Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 129, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

Latest Fall Modes Seen at Meetings Junior League and Saddle Group Workers Garbed in Bright Colors. BY BEATRICE BURGAS' Times Woman* Pate Lditor OOFT woolen and crepe dresjes in bright colors, faring well as matches for the shades of autumn leaves are blazing the scenes of committee meetings, as Junior League and Indiana Saddle Horse Association members prepare for the rcmr.dup Sunday at the Gregg farm.

Mrs. Jack Adams' dress of deep red, like some lush berry, was threaded in gold. The gold note was picked up by black buttons, edged in gold, and a black velvet bow tied the Peter Pan collar. It was a black crepe brimmed hat that completed the harmony of the

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Miss Kurgan

ensemble. When Mrs. E. E. Martin attended an association meeting in an olive green knit suit, she was outfitted completely with brown accessories. Her gloves were of ribbed silk, fitting snugly and matching the color of her purse, shoes and hat. Only a red feather provided color for Mrs. Henry Frenzel’s black and gray ensemble; it was a bright scaret feather, audaciously positioned on the black hat. A black blouse was worn beneath the gray suit jacket. Mrs. Frenzel will sell programs for the Junior League at the roundup. The Columbia Club is making sure that its members and guests will keep the roundup in mind, for on Saturday night the entertainment committee, led by Maurice L. Mendenhall, also president of the association, has arranged to have the ballroom decorated so that even the guests who are not equestrians, will be making arrangements to motor to the roundup John C. Ruckelshaus, president of the club, has invited a list of association and Junior League members to be among the patrons and patronesses. In this group are Messrs, and Mcsdames Perry Lesh, Edgar S. Gbrrell, Frank Hoke. George J. Parry, Cornelius O. Alig, Samuel B. Sutphin, Russell Fortune, Conrad Ruckelshaus, August Bohlen. Henry Frenzel, William Griffith, Norman Metzger. Robert Scott, William E. Munk, R. Ewing Sinclair, Elias C. Atkins, Frederick J- Holiday, John Gould, Eugenj C. Miller, Charles Latham, Robert A. Adams. J. Landon Davis. Benjamin Hitz, Jack Adams, Louis Gausepohl, Luther E. Brooks. George Bailey, James E. Bingham, Walter Brant, John Bookwalter, William H. Ball, J. R. McNutt, Alex Metzger. Woods Caperton. E. E. Martin, M. H. Fuller, Harry F. McNutt, Otto Frenzel, and Major and Mrs. J. K. Boles, Colonel and Mrs. Oliver P. Robinson and Dr. and Mrs. E. B. Earp.

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Tocjg&’s Pattern iounoA. ihu/ftj* ewdL jm f \ yur The lh.no. l' 1 1 Wi ikleaklno, ' Wl \ <-c\ Q- J \ \ few 38 (bEnclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 386. Size Name Street City State

ANEW pair of lounging pajamas saves wear and tear on street clothes, and can be made of cotton as well as silk. Patterns are sized 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Size 18 requires 4"i yards of 39-inch fabric. * * * lo obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis. together with 15 cents in coin * * * The Fall Pattern Book, with a complete selection of Julia Boyd designs, now is ready. It’s 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, if you want to order it with the pattern above, send just an additional 10 cents with the coupon.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Jane Jordan has been employed to help you puzzle out your problems. Take advantage of this service and put your worries in a letter today! Dear Janes Jordan—l have a very dear friend who married a minister a few months ago. This was the second marriage for both parties. Each of their former companions

were dead. The minister had a daughter and the wife had a son. His daughter was of age and her son was not. The daughter took charge of all the money and had the say about the home. My friend did the work and bought all of her own clothes. When she asked

