Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 234, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1935 — Page 10

PAGE 10

New City Shop to Offer Celebrated Wines From Europe’s Old Vineyards Indianapolis Athletic Club Will Have Stock From Dahmen & Allinger, Founded Nearly 90 Years Ago. BY BEATRICE BCR GAN Timrt Warnin'* Pita F.ditor INDIANAPOLIS is to have a wine shop which will distnbute wines from famous European vineyards We picked up this bit of news when we visited the Indianapolis Athletic Club yesterday, and investigated the remodeling of the humidor. We have often wondered where we would go if we had occasion to select the choicest of wfne. We learned yesterday that the club's new shop r.ot only will market the rarest wines from the most famous estates

of Europe but will provide an educational service, detailing how and when to serve the various vintages. \V<> had the good fortune of plying our questions when Franz Breitling was at the club. Franz Breitling not so many years ago—from Cologne-on-the-Rhine. Dahmen fc Allinger. wine growers and .-hippers. was founded nearly 90 years ago, and today he is sole importer of these famous wines. We learned much about wine when we talked to Mr. Breitling. He told us a great deal about the nomenclature, which in itself is a story. He related us the history of some of the famous vintages and corrected some of our erroneous ideas. We learned that wine names in Europe and particularly in France are related closely to geography. All French wines, he informed us, except those grown in

Miss Burgun

A’sace and Champagne, have place names. The most individual name given to a wine in France is that of the property on which the grapes were grown and the wine produced. ‘ Mis en bouteilles au chateau” meant little to us before our chat, but now we know that it designates that the wine was not only grown and made but also bottled on the property. “Orieinalabfullunsr'' and • Kellerabzug" are German equivalents of the

Frenrh "Mis en bouteilles au Chateau." In the catalog he pointed out “Schloss Johannisberger Cabinet, Rotlack." one of the Rhine Gau wines. The word “cabinet” designates that the wine is the finest from a particular 20 acres of the estate. Mr. Bretiling attended wine auctions at this particular estate. “The German buyers sit in one room; in another are English, French and American buyers. The Germans buy at one price and then bargain with the English. French and Amencaui. Sometimes the Germans discover they have sold the finest wine and then they bargain to buy it back. lam going back to Cologne next summer and will attend some of these auctions, he said. Slanted by Benedictines The Schloss Johannisberger wines are the most famous of the Rhine vintage. The original comes from the estate of Prince Von Mettemich. where vineyards were flourishing as early as the seventh century. , The 3enedictines, history reveals, planted their famous vineyard m Johanmsberg in 1106. It finally went to Austrian Emperor Maximillian after the Napoleonic wars, and the emperor in turn presented :t to the Prince Von Metternich as a kind of consolation balm for the failure of the first performance of “Tannhau^cr.” 'Tins estate still remains in the same fannlv and the wines to be put on the clud racks by Dahmen & Allinger are eulhentic estate-bottled. One of the German red wines, frequently mentioned in Elizabethan literature and favored in London. is Assmannshauser Hollenberg Spatburgunder. a wine reserved by the German goverment—which stocks the cellars of hotels where nobility visits. The estate of Baron Rothschild became famous for its clarets. The baron entertained diplomats and royalty and the Chateau Laftte is one of he rarest of French wines from t Bordeaux region. Fungus Gives Flavor The story of the Sauterne, Chateau D Yquem. from the famous estate of Le Marquis de Lur Saulces. is interesting. An almost microscopic fungus growth on the skin of the grape accounts for the racy, sweet, tasty flavor of the wine, a delight to the connoiseur. This growth Is so highly desired that the vintages are hand picked, grape by grape. The fungus itself is not sweet, but when it comes in contact with the juice of the grape upon crushing, a chemical reaction results which gives to the wine its individual sweetness. The Marquis d'Angerville is the outstanding grower in the Burgundy region. His house stands on the foundation of the old castle of the Dukes of Burgundy, built in the twelfth century. At the time of fermenting of the wine, the Marquis personally directs the operates, and the pressing of the must is done by him alone. Hostesses to Be Advised And all of these wines—and many more —will be stocked at the club. Mr. Breitling scoffed at the idea that the wine drinker dares not deviate from the accepted order of wine service. “If you prefer to drink a different wine than is generally accepted for a certain course, dnnk it without fear of social er-

