Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 238, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 February 1935 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Variety Distinguishes Art Work Executed by Junior League Members Fifty-Three Entries Made for Show; Awards Again Offered by Mrs. Robert A. Adams; Portrait and Bronze Admired. BY BEATRICE BURG AN Tinn Hitnin'i Part Editor THE Junior Lratfue exhibit of art work at the American Central auditor. r .ay would lead us to believe hat numbers have few idle moments. Between social and philanthropic duties, many members cMgn paint or execute an idea in some art medium. Yesterday, the members' exhibit committee of the arts and interests division nf the league wa- graced with the variety of the 53 entries for this The exhibit v as a good talking point for Mrs. Horace F. Hill 111.

chairman of arts and interests, vho is encouraging mere members to join the league's Friday morning art class being conducted at the John Herron Art Museum by Miss Anna Hasselman. who judged entries with the aid of Donald Mattison, director of the John Herron Art School, and Mrs. Eugene C. Miller, league member. With a sweep of hm hands, Mrs. Hill remarked: "Just see what the members have a:~omplished—some without any specialized training.” For the second time Mrs. Robert A. Adams offered the awards for the prize winners. W< arrived at till just as Mrs. Charles R. Weiss, chairman of *he hanging committee; Mrs. Noble D an, Mrs Holliday, Mrs. John K. Ruckelshaus and Mrs lie* -Ogle had completed arrangement of entries, most of which were in the nne arts class.

Miss Burjan

Mrs Dean's pastel portrait of Alice Adkins, daughter of Dr. Russell Adkins, was being admired by some of the glee club members who had program under the direction of Edward LaSh ie and Mrs. Paul E F.sher. Mrs. Egbert Driscoll and Mrs. Julian Bobbs were arranging the serving table for the tea. Two honorary member.;, Mr G. Barrett Moxley and Mrs. John A. MacDonald, presided at the table during the tea hour following the talk by Mrs. Cyrus L. Philipps, a visiting League national director.

Some of the early arrivals were exclaiming over the bronze head, sculptured by Mrs. Chsrles A. Greathouse Jr. Two Enter Sculpture Miss Louise Vonnegut and Mrs. William Jungclaus had heads in the sculpture class, and Mrs. Dean entered the only paintings in the oil division. In the water color group were a wall paper design by Mrs. Harold Taylor, costume designs by Mrs. John D. Gould and a Byzantine of Christ by Mrs. Stanley Shiplies. Mrs. Tavlor's design of wall paper was charming. Against a pale green background, a diamond shaped pattern was formed by trailing vines of purple grapes, massed with darker green leaves. In the centers of the patterns were baskets holding fruits m shades of the grape color* Works in Needlepoint In water color Mrs. Iles-Ogle designed the Chinese pattern of a needlepoint cover of a foot bench for her bedroom. After reproducing the design on the *~anvas, she worked it in needlepoint, using odd bits of the wool thread left over from other designs she had made. In the original design a tiny Chinese figure walks across the grass between two red bridges, repeating the color of a summer house. Two trees are silhouetted against the blue sky, streaked with varying shades of a sunset. A tropical bird, with brilliant plumage and gay coxcomb, is surrounded by orchid and rose shaded flowers in the needlepoint fire screen design entered by Miss Helen Shepard, who was the only member to show ceramics in the handcraft class. Mrs. Dean Given Prize After the judging was over we learned that Mrs. Dean's portrait had received a blue ribbon and another of her pictures was given an honorable mention. In sculpture Muss Vonnegut was first and Mrs. Greathouse second. Mrs. Elsa Pantzer Haerle. w ho has been one of the most persistent sponsors of members’ art activity, was awarded a first and an honorable mention in the prints division, with Mrs. Charles Latham, second. In the crafts class Miss Shepard received a fir.-t in general crafts and Miss Helm Fleisher a first in textiles; and Mrs. Iles-Ogle and Mrs. Landon Davis, honorable mentions. Mrs. Taylor’s wallpaper design was given first prise in design and Mrs. John Gould s aluminum design received second. Mrs. Gould's series of costume designs received honorable mention, and her photographs of scenes near the Gould summer home at Point au Banl in Canada were pinned wnh a blue ribbon. LEGION 1 V XI LI AR Y WILL GIVE PARTY Ways and means committee of Twelfth District Council. American Legion Auxiliary, will sponsor a card party on March 20 in Ayres Auditorium. Madden-Nottingham Unit will hold a covered dish luncheon at 1 Tuesday. Feb. 26. at the home of Miss Edith Frey. Units No. 8 and No. 40 will entertain with an evening program at the U. S. Veterans’ Hospital on Feb. 26.

