Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Ulen Club Attracts City Folk Indianapolis Group Goes to Lebanon Often During Summer. BY BEATRICE BL'RGAN Tin?-* Unman’* P*t fditor LTLEN COUNTRY CLUB at Leba- > non has become a favorite recreation center' for numerous Indianapolis resident.* Only a twenty-five-mil* ride t" the north, t.ie rlub has be*<n elected by many as their summer playground Mr ahd Mrs. C. M Turner, who

have been members for eight years, are among those who drive to the club most frequently for golfing. Mrs. Turner has become such an enthusiastic member of the club that she has been appointed Indianapolis membership chairman. On Thursday afternoons women members go

Miss Kurgan

to the club for golfing. Mrs. Donald C Drake, Mrs. Robert Mack. Mrs. James Marlowe, Mr George Houser and Mrs. W. L. Appel have played in several of the seasons flag and biirtd par tournaments. Mrs. Turner and Mrs. C. D. Knapp are regular players, who will attend the annual prize award dinner at the end of the season. After business hours and on the “afternoons off," many of the men play golf. Mr. Appel, Mr. Houser, Mr. Drake. Mr. Knapp. .\% Marlowe and Mr. Turner play rounds at the club several days a week. S. B. Van Arsdale is one of the club's leading players W. R. Chapin. Dr. C E. Harrison. William H. Walker, Norman Magoffin. Dr. Harry Parr and Horace E. Storer are among the other men who enjoy th" course. For ten years since the club opened. Mrs. Turner explains, numerous Indianapolis residents have joined the club. 'But more have Joined this summer than ever before,” she said. On Thursday night many of the members will attend the monthly night party. Mrs. Parr. Mrs. George L. Horten and Mrs. H J. McGarih are assisting m making ready lor the lawn party. Once a month women golfers invite friends to play golf and in the afternoons on golfing days bridge tables are arranged around the veranda rs the brick clubhouse, which looks out across the golf course from its post ion on a knoll. On holidays the club is a popular center for family activities of the more than sixty Indianapolis members. The club provides a matron to oversee the children s play at the Ulen park nearby Walter Pray will describe "Some Highlights About Some Master Bridge Players” at the family night dinner of the Meridian Hills Country Club Thursday. Mr. Pray, who is one of the city's leading tournament players, will describe his experience in competition. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Krick. entertainment chairmen, arranged for Mr. Piav's appearance. Women golfers of the club will entertain guests Wednesday. Aug. 29. DINNER TO HONOR ENGAGED COUPLE Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Birk will give a bridal dinner Thursday night in honor of their daughter. Miss Aileen Birk, and Gilbert H. Moriison who will be married at 8 Friday night at the Ventral Avenue M. E. church. Mrs. Robert J. Briggs. Washington. is visiting her niece, Mrs. C. O. Robinson. Misses Nellie and Judy Bretz. 936 East Thirty-fourth street, will be hostesses at 8 tonight for a meeting of Phi Tau sorority.

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Mary L. Wright Joins List of August Brides The marriage of Miss Mary L. Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Wright, to Homer R. Daubenspeck took place Aug. 8 at the home of the bride’s parents, West Seventy-third street. The Rev. Donald Finley, pastor of Old Augusta Christian church, officiated, and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Earle were attendants The bride is a graduate of Butler university. Mr. Daubenspeck. son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Daubenspeck. West Eightv-sixth street, also was graduated from Butler and Indianapolis College of Pharmacy. He belongs to Sigma Nu fraternity. The couple will live in Terre Haute. Mrs. Charles Bretzman left yesterday with her brother, the Rev. Julius C. Grauel. Baltimore. Md .for a motor trip to Cleveland. Baltimore and New York, where she will visit her son, C. Noble Bretzman.

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A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

TY7ELL, well, our gallant globe- ’ ’ trotting Don Juan, Douglas Fairbanks, the elder, is home again. A little crestfallen, we hear, a little saddened by events, and certainly a much wiser man. Probably if the truth were known, he regrets having taking a flier in titles. He may, and we hope he does, realize he would have been

better off to have stayed with his faithful Mary and the monotony of m a r r ied life. A smaller hat would always have been more becoming to Mr. Fair banks, and might have helped him to give less heed to the flattery of false friends.