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ror." he said. “Women, you know, buy 60 per cent of the wine sold. They usually plan the menus and so they buy their choices." The club's “Bright Lite" wineshop is to have a rose tan ceiling, glowing as the color of the wines on the shop racks. The temperature will be ideal for the preservation of the flavor. A feminine attendant will be on hand to advise the dubious hostess.

DELEGATES CHOSEN BY CITY D. A. R. Mesdames Wilbur Johnson, James L. Gavin, Waldo B. Rosseter and W. C. Bartholomew were elected by the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution yesterday to attend the Continental Congress to be he’d in Washington in April. Mrs. Harry A. Van Osdol was appointed doorkeeper for the congress by Miss Bonnie Farwell, Terre Haute, state regent. Alternates are Mesdames Walter C. Marmon, Fran F. Wocher, Charles P. Lesh, Harold R. Cunning, Frederick E. Matson, Edna M. Christian, Ernest D. Ccfield, George S. Row and Miss Jane Ayres and Miss Cora C. Curry, Washington. Mrs. Edmund B. Ball, Muncie was indorsed by the chapter for the office of historian-general of the national society. Election will be held at the congress.

JUNIOR LEAGUE TO HONOR OFFICIAL

Preceding the board meeting of the Junior League of Indianapolis Monday at the home of Mrs. Horace Hill 111, Mrs. Eugene C. Miller will entertain at luncheon at her home, 5616 Central-av. Mrs. Cyrus L. Philipps, Milwaukee, Wis., director of Region 7 of the Association of Junior Leagues of America, will attend the luncheon and league meeting. Mrs. Philipps, who is a guest of Mrs. Perry W. Lesh during her stay in the city, will be speaker at the general meeting and arts and interest* exhibition of Indianapolis members Tuesday at the American Central Life Insurance Cos. Building.

HOME SHOW AID

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Mrs. Rex P. Young Mrs. Rex P. Young has been appointed director of the advance ticket sale for the Indianapolis Home Show to be held April 5 to 14 in th° Manufacturer's building at the state fairground, by J. F. Cantwell, exposition director. Mrs. Young is secretary of the Indianapolis Garden Clubs, which are co-operating with the Home Show. She has taken an active part in the Matinee Musieale. Parliamentary Club, and the Forest Hills Garden Club.

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Gowns Worn by Loretta Young

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Monkey fur is worked intricately into peeves for the black velvet tunic gown worn by Loretta Young, abov 1 , in the picture, "Clive of India,” tfhich opened today at Loew’s Palace. Miss Young wears a rhinestone clip as the only ornament on the gown. Pic’ured at the right is a satin evening gown worn by Miss Young. The bodice in front is gathered into a salin covered ornament at the neck and from which fall two scarves of the satin. The peplum, shorter in front than in back, is worn with a crushed sash belt ornamented with two large studded circles.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Here ii vour chance to discuss your problems without revealinj your identity. Write vour letter now! Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young man of 20 and have been going steady nearly 11 months. I am very much in love with my girl and wouldn’t consider giving her up.

