Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 80, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Shea Family Masks Win Admiration Daughter’s Art Work Adorns Cottage at Lake. BY BEATRICE Bl ROAN T.asr* Homan i Fac Mltar lAKE MAXINKUCKEE. Aug. 13 —The oriental ornaments of she Wesley E. Shea cottage caught our eye an once. Japanese figures appliqued in silk on rice paper marched around the dining room wail !ke a gay pa rad* of natives on some festive holiday A Jintern of painted

s;ik hung from the and m in g room ceiling, and we felt inclined to ignore the table; to curl our feet under us and dine on the floor More ornaments in harmony at traced us in the living room, out when we saw an arrangement of hung

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Miss Kurgan

on a black satin drapery we went into ecstacies We acre told that Ms and Mrs Shea's daughter. Mrs Ficderic von Ammon Chieagd. hud made them. When Mrs. Von Ammon. formerly Mis Imogen* -Shea, lived in Indianapolis before her marriage, we knew she was >n crested in art. She had studied at the Ogontz school and at commercial studios Only recently, though, she has made masks. The group of five masks in the Shea cottage are cl Mr. and Mrs. Shea. Mrs. Von Ammon's brother Hnrrie. also of Chicago, and Mr and Mrs Von Ammon. Does Her Own Mak Mrs Von Ammon finished her own mask in exotic fashion. It is green; hair of red yarn is arranged on the mask and long eyelashes are of black oilcloth Masks of Mr. Von Ammon and both Mr. Sheas are done in gold, while Mrs. Shea s face is immortalized in silver. Natural characteristic expressions have been preserved in the plaster by Mrs. Von Ammon. The models posed patiently while Mrs. Von Ammon greased their faces and made the negatives of plaster of Paris. After the negatives hardened. Mrs. Von Ammon filled them with more plaster and modeled the masks. Mrs. Von Ammon read about methods ol modeling and last spring began the actual work. So well executed are the masks that she may exhibit them this fall in a Chicago store. Buddha Surveys Scene A Buddha looks calmly down on the scene of the Shea living room from his lofty position on a pedestal. A Japanese screen shields the fireplace. Tapestries and ornaments brighten the room, furnished in bronze wicker furniture. The large screened porch is bright with orange and black furniture, matching the painted chairs and table in the dining room Indianapolis guests frequently visit the Shea cottage, which is opened early in the Maxinkuckeel season Mr and Mrs. Von Ammon and Harne Shea visit their parents frequently during the summer.

Personals

Miss Madge McPherson has joined Miss Ruth Landers. Mrs. Ralph Gery and Mrs. John Cavosie. who are vacationing on Lake Michigan. near Dunes State park. Misses Clarabcl Jacobs. Georgia Thomas and Martha Hill arc vacationing at Lake Wawasee. Mrs. Betty Shive and son Edward; Robert Craig and sons. Robert and Da\id; Mr. Craigs mother, Mrs. F. W. Craig; Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Ratliff are in northern Michigan for a vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Sweeney and family have returned from a weeks visit in Chicago. Miss Mary Beatrice Whiteman is instructor in dramatics at the Tabernacle Presbyterian girls’ camp. Sing-A-Long on Tri lakes. She will return Saturday. Miss Whiteman recently leturned irom a three months' visit m Terre Haute. Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Kicer and children. Betty. Barbara. Carolyn and Richard, have returned from a visit at the Dunes State park and Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. William H Thompson sailed Saturday aboard S. S. Saturnia for Europe

Sororities

Theta Nu Chi sorority will meet tonight lor supper and an informal garden party at the home of Miss Gwendolyn Bynum. Theta Zeta Chi sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Dorothy Greenen. 1130 Sturm avenue. i Delia Sigma Chi sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Bertha Knoke. 526 East Fail Creek boulevard. Theta Sigma Delta sorority will hold ius meeting tonight at the home of Mrs Man- Jane Feig. 426 North Oakland street. Miss Dorothy Miller will be hostess tonight for a meeting of Beta chapter. Phi Gamma Tau sorority. Board Meeting Colled Executive board cf Municipal Gardens Woman's Department Club will hold a called meeting at 2 Thursday at the home of Mrs. Thomas Petranoff. 3367 West Michigan street.

