Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 148, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Woodstock Club’s Dance Tonight Will Form Part of Halloween Activities
Attics Said to Be Yielding- Costumes Which \\ ill Be Seen in Grand Parade; Prelude to Be Dutch Treat Parties. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN Timtt Woman 4 * Page Editor • T VE found just what I want,’' one young matron explained as her JL friend arrived to debate on what to wear to Woodstock Club's Halloween dance tonight. The hostess' face was smudged with dust and the visitor guessed that she had been ransacking in the family attic. We’ve been told treasured gowns stowed away in trunks of attics will solve the costume problems of many of the guests who will march in the grand parade tonight, promenading before W. I. Longsworth, president; Mrs. Longsworth and Mrs. Fisk Landers, judges. In one Dutch treat party will be Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus, chairmen of the club entertainment committee. Mr. and Mrs. Landers will attend with the same group, composed of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Madden. Mr. and tyrs. David Stone. Mr. and Mrs. John K. Ruckelshaus, Mr. and Mrs. Thon as R Kackley Mr. and Mrs. John Cqllett, Miss Harriett Denny, Thomas Ruckelshaus and Burford Danner. Miss Edith Lackner, Cincinnati, has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Yale Rice, and they will join the Dutch treat party which will include Captain and Mrs. Ola Fred Heslar, Mr. and Mrs. William Griffith. Mr. and Mrs. Julian Fauvre, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frenzel, Mr.
George Devlin Takes Bride in Rite at Church
Miss Mary Ellen Maupin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Maupin, and George R. Devlin were married at 9 this morning at St. Joan of Arc church. Miss Marie Filcer, organist, played bridal music. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a burgundy velvet gown, trimmed in rhinestones, and designed with a jacket. Her hat of silver sequins had a short veil, and her flowers were white chrysanthemums. Miss Pauline Maupin, the brides sister, was bridesmaid and wore a golden brown velvet dress, a gold sequin turban and carried a bouquet of yellow pompom and bronze button chrysanthemums. William Shea was best man. A wedding breakfast was served at the Maupin home for relatives and out-of-town guests who were Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Devlin, Edin, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. John H. Devlin and Dolores Devlin, Syracuse. N. Y.; Mrs. Dennis Shea, William and Ralph Shea, all of Muncie; Lawrence Devlin, Kansas City, Xan.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jordan, Danville, Ind., and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Minnick. Newcastle. Tlie c'-up!-’ left on a wedding trip and will r: t in here to live. MEETING ARRANGED FOR MUSIC GUILD Mrs. W !1 C. Hitz will preside at an all-fay meeting of the White Cross M" r Guild tomorrow in the nurses’ residence of the Methodist hospital. Sewing and hospital dressings will be made in the morning and the guild chorus, directed by Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs, will rehearse at 11. Following luncheon at 12:30, a program will be held in the auditorium. Dr. John G. Benson, hospital superintendent, will talk on the White Crass work and a oneact play. “Concession,” will be presented with Mesdames Mark Covert, Arthur Dewey. Richard Fielding and Katherine Dalsheimer taking part. Halloween favors will be presented to patients on the Thomas Taggart Memorial Children's floor of the hospital today by the Helping Hands White C.css Guild.
