Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 154, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1934 — Page 9
XOV. 7, 193T_
Place Asked for Women in Barrooms Such Environment Is Deemed Likely to Widen Range of Conversation. BY EVELYN SEELEY Time* special Writer PLEASE. Irvin Cobb, let us stay la the barroom. Don't send us back to our dismal hen-party purgatory. We will be lost forever If your hars-for-men-oniy crusade wins. We know you can get along fine without u . that in the good old-fash-ioned bars for which you are so homesick you may be better off. But have a heart—* hat would we do without you? In your presence ps we will pa.-kie and be stimulated into bright and Intelligent conversation. Left to ourselves we will sink to the level of curtains and cosmetics and maids and personal gcsalp. You said. Mr. Cobb, as you waxed so amusingly nostalgic at a coeducational cocktail party the other night: ••Barrooms used to smell like they smelled of stale sawdust, i pittoons, old cigar butts, state beer. Now fas you sniffed disgustedly) they smell of perfume and gardenias and all those things you women put on your faces to make you look what you aren’t. “Fir t it was the smoking car you encroached on. Then the barber shop. And now the bar. It’s a hell of a note." Charles Driscoll piped up: “And you spoil all the stories! You women have a sense of sin about a story. You can take a clean joke and make it sound perfectly filthy. You're a menace." “We men can sit around in our clubs and never miss you women,” ! Mr. Cobb continued ruthlessly. "We •.ever think about you except hoping to God you’ll not come where we are. You women sit around by your- j selves and keep one ear open ail the j time for the telephone to ring say- ; ing some man is on his way." Brands Talk Too Personal St • ind think about the hen par u have attended. What d:n ilk about? First you talked abou ..nnie’s new hat; then you talked about Jane's new apartment; then you got into an involved and devastating conversation about Helen's allair with Mary's husband, leaving Helen not a shred of integrity. Wnen Polly got going on a discussion of the A. & P. grocery j situation Jr-ne yanked the conver- I sation right back to her dealings ’ with her corner grocer. Women left to themselves are too j subj live and are intellectually lazy. < Disliking argument, and too unso- ; cial-minded to project a subject beyond themselves, they pull a potentially interesting discussion right back home into personal channels. They drop into discussion of immediate and superficial Common interests because it is so easy. And if it is also unspeakably dull and ‘ boring it does not matter. They j save their mental exertion until j they can challenge the men. It Isn't altogether their lault. If j women have been exploited, indus- j trially. to depress the wage scale, j . ave also been exploited, sentimentally. to depress the scale of conversation. Men have over-em-phasized their romantic values as 1 wives and mothers at the expense of their intellects. Limited to Four Topics "Charm School” Margery Wilson j gave a conversation test to 10.000 women and found them limited, conversationally, to four subjects—-make-up. movies, boys and school. Lord knows I hate to agree with Margery Wilson, whose “charm school’’ gives me a pain, but her findings about 10.000 women are significent. I would say they have another subject or two, and I would also exempt certain women—such as my own colleagues—who talk shop and thereby are lifted automatically out of their limitations. Anyway. Miss Wilson’s “charm school” won t cure us. A more active interest in life outside of our apartment walls, a better sense of proportion and a stronger sense of humor will help. And if you men at your bars won’t help us acquire these qualities who will? We don’t want to go back to the kitchen and the hen parties it connotes. We want to stay in the barroom. If you give us a little help with the left elbow we can pull ourselves up by our mental bootstraps until, conversationally, -we re chin-to-chin with you and you'll be glad we came. Club Luncheon Set Emma Donnan Club will entertain at a luncheon at 12:30 Saturday in the Athenaeum. Reservations are in charge of Mrs. Clara Fischer, 1005 North Pennsylvania street. Pure Blood Is The Basis Os Good Health: New Yeast Vitamin Compound Now Bringing Renewed Health to Thousands. Give yourself a fair chance to recover from such ailments as underweight jagged nerves, mteatin&i tieadaches. pimply skin, constipation lose of energy, with Thor's Vitamir B Compound, the new veast vitamin compound, tenown ana praised by thousands ail over the country, whe have used it with splendid result* Read what some of them say: Mt system seemed to be chockeo full at toxic poison and I suffered no end from stomach trouble, indigestion. nervousness. Sleep was not restful and I woke too tired to cover my beat." says Officer J. M. S. of Kokomo. IndL "Nothing seemed to reach my troubles uctli I tried Thor > Vitamin B Compound wnich put me on the road to recovery almost immediately Today my digestion ia perfect: my bowels are regular and my sleep is sound and restfin. 1 feel my old-time self V* every way and can't say too much for Thr rs Vitamin B Compound " " Becoming all rundown and weak with a bad. stubborn stomach trouble. I gave your yeast vitamin compound a trial and it. undoubtedly, did me a great deal of good." writes Mrs. J. M. H, of Luray, Va. Get a bottle of Thor's Vitamin B Compound, only 60c, fron. your druggist, and if you do not think you are on the road to recovery after taking one bottle, ask for your money back.—Advertisement.