DENTAL SPECIALS V an wor* L y__ G ’red '*W"* "I AF. S EXTRACTION • r n Ark—r ■ •>np nLo •(' wUt f---RAY. 51.50 f M ( omplrtr af All Imll Plate-. Repaired w ■. n 5 1 53 jp. 8 PLATES fiMw nmitr O•>4f CO *•! U" *' <iJ*i l• ': w *l. jU lranint •• * Oril. !M * Rn4iti Ia *< DR. FRIEDLAND

Charm House Hostess

—— aM—Hi mmmmmimmh J/m 1 1 -

Mrs. Olaf Jensen planned redocoration of the Irish “castle” built a? 1454 North Delaware street more than a quarter of a century ago by the late John Reed, who delighted in Irish architecture. Mr. and Mrs. Jensen have moved their Charm House to the old mansion.

Manners and Morals ■ BY JANE JORDAN

Fvrrv person who rfaHs this column i* urced to comment on the problem under disrussinn todav. Line up one side, or the other and write vour letter now! The results will be published. Dear Jane Jordan—l am writing to tell you how right and true your column is. I want to tell you that it doesn’t pay to neck or anything

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else. I have been going with a certain fellow and I am simply crazy about hi m. Well. I gave in. I'm sorry. I hate myself. I have hurt myself in his eyes. He told me a fte rw ard that he went steady with the only girl he ever loved

Jane Jordan

for three months and was with her every night for six weeks without, kissing her but twice. Please publish my letter so that other girls will take heed. Tell them all never to neck or give in so they wont have to suffer the heartaches and bitter disappointment that I have had I am still crazy about him. I don't think I can ever go with another fellow after having been such a fool, but if I ever do there won’t be so much as a single kiss. I forgot to tell you I'm just eighteen. SORRY. Answer —I am getting so tired of the hoity-toity puritanical pose of sexually greedy young men that I should like to see them stripped of all claim to virtue, for they have none. Your voung man is a nastyminded. selfish, hypocritical product of a patriarchal system which taught its sons to revere women of ice and look with contempt upon women of warmth. I scorn him, not because he made love without matriomonial intentions, but because he can not see beauty without a permit. He is like a guest who accepts the generous hospitality of another without the breeding and grace to write a thank you note. With no imagination to guide him to a tender understanding of the exquisite emotions of a young girl who takes her first lover, he evades all spiritual responsibility with a crude cackle about chastity. The man who deflowers a young girl without giving her anything to remember except shame and grief is made of the commonest kind of clay and I hereby nominate him and his ilk for oblivion. By an idiotic, egotistical, outdated concept of masculine privilege he gives himself a pat on the back and you a shove in the gutter for the self-same act. No intelligent man will regard him as other than a boor.

CITY RESIDEN TS AT MAXIXKECKEE LAKE MAXINKUCKEE. Aug 13. —Miss Leola Badger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E C. Badger, Indianapolis. was a house guest at the Croel Conder cottage at Lake Maxinkuekee last week. Miss Dorothy Behmer entertained two tables of contract in honor of Miss Badger at the Behmer cottage. Other guests included Mrs. Polly Butler. Misses Lois Bess Morns. Helen Behmer. Betty Conder, Saiiy Street and Josephine Miller. Misses Helen Campbell. Mary Wynne and Peggy Chapin recently spent a few days at the Drake in Chicago. While there they attended A Century of Progress Exposition. Miss Wynne has returned to her home in Indianapolis after spending ten days as a guest of Miss Chapin at her parents' summer cottage The Buckeye. Reunion to Be Held Thirty-first annual reunion of former residents of Jackson Jennings. Scott, Clark. Jefferson and Washington counties will be held at 2 Sunday at Brookside park. J. Claud Thompson, is president and H P. McColgin. secretary and neasurer W'TcTfl L\to~Mcct Sarah A. Swam. W. C. T. U.. will meet at 2 tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Harriet Anderson. 2020 Woodlawn avenue. New officers will be electee.

