Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 184, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 December 1934 — Page 10
PAGE 10
Merrymakers Club Dance Will Be Held on Christmas Instead of New Year’s Eve Mrs. J. William Wright Is Arranging for Annual Event; College Students at Home for Holiday Will Attend. BY BEATRICE BURGAX Tim** Woman'* Pace Editor THIS Christmas holiday season is the fourth that members of the Merrymakers Club have celebrated with a series of dancing parties. Not only will there be the club dance on Christmas but several private dances given by various members and their friends. Always before the club holiday dance has b*?en on New Year's eve. Mrs. J. William Wnght who organized the club when the members were of the dancing school ago, is handling the details of preparations. Several of the members thus year will be coming to the reunion from
their first year of study in colleges. “The club is growing so that I think next year I will divide it into junior and senior groups." Mrs. Wright suggested today awe exchanged words about the busy juniors who dance every two weeks at the Propylaeum. Mrs. Wright has invited the chaperons, who will be Messrs, and Mesdames Francis Fauvre, Frank Balke, Lvman Whitaker, Paul H. Krauss, Fred Braden, Gerald Hiatt. Louis A. Geupel, Reid Steele, Neal Thurston, Clarence R. Weaver, John Messick, Uz McMurtrie and Mrs. Louise Schellschmidt Koehne. Several of the boys will compose a floor committee and will assist Mrs. Wright and the chaperons as hosts. These boys will see to it that the guests are introduced and enjoy the party. In addition to the forty-four active members, the
Miss Burgan
college set will join the party. Returning from the East will be Marynette Hiatt, from Vassar College; Jean Van Riper, from Wellesley College; Charles Huston, from Princeton University; William McMurtrie, from Dartmouth College, and Anne Elliott, from Wells College.
Several of the members are studying at Indiana universities. Among them are Willis Blatchley, M. J. Moore and Richard Voyles, DePauw; Dorothy Martenet, Ray Fatout. Donald Morrison and William Gauss, Purdue, and at Butler, Martha Moore, Aline Bailey, Jane and Mary Wynn and Clarence Warren. Vacationing during the Indiana recess will be John Brandon, Jim Bob Herdrick, William Koehne. William Kendrick and Dan Taylor. Dorothy Braden will be in town during the vacation of the University of Arizona. J. William Wright Jr. will be vacationing after studying at the University of Michigan, and Ralph and Wayne Burns will return frortf school in Texas. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Burns Jr. will entertain several of the Merrymaker friends of their sons at a dinner party New Year’s eve before they attend the Princeton Triangle Club shw at the Murat. Seven girls, some of whom are Merrymakers, have invited their friends to a dance Dec. 22 at the Woodstock Club. The hostesses will be Miss Sally Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Smith; Virginia Blackley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Blackley; Ruth Coler. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Coler; Joy Geupal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Geupal; Lou McWhirter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Felix M. McWhirter; Eleanor Mingle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Mingle, and Miss Marjorie Raiser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Raiser. MISS RAMEY, TO BE BRIDE SOON, FETED Turquoise blue and rose appointments were used by Miss Joan Boswell last night when she entertained for Miss Betty Ramey, a bride-to-be The party was held at the Boswell home. 3720 N Sherman-dr, for Miss Ramey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George L Ramey, whose marriage to Dr. Robert Wiseheart, will take place next month. Mrs. F. C. Boswell assisted her daughter. Guests included: Miss Ramey, her mother, and her sisters, Miss Margaret Ramey and Mrs. Calvin Lenox, Lebanon; Mrs. C. Hollis Hull. Connersville and Mesdames Jean Black. Gilbert Morrison, Christian Carlsen and George F. Collins; Misses Marie Roach, Magdalene Adams, Josephine Meloy, Mariamelia Schmidt, Eloise Welsh, Jane Howe. Elysee Crosier and Mary Paxton Young.