Key of B b Two

Copyright. 1921, by W. Scott Grove. Seractoa. Pa.

Tfep key of B Flat Major bas two flats, and ta this lemon, the aewenteßntb of ihe tcrim, tbe chart shows bow to play accompaniments in the key of B Flat Major. INSTRUCTION—PIace the chart at right angles with the keyboard, an that the pniU white letter D with a dash above it on the chart fe dhncetiy ewer D an the keyboard. Then the white spaces on the chart will be osar the whose keys and Mack spares over the black keys. The tap, middle and hnttnm sections an the chart represent the thsee chords a mastary of which sfl enable any one to arentn (as> on the pane or osxw aw** or mslndf in the tm§ of B Mat Mska tta

W.C.T.U. Units of County Will Give Tea Series A series of silver Valentine teas will be given simultaneously from 2 to 4 Friday by county directors of the departments of the Marion County Women's Christian Temperance Union. The teas serve as a membership drive to which each member is requested to bring two guests. Proceeds will be used for the educational fund. Mrs. Epha Johnson, county director of alcohol education, will have charge of a tea at her home. 325 N. Bolton-av. She will be assisted by local directors. Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson will be speaker, Mrs. Fred Stucky will give readings and Mrs. Guy O. Carpenter wall sing. Mrs. Dorothy Kortepeter and Mrs. Sallie Silson will preside at the tea table. Mrs. T. R. Ratcliff, county director of the evangelistic department, will be in charge of a tea at her home, 4010 N. Capitol-av. The program will include readings by Mrs. Frank Kinsey; music by Mrs. George Coldren and a talk by the Rev. Richard Millard. Mrs. Charles Magcl, county director of temperance and missions department, will be in charge of a tea at Central Y. W. C. A. Miss Florence Lanham will speak on •Missions”; Mrs. Charles Mueller, "Temperance,” and musical numbers will be played by students of the music department of Indiana Central College. Mrs. Marietta Power and Mrs. Harry Sloan will preside at the tea table. Mrs. Silas Ryker, county director of official papers, will have charge of a tea to be held in the social room of the United Brethren Church, University Heights. The Rev. William Lee Spratt will talk on "The Needs of the Hour.” Musical program will include piano solos by Miss Donna Hall; violin numbers by Miss Katherine Kurtz, and songs by Miss Treva Miser, Muncie. Mrs. T. A. Perry will give devotions. Mrs. Theron Waddell, Mrs. Ralph Bossingham and Mrs. Don Lucas will preside at the tea tables. Mrs. Frank Pittman, county director of Flower Mission and relief, will be in charge of a tea to be held at the home of Mrs. Carl Gruelle, 1208 N. Gladstone-av. The Rev. H. L. Lewis will speak on "Temperance and Missions.” Readings will be given by Mrs. Maytha Brewer and Miss Kate Smith. Local directors of the department will assist and give a demonstration of the Flower Mission work. Bridc-to-Be Feted Miss Martha Davis, whose marriage to Harold Paul Jackson will take place Feb. 21, was entertained at a surprise kitchen shower Monday night at the home of Mrs. Carl Ritzi. Those present were Mesdames Jacob Harold, James E. Durham. Wayne Suthcrlin, John Gallagher, Roland Lambert. Howard Vanden Evnden. Fred Baker. Harry Cruse and Thomas Sheridan; Misses Irene Bratton. Jerry Powers, Clara Haffield. Doris Grimes and Betty Stickens. Mrs! Ritrl was assisted by Mesdames Walter Tichenor. William Watts and Norman Wampner.