Mrs. Ferguson

I trust his experience will prove a good example for other and less noted American husbands. The male, as you may have noticed, has a tendency to the sort of vanity which marriage seems to augment. It is this vanity which often betrays him. Once he succumbs to it. a husband may come to believe that his wife underestimates him. and that he must have a lady-love to be truly appreciated. What happens then? In a good many cases he comes sneaking home after he has been taken for a cleaning by the dame with honey on her tongue. Wives, somehow. are not so good at compliments. Its often a strain for them to go on repeating the formula about how wonderful men are. In the first place, every honest woman knows her husband isn't wonderful. He may be lovable, fine, high-minded, intelligent and kind, even noble, but the Lord

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

hasn't got around to perfecting the truly wonderful male—and I don’t think a woman would like living with him if ever &uch a one appeared upon the earth. The truth is, we don’t want anything really extraordinary in the way of husbands. Just the plain ordinary garden variety suits better. For this reason, perhaps, the busy wife often forgets to spread the flattery along with the butter on her husband's toast. And so. I am told repeatedly, we lose our loves. Maybe so. But if a man lives long enough and manages to get around a little, he will find out one truth: It's the women who tell you how wonderful you are who play you for a sucker. Sometimes one of the kind may even be married to you, but she plays you for a sucker just the same. If you are a smart man, you will listen once in a while to the wife who intimates that you sometimes behave like a sap. For she's probably the one who really loves you and will stick by you when the cooing doves have cleaned out your pockets and left you flat.

DUBOIS COUNTY REUNION SET

The annual Indianapolis reunion of former Dubois county residents will be held Sunday in Brookside park, near the community house. There will be a program of games and contests and, in the afternoon, a business session with the annual election of officers.

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Party Will Be Tendered to Mrs. Hitz Recent Bride Will Be Feted at Bridge and Shower. Misses Constance Pearce and Thelma Roller will be hostesses tonight at Miss Roller's home. 2301 East Garfield drive, at a bridge party and miscellaneous shower, in honor of Mrs. John Hitz. Mrs. Hitz before her marriage in June was Miss Virginia Teague, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Teague. The hostesses will be assisted by their mothers, Mrs. Harry Pearce and Mrs. Charles W. Roller. Decorations will be orchid and yellow. Guests with Mrs. Hitz will be Misses Nancy Ridge, Josephine Bennett, Josette Yelch, Barbara Varin, Louise Haworth, Betty Stayton, Susan Hill, Eleanor Young, Jeanne St. Pierre. Margaret Overman, Janet Chapman and Mildred Cross. Dates have not been set for parties which Miss Yelch and Mrs. Abe Pfister will give for the bride, who attended Butler university and belonged to Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Luncheon Given at Club Honors Guest at Fort Lunching at the Columbia Club yesterday -was a party of friends invited by Mrs. William B. Leitch. Ft. Benjamin Harrison, to honor Mrs. Bess McCammon, Washington. Following luncheon bridge was playea. The tables were centered -with vases of cosmos. Mrs. McCammon is visiting Mrs. George Gay, also of the fort. Guests were Mesdames William K. Naylor, O. P. Robinson, J. K. Boles, Warren Davis, Dwight Adams, Richard Sears, Edward A. Routheau, Charles Lewis, Stanton Smith, Leo Clarke, G. R. Wells, Robert McClenaghan, H. F. Searight, R. A. Machle, L. c. Bleumel, R. E. Jones, David Stewart ana Mrs. Gay. MEMBERS OF GUILD WORK FOR HOSPITAL The business women’s auxiliary of Grace M. E. Church White Cross Guild made 2,000 surgical dressings, one dozen towels and mended three sheets at the regular meeting last night in the nurses’ residence of the Methodist hospital. Members present were Miss Catherine McKinney, Mrs. Harriet Kramer, Mrs. Donald Cook, Misses Ruth Griffith, Virginia Gardner, Rosamond Gabriel, Winifred Wiley, Helen Ealand and Helen Bradley. This is one of the newer White Cross guilds. Another new one, the Beacon Guild, a junior organization, met yesterday at the home of Mrs. John P. Harvey, sponsor. The members rolled 700 surgical dressings for the hospital. Members present for the first time were Joan Davy, Norma Oburn. Shirley Shreffler and Janet Billicum. Miss Lydia Kruge has returned home after visiting her sister, Mrs. V. R. McQuilkin, Indiana lake, Russell Point, O.