Jaunty School Dress
A LITTLE dress like this for classroom will find much appreciation ** with modem schoolgirl who are insistent about clothes with sophistication. It is delightfully smart and different, besides being quite simple to make it. In a gray and red checked woolen was the original with plain red woolen trim Red buttons trip down the back of the “butcher boy” blouse. Daughter will love this in navy blue wool crepe with bright red trim. Plain woolen skirt with plaided blouse with the plain woolen used for trim, is still another suggestion. Tweedy cottons, linen and cotton challis prints r.re nice tubbable fabrics for this dress. Style No. 592 is designed in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 requires yards of 35-inch material with Vi yard of 35-inch contrasting.
Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 592. Name Street . % City State Size
To obtain a pattern of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Ellen Worth, The Indianapolis Times. 214 West Maryland street. Indianapolis, with 15 cents in coin. HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle aroused incah L The first ■ J|AjPiA|Nj£ 5 in * v iation. world-famous S aviator. I PiEHM.OP,E 17 courtesy titles. ll To fly apart. L HeBI|P,mPS 20 To scorch - M kjMR A, n|mS E /--.bBN E. i SIN 21 Almond. ” ..,h.r*r 1 U|DjGIE ON SI l ' r ,,., rcr 24 Metric foot, mall nittrn I / MB' iMI / I lEI JAPANESE 26 People united iSSHKEpa FLAG 16 Strikes ZU 1 noisily 31 To card wool. 18 Ireland. wlHtep£|gM(FU UiNWAN 32 Gray-green. 19 God of war. a'GDPBOPi'AT Olp!SplAOD| 34 03 Attacked by 43 To d uole - 3To eni P loy 40 Flowering a mob 45 Poem - 4 Neuter sHrub. 25 Kind of bed. 9 u ‘ de( l' ~ . pronoun. 42 ® mel F, . *7 48 Striped fabric. _ , „ 44 Second son of 27 Rodent c _ o ,, .. 5 Inclination. 28 Small match. ® maJl plt? * Fn vnv Adam 29 To come In. 52 Minerals. 6 En\oy. 45 Away. 33 Net weight of 58 He * 8 by 7 Sun god - 46 Night beforea container nationality. 8 Frozen water. 48 Devoured, 36 State of dis- 59 His English 9 Furnished 49 Onager. organized flight was with oars. .61 Half an em. flight the first water- 10 Experiment. 53 North Caroling 37 Myself. air record (pi.) U Today he is 54 Exclamation 38 Part of the vrßTirAi a of of pleasure - Roman month. ' ™ * planes (pi.) 55 Father. 39 5280 feet (pi.) 1 Tumult. 12 PoeL 56 Form of a. 41 Natural power. 2 Body part 14 His flight 57 W ithin. I 14"" h 14 I |s lb it 16 9™7^"l " SSF n- PMpigp: Cml *— V * 55 —I —-- 144 !*<■ J *n —j — L_ *1 Ml Ftt! II 11 ITT
COUPLE TO BE WED SATURDAY HONORED] A dinner last night at Hollyhock Hill honored Miss Clara Lepple and Edward Hridenreieh. whose marriage will take place Saturday at the home of Miss Lepple's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Lepple, 1305 Hartford street. Miss Anne Lepple. sister of the bride-to-be. enteretzined with the dinner, at which covers were laid for the engaged couple and Miss Carolyn Atting, Albert Fox. Everett Dammeyer and Mr. and Mrs. John Heidenreich Jr. Fall flowers and appointments were used.