<t HOME COURSE IN PIANO PLAYINQ—LESSON NO. 17 <a>

Aid and Participants in Art Exhibit

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Reveal your troubles to Jane Jordan in a letter today and read your answers in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a 17-year-old brunette and have gone with a 23-year-old boy almost a year. He is not good looking, but is a very nice boy. He is old-fashioned, does not drink, smoke or dance. He

is very crazy about me and would marry me if I would say the word. I do not like him so well, but have gone with him to please my parents. I'm not a wild girl. I dance and when I’m out on a party I smoke and have a drink occasionally, but I do not have a habit of either. Last summer I

Jane Jordan

stepped out on my boy friend and went with a very good looking fellow about 27 years old. I found out later that he was married and haven’t gone with him much since. It is hard to refuse for I really do love him. and it is impossible to forget him. Should I marry the boy friend even though I do not and never will love him and try to be happy, or should I try to forget both? LOVESICK BETTY. Answer—Every girl ought to respect her own instinctive “no” to a man's proposal of matrimony. If she does not it is because she is afraid that no one else ever will ask her and because her goal is to be married at all costs. She reasons that any husband is better than no husband. That her reasoning is false she discovers to her grief. It wouldn't surprise me if your parents encourage you to go with your boy friend for the very reason that they feel you are not sufficiently attracted to him to tear off and get married at 17. If they can delay your marriage for a few years by keeping you busy with a suitor whom you won't accept, they will figure the time well spent. The married man is only an emotional phase you are going through. He is older and therefore more like a father. He belongs to another and you fancy yourself a woman of the world leading a wicked, exciting life. That's about all there is to it. You'll get over it and live to marry a man you haven't met as yet. tt tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—l am a married woman and have a child. My husband and I don't get along. He is so hard-headed that he can’t see my way at all. As long as I give in to him we fret along O. K. I think of leaving him but my baby holds

OROVE’S MUSIC SIMPLIFIER is folly protected ty in the Foiled State*. Ganada. Great Britain, the cocntrie* of Continental EUrope and their cokrate*.

white letters an to be played with the left bend, the black fatten wfth the right hand. Now, bssdug placed the chart on (he piano, play the whfte tetter on the top eection with the left bend, and then the three Mack fetters 1a tmiwrwi with the right hand. Unt phij thr mitii hi fhsi hi tls i—imi wnry. Itan fhn tirttnm —*— -” wl then return to the top seetkxx Tbe and sMatetto B sfit a dab dn 1> which glam the chart pnrtfkn, and act InkPid kOerwftdef jsseto Mr

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

me back. Should I go on loving him and let him push me around, or should I leave? LONELY AND BLUE. Answer —Neither. Learn how to handle him better. Opposition only makes his type stubborn, but there are many other ways to victory over his selfishness. Diplomacy has been called the art of letting someone else have your way. See if you can’t become a better diplomat. tt tt Dear Jane Jordan —We are two good-looking girls 17 years old in love with bachelors who are twin brothers. They have good positions and would be able to support us. One night on a double date they proposed to us. We really love them and would like to marry them but we are still in school. What would you suggest? WEAK. Answer—ls they are sincere in their proposal of marriage they will be willing to wait until you have finished your schooling. Perhaps they are only playing with the idea of marriage. You would do well not to take them too seriously. tt tt a Dear Jane Jordan —I am a girl of 17 years old. I met a fellow of 19 at a house party and have grown very fond of him, but mother doesn’t like him. She would not allow me to accept his invitations and now he doesn’t ask me any more. Do you think I should not go with any one else until he asks me for dates again jr do you think he has lost all interest. IN DEEP THOUGHT. Answer —It’s a mistake to refuse dates in hopes that a discouraged boy friend will return. Have as gay a time as possible. If he has sufficient interest in you the other dates will act as a challenge for him to try, try again. FAMOUS WOMEN TO BE PORTRAYED C. Norman Green will introduce and describe the characters which will appear in "Lady America,” a pageant of famous American women to be presented at 8 Friday, Feb. 22 by the Ladies Aid Society of Broadway M. E. Church. Mrs. J. N. Greene will model as Mrs. Grace Cooiidge, and Miss Lois Sedam and James Carmichael will appear in a Quaker group. Betrothed Couple Feted Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Padgett entertained with a party for Miss Myrtle Lahmann and Albert Hall who will be married Feb. 19 on Sunday night. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. John L. Cox. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Troy, James Hill, Misses Helen Summers and Julia Beatty, Frank Calabrese, Willard Hall and Francis Troy.