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Jane‘Jordan

for a little money the daughter would say, “you get your board.” The minister’s daughter had a girl friend who came to the house two and three times a day, and she also tried to tell this wife what to do. The minister took the part of his daughter's friend and told the wife to go. The daughter’s friend told the neighbors that she would break up this marriage. Shortly after this threat the minister sued for a divorce. Would you say she alienated his affections? Do you think he was trying to please the daughter or do you think he was interested in the girl? AN INTERESTED FRIEND. Answer —I do not know enough of the circumstances to be sure of my reply. My impression (and this is all it is> is that the daughter is the real bone of contention, and the apple of her I father’s eye. It is evident that she wished to fill her mother’s place i as housekeeper and companion to | her father. Therefore, she looked | upon his new wife as an intruder. The husband put the tie to his daughter above the tie to his wife, which is absolutely wrong and a situation bound to brew trouble. The father-daughter combination is of long standing and bodes ill for any one who undertakes a love partnership with either. If the minister has an attachi ment to the young lady's friend, i it is again due to the daughter s

influence. A close friend of the girl causes less disruption between the pair than an outsider. It is as if he loved the daughter in the friend. Nor do I believe that the girl is one-half so interested in the minister as she is in his daughter. Has the minister's daughter no boy friends to take her interests away from her father’s home? I do not know whether or not this situation constitutes legal grounds for the alienation of the affections or not. All such suits have a “get even” spirit behind them which makes the case hard to prove. The statements of the wife would carry little weignt unless backed up by some powerful witnesses. If the wife wants a divorce I should think a countersuit, charging cruel and rhuman treatment, would be more likely to succeed. a tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—l went with a fellow steady and he got in trouble and got a year’s sentence. I have been married and have a son of 5. I’ve never gotten a divorce from my husband and he wants me back. We have been separated for three years. Our married life was just one separation after another. After being away from him for three years I don’t know whether I could bear to live with him or not because I love the one who is in prison. Some tell me I should wait for him and others say I should go back to my husband for the baby’s sake. But I would probably be in misery all the time. Any advice you can give me will be appreciated. G. H. Answer —Both men are very bad bets. It seems to me that constant separation by the intervention of the law is just about as bad ?is separation by quarrels. I see no hope! of peace in a return to your old problems with your husband. But neither do I see peace in living with a man who can not keep out of trouble with society. What you need is anew deal. Why do you put off divorcing your husband? Wouldn't this be just one more complication cleared away in the interests of a fresh start?

Cranberries served as a sauce or jelly—in fate, salads or puddings—made each meal a holiday Jeasl. grocery or fruit dealers have CDatmor (jranberries, !fds(< for free recifje cards. Buv quality graded and trade marked

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

State Group of Clubs to Meet in City Grace Morrison Poole, National Federation Head, to Speak. The Seventh District Federation of clubs, of which Mrs. Clarence J. Finch is president, is arranging to meet delegates to the forty-fifth annual convention of the Indiana Federation of Clubs when it assembles Oct. 23, 24 and 25 at the Claypooi. Mrs. Grace Morrison Poole, president ot the General Federation of Women's Clubs, will attend the Tuesday and Wednesday sessions and the annual dinner Tuesday when she will address the group on "Federation and the New Day.” Other general federation leaders and Indiana women serving in the general federation will extend greetings. Miss Elizabeth Paul heads the program committee which has scheduled as the convention theme, 'Higher Goals for Indiana,” with particular stress to be laid on the departments ot American home, fine arts, international relations and public welfare. Convention music is in charge of Mrs. Caroline Ayres Turner. Mrs. Frederick 6. Balz, first vicepresident and dean of departments, and Mrs. Allan S. Courtney, second vice-president and dean of district presidents, will meet with their respective groups for luncheon on Tuesday. The Seventh District club women will entertain with a reception at the close of Tuesday evening's program. Mrs. Poole will preside at a breakfast for club presidents Wednesday morning, and the committee on cooperation for the blind will hear C. D. Chadwick, executive secretary of the state board of industrial aid, speak. Luncheons Wednesday include those for the committee on motion pictures, American home, and junior. The fine arts dinner in the Riley room will conclude Wednesday’s program. Senora Bertita Leonarz Harding will be guest speaker. On Thursday, Professor Donald Du Shane, president of the Indiana Society for Mental Hygiene, will address the mental health group at breakfast and members of the tenth and sixth districts also will meet at breakfast. Luncheons include those scheduled by the international relations, public welfare, Epsilon Sigma Omicron and rural cooperation groups. At the federation banquet Thursday night, Dr. William G. Spencer, president of Franklin college, will speak. Past presidents will be honor guests with Mrs. Robert A. Hicks, Cambridge City, presiding.