Sororities
Miss Lucille Kramer will entertain members of Gamma Chapter, Rho Delta Sorority, tonight. Alpha Nu Chapter. Alpha Zeta Beta Sorority, will hold a business session 3t 6:15 tonight at the Young Women's Christian Association Building. Miss Mildred Benton will preside, and Miss Florence Egcleston. dance chairman, will have charge of the ticket sales report. Gamma Beta Chi Sorority will be entertained tonight by Mrs. Charles Baird, 44 E. 55th-st. Mrs. Gus Bisesi is chairman of the basket relief committee. Final arrangements for the holiday dance to be given Saturday at the K. of C. Auditorium by five sororities will be made at a committee meeting at 6 tonight at the Claypool. Miss Marie Fehr will entertain Alpha Chapter, Phi Tau Delta Sorority. Friday night at her home. 426 Harvard-pl. Alpha Pi Omega sorority will meet tomorrow night at the home of Mrs Eleanor Menhennett. Miss Lucille Kramer will be hostess for a meeting of Gamma Chapter, Rho Delta Sorority, tonight. B rid pc Scheduled Woman's Contract Club of Indianapolis members will play bridge at 1:15 tomorrow afternoon at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.
So different! So delicious ! AMERICAN BITTER CRACKERS are “The World's Best” VALUE! Trv them— NOW! . I il H uii HiH^ * iJ
Engagement of Miss Winter and Minister Told At a tea given at the home of Miss Mabel Goddard, 812 West-dr, Woodruff Place, this afternoon, the engagement of Miss Mary Winter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Winter, Elkhart, to the Rev. Rolland Dove was announced. Appointments for the tea were in red and green, holiday colors. Guests and assistant hostesses included associates of the bride-to-be, who is a teacher in the English department at Technical High School. Those who poured were Misses Clara Ryan, Vance Garner, Helen Tichenor, Lillian Martin, Florence Jones and Mrs. Jeanne C. Bose. Guests were Misses Alice Brown, Olive Brown, Gladys Eade, Florence Guild, Halcyon Mendenhall, Nardie Pollitt, Margaret Remy, Zila Robbins, Jane Strain, Margaret Waters, Jeannette White, Martha Dorsey, Adele Phipps and Winifred Brill; Mesdames M. Stevenson, Jeanne B. Eastland. Helen Bowlder, Ressie Fix, f. O. Mclntosh. Rachel Schumacher and Grace W. Smith. Ladywood Girls Will Appear in Tableau Cast Upperclassmen of Ladywood School will present a tableau of the Nativity scene following presentation of two plays by the Dujarie Dramatic Club at 8 Sunday at Ladywood Hall. Mrs. George S. Foerderer is director of the dramas. Catherine Goeke, Catherine Gartland, Chloe Snell and Betty Manillo will appear in "Dust of the Road” by Kenneth Sawyer Goodman. Characters in the second play, representing conditions in France during the French revolution, will b' portrayed by Mary Ellen Gartland, Catherine Goeke, Elizabeth Dienes and Eloise Patterson. Music will be provided by pupils of the music department. Jane Braunstein will be herald, announcing the program. NARRATORS WILL SEAT PRESIDENT Mrs. Merton A. Johnson wall be installed tonight as president of the Narrators, which will meet at the home of Mrs. Joseph W. Sovine. 628 W. 43rd-st. Other officers are Mrs. Paul Duckwall, vice-president; Mrs. Hillary G. Bailey, secretary ana treasurer, and standing committee chairmen. Mrs. Sovine, program: Mrs. F. M. McKinstray, social; Miss Dessie Davis, membership, and Mrs. Kenneth L. Dotterer, finance. rs. Johnston will read an original short story. "Gertrude Stein and Modernism in Writing” will be the subject of Mrs. W. C. Himmel. Miss Davis will read a biography of Mrs. Bertita Leonarz Harding, whose book. "Phantom Crown.” will be reviewed by Mrs. Donovan A. Turk.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Miner Jr.. Little Rock, Ark., are spending the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Smith, 3043 Broadway. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Nauman and children. Detroit, will come next week to spend the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Newton Todd, 4053 N. Pennsylvania-st. Mr. and Mrs. Kurt F. Pantzer will have as their holiday guests Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ferridav and Miss Emita Ferriday, Wilmington, Del.