Mrs. Olaf Jensen

| You, at least, were willing to risk • something for your love. It was the I best of you and not the worst of ! you that went into this experience. ! The fact that your generous impulses met with poor return results from the fact that you wasted your sweetness on an undeveloped pup instead of a civilized gentleman. There is no reason in the wide world why you should not find happiness with a husband capable of appreciating your capacity for giving. Selectivity and not frigidity is the lesson you have to learn from your painful experience. I devoutly hope for a flock of letters from our readers expressing themselves in no uncertain terms about your situation. a a a Dear Jane Jordan: I am a very bad disappointment to mv wife. I do everything I can to make her happy which isn’t much to her. She is to be a mother soon and says she is going to take the baby away from me. She is a very, very jealous wife, and she has no reason to be. I can’t even speak to any one without her being mean and hateful for a long time afterward. Otherwise she is a very pood wife. Can she get a divorce on her jealous accusations? Can she have the baby all to herself? Please quote law for me. A DADDY-TO-BE. Answer —She can not get a divorce on grounds of infidelity without proving that it is actually true. In case of a separation the chances are that the court would award the custody of so young a child to its mother. Your best chance of keeping your baby is to w r in its mother.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Reva Oaks Is Bride in Home Rite Weds Richard Cook in Pretty Ceremony at Flora. Many Indianapolis guests attended the wedding of Miss Reva Oaks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Oaks, and Richard H. Cook, Detroit, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Cook. 5150 ! Washington boulevard, in Flora ■ yesterday. Miss Ruby Cook, Indianapolis, : sister of the bridegroom, was maid iof honor and wore a pink crepe gown and carried pink roses. Miss Doris Yakey, bridesmaid, was in blue crepe and carried pink roses. I The ceremony took place at the Oaks home, decorated with palms, ferns and garden flowers. The bride given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of white lace over satin with a knee-length tulle veil. She carired an arm bouquet of white rases. James P. Cook, the bridegrooms brother, was best man and Robert Stuart was the usher, Mrs. Cook attended in a blue chiffon gown and Mrs. Oaks’ dress was of blue lace. Other Indianapolis guests were Miss Eleanor Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Crosby Bartlett, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Angletton. Mr. and Mrs. George Purvis Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fessler and Misses Mane Culbertson. Caroline Henderson and Opal Flora. Other out-of-town guests wore William Upp, Cleveland, O.; John | Stewart, Kempton; Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Oaks and daughters Eleanor and Barbara, Evanston, 111., and Miss Ivy Craig, Chicago. The couple will live in Detroit.

Friends to Fete i Bride-Elect at Party Tonight Miss Gladys Marie Hammel, who will be married to Gaylord Sweany, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sweany. next Sunday will attend a party which Mrs. Orville Wilson, 5839 Beechwood avenue, will give tonight. Miss Hammel has chosen Miss Hazel Stafford and Miss Betty Buenting as her attendants. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. F. C. McCormick. Guests will be Mrs. Jessie Hammel, the prospective bride's mother; Mesdames Claude Hatfield, Walter Burbrink. Edna Copley, and Misses Hazel Baker, Janet Baumann, Ethel Howe. Louise Eieckhoff. Mary Britton and Ruth White. BRIDE-ELECT GUEST AT BRIDGE PARTY Miss Vee Lanahan and Miss Mildred Flanigam were hostesses yesterday morning at the Marott at a breakfast bridge party and crystal shower, honoring Miss Norma E. Ryan. bride-elect. Delphinium, asters and roses, in blue and pink, decorated the tables. Guests were Mesdames John Ryan, Miller Sherman Sr., James P. Scott, Donald White. George Morgan. Edward Green, Norbert Sack, Webb Clinehens and Misses Frances Glenn, Regina Fleury, Ruth Brown, Florence Gaddis, Martha Chapman, Elsie Thiesing. Louise Schmitt. Pauline Taylor, Edna Lamkin. Nellie Modlin, Josephine Smith and Mary Helen Lose. Alumni to Meet Monthly meeting of Indianapolis Alumni Association of Kappa Delta Rho fraternity will be held at 8 tonight at the Washington. Dinner will be served at 7.

