Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 81, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1934 — Page 4
PAGE 4
Lake Home of Krausses Is Inviting Hickory Crest Is Social Center for City Colonists. BY BEATRICE It LEG AN lim Wmin i Pt Fdilor T AKE MAXINKUCKEE, Aug. 14 *- J —Hickory Crest, one of the many attractive cottages of Indian* spoils vacationists at Lake Maxinkuckee, has as its hostess. Mrs. Paul H. Krauss. Mrs. Krauss’ pleasures at the lake have extended beyond the usual activities of a water re-
sort, for she has spent many hours planning and executing the interior decoration of the cottage. She has wielded a paint brush for very a t t r a e*‘* “ effects. Cool green walls provide an ideal background for the antique f u r n it ure in the large
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Miss Kurgan
living room, which has French doors and windows inviting breezes from three directions. Rust rose trims the window ledges, matching the dominating color in the dining room. Wicker chairs and davenports in the living room are arranged with tables conveniently ladened with currennt magazines and cigarets. A chaise lounge, softly cushioned in tan and brown has a view through a window, where one mav observe the sail boats gliding through the water. A w icker desk stands by a window. Shelves of late books hang nearby. The rooms are bright with garden flowers, which Mrs. Krauss raises in the back yard A gnome stands impishly In the center of the garden. A terrace garden, arranged with outdoor furniture opens into a guest house, where Mr. and Mrs. Krauss’ sons. Paul H. Krauss 111 and Stewart Krauss. exclude themselves. Paul has been making plaster masks, and in the guest house he declares he has "elbow room. ’ He made one mask of Stewart, which he gilded, and Mrs. Krauss has hung it on the living room wall. A huge bear rug sprawls over the floor, and the wall is caricatured with charcoal draw ings of cartoon characters and friends of the boys. J. William Wright Jr.. M. J. Moore Jr. and Richard K. Fowler frequently visit the Krauss boys. One of their favorite sports us shooting clay pigeons, thrown out across the lake. The terrace is >hielded by a lattice fence background; at the foot of the lattice work odd little bottles and jugs are set between pots of plants. Mr. and Mrs. Krauss often are host and hostess to the Indianapolis colonists. They attend the Thursday night suppers on the east shore. On "maids night out" the cottagers gather at one of the cottages for a "pitch in” supper. Sometimes bridge is played, but many times new games are devised. Some, for instance, test their knowledge. Frequently hostesses prepare slips of papers with names of famous person; the object is to name the persons profession. A mystery game is another favorite of the vacationists. Circumstances are decided on by the leaders and through cross-examination the parties invariably reveal their guilt. The Krauss family will remain at the lake until September. MRS. HARAKAS TO BE HOSTESS At the regular business meeting of Mary E. Balch Woman's Christian Temperance Union Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. M. P. Harakas. 3324 Northwestern avenue, a mu>ical program on violin and piano will be given by the Misses Lois nad Elaine Everhart. Mrs. C. H Bush will give the Scripture reading and devotions. Singing will be directed by Mrs. Harakas and Miss Margaret Lashbrook will give a reading Mrs. Elbert Moore will preside.
A Day’s Menu i Breakfast — I Blackberries, cereal, j cream, poached eggs, j muffins, milk, coffee. ! Luncheon — * Squash and bacon scallop. ! sliced tomatoes, toasted { muffins, apple sauce, milk, j tea. I Dinner — I White fish baked in to- | mato sauce, rice timbales. ! creamed radishes, new I turnip and cucumber sal- j ad. greengage, pudding, j milk, coffee. ' i
CROQUIGNOLE "GIGOLETTE** PERMANENT WAVE B9‘^g| shampoo. rIM, Vt Ai|i>r •. L ringlet rad* * % Ihnrcnih sham- SI- N RAT p*o. artUlic finger SPIRAL aa*e, i and _ . rad c*rls dll 59 C 24f Complete for < j tar g|.l*. Do not hr confused, do not bo misled. We use only Fresh Supplies, Fresh Solutions. EXPERT OPERATORS. Positively not a school in any sense of the word. LAYAWAY PLAN Pay Ms for oar r|lr war* and receive r*'*lpl entitling too ta wave at Ihit priea aatil Ort. I at. ACT SOW. BEAUTIFAIR 301-1 Roosevelt Bide. RL 2930 RI. 2930
Bride of Army Officer
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.1/ iss Rev a Rudy's marriage to Lieutenant Sidney Sterne took place last, Sunday at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Mary Rudy, 3053 Central avenue. After a wedding trip the couple trill go to Gallipot is, 0., to live.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN-