Card Parties
Auxiliary to the General Protestant Orphans' Home will entertain with a card party at 8 tomorrow night at the home, 1404 S. State-st. Mrs. Edward Brockman is chairman. Club to Entertain Husbands of members of the Thursday Afternoon Reading Club will be special guests at the club's Christmas party tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. Charles Salisbury, 1030 N. Tuxedo-st. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Charles E. Yarbrough, Mrs. J. W. Fritts and Mrs. L. H. Doty. Dinner will be served at 6. followed by gift exchange. Club to Entertain Woman's Athletic Club will entertain its members Monday night at the Hoosier Athletic Club. Miss Merzie George is chairman and will be assisted by Misses Louella Jones, Lenora Zimmer. Naomi Fike, Mary Hardesty. Marcia Kinder and Mrs. i Hazel Dunnweg.
Aid in Toy Repair Work
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Left to Right—Betty Barnard and Mary Barnard. Dolls, scooters, games and airplanes are among the many toys repaired and painted at the Camp Fire Girls’ Christmas Toy Shop this year. The toys will be distributed to children through welfare organizations. Betty and Mary Barnard are working on toys collected from the movie parties held last Saturday at the Tuxedo and Fountain Square Theaters. More toys are expected for the workshop, for another party will be held Saturday at the Tacoma Theater.
New York Matron Again Rated World’s Best Dressed Woman
BY MARY KNIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright, 1934. by United Press) PARIS, Dec. 12.—Mrs. Harrison Williams, society beauty of New York, was re-elected by Paris dressmakers today to succeed herself as the best dressed woman in the world. Two other American women were in a list of the 12 best dressed. They are Louise Van Alen Mdivani of Newport and New York and Baronne Eugene De Rothschild of Paris. This year the dressmakers could not agree on the usual 10 best dressed women but expanded their list to 12. They estimated it cost each of the 12 an average of $50,000 a year to maintain their paramount places. The women selected, in order, are: (1) Mrs. Harrison Williams; (2) Princess Sixte De Bourbon Parma; (3) The Hon. Mrs. Richard Norton; (4) Countess De Saab; (5) Begum Aga Khan; (6) Baronne Von Drieger; (7) Marquise Nicoletta Visconti; (8) Louise Van Alen Mdivani; (9) Duchess of Alba; GO) Baronne Eugene De Rothschild; (11) Countess Antonin De Mun; (12) Princess Dora Ruspoli.Not only wealth, charm and beauty were declared by the electing dressmakers to be essential to placing in the list, but vivacity, poise, personality, brains and "it,” in addition to the $50,000. Mrs. Williams brightens things around her with gay colors, scintillating jewels and luxurious furs. Among the dressmakers whose skill has won her regal rank among fashionable women Elsa Schiaparelli ranks high. This year Mrs. Williams wears the new greens, stratosphere blue, black and white. The Princess Sixte, whose husband died recently, is still in mourning, but this spring will wear gray and black and white. Her mourning even now is of the smartest kind and she is as distinguished in it as she was in her former smart attire. The Hon. Mrs. Richard Norton, London, spends much time in Paris. She is tall and slender with dark eyes and hair. Her color prefer-
Informality by Chanel
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A touch of fantasy that emphasizes the informal spirit of the costume is supplied by this hat and scarf of sheer yellow and brown plaid wool. They are worn with a strictly tailored suit of brown lainage. Chanel designed the ensemble.