TWO WILL SPEAK . AT CLUB MEETING A program on "Women of the Old Test amen;" wi’l be given by Mrs. William A. Rowland and Mrs. Henrietta W.i'en a meeting of the Culture Club Friday with Mrs. Rudolph Miller, 974 West drive, Woodruff Place. Civic Group Will Meet William F. Bornkamp. president of the Wayne Township Civic League, will preside at a meeting at 7:30 tomorrow night at the home of C. C Bordenkecher, 3825 West Washington street. | Daily Recipe i SALMON ROLL j 2 cup* flaked .salmon j j 2 eggs j 1 cup flour j 1-4 teaspoon salt j j 2 tablespoons shortening j | 1-3 cup milk ' j 2 ter -poons baking | powder | Sift flour, baking powder r | and salt. Cut in shortening. | f Add milk and stir until well j } mixed. Roll one inch thick, r | Mix salmon and eggs together j ! and spread over dough. Roll j j up like jelly roll and bake in = | moderate oven thirty mm- j ( utes. j j —1 Corns Lift Right Out! FREEZONE does it! Puts the com to sleep—deadens all pain —and soon make* it so loose in its bed of flesh that it lifts right out! Hard corns or soft—*ll are quickly ended by FREEZONE. Calluses, too. Get a bottle at any drug store and walk m comfort! FREEZONE
and Mrs. Harold Taylor and Oscar Frenzel Jr. Before guests of Dr. Walter L. Bruetsch go to the club for dinner, they will stop at the home of Mrs. Lafayette Page for cocktails. Another group will pause for cocktails at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Noling. Mrs. Samuel Lewis Shank has invited eighteen guests to dine with her and her sister. Miss Clara Gilbert. at the club before the dance. Miss Constance Fowler and Charles Edward Buschmann who will be married Nov. 10 will go to the dance as guests of Miss Ellen Rogers, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Clarke Rogers. Misses Dorothy Johnston and Helen Shepard will be in the party w'ith Henry Johnston, Jaseph Wallace, Eli Messenger and Richard Tennant. Stopping at Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Todd's home before going Dutch treat to the dance will be Messrs, and Mesdames Robert Ferriday Jr., Frederick Albershardt, Misses Josephine Reed, Jane Moore and Messrs. William Bertermann, Volney Brown and Richard Hoberg. Another group of members will be Messrs, and Mesdames Orland Church, T. A. W. Gilliam, Perry Lesh. William H. Mooney and Louis Haerle. a a a Workers of the Civic theater will go backstage tonight after the last performance of the season’s first production for an informal party arranged by the social committee. Board members, the cast of “The Church Mouse,” the stage crew and membership campaigners who sold five or more memberships will gather to enjoy a stunt planned by Mrs. C. C. Robinson. Never before has such a party been held by the Civic theater. Frederick Burleigh, new' director, will be there to become acquainted with the workers responsible for the success of his first show’. Mrs. George T. Parry is chairman of the social committee, and her assistants are Miss Helen Coffey, Mrs. R. P. Van Camp, Miss Eldena Lauter, Mrs. Will Coburn, Mrs. William H. Coleman and Mrs. Harold Tharp.
Costume in Two Pieces BY ELLEN WORTH *
j..>... - ■■■
JAUNTY are today's patterns. Loads of smart changes can be worked out with a separate skirt and blouses, and make your wardrobe look really more extensive than it is. Blouse Style No. 902 shows a very smart, round yoke arrangement and shirtwaist collar. It adapts itself so perfectly to numberless materials as silk crepes, tie silks, and lightweight woolehs. Sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 36. 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 2 yards of 39-inch material with yard of 3’2-inch ribbon for bow. Skirt Style No. 688 with buttons down front has a plait for easy walking. Fashion it of plaid or checked tweedy monotone homespun woolen or velveteen. Sizes 26, 28, 30, 32 and 34 waist. Size 28 requires 2’s yards of 35-inch material.
Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 688 or 902 Size Name Street City State
To obtain a pattern of this moaef, tear out the coupon and mail it to Ellen Worth, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, with 15 cents in coin. B B B B a B You can have a very smart wardrobe at little expense of time and effort—our attractive fall and winter book of fashions is just bulging with ideas that you can turn into chic wearable clothes. Send for your copy today. Price. 10 cents. I &
JJ’i" • - - ' x - m - •■” • 1 iii-W'V'JJ'Ll'i , - ,j Interesting, Ensembles }**' -y|RS. WESTCHESTER and Mrs. Long Island met in a New York * I IVI suit shop the other day. Mrs. Westchester was seven minutes *0 " I late, but she explained it was only because Mrs. Long Island must : j Then both went into ecstasies over the beauty of the country in I the autumn until the salesgirl, trying to balance parkways with fair- .- fcajlr jgpfc ; ways, landscaping with acreage, and polo fields with racetracks and Manin aWJ:<!r ’ "