— Have a Hobby Busy Period Approaches for Stamp Collectors

MRS. C. O. ROBINSON’ Times Hobbv Editor SINCE four of the leading stamp societies will be holding their annual conventions during the last two weeks of August, the philatelic-minded vacationists will have the choice of several holiday objectives, or if exceedingly agile, they might be able to look in on each of the meetings. The twelfth annual convention of the Precancel Society Vill be held in Philadelphia from Aug. 20 to 23, immediately prior to the meeting of the Society of Philatelic Americans in the same city Aug. 23 to 26. The Philadelphia Evening Ledger is joining with the two societies in plans for an elaborate stamp exhibition to which the United States government will send a fine display. The postoffice department also will provide a branch postoffice and philatelic agency for the duration of the show, to accommodate collectors. The American Philatelic Society meeting at Atlantic City Aug. 27 to 21 is to be honored with the issuance of a sheet of six 3cent stamps of the Mount Rainer design. The sheets will be printed on a special postage stamp press to be included in the bureau of engraving and printing display at the exhibition to be held as a feature of the convention. The exhibition will be invitational and noncompetitive and will consist of unusual stamps and covers dis-' played by the owners of fifty of the outstanding collections in this country. The new 16-cent airmail special delivery stamp will be placed on first day sale at Chicago Aug. 30 in consideration of the request of the American Airmail Society holding its annual convention there Aug. 30 to Sept. 1. As stated before in this department*the new airmail stamp will carry the coat-of-arms of the United States as its central design, but no decision has been made as to its color. Both the Airmail Society and the A. P. S. have issued sheets of attractive varicolored poster stamps to advertise their conventions. a a a The A. P. S. stickers are made sheets of four and may be purchased for 10 cents a sheet plus return postage from Walter J. Molyneaux, Jefferson hotel, S. Kentucky avenue., Atlantic City, N. J. The airmail labels are printed in sheets of six with one row inverted to make an interesting philatelic study. Information concerning their purchase may be obtained by writing the executive offices of the Airmail Society, 1539 South Kolin avenue, Chicago. The postoffice department has announced that postmasters at Greenwood, Miss., Idaho Falls, Idaho, and Tyler, Tex., have been furnished special cachets for use on first flight mail effective Sept. 1, and that air mail service will be inaugurated in Hawaii shortly after Aug. 27. Postmasters at Honolulu, Maalaoa, Hilo, and Lihuo will cachet first flight mail. Collectors washing to receive these cachets, send covers to the postmasters with orders to hold for first flight. The 1, 2. 3 and 5-cent denominations of the National Park series of the United States stamps now have been issued and are as beautiful a pictoral set as collectors could wish. Their additional size makes them an arresting advertising medium and as a means of revenue they also have been a success. For the five-cent value 80.000 covers were dispatched and 150.000 stamps sold on the first day at Yellowystone Park postoffice and 87.000 stamps and 32.150 covers from Washington, D. C. This proportion seems to settle the dispute as to whether collectors want their covers canceled at Washington or from the place the stamps intend to commemorate. The remaining values of the series will not, be issued until after the air mail special delivery is placed on sale. b n tt POSSIBLY the most important foreign issue of particular interest to American collectors is the Canadian commemorative which was issued July 1. to honor the annual meeting of the United Empire Loyalists’ Association in Toronto. The Loyalists were citizens of the American colonies who immigrated into the Canadian wilderness during the revolution because they wished to remain loyal to the British government, the 400th anniversary of the landing on Canadian soil of Jacques Cartier who discovered the St. Lawrence river also is commemo-