Card Parties

Sergeant Ralph Barkes Auxiliary to Post 1587, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will hold a bi-monthly card party at the hall, Olive and Cottage streets at 8 Thursday night with Mrs. Catherine Roembke, chairman. Mineola council No. 31 will sponsor a card party at 8:30 tomorrow night at 1609 Prospect street. October committee of St. Anne’s church, Mars Hill, will sponsor a dance tonight in the parish auditorium. Al, Andy and Doc, radio entertainers, will provide the music. Women of the Moose will entertain with a card party at 2:30 and 8:30 Thursday in the hall, 135 North Delaware street, with Miss Evelyn Runyan, chairman. The public may attend. Big Sisters maternity branch of the Catholic Women's union will hold a card, bunco and lotto party at 8:30 tonight in St. Cecelia hall. Mrs. Mary Graham wall be in charge of a card party to be given at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon at St. Philip Neri auditorium.

Washington PEAS Give Tour Appetite a Ttrill—A Delicate Delicious Delicacy. 24 1,0 2 Cans SI .BB Case Lots Only. Cash, Carry Lewis R„ Doll 800 MADISON AVE.

? WARNING! 1 Be Sure the Name m on Bottle and Cap B ;t- are the Sdme Hi INDIANAPOLIS OISTRiPUTORi l 7ki&*cMlLK

Voters League Speaker

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Mrs. Horace R. Lamb, New York, chairman of the department of government and economic welfare of the National League of Women Voters, will speak on “The League and Economic Trends” at a membership tea of the Indianapolis league Friday afternoon at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Beginning with her early school days at Westover, and through a year’s study in Paris, her college work at Bryn Mawr, and later special graduate work in economics at Columbia university, Mrs. Lamb has evinced specialized interest in economics, political science and problems of foreign policy. Before assuming direction of the league’s economic welfare program in May, 1934, Mrs. Lamb had been associated since 1928 with the league’s department of international co-operation. Her grasp of international economist affairs has been re-

Club Meetings

WEDNESDAY Business meeting is scheduled by the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside for 2 in the American National bank building. Flemish Flanders chapter, International Travel-Study Club, Inc., will meet at 7:45 at the home of Miss Laverne Brown, 234 East Ninth street. Mrs. S. R. Artman will lecture, and Mrs. Walter Summa will assist the hostess. THURSDAY Mothers of Phi Delta Theta fraternity pledges will be guests of the Mothers Club at a luncheon in Butler university chapter house, 705 Hampton drive. Mrs. A. E. Coddington, president, will be assisted by Mesdames A. S. Johnson, J. C. Moore, V. C. Raiser and H. K. Kalb.

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Mrs. Horace R. Lamb

fleeted widely, particularly in her authorship of eight important publications of the national league on disarmament, war debts, League of Nations, world court, Pan-American questions and allied international topics. In 1927 she studied for four months at the Geneva School of International Studies, and in 1929 attended the Cultural Relations Seminar held in Mexico. Mrs. Joseph J. Daniels, president of the local league, will presile at the tea. The legislative program will be presented by Mrs. Warren K. Mannon, chairman of the legislative steering committee of the state league. The tea will honor the 175 new members of the league.

TUDOR HALL OFFERS RILEY PROGRAM

Students and teachers at Tudor Hall school attended a Riley program presented yesterday at assembly by members of the Masquers Club of the school. Miss Nina Brown, club president, opened the program which included poems by James Whitcomb Riley, read by Misses Betty Amos, Ardith Mettenet, Mary Lou Allen and Patricia De Prez. Club Will Meet Mrs. O. D. Springer, 5130 Broadway, will entertain members of the Current Literature Club at a luncheon meeting tomorrow. Mrs. E. W. Cowley will give a book review.