Welfare Club Arranges Party and Style Show
Reservations for the Welfare Club's benefit card party and style shew scheduled for Wednesday, Nov. 7, in Ayres’ auditorium are in charge of Mrs. Harry Kuhn, general chairman, and Mrs. Richard Poole, ticket chairman. Mrs. E. Monty Campbell , club president, heads the hospitality committee for the party, proceeds of which will be used in the club's philanthropic work for elderly women. Assisting Mrs. Campbell will be Mrs. Joel Wilmoth, hororary president; Mrs. Kuhn, Mrs. Nelle Greyer, first vice-president, and Mesdames Volney E. Huff, W. S. Mitchell, Oscar Jose, A. G. Mills, John Sawyer, A. E. Zaring and Mrs. Martin. Auxiliary of Prospect chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will hold an allday meeting Friday at its hall, State and Prospect streets. A pitch-in dinner will be held at noon. Auxiliary members have invited their families to attend a Hallow’een party Saturday night.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Miss Ramey and Dr. Wiseheart to Wed Jan. 5
Jan. 5 is the date set by Miss Betty Ramey and Dr. Robert Wiseheart for their marriage. Announcement w r as made last night at a bridge party given by Mrs. C. E. Carlsen at her home, 3640 North Meridian street. The bride-to-be is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Lawrence Ramey and Dr. Wiseheart is the son of Dr. and Mrs. O. W. Wiseheart, North Salem. The ceremony will be read in the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Guests last night included Mrs. Ramey, Miss Margaret Ramey, Mrs. Jean Black, Mrs. Gilbert Morrison, Mrs. George F. Collins, Mrs. Calvin Lennox, Lebanon, Mrs. Richard Bireley, Chicago, and Misses Josephine Meloy, Mariamelia Schmidt, Jean McKay, Magdalene Adams, Joan Boswell, Mary Paxton Young, Marie Roach and Eloise Welch. The bridal colors of water lily green and brown appointed the party and Shirley Ann Carlsen presented the guests w’ith gold arrows bearing the wedding date. Club Luncheon Held Fleur Petit Club held its annual luncheon yesterday at Hollyhock Hill. Guests w’ere Mesdames William Eddy, Edward Broden, Harold Braun, Maurice Fitzgerald, Martin Broderick, John Schaffner, George Green and Harvey Hagelskamp.
HEADS SORORITY
1 1
Mrs. R. C. Morgan Mrs. R. C. Morgan is the new president of Alpha chapter, Omega Nu Tau sorority.
Croquignole Gigolette Permanent ** , Ar. outstanding wave at an excep- n fgj B §2 Blmraff ] t’.or.al pr.ee. The choice of the tßkrjtw jBjB nk*. |u smart women of Indianapolis. Com- f olete in every detail. 2 f o r $1.15 Spiral If Desired. Complete. / Fa Venetian Universal •Shampoo Oil Wave Steam OU Tonic • Finger wave 79c. $1.39 $2 00. • Pir.se M . 2 for sl3l 2 for $1.41 2 for $2 01 a End Ol _ curls. /tIC BEAUTIFAIR A - : !oar L * 81-J930 *Ol-303 ROOSEVELT BLDO. 81-2M*
Suits of Tweed Offer Interesting Ensembles
MRS. WESTCHESTER and Mrs. Long Island met in a New York suit shop the other day. Mrs. Westchester was seven minutes late, but she explained it was only because Mrs. Long Island must have taken an earlier train. Then both went into ecstasies over the beauty of the country in the autumn until the salesgirl, trying to balance parkways with fairways. landscaping with acreage, and polo fields with racetracks and tennis courts, concluded that life in the country was made to order for the tweed suits in her department. *
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Let Jane Jordan help you puzzle out your problems! Explain your situation in a letter and read your answer in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—My husband and I have decided to put our argument up to you. He is 43, I am forty-one. We have a daughter who is married, and lost one five years ago. Before our girl was born my husband started drinking and spending almost every evening away from home. My health w r as none too good for several years and our daughter w T as ill all her life. When he was drinking he would tell me about how women
tried to make him. He kept company with one woman a few times, but was not untrue. He has never been untrue, but he tells me he thinks it is O. K. I do not care, for it makes no difference now. I finally told him of an affair with one boy once, but I never have been untrue
s
Jane Jordan