Chapter to Meet Jeanne d’Arc chapter, International Travel-Study Club. Inc., will j meet Friday night at the home of Mrs. John S White. 1307 North Ew- 1 mg street. Assistant hostesses will j be Mrs. Harold Maves and Mrs. Gladys Blake. Mrs. S. R. Artman will lecture on "Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia.” Club Will Meet Manuel J. Vidal will address the ' Spanish Club at its meeting at 7:45 tonight at the Lockerbie on “Commercial Importance of the Spanish Language." Open forum meeting , will be followed by a social hour.
BY ELLEN WORTH
Professor to Speak Professor Toyazo W. Nakarai of Butler university will address a meeting of the Women’s Missionary Society of the Central CThristian church at 2 tomorrow afternoon. The club vice-presidents, Mrs. J. W. Atherton and Mrs. Eben Wolcott, have arranged the program. Evan Walker will sing. A social hour will conclude the program.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Food Budget Assisted By Fifths Rule Nourishing Diet Provided by Program Used During War. BY MARY E. DAGUE NXA Service Writer To provide nourishing food for a family is never a simple task, and when the income is small the homemaker faces a more difficult problem. She must have some knowledge of both food values and human needs, coupled with ingenuity and patience, if she would spend the food allowance wisely and well. A study of the properties of natural foodstuffs makes it quite possible to maintain a cheap but adequate dietary without sacrificing the essential food values. The amount of money the average family ordinarily spends for food is influenced by several factors. Individual tastes, nutrition requirements, avoidance of waste and economical planning control the food budget as definitely as does the size of the pocketbook. It frequently has been estimated that not more than one-fourth of the income could be allowed for food. But when the income falls below what might be considered even a moderate sum, the allowance for food may be above the allotted one-fourth, due to the act that fpod is of first importance on the list of necessities. Division of Foods When the World war enforced a combination of economy and food conservation, the United States food administration advocated the division of the food allowance into fifths and this simple, workable basis for the division of foods was worked out: “One-fifth, more or less, for fruits and vegetables. “One-fifth, or more, for milk and cheese. “One-fifth, or less, for meats, fish and eggs. “One-fifth, or more, for bread and cereals. “One-fifth, or less, for fats, sugar and other groceries and food adjuncts.” If you will try this arrangement for a week or two you will find that you are serving well balanced meals, which provide protein, fat, carbohydrates, mineral constituents and vitamins. Don't Overlook Cereals In your meal planning, don’t overlook the cereals. The germ part of grains especially is of great value and is classed with the “protective foods.” You can work cereals into appetizing luncheon or supper dishes that are most inexpensive and nourishing. Dried fruits and dried vegetables are cheap sources of energy and mineral salts. The root vegetables and cabbage have a long season and are very low in cost They supply a maximum of valuable nutrients for the maximum outlay. Cheese should not be forgotten as a means toward economy. A concentrated food, it contains no waste and is rich in calories. It’s an excellent source of vitamin A and a good source of vitamin B. There are also many varieties of fish that lend themselves to low cost meals.
SHULLENBERGERS TO BE HONORED
Members of the Central Christian church and their friends will attend an informal reception from 5:30 to 6:10 tomorrow night honoring Dr. and Mrs. William A. Shullenberger. The reception is honoring the Shsillenbergers who recently were elected as the fratenral delegates for United States and Canada to the world convention to be held at Leicester, England, in August. Following dinner a congratulatory program will be held in the church auditorium with talks by church members. Mrs. James H. Lowry will sing and H. B. Holloway, fraternal delegate to the last convention, will represent the brotherhood.
