Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 74, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

Cool Days Bring Out Knit Wear Dress of Green Boucle Given Preference by Mias Jane Keene. BY BEATRICE Bt'RGAN Timfi Womans Pat* Editor AiEODERATION in temperatures Rends many of the young matron* and m-s'-cs to their wardrobes for knitted suits arid crepe dresses One cool morning Drought Miss Jftne Keene out in an apple green silk boucle one-piece dress. A lacy

*■ J

Mw Burgnn

at the neckline. Mrs. Josephine Morris McKee's knit suit was of green, a dark autumn shade. The blouse of an open stitch crossed in surplice fashion. The dark brown rough strawhat complemented the autumn shade; It turned up jauntily on one side. Mrs Kurt Pantzor's crepe dress gave the effect of being checked and figured at the same time. Flecks of orange centered the brown and tan checks. The short sleeves were fastened to slightly gathered shouloers, and wide cuffs were pleated and edged with orange and tan stripes The neckline was fastened in /sent tie fashion Large, round buttons down the front of the dress matched the material. The brown suede belt buckled with a silver square ornament. Mrs. Pantzor's Breton sailor was of rough brown straw and ornamented with an orange feather. As Mrs. perry Lesh shopped preparatory to leaving for a vacation in Michigan, she wore a simple white pique sport dress, with its short sleeves and collarless neckline edged in rickrack. A brown suede belt matched the wide brimmed touch straw hat. a o 9 Mrs. Ralph Reahard and her daughter. Miss Sally Reahard. went to Lake Maxinkuckee today for a visit. Mrs Reahard’s son. Ralph M Reahard Jr., is a student in the Woodcrafters summer school of the Culver Military Academy.

Personals

* Mrs. Ernest Henry Warnnek. Remington. is here for a two weeks' visit with her parents. Dr. and Mrs. j Albert Ogle M.'Ses Mariadna Colburn. Jane Fit ton. Mrs. Mildred Taise.v and. Miss Esther Taylor are cruising on I the Great Lakes aboard the S. S Tionesta. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schuller and daughter Diane. Akron. 0.. are j guests of Mrs. Schuller's lather, E. O Bureau. They came to attend the wedding of E. Hobart Burgan and Miss Katharine Tarr on Saturday. Miss Lois Thatcher. 147 West Hampton drive, has gone to Chi- j cago for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Gordon are ; spending the week-end in Terre j Haute, visiting Mrs. John C. Ross and family. Mi'S Betty Farber has as her house guest. Miss Betty Schwartz. Cincinnati. Miss Mary Gene Wann. Terre Haute, has returned to her home after visiting Miss Caroline Hewitt.! daughter of Dr. and Mrs John H ! Hewitt. Misses Mary Lou Metsker. Inez Jeffries. Jeannette Moore Ins Hollins and Geneva Menninger are traveling through the east. They will visit Mr and Mrs. Coleman Moore and Miss Theresa Bagnoli, l Washington, formerly of Indian- \ a polls. Mrs Archibald McGinnis is vaca- 1 turning at the Cape Codder at Fal- I mouth. Mass. Miss I. Hilda Stewart with her sister. Miss Janet M. Stewart. Arlington. Mass., is vacationing at the Tavern at North Falmouth. Mass. Richard B Benson. Omaha. Neb.. ( is spending a week with his parents. Dr. and Mrs. John G. Benson. , Mrs. Hal T Benham. and Mrs. > Robrrt Stempfel have gone to Powers Lake. Wis„ to visit Mrs Clarence Warren. Mrs. Elmer Ittenbach and Mrs. Grace Buschman. Mr and Mrs Frank V. Mills and daughter Virginia have returned from a month's visit at Lake Wiwasee. Taylor Wilson and Mrs. Jane Arbocast arrived m New York recently after a two weeks' cruise to South America and the West Indies. Mrs. Floyd Mattice has returned from Lake Manitou. where she attended ahouse party given by Mrs Roy Demston. Rocheeter Mr. and Mrs. John B , Little. Washington, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Franklin L. Bridges and Mr. and Mrs. J. Burdette Little. Miss Louise Vonnegut. daughter of Mr and Mrs. Anton Vonnegut. is summering at Chester Springs. Pa. and is studying art at the Pennsylvania Academy of Art. Mr. and Mrs. D. Laurance Chambers and daughters. Misses Judith and Evelyn Chambers are at Northport. Mich. Dr. and Mrs. Gordan Batman returned yesterday from a trip to Black Hills. S. D : Rocky Mountain National park. Colorado Springs. Col. and Pike's Peak