since married, for I love my husband and would not hurt him. Besides, I have no desire for that sort of life. He says that if a girl did those things before she was married she always will do them, but a man won’t. He is kindness itself in every other way. but pouts at times and drinks. Then he says awful things and when he sobers up claims he did not mean them. He says he knows I am not true to him. He thinks all women are cheats, but that very few men are. If I talk and laugh with others, it is not all right, and if I keep quiet he says I am a wet blanket. I am heartsick for I love him and I think he loves me. He tells everybody what a good housekeeper and cook I am. We could be happy and have good times, but this thing is getting on my nerves. Answer When a man is obliged to do such constant bragging about his potency, we only can assume that he secretly doubts it. If I understand you correctly he does not carry his affairs through to their logical conclusion, but boasts for your benefit. Many of our apostles of freedom are merely using their adventures as a means of adorning a weak ego. All too often their ardors are of the head rather than the heart and are maintained solely for the prestige of the self. This is contrary to love which is a setting forth of the personality away from itself to live in and for another. Your letter is not complete enough to tell me why your husband feels uncertain of his masculinity. Why must he strut his phony little affairs before you to impress you of the vigor of his manhood? Why does he feel the urge to hurt you by making you
feel unimportant to him and by accusing you of the very acts he would like to commit himself? My guess is that you have failed to build up his pride and make him feel certain of your burning admiration. I am reminded of Virginia Wolf’s remark that it is the business of every woman to hold a mirror up to her husband each morning so that he is able to see himself as twice his natural size. If you would do more of this it might cut down the warring between your egos. Dear Jane Jordan—l am in love with a girl who loves a fellow who loves himself. I have been in love with her for five years. Three of those years she was mine, but we were too young to marry, I thought. Now I wish u T e had. When I asked her if she was sure she loved him she said she didn’t love him at all. Isn’t that just like a girl? I asked why she wanted him and she said “because I can’t have him.” She has told me time after time that it would be very easy to love me again. She talks about our home and children and gets all on edge. Then I pop the question. I have tried it ten different ways, ten different times, and she says “I don’t know.” She is so sweet through it all that I can't get discouraged. Would you camp on her doorstep? If you can give me a hint how to win her, please do. I’m really very serious about this. WALT. Answer—ls she admits she likes things she can not have, wouldn’t it be a mistake to camp on her doorstep? Perhaps a little competition would help her to make up her mind. No one can tell you how to win her, but since your present methods net you nothing but sweetness and light you might at least look around for someone more responsive.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Baked apples, cooked cereal with raisins, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Toasted sandwiches of ham and egg, Chinese cabbage salad, grapes, milk, tea. Dinner — Vegetable platter, custard pie, milk, coffee.
VI PERMANENT WAVES V AT REAL MM X BARGAIN rn y ' PRICES Sm I Spiral or HRi iSajj K Inclnde Trim, £ Q A Shampoo, Finger||%MP Wave, Open Mon- w# W** Wed., Fri., Eves. i tor Ml Oit Wnro ErrptUn Oil We IS. tw 9 s for *l.Bl f for K*l Splendid for Gw. Dyed. Blenched Hair ROYAL BEAUTY SHOP M Booiewl* Bide- W-BTB4. BHdqU nndW’a ? hhir.on Sin.
Knitting Needles Flash As Ten Contestants Vie , in Event at Block Store
Finale of Race Started Two Weeks Ago Attests Interest in Work; Individuality Permitted in Competition. BY HELEN I.INDSAY IT was a race to the finish. Breathless and excited, the ten contestants who remained yesterday afternoon, from the thirty-five who entered the race two weeks ago, strained to come in first under the finishing tape. They were the knitters in the marathon knitting race staged m the knitting department of the William H Block company store. Color had nothing to do with winning of the finished garment, but each woman had shown her own individual taste, and the yams were bright and varied. The contest was for speed and beauty; the finished garments were short-sleeved knitted blouses. They were made in the simplest stitches, the yoke a simple garter stitch, and the bodice and sleeves a wrapped stitch. ' Some of the contestants were veterans; others were doing their first knitting in the race. The contest proved one thing—that these experienced knitters were faster than their instructor thought they would be. Twelve hours of knitting were allotted at first for the finishing of the garment, but the finishing ten had knitted only eight hours when victory was claimed for Mrs. Felix Mastrapaolo, 131 Montcalm street. One knitter, eager to win the award of $5 worth of knitting materials, had driven in from Noblesville each day of the contest. She was Mrs.