We have a xew | quarrels but they. are not caused by us. Her parents can’t understand that their daughter should be sympathized with instead of blamed and pun_shed for choosing the fellow she wants. * Both parents seem to dislike me especially the mother. They say the rea-

'1

Jane Jordan

son I’m not working is that I don’t like to work. I have tried to find work, but you know what a young fellow of today is up against. I don’t believe that they would be satisfied if their daughter was going with a millionaire. Her mother has remarked that she would give anything if her daughter only would give me up. If they could they would deny her of courtship altogether. If we stay in for the evening they are not even sporting enough to give us a chance to be i alone together, but retire as late as possible. I am supposed to leave at | 10:30 on Tuesdays and Thursdays] and at 11 on Saturdays. Does it j seem right to consider that a date j and would it be new and unthinka- i ble for us to see each other on Sunday afternoons? I have tried to make them like me, and you can see that their daughter is one in a million. As long as she works her youth away for her board and a roof over her head (as they put it) she may have a few privileges, but she is of age and doesn’t have to stand for such unreasonable requests. She is trying to please them and me, too. | Shouldn’t her parents appreciate | and realize that she is only asking j for her happiness? TRYING TO DO RIGHT. Answer— They should, but they won’t. If they had said to you, “Now we have all the sympathy in the world for your feeling about each other. Naturally we expected that our daughter’s affection would put forth toward a member of the opposite sex. However, you two have a great many things to prove before you are ready to take on the responsibilities of marriage. “This young man has to prove that he has that extra dash of initiative and energy which it ; takes to break through the toughness of the times. He has to prove that seemingly impassable obstacles only stimulate him to su-per-human effort, and that he is not the type to say, T can't make the grade because others can't.’ “We deplore his willingness to place the blame for his idleness outside of himself instead of on his own inertia when confronted with difficulties. However, he is young, and with encouragement he may refuse to be daunted by j an economic situation before which stronger men than he have quailed. “Os course, you two realize that at your age one of the things you have to learn is the technique of denying instantaneous gratification to every desire. Now is the time that you deny the needs of the present in the interests of a future goal Your task is to tolerate stimulation and inhibit response. It is not easy, but your ability to cope with reality marks the difference between infancy and maturity. “Our daughter is no longer a child, but a self-supporting woman. She is not our possession and her time is her own. We have bought something very dearly which we wish to give her for nothing and we hope it will not be refused. It is called ‘old people’s experience.’ ” If they had said that, you and I and your girl would respect them. As it is they only have nullified the good they could do by an attitude which is sure to antagonize. Do you think you could make them see this point? M M M Dear Jane Jordan—This summer, I occasionally went with a boy. but since school started I don’t see much of him. When we meet he acts as if he is glad to see m? and asks me to go places with him, but never sets the ac- *,

THE INDIANA!. IS tttOTIMES

tual time. He does not go with any other girl because one treated him unkindly and he lost his confidence in them. What could you suggest for me to do? V. I. W. Answer—Perhaps he doesn’t have the money to make good his request. Why don't you invite him over to spend-the evening? If he has been hurt by another girl, he will appreciate your invitation where another boy might interpret it as “running after him.” CITY STUDENTS TO BE PARTY GUESTS Misses Jean Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Brown, and Miss Marynette Hiatt, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Hiatt, will attend week-end parties at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. Miss Brown, Vassar student, will be a guest at the Delta Kappa Epsilon dance and Miss Hiatt also a Vassar student, will attend the party at the Psi Upsilon fraternity house.

HEADS CLUB

—Photo by Moorefield.

Mrs. Lester McLean Mrs. Lester McLean is the new president of the Artemas Club. Other new officers and committee chairmen are Mrs. D. H. Campbell, first vice president; Mrs. William Shirtz, second vice president; Mrs. Ralph Tindel, secretary; Mrs. I. C. Stevenson, treasurer; Mrs. Allen Matthews, corresponding secretary; Mrs. S. R. Houston and Mrs. A. E. Brown, ways and means committee chairmen; Mrs. Ira Hendrickson and Mrs. Edward Helm, social committee chairmen; Mrs. Charles Mcßride, welfare chairman; Mrs. Stephen Springer and Mrs. William Hamilton, house committee chairmen; Mrs. Frank Freers, membership chairman; Mrs. E. D. Hill, cheer chairman and Mrs. George Stiles, press and telephone chairman.