LOOK YOUR BEST SHAMPOO .. rn * and SET DU C PERMANENTS * 2 -° ntniKlC ud s-)nn El GENE >4 N O-i.UU POWDER PUFF 31 r.. Ohu M. 1.1. Mil

Wedding, Last Year Told

Mi*n Linctta Lvcile Stanley became Mr*. Ralph W. Hook on April 22, 1922. Mr. and M rs. H ook are at home at 3172 Central aven ne. Mr*. Hook vs a daughter of Mr*. Myrtle A. Stanley, and Mr. Hook’s parents are Mr. and Mr*. John .4. Hook.

pattern "as knit in diagonal stripes across the bodice and the elbow length sleeves, gathered slightly at the elbows. A narrow band of the boucle trimmed her white Panama hat A crystal clip snapped o n

Manners and Morals BV JANE JORDAN

Il>) toii find it hard to understand miitwK? Put tout problem before Jane Jordan and let her help you ficure it out. Write that letter now! Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young married man and have been married just eight months. I don't know whether I loved my wife or not when I married her. I had many affairs before I was married and always thought it was the man's place to run around before marriage. My wife confessed to having affairs with three or more men

*_ ME

Jane Jordan

really a chump, or else I am unbalanced mentally. I have played square with her and am trying to learn to love her. This has got me worried to death and I hardly know what to do. Please advise me what vou think of my attitude. SALTY SAM. Answer—Perhaps you have no real desire for a lasting union. If so you would look for any excuse to prevent you from falling whole-heartedly in love with your wife. I always suspect any promiscuous behavior before or after marriage as an attempt to keep any one person from becoming too important. A series ol irresponsible, affairs is one way ol evading a socially responsible relationship. Now that you have entered a partnership in which you have played square, do you regret the days of your freedom? Are you doubting your wife because you doubt yourself If you can convince yourself that she is not faithful, will you feel justified in returning to your less responsible habits? Your wile's former affairs need not affect her love for you and they ate no argument against her capacity for fidelity. Evidently she preferred permanence and her love adventures were only temporary substitutes'for a marriage. I doubt if she changed her partners with the nonchalance that cnaracterized your early experiences. Mv remarks are only guesses, the best I can make from such limited material. If they do not fit the case, perhaps you'll wish to add more information to your first letter. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a voung girl of 17. I have been going with a boy for six months. Two of his boy friends began coming over when he did and now the boy doesn't come so often. The other boys stop every time they see my boy friend's car in the drive. I don't care for them, but I think a lot of the boy I have been going with What shall I do? LITTLE JOE. Answer—Of course you can rid yourself of the intruding bovs bv the simple device of showing them they are not welcome. You need not be obviously rude, but if they are not entertained, it is doubtful that they will care to call. Dear Jane Jordan—We are just furious with this Mr. Sixty who savs that girLs use their sex to hold their jobs The average working girl is honest and morally cood and trying to make a decent living. There are some employers who ask such an atrocious thing of a girl, but not all. In any office you will find the average girl more competent and more worth her salary than your egotistic male. We hope we never have to ask Mr. Sixty for a job OELLA. Answer—l nave oeen surprised that we did not have more indignant reactions to Mr. Sixty's letter. I wonder why the girls

CROQUIGNOLE °ERMANENTS by ROYAL fur w v c gs \ T Friend W%# Jtr Original *5 Value •’** Camplrlf 'h Shampno and Set • Nell Setting • Splendid tor . .ne-udea Hale %£ • Expert • I meat Materia la Operator* Spiral If neaired ROYAL BEAUTY SHOP ii tt'l'ir'.i Rtd ( f ’intment Necessary*

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Mrs. Ralph W. Hook

haven't risen to their own defense? Dear Jane Jordan —I am interested in joining a bridge club, either for ladies in the afternoon or for married couples in the evening. Can you tell me where I can get in touch with bridge clubs of this nature? L. C. B. Answer—Do any of our readers want anew member for their bridge club?