Gfl roar trouble* oul of vour STstem bv writing to Jane Jordan. Read her rnmment* on your situation in thia column. Comments from readers are insited. Dear Jane Jordan—l am writing in regard to the dear mother whose husband whips her daughter, and your good advice to her. I am a
nurse and I married a man with two children. I raised them both up to w o m a nhood and God has more than rewarded me. I still have my beautiful son. now 25 years old. He is just as sweet today and the same quiet baby he
Jane Jordan
always has been. I ruled them with love, and love is the only conqueror. The father has passed on, but God has rewarded me with this beautiful, good son. My own dear people have all passed on, so my son is my all in life. I sure feel very grateful for him. I know when we can take and love children as our own that love will win out. A MOTHER. Answer —Your devotion to your step-children apparently is just as intense as if you were their natural mother. Therefore it is apt to run into the same problems that beset the devoted mother and her children. One statement in your letter disturbs me: "He is just as sweet today and the same quiet baby he always has been.” Don’t you think the time has come when, as a good mother preparing her children for life in a fiercely competitive universe, you should encourage your son to grow away from you? You would not wish to keep the relationship between you so close that it would exclude the entrance of a potential wife into the picture. Do you really regard him as a quiet baby at 25? Do you permit him to be dependent upon you. or do you aid him in taking a
! Daily Recipe j SALAD PLATE ! 12 cream cheese balls | 1 cup pineapple cubes • 12 pasteurized dates 1 cup cantalouge balls ; 12 segments canned , grapefruit j ? large bananas, sliced j Lettuce { Nut meat 8 j Salad dressing i Place small lettuce leaves on j individual salad plates 1o form I six cups. Place the ingredi- } ents in separate cups and | marinate with French dressin* made from the fruit juices, j Cup I—Dates stuffed with i nuts and cut in crosswuse ! slices. I Cup 2—Cream or cottage i cheese balls sprinkled with • paprika. I Cup 3—Pineapple cubes, j Cup 4—Cantaloupe balls or i cubes. I Cup 5 Sliced bananas, | sprinkled with lemon juice. Cup 6—Segments of canned ? grapefruit sprinkled with I chopped mint, j Serve with crackers or thin ' bread and butter sandwiches I and a beverage.
The PERMANENT That Stay* PERMANENT /Rnl rnogi h.nole hefting ffiHt * RY ROYAL f f 69c 2 for (I SI Spiral If Iteslred OIK HUG. MM tROQIIGNOLt VO prrmanenls com- Q pleie with HAIR CtT. flHr I Inter att Sham- veww poo. Complete $ plead Id for Gray and Blrarhrd Hair. ROYAL BEAUTY SHOP 411 RmoHI Hide. HI. SIM. Ollaol* and Washington Sts. X# Appointment Xrrroaary
Mrs. Sidney Sterne —Photo by Dexhelmer,
vigorous part in the economic and social world? Does he care for girls and are you interested in having him form new emotional ties which have nothing to do with you? Thank you for your kind comment on the advice of the column, and for taking time to write. If you care to answer the above questions I shall read your answers with much interest. a tt a Dear Jane Jordan—l was engaged for about a year when I finally got my eyes opened to the fact that I was being deceived and fooled. Since then I have been going with a young man of 22. I care a lot for him, but I can't trust him. He used to come to see me every night. It seemed as though nothing could stop him, but lately he has made excuses to stay away once in a while. Os course, his excuses may be true, but I can’t believe him since I learned m.v lesson one time. He says I'm not settled and that I like to go too much and have a j good time. Really, I am ready to settle down. Could it be that he is the one who is not settled? Please tell me how to trust and believe in the one I care for, because I will never marry until I can do so. JUST TWENTY-ONE. Answer —You will have to train yourself to abandon suspicion which has no basis in fact. If you can point to something definite to account for your mistrust, it has a rational base. But if it is just a feeling, founded on some trivial occurence, the fault is in you. The fact that the young man stays away from you on an occasional evening, is not grounds for suspecting him. Everybody likes a change of scene sometimes. It is entirely possible that he does not want to settle down. Encourage him to talk himself out to you on the subject, but remember that no man tells the truth to a woman who can’t "take it” without throwing an emotional scene. Mutual trust only can be estab- ; lished when the partners are honest with each other and not obliged to conceal facts of vital ! importance through fear of hurt- j ing each other's feelings.