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rated with an attractive Canadian postal issue. The astute Italian government, with its thoughts on the accumulation of lira, continues to issue numerous commemorative stamps on what the annoyed but amused collectors feels is the flimsiest of pretexts. Yet the stamps are so enticing that regardless of cost, they are added to albums. According to one recent issue here shown, the gentleman with the walrus mustach, Amonio Pacinotti of Florence, invented the dynamo seventy-five years ago, and the athletes who dash for goals over the stamps both of Italy and her colonies bespeak the final play of the International Soccer Competition held in Rome, as does also the high value airmail, 50 lira, featuring an enormous football. The Indiana Stamp Club has continued during the summer to hold its meetings the first and third Friday evening of each month, at the Hotel Lockerbie, and has found despite the torrid weather that both attendance and membership have increased. The next meeting is scheduled for Friday of this week Aug. 17, at 8 o'clock, and visitors will be welcomed cordially. WHITE CROSS GUILD MEETS TOMORROW Grace M. E. church. White Cross Guild, will hold an all-day meeting tomorrow in White Cross headquarters in the nurses’ residence of the Methodist haspital. Members will sew and roll bandages. Mrs. Allan Ball is president. St. Paul M. E. church White Cross Guild, of which Mrs. Emma Hackney is president, will meet all day Wednesday to continue the work for the hospital. White Cross Children’s Cheer Guild will have an all-day guest meeting Friday. Mrs. Helen Johnson and Mrs. Carter will be hostesses for the noon luncheon. Mrs. George E. Hoagland Jr., president, has appointed Mrs. Stephenson and Mrs. Herman Cox to arrange for a picnic later in the month.

BATHING OUTFIT

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A bathing suit of checked gingham, a swagger beach coat of terry cloth and a straw' hat with large, droopy brim make up the beach costume worn by Mrs. Barclay Warburton Jr.

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Hollywood Goes Egyptian Patterning Styles After Those in Cleopatra Film Claudette Colbert, Who Plays Siren on Screen, and Frances Drake Among- Stars Wearing Clothes of This Type. BY HELEN LINDSAY HOLLYWOOD designers and style scouts are busy this season discerning beetles from scarabs, for the mode in the movie colony has \ leaning toward the Egyptian. It's all because of Claudette Colbert's costumes in "Cleopatra.” Claudette has succumbed to the fad herself in her new fall wardrobe, and has three costumes for wear away from the studio which show the Cleopatra influence. One is a daytime dress of French beige wool crepe, made in one-piece with narrow pleating in the skirt, starting at the knees. It has long sleeves, with wide cuffs which achieve a bracelet effect

through a corded treatment. Around the neckline a daytime version of the Egyptian collar also is given, through cording, and golden bet ties form unique buttons up the front of the bodice. Miss Colbert also has an evening dress which shows the Egyptian mode. It is of pansy blue satin, which sheaths the figure, and has a wide, jeweled Egyptian collar of diamond cut cabochon sapphires. The back of the gown is very low, but has a wide strap of satin in’the center, and from the knees the dress flares into a pleated flounce of satin, ending in a train. Her third costume which shows the influence of the movie is a hostess gown of raspberry-colored crepe, with the typical Egyptian tunic silhouette. The neck is high and richly embroidered, with a scarab motif in gold thread. The sleeves are long and the design of the embroidery is repeated at the wrists. This gown also has a long graceful train.