Service Unites Reva Rudy and Sidney Sterne

and I told her I thought I would rein emb e r it and never trust her. We never quarrel, but I get spells and want to run away from her because I think she cares for someone else. She tells me she loves me but I ;uess I am

Rabbi M. M. Feueriicht officiated at the wedding of Miss Reva Rudy, daughter of Mrs. Mary Rudy, and Lieutenant Sidney Sterne, son of Mrs. Sarah Sterne, Cleveland. 0., which took place yesterday afternoon at the Rudy home, 3053 Central avenue. Immediate families attended the ceremony. Mrs. Edward Harmening played bridal airs. The bride, unattended, wore white moss crepe, designed with a slight train and a jacket trimmed with beading. Her veil was of tulle and she carried white roses. The couple left on a wedding trip to Canada, and will make their home in Gallipolis, O. The bridegroom is a Purdue university graduate and the bride attended Butler. Card, Partj/ Scheduled Harold C. McGrew auxiliary, Spanish War Veterans, will hold a card party Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. C. C. Moon, 3620 North Illinois street. Mrs. James C. Mangus is chairman. Club Part}/ Set The monthly contract game and ffincheon of the Propvlaeum Club will be held at 10 Wednesday.

BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridce League THIS is the fifteenth of a series of eighteen playing problems prrpared by Henry P. Jaeger. In duplicate, making your contract doesn't always give you a good score, although you have bid for game, or even a slam. Remember, in duplicate you are comparing your results with the results made by all the other tables with the identical hands. So. if you have bid for four odd, and there is five in the hand, you A A. Q 8 fi 3 V A K ♦ J 10 !> A K 10 9 A K 10 N * J 4 ¥9532 VQJIO 7 + KQS2 w k ♦ 7fi i AJS6S ♦ Q 5 3 2 ▲97 5 2 V 8 6 4 ♦A S 3 AA 7 4 Duplicate—N. and S. vul. Opening lead —V Q. Dealer —South South West North Hast Pass Pass l A Pass 2 A Pass 4 * Pass HO Laa oeiier matte it or you will receive a low score. a b a EAST'S opening lead in the queen of hearts which North, the declarer. wins with the king. A small club is led and won with the ace in dummy. The deuce of spades is returned, the queen finessed, and it holds. Declarer then plays the ace of spades, picking up the outstanding trump. The par play on the hand trom this point is as follows Declarer