BRIDE-ELECT

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Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

This letter brines up anew aspect of •‘Sorry’*" problem. What part did her parents play in her trouble with the youne man who made love and ran? All parents are Invited to eipress themselves in rerard to the opinions published below. Dear Jane Jordan—Your answer to "Sorry" is about what one could expect. If it is the "best” of any girl to so lose control of herself.

there is not much good in her. You have done so much damage to right thinking among our young people that I am surprised that a paper gives you space. I belong to church groups and when Jane Jordan is mentioned it

K "-rj®

Jane Jordan

is with shame. Your reply to a young girl recently said that her mother was jealous of her suitors. A mother's love is the only thing in this world that has ever been compared to God’s love—sacrificial. It is seldom that a bad mother gives her child bad advice. There is a wonderul opportunity in this column to clean up lax morals among young people today. The way they are made to think they are right and mother and father wrong is sickening. UNSIGNED. Answer: You misunderstand me if you think I believe young people to be invariably right, or that they should be left to stumble through life without kindly direction. I am definitely set against the autocratic type of parent who conceives it to be his divine right to impose his own rigid codes, modes and patterns of behavior on the child. I disagree with the parent who insists upon strict obedience to unreasonable commands, and dislike those who take advantage of the child's lack of physical strength to inflict cruel punishments. In a revulsion of feeling against the old patriarchal set-up, many modern parents have swung to the opposite extreme. In their eagerness to escape the errors of the old order, they insist upon absolute liberty for their children. In their lexicon, no child ever is forced to do anything against his will. This system has almost as many disadvantages as the first. Every one knows undisciplined children who are pests and nuisances, disliked by both their elders and contemporaries because they were left too much to their own devices. Somewhere between the two extremes the truth lies. I have the utmost respect for the parent who has made an art of child guidance and who does not go into a tantrum when the young behave in an inconvenient manner. He is one who takes the time and trouble to explain to the child the reasons for our social institutions, the necessity for respecting the rights of others, the benefits of courteous behavior and friendly co-operation. The parent who has made a friend and companion of his child, who has won the confidence of the young by the justice of his judgments, who does not harp and carp upon parental authority, but helps the child to discover its owns potentialities, is the only parent who is worthy of respect. I have no confidence in the sacrificial brand of mother love which is popularly supposed to be of divine origin. I find it conceals extremely selfish purposes which are nothing short of emotional bondage for the child. An overwhelming, devouring mother love is the cause of many serious personality disorders in later life. It is a sort of saccharine tie which all enlightened people heartily condemn. tt tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—l am in love and can’t get out, nor can I get my man. . His mother is all that stands between us. She is old and getting cranky. She wants her son all to herself. What is wrong with her, with him, or with me? Please answer. MAE WEST. Answer—The culprit in this case is the mother who tries to bind her son too closely to herself when she should be influencing him to leave the family circle to mingle with younger women. Nothing can be done to alter her attitude which she has carried over into old age. The next person in the wrong is the son who lacks the vitality to break a tie which has outlived its usefulness. Miss Gladys Tyner, 336 North Arsenal avenue, will leave tomorrow for Detroit where she will visit Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Fox.