ANN CAPLIN WEDS ARTHUR SCHWARTZ When Mr. and Mrs. A. Arthur Schwartz return from a wedding j trip to the Great Lakes they will j be at home at 21 West Twentyeighth street. Mrs. Schwartz before the wedding Sunday was Miss Ann Caplin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Caplin. Mr. Schwartz’ parents are Mr. and Mrs. Morris Schwartz. The services were read by Rabbi Morris Feuerlicht, assisted by Rabbi Sam Levin, at the home of the j bride's sister, Mrs. Lucius H. Riggs, 517 North Dequincy street. The bride wore a white embroidered organdy dress and a large white picture hat. She carried Johanna Hill roses, lilies of the valley and baby breath. She was attended by j Charlotte Jean Kline. Chicago, her niece, who wore pale pink chiffon and a head wTeath of roses. She scattered rose petals in the path of the bride. Charles Caplin, the bride's brother, was best man. Pasquale Montani played harp ’ music for the ceremony. County Reunion Set Annual reunion of former residents of Greene county will be held Sunday afternoon at Brookside park. Myers to Picnic Mvers reunion will be held at Garheld park Sunday. John Pow- j ers is president and Lillian Keener.; secretary.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Parents to Fete Bridal Party Here Event Precedes Wedding of Ellen Meinzer Thursday. The bridal party for the wedding of Miss Ellen Meinzen and Arthur L. Amt. Chicago, will be guests of the bride’s-elect parents, the Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Meinzen, tomorrow night at a dinner. Miss Meinzen and Mr. Amt will be married by the Rev. Mr. Meinzen Thursday night at the Emmaus Evangelical Lutheran church. Miss Paula Meinzen, the bride’select sister, will be maid of honor and Misses Selma and Ema Meinzen, other sisters, will be bridesmaids with Miss Norma Amt, sister of the bridegroom-elect. The best man will be Hugo Gehrke, Chicago, and ushers will be John Roth and Rudolph Hasemann, both of Chicago, and Ralph Bernecker. Saginaw', Mich. Other guests will be the Rev. Richard E. Meinzen, the proactive bride's brother, of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, who will assist her father in the wedding ceremony, and Mrs. Meinzen; Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Meinzen, Ft. Wayne; Bernard Mieger. Chicago, who will be organist. and Miss Ruth Brews, Chicago. Decorations will be in rainbow colors of pink, blue, green and yellow.
Norma Ryan Is Married to Mr. Shennan The Rev. James A. Hickey united Miss Norma Elizabeth Ryan and Miller Sherman Jr. in marriage this morning in the rectory of SS. Peter and Paul cathedral, with the immediate families attending. The bride was attended by her sister, Mrs. James P. Scott, who wore a black corded crepe gown, designed with a scarf taffeta and lame. Her hat was of black felt and her flowers were gardenias. George Appleman was best man. The bride, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Ryan, wore a gown of oxford gray angora and jersey, trimmed with a velvet scarf. She wore gardenias. The couple left to cruise on the Great Lakes and will be at home after Sept. 10 at 6139 Primrose avenue. Club Meeting Planned Indianapolis -to - Baltimore Club will hold a special meeting tonight at the home of Mrs. Mae Thayer.
Sj .1. ! 11 jjl^ II ' 1 lm | J n\. jj 111 , ilhe. inVtiaW f and lyiiijM' J |v\ vl Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me pattern No. 331. Size Name . Street * City State THE chic twins wear a breezy, flattering two-piece frock with bright scarf and glass buttons. It can be made in linen or alpaca and is designed in sizes 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Size 18 requires 4*i yards of 39inch fabric with 3 i yard contrast. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart ot this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street. Indianapolis, together with 15 cent; in coin.
M artes E first P * atp Xuriistic" Pr%t, Vj Permanent I w I ditiona the hair. Self-sr tting, wound from enda all jj produces a soft, strong. natto aralp b> expert operator*. wtw H ura i wav e. Complete with ahampoo and 3- tt Slavs until the hair zrows art. Orig. 22.30 ralue. ° u -- qH 4. Plenty of curls. Original *lu Value Tulip Eli 5. Will not hurt the most tender Oil Permanent CO HI headed. Croquignole 6 MaKes ,hln ha;r look fM ‘ aVler ' Complete—2 for *3.01 EVERT PERMANENT COMPLETE SFIR.VI. IF nF.SIREn DYEIV— BLEACHED—C.RAT HAIR OI K SPECIALTY. ••Needless to Par More—Risky to Pay Less.” Maah. fits. HHHHHHHHHHHHi Operator.
Berets Right for Fall
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—From La Mode Chez Tappe. New York.. Pancake berets are the big news in early fall hat fashions. This one, worn bv Odette Myrtle, stage and screen actress, is of brown felt, trimmed with a high-lighting patent leather triangle of matching color.