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Cottages at Lake Opened for Guests Week-End Entertaining Enlivens Colony at Maxinkuckee. BY BETTY CONDER Time* Special Writer LAKE MAXINKUCKEE. Aug. 6 Week-end guests add to the activities of the Maxinkuckee colony of Indianapolis vacationists. Dinner parties, sailing parties and water sports are planned by hosts and hostesses to entertain their guests. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin and children, who are in the R. A. Edwards cottage on the east shore, had as their guests recently Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Ogle and their children, Virginia, Bill and Larrj.. Miss Mary Birch Ingram, who is spending the summer with her grandfather, C. E. Coffin, entertained at a dinner party last week in honor of her house guests, Miss Barbara Haines and Gordon Hall, Indianapolis. Following the | dinner the guests attended a dance at the Maxinkuckee Inn. Other ; guests included Misses Mary Crawford, Mary Jane Sheerin. Eleanor Rav, Mary Ellen Mowbray, Jane Adams, Irving Moxley and Betsy Home, Messrs. John Ray Newcomb Jr., Joseph Miner Jr., John Brandon David Cooper, George Home Jr., Robert Smith, Sam Foster, Norman Michaels and Walker Winslow. Mrs. Arthur Wagner has returned to her home in Indianapolis after visiting Mrs. Harvey Shafer for several weeks. Guests at Hickory Crest last wcekwere Messrs. J. William Wright Jr., Maurice J. Moore Jr. and Richard K. Fowler, all of Indianapolis. The guests were entertained by Paul Krauss 111 at fishing, shooting clay pigeons, swimming and motor boating. David Smith, Indianapolis, was at Maxinkuckee last week visiting Scott and David Moxley. Mrs. Emory Baxter was in Chicago Wednesday attending A Century of Progress exposition, but returned for the week-end. General and Mrs. L. R. Gignilliat : entertained at dinner last week, ! honoring several out-of-town guests. | Covers were laid for Bishop Edwin jC. Hughes, Washington; Bishop Hughes’ daughter, Mrs. William ! Ramey, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Hughes Jr., and Tracy How-ell, Corpus Christi, Tex. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Willson have returned to their home in Indianapolis after visiting with Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Mueller at their summer home, Hilarity Hill. Miss Judy Preston left Wednesday for Lake Wawasee after visiting Miss Marjorie Jean Mueller for some time. Mrs. William Gates, Indianapolis, is the house guest of Mrs. William Munk on the east shore. Mrs. John S. Kittle, Miss Peggy Elliott and John S. Kittle Jr. w-ere in Chicago last w-eek. Miss Eileen Booker, Indianapolis, is visiting Miss Irving Moxley, who is spending the summer at Maxinkuckee with her mother, Mrs. Barret Moxley, in the C. J. Roache cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Louis McClennen have left Maxinkuckee for several weeks to be at Cape Cod. Mass., but w-ill return to the W. R. Adams cottage later in the month. Mrs. McClennen was Miss Sarahanne Adams before her recent marriage. Mrs. Carl Habig and daughter, I Miss Mary Habig. Miss Peggy Sweeney and Miss Helen Bosler, Indianj apolis, were at Culver Wednesday to attend the military academy dance.

Contract Bridge

cashes the ace of hearts, and then leads a small spade, winning in dummy with the seven. A heart is returned and trumped with the six of spades. The declarer now’ cashes the king of clubs and then leads the ten of clubs which East wins with the queen, but East now is helpless. If he leads a diamond, the declarer plays low from dummy, allowing West to win the trick with his queen. But then West is helpless. To return a diamond will allow the declarer to win two diamond tricks, while to return a heart will allow the declarer to discard the losing diamond from his own hand and ruff in dummy. Os course, if East had led a heart , instead of a diamond, declarer would have ruffed in one hand and discarded the losing diamond in the other. This is a neat example of a strip an end play. iCopvrieht 1934 NEA Service. Inc.) Sororities Alpha chapter, Omega Nu Tau sorority, will meet Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Violet Burkhead. 708 East Eleventh street. Mrs. Walter Worrell, Post road, will be hostess tonight for a meeting of Sigma Phi Gamma sorority. Miss Miriam Isham and Mrs. Charles Snider are in charge of transportation. Beta chapter, Omega Phi Tau, will meet tonight at the Spink Arms. Arrangements will be made for the national convention to be held in Chicago. Miss Estryl Adams. 6207 Carrollton avenue, will be hostess Friday for a meeting of Alpha chapter, Phi Tau Delta sorority.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