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Jewish Women of Nation Will Hold Session Chairmen of four committees for the fourteenth triennial convention of the National Council of Jewish Women in New Orleans March 10 to 15 have been named by Mrs. Arthur Brin, president, it was announced today by Mrs. Samuel Dorfman, chairman of the Indianapolis section. Mrs. Sydney M. Cone, Pikesville, Md., first vice president of the national council, has been named chairman of the committee on findings; Mrs. Charles Reichenbaum, Milwaukee, chairman of the committee on state and interstate conferences; Mrs. Arthur Goldsmith, Portland, Ore., chairman of the committee on rules;.. Mrs. Israel Bernstein, Portland, Me., chairman of the resolutions committee, assisted by Mrs. Louis Kaufman, Montgomery, Ala.; Mrs. Jack Israel, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Mrs. Leo Muhlfelder, Albany, N. Y„ and Mrs. Morris Ginsberg, Flushing, N. Y. Leo W. Schwarz of the New York School for Adult Jewish Education will speak Wednesday, March 13, on “Translating our Jewish Heritage.” The report session ‘'will be followed by a luncheon meeting at which Dorothy Dix, newspaper columnist, and Roark Bradford, novelist and playwright, will speak. Mothers to Entertain Indianapolis De Molay Mothers’ Club will sponsor a card party at 8 Thursday at the chapter house, 1017 Broadway, for members, De Molay members and friends, Mrs. Irma Brinkman, chairman, will be assisted by Mesdaes Clyde Hall, Everett L. Jackson, Marie Jasper, Bertha Lindgren and club officer, Mesdames C. M. Stevens, F. W. Hasaler, H. G. Peterson, Anna Schneider and Thomas Weber. 'Two Entertain Mrs. A. Whitley Foster and Mrs. Arnold Staton entertained at a luncheon-bridge party yesterday for Mesdames P. L. Sprecker, Newell Boles, Paul Rinne, John Gandall and Everett Smith, and Miss Janet Jeffries.

Card Parties

Truth Center of Applied Christianity will give a dinner dance and card party at the Foodcraft shop at 6:30 Thursday, Feb. 14. Steele’s orchestra will play. Fred E. Grace is chairman of arrangements. Truth Center of Applied Christianity will entertain with a Valentine party Thursday night at the Foodcraft shop. Dinner at 6:30 will be followed by dancing and card play. Prizes will be given. The Rev. Edna F. Mauzy Leaser is in charg* of reservations. Weekly euchre and card parties are held at 8:30 Friday nights at the assembly room in the Fountain Square Theater Building by the Widow's Social Club.