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ences are autumn shades, and she wears rich, heavy fabrics of a solid tone brightened by colorful accessories. The Countess De Saab is Cairo’s queen of the wardrobe. She has risen from sixth place in last year’s list. Her dark, striking beauty is an inspiration to dressmakers. The Begum Aga Kahn, former French candy girl and milliner who married the Aga Kahn, one of the wealthiest men in the world and the spiritual leader of all Indian Mohammedans, entered the list for the first time. Baronne Von Drieger of Amsterdam and The Hague moved up one place. Marquise Nicoletta Visconti, Rome’s candidate, is a beauty whose classic lines are adapted particularly to the year’s mode. Louise Van Alen Mdivani is a delightful blond of the charming wistful type, She likes pastel shades and etherial fabrics rather than heavy stiff materials. Soft furs and discreet jewels further prove her claim to her ranking. She is tne divorced wife of Alexis Mdivani, the prince from the soviet republic of Georgia, who is now the husband of Barbara Hutton, five-and-ten-cent store princess. The Duchess of Alba, Spanish aristocrat from Madrid, slipped down a few notches this year, but has not lost in prestige. She long has held a place among the leading few. The Baronne Eugene De Rothschild is the former Mrs. Dandridge Spottiswood of Virginia. Despite her titled marriages she retains the charm of the Southern belle with old world embellishments. She long has been considered a living definition of smartness. The Countess Antonin De Mun and the Princess Dora Ruspoli, who are seen everywhere that the elite gather, complete the roster. Miss Fogle to Wed Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Fogle announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Sara Fogle, to Joseph Smith, son of Mrs. Celia Smith.
Peace Pleas Scheduled in Radio Series Business and Professional Women Sponsor Broadcasts. Bn Timr Sprrinl NEW YORK, Dec. 12—An 11 weeks’ series of broadcasts in behalf of world peace will be inaugurated Friday by the International Federation of Business and Professional Women, Miss Lena Madesin Phillips. New York, national president, announced today. Peace leaders and presidents ol foremost women's organizations in the United States wull take part in the series. Broadcasts will be given between 3:30 and 4 on successive Fridays as a part of the program of the Woman's Radio Review, with Mrs. Claudine MacDonald, director, and will be relayed through station WEAF, New York, to a nationai network. The series, titled "Women and World Peace,” will present Mrs. Carrie Chapman-Catt, founder and honorary chairman of the National Committee on the Cause and Cure of War; Miss Jane Addams, honorary president of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and others active ir. peace work. The purpose of the broadcasts, according to Miss Phillips, is "to evaluate the contribution women have already made to the cause of world peace, to study the methods they have used, and perhaps to chart new and even bolder methods.” Miss Phillips will open the series Friday with an introductory address, and the remainder of the broadcasts are scheduled as follows: Dec. 21, Mrs. Mary R. Beard, author and historian; Dec. 28, Miss Addams, honorary president of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom; Jan. 4, Mrs. Geline MacDonald Bowman, president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs; Jan. 11, Miss Josephine Schain, chairman of the Peace Committee of the International Alliance for Suffrage and Equal Citizenship; Jan. 18. Mrs. Arthur Brin, president of the National Council of Jewish Women; Jan. 25, Mrs. Chap-man-Catt; Feb. 1, Mrs. Estelle M. Sternberger, executive director of World Peaceways; Feb. 8, Mrs. Florence Brewer Boeckel, education director of the National Council for the Prevention of War; Feb. 15, Mrs. Ella A. Boole, president of the World's Woman’s Christian Temperance Union; Feb. 22, Mrs. Grace Morrison Poole, president of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs; March 1. Miss Phillips, who, in a closing address, will summarize the major points made by the speakers.
SOUTHERN CLUB SETS ANNUAL PARTY
Mr. and Mrs. George Landis will be chairmen of the annual holiday dinner and dance of the Southern Club Dec. 21 at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Their assistants will be Messrs, and Mesdames W. R. Scaff, W. C. Freihofer and A. Glenn Shoptaugh.