—— Have a Hobby ————————— Sampler With 1800 Date Cherished by City Man

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BY MRS, C. O. ROBINSON Times Hobby Editor DURING the year 1800, Sarah Firth a very small girl living in Hornbury, West Riding, Yorkshire, England, sat at her sewing frame and stitched a sampler which today is preserved with loving care by her great-grandson, Walter H. Green of this city. Sallies sampler is worked upon a piece of handwoven linen approximately nine inches square and the design is the usual one of cross-stitched letters and numerals interspersed with hearts and brackets of flowers. Os course, Sallie included a religious verse in her sampler design, and being a discriminating child she chose one of age and distinction which had graced a very early sampler dated 1694, “Love the Lord and He will be a tender Father unto thee.” Here Sallie’s pudgy little fingers which had fashioned the letters so perfectly, were betrayed by her inability to spell. She omitted the second ‘e’ in ‘thee,’ the only mistake in the entire sampler. At the time that Sallie spent many long hours placing the stitches in her sampler with painstaking care, undoubtedly she was a very young child, since the work, although tidy and accurate, obviously displays immaturity, yet contrary to the usual practice her age is not given. Her signature simply reads, “Sarah Firth wrought this 1800." I suspect Sarah. I think that later in life she ripped out the telltale numbers and invoked the feminine prerogative of subterfuge regarding her age. Unfortunately Sallie’s sampler could not be photographed because her artistic taste tended toward pastel colorings, which have been softened and mellowed by time until they are not sufficiently distinct to be reproduced by the camera. a a a SARAH FIRTH came to America in 1842 with her husband, Chris Green, and died in 1859 at Weston, 111. If she could visit her small feminine descendants today doubtless, she would not be reconciled easily to the fact that swimming and horsemanship instead of sewing and embroidery are present-day social requisites, yet unquestionably she would be delighted to find that in spite ot their strenuous activities her great-great-great - granddaughters remain perfectly mannered. a b a AIDED and encouraged by her husband and inspired by the gem from Sallies needle. Mrs. Green made a collection ol charming samplers which she uses as wall decoration to complement the many rare and beautiful antiques with which her home is furnished. Although lacking the intimate association which is attached to the heirloom, each of the other samplers has an interesting story including the circumstances of its acquisition. “Helen Case's sampler, 1850," flaunts large cross stitched flowers. “Ruth Thorn’s work. 1830,” was made on coarse brown linen. "Sarah E. Prewitt, St. Magaalen's, 1841,” created a distinctive effect by working her design on bleached linen and by making a very wide and handsome border. Little Eliza Trinker of England made her sampler on very fine material, called Tiffany, much like our present day lawn, and her stitches are so exquisitely minute and intricate that if she had not signed it “Eliza Trinker. Dec. 1, 1813. aged 10 years,” such perfect needlework never would have been attributed to a child. Possibly she was a student in one of the "infant schools of embroidery” which* flourished at that time. BBS \ N unusually large sampler, xY. nearly fifteen inches square, in Mrs. Green's collection, is of particular local interest because it is signed "Martha Jane Moore's sampler, finished July 11. 1840, aged 11. Martha Jane Moore, Indiana.” Evidently Martha Jane was a loyal Hoosier and also an embryo

((nan St g saipj\ OF PERMANENTS BY BEAUTE-ARTES CONSIDER YOUR Tuesday .. Rr J.t' >nK . nXTffMytm Only! ( roquignole xMBt- Ana. 'MI IB ( me to mil at PATRONIZE WHERE IK ■■■■WVSHNVHHRH onien enHf (UI SViV I'IHIJi Wound from end* to ,|or*ed it as the W~~7illAiyiTAjr7 ;r o er p „„ s ': , ilK ‘;V;;f; , '■ PREVAILS—BUY WHERE £lSffiVS a , dXsf" WBMWWPSWBHP | Original Mt jgr m.Mi' nt. I mijuignnle nr $3 j IS BEST FOR LESS ' t-ewi-M 1 IIVKII-HI.K'l HUt-tiRAI II \l K Oil! >l*E< lAI.TY. •■v <!’ • 11-,I 1 -, \t„ r ,— K m I*.n l.i**'' itiitasaSaiiiii Sta. Operatora

