to bed. Plenty of persons spend Sunday just that way. The whole unhappy situation
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Hour children to have fine, stalwart bodies and sound teeth. Then, you want to be od, rich, pure milk—and all the Vitamin D th authorities say so. And now, everyone VTtamin D automatically —in this depend;vaporated milk —and at no extra cost to * Wilson’s Milk today. Eve orated Milk and give your family an ntless automatic supply of this important every Milk j should be made an automatic source your of more Vitamin D— to help prevent e fine the all too prevalent childhood dishave ease known as rickets —and to help same maintain strong bones and sound teeth i new for people of all age^. Wilson’s Evaporated Milk may be resent included in the diet of your family in ishine sufficient quantity to give young and ire ex- old an abundant supply of Vitamin D. along jet all You may feed it to your baby as diItamin reeled by your doctor. You may give nd the il 40 your children in chocolate and baking anywhere you use milk or s. cream, you may use Wilson’s Irradiated Evaporated Milk and get the extra jWjIT benefit of its enriched Vitamin D conSuS' tent. Your grocer has it ready for you; All statements in this advertisement art Association Committee on foods.
Sorority to Meet in National Session
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Mrs. Joseph R. Thomas
Eighth biennial national convention of Theta Sigma Phi, national journalistic sorority, will open at the Spink-Arms tomorrow and continue through Saturday. Mrs. Joseph R. Thomas is registration chairman, assisted by Mesdames Lee Fox, Virginia King, Margaret Avery Coffin and Kathryn Dolan and Miss Mozelle Ehnes and Miss Marjorie Watkins.
could, perhaps, be solved if we used our cases intelligently and abandoned our stiff insistence on introductions between likely looking strangers. The bonhomie of the male saloon is largely due to the fact that a customer can drop in alone and find someone to talk to—perhaps a stranger, perhaps a friend. That detail is immaterial. But try to start a conversation with the stranger at the next table in a restaurant, or even a sidewalk case! You might in Paris—in New York you are guilty of the heinous crime of “picking up,” which is a reflection on your moral character and upbringing. Well, why should it be? It js easy enough to leave if your companion turns out to be a bore. And even if he is quite a sinister
Miss Louise Eleanor Ross
Miss Louise Eleanor Ross is convention chairman and will serve as toastmaster at the concluding banquet Saturday night. Miss Winifred Smith is serving as editor of Convention Shorts, a newspaper to be issued daily during the sessions. Assisting Miss Smith are Misses Ruth Robison, Frankfort; Ann Hall, Vivian Ross, Ruth Marie Price and Dorothy Wright and Mrs. Eleanor Zoercher.
character, with a long police record, what of it? You are not accepting him as a friend by chatting with him over your iced coffee. It won’t hurt you a bit to learn what gangsters think about. But dangerous characters are not numerous. Most of the persons who go alone to respectable cases are just as decorous and lonely as you. And if it were not for our absurd, stiffnecked formality, they would be charmed to talk with you. Men have their clubs, into which they drop for a little casual companionship with whoever may be there. Women reserve their clubs for occasions of the most august formality. Men have their comradely bars, into which a woman would hesitate to go alone.* But won’t some kind-hearted patron of the lonely start a series of
; THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES '
Miss Winifred Smith
coffee houses, with their tables craftily arranged to encourage conversation between strangers? When the vacation neurotic has found an easy way to find companionship, at any hour, the neurosis is half-cured. And the hours away from the soothing routine of the office may turn out to have been extremely pleasant, after all. Park Program Set Mrs. Clarence L. Kittle is chairman of the program of Tarum Court Ladies Oriental Shrine to be held tomorrow night at Christian park. Miss Mary Elizabeth Karstadt, Allen Guthrie and Gilmore Johnson Jr. will give dance numbers; Miss Janet Dora will play the accordion and Harry Bohn, Accompanied by Mrs. Kenneth Glass, will sing.
Bridge Tea Tendered to House Guest Miss Aufderheide Fetes Frances Dyckman,. Dallas, Tex. Miss Joan Aufderheide entertained today with a bridge tea honoring her house guest, Miss Frances Dyckman, Dallas, Tex. Miss Aufderheide entertained at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph G. Aufderheide, 4950 North Meridian street, for Miss Dyckman, who was her classmate at Vassar college; Miss Laura Miller will entertain tomorrow in the visitor’s honor. Among the guests were Misses Elizabeth Hall/and Mary De Prez, Shelbyville, and Miss Miller, Misses Alma Lyon, Isabelle Morris, Esther Jane Throckmorton, Estelle Burpee, Jean Brown, Mary Martha Hockensmith, Martha Coleman, Dorothy Young, Peggy Pearson, Katharine Fulton and Jane Rauch.