Announcements
Queen Esther Auxiliary, Order of Eastern Star, will hold its annual Christmas party Friday at the Masonic Temple. Dinner will be served at noon. Mrs. Lillian Glicker and Mrs. Anna Martin are in charge of reservations. Ladies’ Bible Class of the Central Christian Church will hold a food sale and bazar tomorrow. T]oe public may attend. Mrs. George Eakins. 22nd-st and Arlington-av, will be hostess for a meeting of the Study Club of Pleasant Run Parent-Teacher Assn, at 1:30 tomorrow afternoon. Board meeting will be held wdth Mrs. Fred Wilson, presiding. Past matrons and past patrons of Indianapolis Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will hold a Christmas party and election of officers at 8 tomorrow night at the Masonic Temple, W. Morris-st. Gifts will be exchanged. Warren Township Democratic Women’s League will sponsor a party Monday night in the 18th ward Democratic headquarters on Johnson-av. Mothers’ Club of Holliday kindergarten will sponsor a luncheon and hiloday party tomorrow at the kindergarten. MOTHERS’ CLUB TO GIVE PARTY Dolls will be brought by Tri Psi sorority members to a meeting Friday. Tri Psi, Mothers’ Club of Delta Delta'Delta Sorority of Butler University, will hold its Christmas party at the chapter house, 809 W. Hanip-ton-dr. The dolls will be donated to the Wheeler City Rescue Mission. Mrs. C. R. Matthews, president, has appointed the following committee: Mesdames R. E. McHatton, H. W. Glossbrenner, S. W. Stultz, Charles F. Pollitt, E. D. Tenbrook and C. H. Johnson. Skating Party Set Miss Regina Koch is chairman of a skating party to be held by Job’s Daughters. Bethel 1. at the Young Women’s Christian Association rink Friday night. Assistants are Misses Bobbe Ehlers. Juanita Caldwell, Jeanette Andrews. yElnora Westbay, Fedora Herman, Margaret McAree, Hortense Herman and Rose Louise Wald. Mothers to Entertain Active and pledge members of the Butler University Chapter of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity, will attend a Christmas luncheon at noon tomorrow as guests of the Mothers’ Club. Mrs. C. V. Raiser is chairman, to be assisted by Mrs. F. C. Casn. Mrs. A. L. Taylor. Mrs. K. N. Jefferies and Mrs. R. L. Lowther. Club Dinner Scheduled Miss Gertrude Campbell will entertain members of the Noonan j Club at a 6 o’clock dinner tomorI row night at her home, 1106 Eugene-st.
- YARN AS TRIM
. '' iiiPiliji Barbara Schwinn, young American designer, makes this flattering street dress of rough brown woolen and trims it with citroncolored drapery yarn. Buttons down the back of the bodice and down the front of the skirt are a novel feature.
Welcome Given New Members of Latreian Group Seven new members of the Alpha Beta Latreian Club were welcomed by the membership at a Christmas party yesterday held at the home of "Miss Dorothy Phillips, 5136 Washington-blvd. Mrs. J. A. McConnell assisted the hostesses. The new members include Mesdames Malcolm Campbell, J. S. Stillman, Bernard Lacey, William leuter and Paul D. Whittemore; Miss Virginia Hubbard and Helena Sipe. Mrs. Dorothy Bushman gave a travel talk on "Living in France” and Mrs. Marvin Lugar poured at the tea table. A plateau of poinsettia and pine cones formed the tea table centerpiece. Mrs. Edward L. Kirkpatrick is president. ALUMNI HEADED BY MAURICE HARRELL Leading the Delta Tau Delta Alumni Club of Indianapolis are Maurice T. Harrell, president; Hilbert Rust, first vice-president; J. S. Herriot, second vice-president; Obie J. Smith Jr., secretary, and John R. Barney, treasurer. Sons to Be Honored Among the parties to precede the Corpse Club dance Dec. 26 at the Woodstock Club, will be a dinner which Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Carroll will give for their sons, Allen Carroll, who attends classes at Hamilton College, and Alex Carroll, a senior student at Park School. Lathams to Entertain Dinner party will be given Dec. 21 by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Latham for their son, Charles Latham Jr., who will be here from Philips Exeter Academy for the holidays.