suffragette since, to the usual lines of alphabets and numerals, she added a log cabin from which waves a flag bearing the name Harrison. Not content with this manifestation of her enthusiasm for the candidates in the presidential campaign of the year 1840, she also stitched in letters an Inch high the names of the standard bearers, Harrison and Tyler. Apparently she was devoted to her family and wished them also to be represented in her masterpiece, since on each side of the Harrison design are rows of paired initials whose dominating final letter signifies a family name. Those on the right, all ending in M, undoubtedly are Moores and the left the constant H possibly alludes to her maternal relatives. As Mrs. Green's samplers could not be photographed an illustration from a treatise by Marcus Huish has been used because it resembles the one “wrought” by Sarah Firth. It has similar alphabets, numerals, hearts and signatures, lacking only the verse, and is inscribed “Wrought by Maria E. Spalding at ten years of age, Brooklyn, June 30, 1819.” It is typical of the early nineteenth century samplers, the kind most commonly seen and is part of a collection owned by Dr. J. W. Walker, Chicago. OFFICIAL OF LODGE WILL BE HONORED Mrs. Marie Leonard, grand guardian, Order of Job's Daughters of Indiana, will be honor guest at a card party to be held tomorrow at. the home of Mrs. Eula Griffy, 83S North Rural street. Mrs. Leonard will leave Aug. 13 for the supreme session of the order in Portland, Ore. Mrs. Griffy will be assisted by the grand officers, Mesdames Elizabeth Tyre, Bertha Lynch, Eileen Money, Grace Jester, Lillian Smith, Amelia Riggs, Ethel Warner, Beatrice Trusler and Jessie Pruitt.

RECENT BRIDE

• \ 'y-

—r-noto by Kirkpatrick Mrs. Victor Griffin The marriage of Miss Florence Tridle. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tridle, and the Rev. Victor R. Griffin, Melbourne. Australia, look place Sunday at the University Park Christian church. The couple will live in Indianapolis.

Fashion Authorities of City Stores Will Write This Week for The Times Lucinda Smith, Virginia Judd and Helen Ready of Ayres and Edith Evans of Block’s Will Describe Autumn Styles. BY HELEN LINDSAY EVERY ONE enjoys slipping behind the scenes once in a while, to discover what "makes the wheels go around." There's a recognition of the importance of stage hands and directors in the theater, and the fashion panorama has authorities uho guide and plan the styles just as expertly as any dramatic director. When pique changes to velvet, they have told you about it many weeks before. When skirts forget their primness, and slash daringly to the knee, you are not surprised, for these experts have gazed in the crystal ball of fashion, and have prophesied just such changes.

They plan your wardrobe for you, and see that you can develop that plan by finding the very clothes they suggest hanging invitingly in your favorite stores. They model them for you, and snow you just how attractive you can be in a costume that is perfectly assembled from foundation garment to jeweled clips at the shoulders. They do all this work for you, and they love it. For each one of them is “fashion conscious,” and delights in making the women of Indianapolis realize the effectiveness of proper clothing. This week, this column is giving its readers a glimpse behind the scenes with the group of young women who are responsible for the fashion trend and its success. Two of them are familiar figures to patrons ot the L. S. Ayres tea room. They a v ? Misses Lucinda Smith and Virginia Judd, professional models, who

display the newest mode during the year there. This summer, these two young women have been in Now York, where they were fortunate enough to model in the openings of some of the mast exclusive and distinctive salons. They have written their experiences and their views on fall fashions for The Times. B B B B B B New York Experiences to Be Related ]%>|TSS HELEN READY, fashion copy writer for Ayres, has bee*i intro--IVL duced through this column previously. She Is the dynamic person who tells Indianapolis women just what can be expected in the way of breath-taking clothes in the Ayres store. Recently Miss Ready returned from a visit to New York, where she studied fashions, and was entertained in some of the interesting places in the city. Helen Ready is too busy to keep a diary, but she's written for this column a page from an imaginary one, describing the froth of New York like as she saw it. BBS B B B Mode for Fall Will Be Interpreted THERE'S a quiet little person in the advertising office of tire Wm. H. Block Company, who delights in all of the subtle changes fashion makes. She loves color and grace of line, and she writes and talks about them in entertaining fashion. If you see a diniinutive woman with a kntiting bag on her arm. looking adoringly at some of the newest creations in Block's French salon, you will recognize her. She is Miss Edith Evans, fashion copy writer for Block's who has written for this column her interpretation of the fall mode, with all its vagaries. A fashion resume wouldn't be complete without mention of the changes in hair dressing. So Anthony Desaldo, who recently won a cup in the east for finger waving, has outlined the various coiffures which will be suitable with fall costumes. It will be a week's fashion clinic for column readers. Get your notebooks ready, and prepare to see the mode through the eyes of experts.