A Woman’s Viewpoint
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON ONE thing that mitigates against human happiness and social well-being is our tendency to separate into clans. You have, let us say, arrived finally at your goal in local society, occupying what you feel is your natural and rightful place. Well, unless you are one of those rare beings with a sincere liking for people, there you probably will stay, moving about in your narrow’ orbit, a goldfish in its bowl, until you fill your narrow’ grave. Our whole social structure is made up of these circles within circles, each bent upon never touching th£ other. The business girl has what she calls “her little bunch"; the married woman sticks to her club membership, while the man gathers a few r cronies about him and all are content in the thought that they are “exclusive.” How stultifying that old exclusive business is. anyway! Social sets invariably breed smugness. If you ever lived in a small tow r n you’ll know what I mean. You may have belonged to the very first family in your community, but you met your inferiors on a common ground nevertheless. The were not just people to you. They were folks. You could go across the track and sit down with Mrs. Sweeney, the' village washerwoman —nobody had laundresses in those days—and speak to her directly as one human being speaks to another. And alw’ays out of such contacts you got something very valuable for yourself. You sensed the strong common tie that binds us together. You knew w : e were all men and women before we w r ere club members and rich people. Our urban civilization has caused us to lose this art of communication. A sad fact for us all. Because even if you are the fortunate one and happen to be a very grand person, feeling intelectually and morally superior to those in a low’er stratum—well, all I can say is you don’t know’ what you’re missing. I’ve no patience with women who assume this high and mighty attitude toward those who have had less opportunity or less money. It is as if they lived in a spacious, rambling house and decided they’d spend their whole existence in an upstairs closet. Eventually their outlook is restricted only to what they can see from their tiny window. It’s a smug world at best, so if you never leave your group to venture into unknown orbits, the misfortune is all yours.
DIRECTS WORK
HP ,1 * ( s
Mrs. Elizabeth Dickinson
Fraternal Order of Maccabees entertained with a Halloween party for members and their friends last night with Mrs. Elizabeth Dickinson, district manager, in charge of junior work. A1 Hausman was arrangements chairman.
ggg| MODERNISTIC ITnbp Oil Ware I" '''■"for llapushup ‘set fidl Beaute-Artesfifll UU I ROOSEVELT BLDG.—LI-7203 UU I
_OCT. 31, 1934
i G. E. Jones, wife of a Nobtesville minister. The marathon brought scores of ! interested spectators each day to j the knitting department. There they gathered around the table where the contestants were seated, to watch them flash their knitting needles through the air, catching up the soft, bright colored yarns. The winner, Mrs. Mastrapaolo. is an experienced knitter. She has made a number of knitted suits at Block's, a swagger coat and several separate sweaters. Knitting is even more popular this year than it has been before. A number of new yarns have been introduced for the new garments which are being knitted. Chamois bouclette is one, for knitted suits. Crepe gora, which has the appear* ance of camel's hair cloth in finished knitting. Is also used in the making of fall suits, and Aberdeen tweed, which is a heavy, colorful yarn, is used for coats. s a Inspired by the gypsy costume which he designed for Katharine Hepburn in “Little Minister,” Walter Plunkett, RKO-Radio Pictures designer has designed a dress similar for the young actrefs. It is a hand-painted sheer mousseline blouse, combined with nih velvet. The blouse has full sleeves, with dropped shoulders, puffed above the elbows, and caught into flattering fullness at the wrists. The velvet is used in a laced girdle and skirt. The skirt, like the one which Miss Hepburn wore in the play, is made with a deep flounce, gathered on to one above it. tt a a London hotels and night clubs aro showing the influence of the approaching marriage of the Princess Marina to Prince George, in elaborate costumes w’orn by Quests. The new gowns often are shown in Marina green, the shade officially sponsored by the Princess Marina for the British color council. The color is near a French turquoise, though somewhat darker, and will be combined w’ith dark colors in many of the winter costumes in London, Paris, aqd the United States. — — ' CITY STUDENTS AID SORORITY FOUNDING By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 31. Six Indianapolis students at Indiana university are in a group which recently formed anew social sorority, Sigma Phi Upsilon. Miss Irma Valinetz and Miss Alice Stolkin are charter members and Misses Ruth Dorman Jeannette Solotken, Helen Talesnick and Lenora Davis are pledges. Officers are Miss Rose Fox, Gary, president; Miss Myrna Sachs, Cleveland, 0., vice-president; Miss Ruth Goldberg, La Porte, secretary, and Miss Dorothy Hassan, Ft. Wayne, treasurer. Charter members are Misses Anna Doran, Ft. Wayne; Frances Kaufman, Gary; Sylvia Levin, Hammond, and Misses Valinetz and Stolkin. Pledges are Misses Sarah Goodman, East Chicago; Sylvia Gladstone, Ft. Wayne; Tillie Cramer, Kendallville; Wilma Friedman, Connersville; Fannie Schwartz and Rachel Steiber, Ft. Wayne, and the Indianapolis students.
AMIBgCAK
BUTTER CRACKERS Their really different, delicious taste means extra cracker value. Made with lots of country butter.
IWIRT BISCUIT (0 ll* P O l i <