CHURCH GROUP TO GIVE MUSICAL TEA Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter has arranged the program for a musical tea to be sponsored by the Missionary Society of the Fairview Presbyterian Church for 2 Tuesday. Mrs. Wilson B. Parker is general chairman. The reservations committee includes Mesdames E. W. Bilveu, D. H. Whitham, McClelland Coppock and Dewitt S. Morgan. A trio composed of Mrs. Walter E. Treanor. violin; Mrs. Carl S. Lieber, cello, and Mrs. Edenharter, piano,* will play selections. The program includes; “The Green-Eved Dragon" Charles “Musical Snuff-Box' - Riadoff “Queen of the N‘eh'"' Mozart Mrs. Helen Brooks Fausset “Svlvla" Olev Speaks “Come to the Fair” Martin “Cossack Love Song" Kountz Virgil Phemlster “L'Angelus” Rente “Au Printeir.ps" Gounod-Verdaille Miss Martha Burns “Love Went a Riding" Bridges “Still as the Night" Bohm Miss Maxine Moore “Ev the Water of Minnetonka"’. Lieurance Ensemble Gypsy Lecture Tomorrow Will Conclude Series Miss Sara Ewing will introduce Konrad Bercovici when he addresses Town Hall patrons tomorrow morning in the Columbia Club ballroom as the concluding event in the Indianapolis Town Hall Series Association. Mr. Bercovici, gypsy author, musician, journalist and world traveler, wifi present “Gypsies of Many Lands.” Mrs. H. J. McDargh will be hostess at luncheon following the talk and others to be seated at the speakers’ table will be Mesdames D. S. Meditch, Paul V. McNutt, John W. Wheeler, Frank McHale, Demarches C. Brown; Merton Keefe, Lebanon: John W. Hutchins. Jack A. Goodman, Wayne Coy, Walter P. Morton and Edgar F. Kiser. Miss Mary Riggs and Dr. Simon Reisler. MISS CURTIS WED IN KENTUCKY RITE Mr. and Mrs. Harold Conkling Curtis announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Ruth Louise Curtis, to Paul Carter Smith, Indianapolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Z. C. C. Smith, Lebanon. The wedding took place Jan. 28 in Covington, Ky„ with the Rev. C. S. Stambaugh officiating. Mrs. Smith attended Butler University and is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Smith attended Benjamin Harrison Law School. HARVARD FACULTY MEMBER SPEAKS Pupils of Park School heard Prof. Kenneth Ballard Murdock, dean of arts and sciences at Harvard University, in a talk yesterday morning at the school assembly. Luncheon Chib to Meet “Long Remember” by McKinley Kantor and “Heaven Is My Destination” by Thornton Wilder will be reviewed by Mrs. Alice Baxter Mitchell at a noon meeting Tuesday of the Ladies Luncheon Club at the Scottish Rite Cathedral. Mrs. Sidney Blair Harry will sing. Reservations are to be made by Monday noon.

FRIDAY and SATURDAY Bargains Prices LADIES’ RAYON j NECKWEAR Panties, bloom- 2 FOR Nhff jf Jy Pique, linen 2 FOR ers and step- ■■ and silk collar ■■ lace or 1% II a and cuff sets, 1% 11 p ruffled trims. \J W many styles. WW* lastex girdles Ladies’ HATS BLOOMERS Two way stretch, _ New Honey Bunch Extra sized m f^ b , I n rel^ r S Kilo and Novelty Gob LTfl. za rmen t sos K fir and large. 3IP styles in visca straw fit JC ravon. special UU C cloth. - BRASSIERES niinere Dresser Scarfs v :' Ce *'Z Efl„ Special lot of pouch _ QUC Lg' 50C. nowOU C and envelope bags 1 1 i amts’ wnsF Reduced TOWELS knuihw llvw Turkish towels, “"50c LADIES’ GLOVES S*fso Double woven chamisuede slipons jl—, ST If fITEY Ladies’ Blouses with scalloped tops JI,JC I I PAIR Regular size _ Here is a reg. pa *- 12 in box, £fl dollar value in t | | special at I IQ — ,; " OU c l LADIES’ DRESSES 3 FOR -J MEN’S TIES Fast color s , e. LfIMP SHfIDES styles with novelty one floor lamp _ Attractive pat- w A t - V and one bridge £fl terns in Men’s 1% lip lamp shade. I I Q neckties. 2 for O W both for W W Men’s (talon Suits M©n S Shirts SWEATERS mvil 9 VNIUII I4UIIO slightly soiled shirts ppp ..... . , W m Children s alliZ*;:PA reduced tor thrs sale. | J wool sweaters C A long .teeves and nI I. Some regularly SI.OO, J 111, for these snap- —■ lie r/ed T JU C \'\ now- W py days uv CORNER WASHINGTON AND PENNSYLVANIA STS.