CHAIRMAN
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Miss Ann Myers Miss Ann Myers is general committee chairman of a benefit dance which employes of E. C. Atkins & Cos. will give Tuesday night at the Severin. Proceeds from the second annual charity project will be used to purchase Christmas baskets for needy families. Maurice Collins will be master of ceremonies for a floor show, Mrs. E. Eugene Dawson will assist Miss Myers. Other committees are: Tickets, Miss Betty King; entertainment. Miss Ethel Finley, and donations. Miss Joyce Bogard. Henry Moffett's orchestra will play.
Stuffy Head Just a few drops up each nostril. roMNjlfM Quickly, breathing lMMjiMgf again becomes clear!
Simple Life of Housewife Comprises Sole Activity of Frau Alwine Dollfuss Widow of Former Austrian Chancellor Cooks, Does Marketing and Cares for Children in Small Vienna Flat. BY HELEN LINDSAY FRAU ALWINE DOLLFUSS, widowed when assassins struck down the chancellor of Austria last July, is finding her only consolation today in doing the routine household tasks that most women know—cooking, marketing and caring for her children. Breaking the silence she has maintained sine.* the tragedy, for reasons of policy as well as personal taste, she tells fir the first time in the January Pictorial Review, how she has carried on since the death of her husband. "It is a relief to do my own cooking." she says. "I have one little
maid servant, to wash dishes and clean the flat, but the cooking I attend to myself. Also, I prefer to do my own marketing, and the flowers that I get in the stalls make my home brighter if I select them myself.' Frau Dollfuss lives quietly in Vienna, with her two childre. Rudi, 3, and Eva, 4. The family is supported by a government pension. "Whenmy husband was alive.” the mother says, "he received a salary of two thousand schillings <s4oo> a month, and certain additional sums that went with the position of chancellor. That two thousand schillings the government now has graciously awarded to me as a life pension. That may seem very little to pay the chancellor of a once mighty empire. But Austria now is very poor, and we were well satisfied. We never had any money but my husband’s salary, and I am more than
thankful for the pension which will permit me to keep our little home and give my children proper schooling.” a a a a a Pension Shared With Poor / T'HE pension enables Frau Dollfuss to carry on the charitable work A among the poor of Vienna that has been her only public activity. She always has preferred the role of hausfrau to any other, and even when her husband was mast prominent, they lived simply. "We live now, and intend to remain in the littie apartment that my husband and I took before he became chancellor,” she says. "When he became powerful, the government officials tried to persuade him that the flat was too small, and that we must take apartments in one of the empty palaces, but we remained where we were.”) The chancellor's widow always has been more interested in economic* than in politics. It was while she was studying economics in Berlin, earning her way through the university by working as a stenographer in a business office, that she met Herr Dollfuss. Frau Dollfuss herself is a German, born in Pomerania. a a a a a a Marlene Dietrich to Wear Spanish Garb "IY7HEN Marlene Dietrich appears in a few months in her newest pic- ▼ ▼ ture, "Caprice Espagnol," she will wear costumes quite different from those generally seer, in musical comedies and other productions presenting Spanish styles. The costumes, which have been designed by Travis Banton, all were made in sketches before they actually were designed. One is a traveling costume of the 1890 period. It is black taffeta, embroidered in black beads. Miss Dietrich will wear with it a black lace scarf and a large black velvet hat. A Spanish carnival costume is in black satin, veiled with a black net dotted with large chenille pompons. Mr. Banton had the chenille dots applied on the net by hand, since he could find none suitable for the effect he desired. a a a a a a New Millinery Trend Forecast FASHION experts are predicting that feminine millinery will be affected by the large picture hat of white lace, which will be worn tilted back on Miss Dietrich’s head. It has three large pink carnations for trimming, and is worn with a fitted white crepe dress, draped in lace. Miss Dietrich will wear unusual costume jewelry in the form of little bright red roasters hanging from her earlobes, and three gayly colored roosters will be embroidered of sequins on the black lace Spanish fan which she will use in the picture.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Please do not ask Jane Jordan to answer your leMer without printing the problem. The column would be meaningless to other people! It is better to disguise your case by changing names, places and dates. Dear Jane Jordan—Do you think it is best to keep a boy guessing or to tell him just how you feel about him? ANXIOUS FOR AN ANSWER. Answer—That depends on the boy. There are some people who perpetually desire the perpetually unobtainable. To hold this type you