Girl Scout Activities Come to
Halt at Camp Dellwood
Miss Ellen Hathaway, director of Indianapolis Girl Scouts, has announced that Girl Scout headquarters will reopen Friday, following close of the ninth season of Camp Dellwood last Sunday. Mrs. C. F. Voyles. commissioner, has announced that 450 campers were enrolled this year at the camp, directed by Miss Hathaway. Mrs. Herbert T. Wagner is camp chairman. "Fairy Tale Wood,” by Carola Bell, was presented as the final play of the camping season. The cast was composed of more than fifty campers from the five different units. The leading roles were taken by Marie Wagner, Joan Buschmann, Virginia Robinson, Harriet McGaughey, Maxine Murphy, Betty June Towles, Estelle Cohen. Betty Weiss, Peggy Winslow and Mary Evelyn Veeder. Handicraft proved a very popular activity during the summer. Miss Nell Hancock, the counselor, in her report told of the use of ten materials in the making.of various articles. Leather, beads, wood, rubber, silver, craftstrip, paper, tin, and oil cloth were used in making of belts, purses, bookends, bracelets, bathing
shoes, dog leashes, book covers, hats, and camp tapestries. Wall hangings were made from muslins, printed by means of potato block prints. Mrs. Mildred Ewan Michael, nature counselor, encouraged the establishment of a museum in the Kiwanis library to which the girls brought their collections of plant and animal life. She introduced the girls to the study of fresh water life and taught them anew art. the making of smoke prints of leaves and plants. They improved upon the old style of spatter prints also. Professor Willard N. Clute of Butler university, assisted Mrs. Michael with tree study for the campers. He spent two days in the camp identifying and labeling the trees of Dellwood and leading the girls upon nature hikes. In the last period he conducted a contest in the recognition of trees which was won by Mary Jean Sefton of Troop 50. The Pioneer campers, under the direction of Miss Mildred Jenkins, made several overnight hikes. They prepared two meals to which the parents and friends of the campers were invited. The Pioneers built patrol outdoor kitchens, and made their furniture by lashing. Athletics were under the direction of Miss lona Jean Hodson, tennis, shuffleboard, archery, volley ball and folk dancing were included. Kentucky mountain dancing was introduced this summer by Miss Hathaway. One group gave an exhibition of this type of dancing at the anniversary party of the Meridian Hills Country Club. Riding and swimming were taught. A swimming meet and a water pageant were held during the summer under the direction of Miss Blanche Veach and Miss Laura Jane Stout, waterfront directors. The department of dramatics, under Miss Marion Ortseifen, produced seven pageants and plays throughout the season which were witnessed by parents and friends. In addition, programs were presented each Sunday at Scouts’ Own. The most elaborate production was that of the “Pied Piper of Hamelin,” in which the whole camp participated during the second period. Costumes and properties for the plays throughout the season were made by the campers themselves under the direction of Miss Ortseifen. Roushs Are Chairmen Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roush are chairmen of the lawn social to be sponsored Saturday by the Indianapolis Council 57, Daughters of America, and the Indianapolis Council 2, Junior Order United American Ivfechanics, at Spades park. Lawn Social Set Pleasant Hour Council 51, Daughters of America, will hold a lawn social at 4 tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Bowers, 1142 West Twenty-ninth street. Festival Announced Young People's League of Friends Evangelical church will hold a lawn festival Thursday at the church, Parkway and Alabama streets. Miss Frances Brusch visited Miss Mary Alice Peirson last week-end. Miss Brusch was en route to Memphis, Tenn., to join her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George A. Brusch, formerly of Indianapolis. Miss Brusch was accompanied by her cousin, Miss Ina May Townsend of Lufkin, Tex., where the Brusches have been living.
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New York Socialites to Pose as Picture Models at Charitv Art Exhibit me Famous Old Masterpieces to Be Recreated in Unique Event, Expect to Have Influence on Fashions. BY HELEN LINDSAY FAMOUS paintings from various periods, countries and schools of art, will be recreated and posed by New York society personages, for the Green Ball of Art and Fashion in the Waldorf-Astoria. New York. Oct 25. Tlie ball will be for the benefit of the New York Infirmary for women and Children, and in addition to this altruistic purpose, will present fashions as they were seen in the Paris openings this year. Because periods have had a definite influence on the season's mode, the re-creation of the famous paintings will be a particularly appropriate way to present the inspiration for the fashions.