Civic Groups Aiding in Ticket Sales for Fair to Be Held at Detroit Michigan Exposition Scheduled for March 9 to 17 Will Show Progress in Agriculture, Industry and Education. BY HELEN LINDSAY DETROIT and the remainder of Michigan will open March 9 the Detroit and Michigan Exposition, called "the Little World's Fair.” Th* exposition, designed to show developments in industry, agriculture and education, will be held in Convention Hall, Detroit, and will last until March 17. The exposition is a civic non-profit-making enterprise, sponsored by the convention and tourist bureaus. Tickets, first of which was purchased by Michigan’s Governor, Frank D. Fitzgerald, are being sold by state civic organizations, included among which is the Michigan Fed-

eration of Women’s Clubs. Among the principal speakers scheduled to appear at the exposition are Burton Holmes and Edmund Heller. internationally known explorers. Mrs. Nellie Tayloe Ross, first woman director of the United States mint, former Governor of Wyoming, and the first woman ever to govern an American commonwealth, will be among speakers. She will speak on “Women in Politics.” On International Day. the exposition will present to the visitors an array of distinguished guests from other countries. a a a Plaster Suggested for Modern Decorating

TO keep modern rooms from being monotonous, Mrs House Beautiful suggests the use of plaster. It now can be bought by the yard or piece, made up ready to apply to walli. If the apartment has a long tunnel of a hall, the magazine suggests beautifying it by putting up a molded plaster cornice at the joining of the ceiling and the wall. Or you can put in a plaster chair rail, with plaster molding below it, to break the height. A decorative wall paper can be used above the plaster, and the whole scheme carried into the next room. Mirrors can be framed with plaster, allowing the plaster to encroach on the glass itself, or you can use a plaster ornament instead of a picture over a special piece of furniture, or over a mantel. House Beautiful also suggests a miniature orchard in your own backyard, by using dwarf trees. These take up less room than the standard sizes, and produce fruit in about half the time required by the large trees. They frequently bloom and bear fruit the first season. Dwarf trees can be used as single accents in a border, as a background, or to outline a path leading to some garden feature or trelllsed against a fence or building. The usual method is to take a young tree only a year or two from bud or graft,* and while -t still is flexible, pinch out the main steam to cause more branching. Plan the tree’s pattern yourself, but be sure to leave as many branches or offshoots as are desired for the horizontal arms and their fruit spurs. Then fasten these against a wall or .rain them on a lattice of wire stretched between posts. Remove all unnecesssary side-shoots as they appear so as to keep the desired shape with its bearing branches to within about two feet of the ground. a a a a a a Hawaiians Use American Prints HAWAIIAN natives like the “native Hawaiian prints” which are being worn by women visiting the islands just as much as the visitors do. Instead of selecting their costumes from the prints made by the natives, Hawaiian women will be dressed in those made in the United States, *"hich have designs inspired by the native patterns.

Marott Residents and Guests Attend Dinner-Dance

Baskets of spring flowers decorated the Marott last night for the second dinner and dance, given by George Marott for hotel residents and their guests. Entrances to the Crystal dining room and ballroom were flanked by standards filled with greenery, huckleberry branches and pussy willows. The Marott trio, composed of Miss Maude Custer, violinist; Miss Hilda Burrichter, pianist, and Mrs. Fred E. Dunmeyer, cellist, played during the dinner hour. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Munk were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Riissell T. Beyrs. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis H. Rottger were guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Wil-

FEB. 8, 1935

3

liams, who moved here recently from Milwaukee. Mrs. E. Chester Jackson’s guests were her mother, Mrs. Lillian Mansfield, and Mrs. E. A. Gill and daughter, Patricia, ai 1 of St. Louis. Other dinner parties wre given by Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Harrison, who entertained a group of legislators and their wives, and by Mr. and Mrs. Winfield Miller, Mrs. Samuel. Cornell Carey and Mrs. Walter J. Hutton. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. McDuffee and Mr. and Mrs. C. 8. Sweeney are at Dillsboro for a visit. Mrs. George T. Schaler and son Bernard have returned from a month’s visit in Southern California.