Personals
Miss Grace L. Brown, head of the Indianapolis Kindergarten, and Dr. Annie E. Moore, who has been visiting Miss Brown for several months, have left to spend the summer in Boulder, Colo. Miss Mabel Wicks will accompany her brothers, Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks to Boston from where Dr. Wicks will sail Saturday for Liverpool. England. On Aug. 14 Dr. Wicks will attend the international confernce of religious liberals at Copenhagen. Miss Wicks will spend the summer in Worcester, Mass. Miss Thelma Dinking is visiting at the Barbizon Plaza in New York. M. and Mrs. Remster A. Bingham are guests at the Waldorf-Astoria while visiting in New York. Mrs. H. E. Howe and daughter, Miss Jane Howe, will leave tomorrow for an extended visit in California. Miss Howe was graduated last week from De Pauw university.
BUTLER GRADUATE | FETED AT SUPPER Miss Sarah Brateman, who was graduated this week from Butler university, was honor guest at a supper given Monday night at the home of Miss Bess Drazier, 2120 West Michigan street, president of Delta Rhc sorority. Miss Brateman will live at Churubusco, Ind. • Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Anne Gelder, Ft. Wayne; Mrs. Calla Lowenhar, Ft. Wayne and Miss Kate Brateman, Churubusco. Others were Misses Fannie Cohen and Rose Draizer and Mrs. Louis Finegold.. The sorority will hold a swimming party at Longacre on Sunday. Tea to Honor New Leader of Voters League Mrs. Frederick E. .Matson has issued invitations for a tea to be given from 4 to 6 Friday at her home, 4505 Park avenue, in honor of Mrs. S. N. Campbell, newly elected president of the Indiana League of Women Voters. Members of the board of directors of the Indianapolis league and friends of Mrs. Campbell will attend. One hundred and twenty-five invitations have been issued. Mrs. J. J. Daniels, Indianapolis president, and Mrs. Charles N. Teetor, Hagerstown, former state president, will be among the assistants. CONTRACT DINNER SET FOR FRIDAY June contract dinner of the Propylaeum Club is scheduled for Friday night with Mrs. Frederick E. Matson, chairman. She will be assisted by Mrs. Walter C. Marmon, Mrs. Edwin H. Forry and Mrs. Frank F. Powell.
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Cheer Guild of Riley Hospital Gives Breakfast Two hundred attended the annual breakfast of the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild today at the Claypool, marking the tenth anniversary. Dr. William Lowe Bryan of Indiana university was principal speaker and Dr. George Arthur F'antz gave the invocation. Mrs. Andrew J. Porter, founder and auxiliary secretary, discussed the guild's accomplishments. Mrs. Carl H. Irrgang, president, was seated at the speakers’ table with Dr. Bryan, Dr. Frantz and Dr. W. D. Gatch, dean of the Indiana university school of medicine; Dr. George J. Garceau, member of the staff; Hugh McK. Landon, president of the Riley Memorial Association; James W. Carr, association secretary; Miss Mary E. Keckard, superintendent of nurses; Miss Cordelia Hoeflin, superintendent of Indiana university school of nursing, and J. H. B. Martin, administrator. The luncheon program included music by Mary Catherine Stair, harpist; readings by Mrs. Edgar J. Ellsworth; and songs by Mrs. Robert I. Kinnard, accompanied by Mrs. Dorothy Knight Greene. Other honor guests included D. M. Pittman, assistant to Mr. Martin; Mrs. Ethel Pierson, superintendent of nurses at Rotary convalescent hospital; Miss Lute Trout, dietitician, and Mrs. Carl R. Seman. Mrs. S. G. Huntington, Mrs. E. H. Soufflot and Mrs. Lula H. Harvey. Miss Alice Velsey was chairman of an exhibit made by guild members; Mrs. William L. Holdaway was chairman of decorations and Mrs. Ira Fisher, general chairman. Season to Close Members of Chi Beta Kappa sorority will attend a picnic supper and swimming party tonight at Longacre as the last event until Sept. 5.
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COATS BRIGHTENED BY VARIOUS DEVICES The new white woolen coats are gay and colorful. Cut on loose, swinging lines, they gain character from their distinctive weaves. The favorite scheme is to wear white dresses under them, and to rely on accessories, such as brown and white kid spectator sport pumps, a brown and white linen cartwheel hat and brown and white costume jewelry for bright touches. WRINKLES AVOIDED IN TRAVEL ATTIRE Week-end costumes and clothes for traveling should be as uncrushable as possible. After all, the girl who has to start ironing and pressing the minute she arrives at her destination is a source of annoyance to most hostesses. The new cotton sports clothes are fairly wrinkle-proof and triple sheer travel outfits are almost as practical. Leave linen and organdy evening clothes at home and take silk dance frocks. They wrinkle less and are much easier to press. BRIDGE AND SHOWER HONOR BRIDE-ELECT Bridge was played at a miscellaneous shower given last night by Misses Millie Witmer, Helen Briggs l and Virginia Gibbens in honor of Miss Marjorie Horne who will be married to James D. Blythe on Saturday. With the bride-elect’s mother, Mrs. Alice Horne, guests were Mrs. A. L. Bruce. Misses Dorothy Jane Atkins, Margaret Hoffmeister, Helen Turner, Mary McKeehan. Clemenee Dow. Bertha Dernier, Dorothy Fitzpatrick and Mrs. Richard Hunter,