Not only Claudette Colbert, but other movie stars, have shown their appreciation for the Egyptian mode. Fiances Drake has chosen deep pink crepe for an evening gown which is in the Cleopatra fashion. It is elaborate, and yet on simple lines. The front of the bodice is shirred, and comes up high over the throat where the draperies begin. The gown has no back at all. "Glitter" is achieved by circles of bugle beads in flesh color, and there is a wide belt of beads around the waist, which is fitted high. Because of this trimming, Miss Drake wears no jewelry at all with the gown. The gown was designed originally for a trip to New York, bub when this was cancelled, Miss Drake saved it for the opening of the Mayfair. B tt B B B B Madame Rubinstein, Abroad Madame Helena Rubinstein, who is traveling in Europe with on# of her sons this summer, just has returned to Paris from a trip to the French and Italian Rivieras. In correspondence with this column, she writes. “Wpmen are gayer and more ‘beautiful than ever. I am going to Vienna and Russia, and will bring back many new' ideas.” B tt tt tt tt tt Fox Sponsors Fashion, Show Buyers of Los Angeles stores were treated to a special fashion show given by the designer for the Fox studios recently. Ensembles from pictures unreleased were shown. One was called “Chinoiserie” and was in white satin, with green facings and gold buttons, showing the Chinese influence on the tiered skirt, the short tunic, and the detachable jacket. "Toreadora,” was an adaptation of the Spanish mode, in a gold lame dress with a Toreador cape in Alaska seal lined with red satin, and topped by a Toreador hat in gold and red. The combinations of satin with velvet, fur, and lame were considered important for fall. An American fashion was “Rodeo” with cowboy kerchief collar of ermine, and ermine tail fringe. Deep gauntlet cuffs of the same fur were worn with an electric blue sequin dress.

Your Child Early Learning of Word ‘Must’ Builds Up Courage in Child

BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON The sooner we learn the word “must” the sooner we accept life ! without a murmur. It would be foolish, for instance, to suppose that one-tenth of us would be educated if we were not “made” to go to school. I never have taken much stock in the pining of the heart for the three “R’s,” or for a knowledge of maps or battles. Here and there, we find a Lincoln or an Edison who would have educated himself if never a book had been written or a schoolhouse built, but the yearning for knowledge is absent in most people. Probably they would grow up to regret not being able to read and w'rite, and perhaps some thousands would make an effort to learn when they discovered w'hat they had missed. But by that time it would |be real work to learn. The time of adaptation and quick absorption is childhood. What children take for granted as necessary, they do. They know they must go to school and with few exceptions off they trot. However, this is no dissertation on the merits of education, its advantages or disadvantages, or the extent to which it should be carried. Neither is it a discussion of how many children like it, or how many do not, for the fact remains that few children ever set up serious conflicts about school. They say they hate it, but they don’t actually. The big thing is that they “accept” it and in this very fact we have an enormous lesson. The lesson is tha what children learn to accept as a matter of course in childhood they do—and do it without any serious consequences. What is true of school is true of home duties, of neatness about themselves, of obedience, of going to bed on time and other regular habits. It certainly is true of work. We don’t w'ish to make them into mechanical puppets or block off their time by chart. They have so much supervision in school they need a little free-time and playtime out of it. They need, also, hours in which they belong to themsleves to work out their own ides, or simply to relax. But it is obvious that those things they learn must be done, will be done, without to much conflict later on. The habit of acceptance—making up ones mind to endure unpleasant things—grows with the years. Who is it that suffers the nervous breakdown in maturity? The man or woman who has been taught to face things and do them with-

.AUG. 13, 1934

■l d|X|

Mrs. Lindsay

out a murmur when they were children, or the indulged, lazy, petted ones who never knew what it w'as to have a responsibility? It answers itself. Too many such children can not carry on happily and sanely when life's serious problems inevitably face them. They wear themselves out fighting to get away from them. Each day they have to jump the fence of their own desires and in time it w'ears them out. Conflict! Conflict with oneself. Trying each day to scare up enough courage to go on—and losing. Parents will do well, I think, to consider the years ahead. Will their children know how to meet real responsibility with courage and serene minds in the years to come? If it is to be so then they will have to learn that word “must” by heart before it is too late. MRS. EASTMAN IS GUEST AT PARTY Mrs. J. D. Eastman Jr. attended a party, given for her Wednesday* night by Mrs. George Wishmire, 5500 Rockville road. The house was decorated with garden flowers, and appointments were in yellow and white. Guests were Mesdames Charles Wishmire, Chris Wishmire, Thomas Wishmire, William S. Lindholm, Enos Carsten, Herbert Fisher, Merlin Oliver, J. D. Eastman Sr., Byron Carter; Misses Mabel Myers, Sarah and Betty Wishmire, Jean Oliver and Joan Carter.

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