Wasson’s Will Take Part in National Showing of Styles Chosen by Tobe President Roosevelt’s Mother and W idow of Calvin Coolidge Among Sponsors of Radio Event Featuring Fashion Expert. BY HELEN LINDSAY SPONSORED by such nationally known women as Mrs. James Roosevelt, mother of the President; Mrs. Calvin Coolidge. Mrs. Dwight Morrow. Mrs. Kermit Roosevelt. Mrs. Charles H. Sabin and Mrs. Henry Sloane Coffin, the second national fashion show staged under the direction of Tobe. nationally known stylist, will be given at 3 tomorrow afternoon. The local showing, described over the national radio hook-un by Tobe, and showing gowns selected personally by her, will be at the H. P. Wasson & Cos. store. The show will be held simultaneously with others throughout \.e

country. The original event, in the Ritz-Carleton. New York, wall be for the benefit of the Motion Picture Research Council, where admission will be charged, and tea served. The show at Wasson's will be without charge, and reserved seat tickets have been issued to patrons, which will be held until 2:45. when the remaining seats will be open to the public. The show is a carefully staged production, with scenes depicting the proper clothing for events at all hours of the day and night. It has been titled "Diary of a Deb,” and the scenes are those which are the ones frequented by socially prominent young women Prominent in the showing will bo many of the features of tnrs season's mode. Schiaparelli's r.ew harem veils will be seen; luxurious furs in their proper place as accessories will be featured, and color, fabric

and design will be emphasized. The central figures of the cast of the production will be the debutante, her mother, and her dowager aunt, while other characters modeling the costumes will be friends of the debutante. Yale Bowl Will Be Setting THE first act will bring the audience where many of them are yearnin to be at this season of the yeai, at the fifty-yard line of the Yale bowl. The young debutante will be shown attending a game, and the act is called "The Debs Score a Touchdown.” They do it with the most striking sports costumes, which have been given the names of "First Down,” “Fonyard Pass” and "Touchdown.” The second scene is "Fraternity Tea Fight,” showing a group of young girls before a portable bar, where their punch glasses are being filled. Their costumes are semi-formal ones, in which color, fabric and silhouette are important. Costumes prominent in this scene are called “Gold Basis,” “Bows.” and "Cocktails for Two.” Repeal, Tobe will point out, has made night club life passible for even carefully guarded debutantes, and the next scene is aptly called “Night Club Life.” In this, in the intimate confines of a smart dressing room, “Mimi,” the debutante, and her companions are shown in elaborate evening costumes, bearing such descriptive names as "Black Velvet,' and “Scotch.” u tt u nan Afternoon Costumes Displayed THE Art of Lunching Smartly” is shown in the next scene, where Mimi's dowager aunt is hostess at a luncheon in a smart restaurant. The dresses in this scene, which range from afternoon frocks to furtrimmed town coats, are called “Colony Club,” "Park Avenue, ’ "Sutton Place” and "Fifth Avenue.” The worries of what to wear for a “don’t dress date” are solved in the next scene, which is in a telephone room, where the young girls are seen in costumes which can be carried over from afternoon wear to informal evening wear. They are christened “Tables for Two, "Two in One,” and "Hostess.” An afternoon of a debutante forms the background for charming costumes shown in the next scene, which is the Ritz at the tea or cocktail hour. These names are reminiscent of the deb's activities, and include “Junior League,” “Matinee,” “Contract” and "Ritz Bar.” The grand finale of the show, of course, is "Coming Out Party," which shows the debutante and her mother in the receiving line in a ballroom. The splendor of the sophisticated costumes in this scone is shown in the names “Coral Strands,” “Sophisticate,” “Robe de Style” and "Grande Dame.” nnno TJ AT? AMV T(A is assisted by Mrs. J. Ladd Mozley, t KUr . ti rirC/iJI I I\J Mrs Harry Lindstaedt and Mrs. INSTRUCT CLASS a native o, Class in world affairs will be Palestine, received his education in opened at 2:45 Friday afternoon at America at Earlham and Columbia the Irvington Presbyterian church universities. He now is head oi the by Professor John J. Haramy, under social science department at Indiauspices of the Irvington Union of ana Central college and is beginning Clubs. Mrs. Charles A. Harris, his third year as lecturer for the chairman of the class for the union, Irvington union.

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OCT. 9, 1931

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Mrs. Lindsay