must keep him guessing. Others are in search of security and will love that girl best who makes them feel beloved. The average love affair runs something like this: The young man perceives that he has found favor in the young lady's eyes, and he appreciates her more
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for apper cia tin g him. She in turn has the same reactions. And so.the little game of mutual ego boosting begins. However, that which is too easily won is not deeply appreciated. A surfeit of love brings on ennui. It is well to keep a little corner of uninvaded territory which the lover constantly hopes to explore. Each should remain capable of surprising the other. Broad generalizations are of very little value in a love affair because love is an art and not a science. tt tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—Do you believe a girl can love a fellow whom she knows only by sight and by what she can learn from friends? LONELY. Answer —No. What she loves is her own ideal image projected on the stranger. When she meets him he may not conform in any way to what she expects. If he does, it is possible for love to develop. Every girl craves an object for her affections, and if none materializes she will erect an imaginary one. A> soon as someone appears who reminds her of her dream image, she fancies herself in love. nun Dear Jane Jordan—My sister and I think you can help us solve our problem. We have been going with two fellows. They are swell, but we seem to have an attachment for each other’s boy friend. Each of us is more suited to the other’s friend in agf, size and liking. We would like to switch dates, but we do not know how to go about it. What do you suggest? LOVELORN TWINS. Answer—Why don’t you put it up
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I to the boys as a grand, gay joke and see what happens? After all neither boy can feel deserted because somebody else wants him! tt a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young man of 28 and have been going with a certain young lady for the last eight months. Only recently, through one of my friends, I was told that she was nothing but a gold digger. Do tyou think that I ought to heed my friend’s advice and quit @oing with her, or do you think that I should ignore his advice, since I do not really believe it, and keep going with her? A lot depends upon your decision. DOUBTFUL. Answer—l think you should judge the girl on her own behavior and not on what gossiping friends say about her. After all, your informant may be green-eyed with jealousy. tt n tt Dear .Jane Jordan: I have been going with a young man of 18 and was engaged to him. Two weeks ago he stepped out on me. Still, he says he thinks a lot of me. There is another boy who wants to go with me now. Which should I take? S.C. Answer—l don’t know. I imagine your boy friend told you the truth. His infidelity had nothing to do with his regard for you. However, if you’re one of those women who thinks that unfaithfulness is the unpardonable sin, you would do well to look elsewhere for a husbahd. Perhaps he would be faithful in marriage and perhaps not. Note—l have decided to close the smoking controversary for fear the readers will tire of it. I have letters in favor of smoking from ‘A Smoker’s Friend,” “Convinced,” “Female Smoker,” “Mary,” “Miss Independent,” “Jack,” “Jerry Taylor,” “Just Fifteen,” ‘Red He ad,” “Swastika,” "C. L. Schreiner” and letters against smoking from ‘l’ll Take the Non-Smoker,” “H. M.,” “Sts! Sts! Sts!” and from “Interested,” who starteff the discussion. All these letters are very interesting and I thank the readers for their response. Lodge to Entertain “A Night in Japan” is the theme for the annual holiday ,dance of Queen Esther Chapter. Order of Eastern Star, to be give'n Friday night at Masonic Temple. Silver Dragons will play. The arrangements committee includes >£*•* dames Rose Lucas, Agnes Singer. Carrie Ault, Ona Reynolds, Hazes Maddinger, Flossie Jackson, Lucile Hartman. Nellie Young, Maude Huey, Rea Koehler and Louise Sharp.
Jane Jordan
.DEC. 12, 1934
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