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Princess Chooses Two Hats by Suzy
One of Madame Suzy’s models exhibits two of the hats chosen by Princess Marina for her wardrobe. Below are three others from the collection.
A Womans Viewpoint
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
MY selection for the swellest name on the new fallbook list is "The Folks,” by Ruth Suckow. Those two homely words tell more about it than any literary review. The title is a friendly welcome, and you know you will meet inside pleasant, simple, honest people, your kind of peoplejust folks. Perhaps never before has there been any better description of the emotions experienced by a young bride during the period just before her wedding than Miss Suckow gives in the book. I hope no girl will skip the chapters, for they are the very best argument I know for marriage ceremonials. Unfortunately, there has prevailed of late the idea that it was smart to marry in any old hit-or-miss fashion: sneaking off to the justice of the peace; eloping by night to another state, or just hurrying out on the spur of the moment for the license and the vows. For a part of the stability of marriage depends upon how we
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approach it. I believe, therefore, it always should be preceded by a certain amount of preparation, no matter how simple, and attended by certain ceremonial rites. How else can we impress its importance upon’ young people? When one dashes off to get married as if one were going after an ice cream soda, moved by the mere impulse of love, untouched by the meaning such a change implies, or may miss its meaning altogether. But for a girl and boy to go slowly, delicately, cautiously, prayerfully to their union, to have the wedding day set apart and made the occasion of festivity, affection and tears is to mark it forever in their remembrance as a great event. Upon such wedding as this.
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real homes are built —and if there is anything we want in the United States now, more than anything else, it is real homes such as the folks used to make.
| For a Bad Cough, Mix This Better Remedy at Home
Quicker, Lasting Relief. Big Saving! No Cooking! Here’s an old home remedy your mother knew, but, for real results, it is still the best thing ever known for severe coughs. Try it once, and you’ll swear by it. It’s no trouble at all. Make a syrup by stirring 2 cups of granulated sugar and one cup of water a few moments, until dissolved. No cooking is needed—a child could do it. Now put 2% ounces of Pinex into a pint bottle, and add your syrup. This
PAGE 9
Party Given for Miss Warner; to Be Wed Saturday Twenty-five guests attended a miscellaneous shower and bridge party last night which Mrs. L. L. Clark gave in honor of Miss Elizabeth Warner, bride-to-be. Miss Warner, daughter of Mrs. Otis H. Warner, Atlanta, Ga., will become the bride of Homer D. Eberhart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnaldo Ebcrhart. Shelbyville, In a ceremony Saturday. Mrs. Clark was assisted by Miss Florence Day and Miss Helen Clark. Miniature brides and bridegrooms formed the decorating motif. Among the guests was Mrs. Iredell Wright, Anderson. A miscellaneous shower was given recently by Miss Maradith Dick for Miss Warner. Guests ’ncluded Mcsdames John Haerle, F. Paul McCune, Raymond Collins and Louis Eggert: Misses Lelah Branson, Ruth Brookbank. Rosemary Bosson, Margaret Beckwith, Gertrude Fee. Marjorie Ziegler. Margaret Shoefield, Helen Cantwell and Gertrude West.
A Day’s Menu ! Breakfast — j Chilled melon, cereal, j cream, creamed finnan j haddie. commeal muffins, j milk, coffee. Luncheon — J Clam chowder, baking j powder biscuits, pear and ! pineapple conserve, nut ) pudding, milk, tea. . Dinner — { Planked bluefish, Marti- | nique potatoes, onions in | parsley sauce, orange and ! nut salad, apricot and | marshmallow freeze, milk, l coffee.
gives you a full pint of actually better cough remedy than you could buy ready-made for four times the money. It keeps perfectly, tastes fine, and lasts a family a long time. And there is positively nothing lika it for quick action. You can feel it take hold instantly. It loosens the germ-laden phlegm, soothes and heals the inflamed membranes, and clears the air passages. No cough remedy, at any price, could be more effective. Pinex is a compound of Norway Pine, in concentrated form, famous as a healing agent for throat and bronchial membranes. It is guaranteed to please you, or money refunded. —Advertisement.