! Busy Season Forecast by Mrs. Clarence Finch; Women’s Club Leader President’s Day Reception Oct. 19 Will Inaugurate Calendar of Interesting Events. This is the second of a series ol articles hv presidents of leadln*; women's organiations, in which next season s plans are bein* discussed. a tt a BY MRS. CLARENCE J. FINCH President of the' Seventh District. Federation of Women * Club THE Seventh District Indiana Federation of Clubs with a membersh;; of ninety-eight clubs representing approximately 5,000 women looking forward to a very busy season. First on the program is the annual president's day reception. Oct. 19. at the Woman's Department Club. For a number of years this event has opened the club season. At this meeting a brief memorial sarvice in honor of Mrs. J. F. Edwards, who died recently, will be conducted by Mrs. Demarchus Brown. The annual state convention of the Indiana Federation of Clubs will be held here Oct. 23. 24 and 25. The Seventh district, being hostess, will arrange many details of the receptions, luncheons and dinners. Mrs. Grace Morrison Poole, president of the general federation and an international figure as well, will be present during the entire session. Mrs. Robert A. Hicks. Cambridge City, state president, will preside. 1 tt tt tt tt tt tt Winter Events Scheduled THE first regular business meeting of the district will be held on Friday. Nov. 16, at the Severin. This will be a luncheon meeting and the department, and afterward the committee chairmen will have a round table discussion. The December meeting will be a Christmas program in charge of the juniors, with Miss Dorothy Phillips, chairman. Legislation will be featured in the January program, with Mrs. Philip Zoercher in charge. v Fine arts, under the supervision of Mrs. Archibald M. Hall, with Mrs. George Mess and Mrs. Henry E. Von Grimmenstein assisting, will be featured to a great extent. This committee expects to feature Indiana artists and is planning to follow the plan of the Hoosier Salon of Chicago. It will have charge of the February program. A club institute, directed by Mrs. Wayne Reddick, following the outline arranged by Dr. Lillian Pierce of the General Federation, will be one of the features of the March program. The annual district meeting and election of officers will be held early In April. Local speakers of prominence. Governor Paul V. McNutt, Dr. John G. Benson and others, will be featured on programs during the year. tt u a a tt tt History Briefly Outlined THE Seventh district attained its majority May 25, 1930, on the anniversary date of its organization at the Downey Avenue church in Irvington. Mrs. Grace Julian Clark, founder of the district federation and its first chairman, was president of the Irvington Woman's Club and sent out the call to the clubs of Indianapolis to mept in delegate convention. The Irvington Woman's Club was hostess for the occasion. The district federation, consisting of organizations and meeting annually, has followed the state program that has been both instructive and elevating to the women of the entire city. In the monthly meetings held since 1918, from October to the spring convention, the various departments have had the opportunity to present to the entire membership many of the problems in w’hich women are vitally interested. This has resulted in .a keener insight and a quickened appreciation for advancing the social, moral, industrial and religious status of the city. The federation is a group of literary, musical, civic and social welfare clubs. Through the departments of our state federation every woman may find a place to work and appreciate the opportunity for personal growth and the acquaintance of cultured women.

NEWLYWEDS VISIT AT TWITTY HOME Dr. and Mrs. Victor C. Twitty arrived yesterday for a visit with Dr. Twitty's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Twitty, before returning to California where Dr. Twitty will resume teaching at the Leland Stanford university. Mrs. Twitty before her marriage this summer w r as Miss Florence Evelyth, Portland, Me. Dr. Twitty is a brother of John W. Twitty. Mrs. A. S. McLeod and Mrs. A. C. Meyer, whom he will visit this week. Mrs. Margaret Dillon is chairman of a card party to be given by Division 4, L. A., A. O. H., at 8:15 tomorrow’ night at St. Anthony’s hall, 379 North Warman avenue.

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A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Shredded fresh pineapple, cereal, cream, crisp broiled bacon, bran bread toasted, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Casserole of vegetables, rye bread and cheese toasted sandwiches, chocolate cup cakes, stewed rhubarb, milk, tea. Dinner — Fillet of flounder baked with tomatoes and onions, spaghetti timbales, stuffed beet salad, sour cream, raisin pie, milk, coffee.