Among the subjects which have been selected tentatively for recreation will be Goya's “La Vendange,” and “Maja Vestida”; Titian's Portrait of Caterina Cornaro” and "Madame Vigee-Lebrun and Daughter”; Nattier’s "Madame Enfante” and "Madame Victoire"; "Portrait de Femme,” by Francesca; "Dante's Dream,” by Rossetti; lawrence's "Mrs. Siddons” and "Miss Baring”; David's "Madame Reeamier”; Romney's "Lady Hamilton"; Boucher's "Madame de Pompadour,” and John W. Alexander's "Girl With the Ring.” The tableaux will be posed by women interested in the infirmary and prominent in New York society, and will be directed by Lila Agnew Stewart. Eastern designers and business firms will participate in the fashion show for the ball, and there may be a representation from the Paris designers. The ball will be patterned along the lines of the
amous Paris functions. It will be important as a style-launching event, and will be of interest to art students throughout the country. a tt tt m a a Ayres Recreates Hat Picture RECREATION of a picture has been done in an impersonal manner in Indianapolis, with the presentation of a hat by John Frederick, shown exclusively here by L. S. Ayres. T'he hat is pictured on the back cover of the Aug. 15 Vogue, in red felt, with intricate pleats in the brim, and a white and black quill slipped under the black band, and standing up across the peaked crown. Ayres is showing the same hat in one of its window displays this week. st tt tt a a tt Knitted Costumes Returning THE knitted costumes which were accepted as proper sports fashions several seasons ago will be popular again this fall. They have appeared in light weight knits this summer, and will be shown in a variety of styles during the fall and winter months. In Hollywood, the younger stars are taking as their slogan, "Sweatered and skirted—and ready for fall.” One of the Paramount stars, Gail Patrick, is enthusiastic over a black and white knitted costume, as a relief from the many colors worn during the summer. The dress is two-piece, with a plain skirt and a jumper. The neckline is a cross between a “crew” and a "bateau” or boat neck, and the sleeves are long with sweater cuffs. The belt is narrow, of black and white wool, and can be removed and a colored suede belt substituted, if desired. With this knitted suit. Miss Patrick wears an oxford gray hair felt, with a high-crowned effect. A quill is shown across the front. tt a a tt a tt Introducing i Milly Code / Designer LABELS formerly meant much in clothing, and still do in some instances. Women will appreciate this anecdote, remembering tha* they find the NRA label in practically all clothing which they buv these days. A customer in a department store millinery department looked over the hats on the models carefully. Selecting one which she thought she would like, she tried it on, and then removing it, looked carefully at the label. "Milly Code,” she read, seeing the label required by the NRA. "Is that a good designer?” The saleswoman was clever. Without smiling she assured the customer that it was "the best we ever had.” She made the sale.
A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
HENRY MENCKEN, who blusters so much I suspect him of being one, hisses at the sentimentalists in a magazine article. In one breath he says that crime now is prevalent because our laws are not enforced. And the laws are not enforced, he continues. because “of the almost incredible stupidity and lack of
conscience of so many American lawye r sand judges.” In the next breath he flays the men and women who regard criminals as victims of a bad social system and w'ho believe in remedial measures rather than punishment. There’s
a mm
Mrs. Ferguson
bound to be some logical reason for our present crime situation. I think it equally probable also that there must be some good reason for our oversupply of softies or, as Mr. Mencken dubs them, "criminal coddlers.” Within the last two decades there has developed a great deal of sympathy for the bad members of our society. Capital punishment is not approved by many humane, intelligent people, those who are, in all other respects, sane, decent citizens with the good of their country at heart. There is, then, but one way to account for all this. We have not lost our sense of justice; we only are beginning faintly to recover it. In short, the ordinary individual in the United States is not quite able to distinguish between the harm done to society by a certain type of lawyer recognized by the bar, and the harm done by the law-breaker himself. It doesn’t really make sense, Mr. Mencken, to say that be-
_AUG. 14, 1934
Mrs. Lindsay
cause legal procedure is imbecile and lawyers lack conscience we should begin the wholesale hangings of criminals. Indeed, it appears rather childish to rail at the individual who sees the connection between much of our crime and the obstructions put into the way of justice by the courts themselves. If there’s to be any hanging done, let’s all hang together, criminals, courts and general public in a bunch, since are all equally guilty of treason to the state. In the last analysis the public is the chief malefactor, else he would rise up and demand sweeping reforms from the judiciary, which our money supports.
DOUGLAS A, HALL TO WED MYRA TRILLER
Miss Myra Triller, who will be married to Douglas Armitage Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Hall, Aug. 30, has named her sister, Mrs. Byron G. Sunderland, Michigan City, as her only attendant. W. Boyd Brown will be best man. The marriage will take place at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter P. Triller, 27 East Thirtythird street. Miss Isabel Hanson will go to Benton Harbor, Mich., this weekend to join her mother, Mrs. A. B, Hanson.
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