A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

IT must have been a delightful ■* experience for Walter Huston to lay off the garments of “Dodsworth” and assume the robes of Othello, a character he has been playing for the last fortnight in Old Central City opera house in Colorado, most famous theater west of the Mississippi. The transformation from the

portrayal of an American husband, with a and is sa t i sfied, two-timing, ambit io u s wife, into that of a man of ancient Venice, whose lady is all complia nc e, all tenderness, all devotion, should give any man a thrill. It gives wom-

I f'it

Mrs. Ferguson

an a thrill to see it done. De.sdemona, whose untimely death has moved thousands of theatergoers since Shakespeare's day, appears enviable to us, in certain aspects. To have a husband who loved you so much he was ready to smother you at the least suspicion of infidelity, is a situation which holds a sort of allure for soir kinds of 1934 women, I dare s „. When all is said, it is no more tragic to be murdered in bed than to be deserted for another. And compared to some of the pallid love we now witness, the tremendous passion of the Moor, stranger than life or death, is something

Daily Recipe FRUIT FIZZ 4 orange*, juice 2 lemons, juice 1/2 cup unsweetened pineapple juice 1 c. maraschino cherries and juice U pt. bottle* sparkling white grape juice Combine the fruit juices and cherries. Just before serving, add ice and grape ju.ee Serves six. '

CROQUIGNOLE “GIGOLETTE” PERMANENT WAVE 59 $Sk Complfl* with / Unger wave #nrl % thorough Ahum* SUN RAT poo, artlatic linger SPIRAL nave, rinse and _ >nd curls All 5/C nnr 24 ' ‘ Complete ,or 2 for *1.15. Do not be confused, do not be misled. We use only Fresh Supplies, Fresh Solutions. EXPERT OPERATORS. Positively not a school in any sense of the word. LAYAWAY PLAN Cay sS>e for our regular wax* and receive receipt entitling you to wate at thi price until Oct Ist. ACT NOW. BEAUTIFAIR 301-3 Roosevelt Bld^. RI. 2930 Rl. 2930

. AUG. 6,1934

.Mrs. Lindsay

we admire even though we should not desire to emulate it generally. And how the sooty-chcstcd general towers over a Twentieth century Dodsworth! Os the two, the latter is the truly tragic figure, more pathetic for history’s recording, most unloved by those women whom he perpetually serves. Perhaps it is ** ~.sible that our men have degenei. into more makers of money or u.o creators of pretty phrases because that is . all we have wanted of them. Perhaps there are no more Othellos, because our Desdemonas are practically extinct. To incite a great love in the heart of another, one must have a little bit of greatness within one's self. GAMMA CHAPTER WILL GIVE PARTY Mrs. William Wertz will be honor guest at a birthday party and supper which Gamma chapter, Omega Nu Tau sorority, will give on the lawn of Mrs. John A. Lyons’ home Wednesday night. Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames J. Nelson Marks. W. C. Lobdell, John E. Wyttenbach and Miss Georgia Thomas. Misses Beatrice Cain and Alice Massey will be pledged.

Card Parties

Temple Rebekah will sponsor a card and bunco party at 8 Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Austin, 3514 East Washington street. Altar Society of St. Roch’s church will sponsor a supper from 5 to 7 Wednesday at Us hall. 3600 South Meridian street. Cards and lotto will be played following the supper, KIM . ■ Better! Made with real butter! At YOUR Grocery ! HMiWhen You Think wmw of | Pry Cleaning ~| l MINK or Excelsior Laundry 840 V NEW JERSEY Rl-3591 ~ 3VAN&U W : FOR ALL PURPOSES