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Upper left to right: Mrs, Charles R. Weiss and Mrs. Iles-Ogle, Loweri Mrs. Noble Dean. Yesterday morning Mrs. Charles R. Weiss directed hanging of the entries in the members’ exhibit, sponsored by the arts and interests committee of the Junior League of Indianapolis. Mrs. Iles-Ogle. who had several articles entered in the exhibit, was one of the members assisting. Mrs. Noble Dean’s pastel portrait of Alice Adkins, daughter of Dr. Russell Adkins, received a blue ribbon award and cash prize, donated by Mrs. Robert A. Adams. Another entry of Mrs. Dean received honorable mention.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Chilled tomato juice, cereal, cream, buckwheat cakes, syrup, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Scalloped oysters, mixed fruit salad, sponge cake with chocolate sauce, milk, tea. Dinner — Baked haddock with egg sauce, French fried sweet potatoes, spinach with easy Hollandaise sauce, cabbage and grape fruit salad, fig pudding, milk, coffee.

PARTY SCHEDULED BY LITERARY CLUB At the /alentine birthday party of the Wy-Mo-Dau Literary Club today at Banner-Whitehill auditorium, members and guests including members of the Ephamar and Current Events Clubs were entertained. Mrs. John Thornburg greeted the guests; Mrs. Charles Barclay was in charge of arrangements; Mrs. Amy Brookhouse, hospitality chairman, and Mrs. E. C. Wischmeier, music chairman. Mrs. Inez C. Samper, dressed in Mexican costume, presented “My Native Mexico”; the Treble Clef Trio sang; Laura Craig Poland played piano numbers; Mrs. Basil Vaught presented vocal numbers, and Mrs. Thelma Helkena, accordion selections.

tbe chart a person who never struck a note <m the piano or organ before may in a few mfaartpg play the harmonious chords correctly, and then accompany Us or her songs or tbe songs of friends. Proficiency requires aUtfle praettn, Mtmprettns knowledge ct music. Bwery triad in tteck tetter fa marked 1. Z, 6. dtorwj m read it so, no matter in detwsanS dahttoß ft pwtinnt teplpwi

New Auto Show Method Permits Indulgence of 1 'Shopping Around’ Habit Various Dealers Exhibiting 1935 Models in Own Quarters; Comfort, Beauty and Safety Given Emphasis. BY HELEN LINDSAY TANARUS/" NETTING bags and bridge games have been forgotten. Sports events which ordinarily consume much of the time of the masculine public are rushed through hurriedly. Every member in many Indianapolis families this week is enjoying the annual thrill of looking over new models of automobiles. A unique arrangement in Indianapolis is meeting unprecedented success, with local dealers displaying the new models in salon showings, rather than in an automobile show where all models are shown side by

side.. Dealers have discovered that the Indianapolis public enjoys shopping for automobiles just as it does for new clothing, house furnishings, or any other commodity. It enjoys going from one salon display to another, where individual inspection can be made of each model, personal demonstrations can be arranged, and all details of the new cars can be studied. Additional interest has been added to the week’s displays since a number of the automobile manufacturers have introduced at this time models which have not been seen in Indianapolis before the opening of the displays this week. In addition to this, many manufacturers of the larger, more expensive cars have placed on the market this year automobiles in the lower price range, since they have become convinced that good, dependable automo-

biles can be purchased for lower prices. Three paramount features are evident in the structure of the new models. Each has b< en designed to give the utmost in safety, comfort and beauty. Many of the General Motors automobiles are of all steel construction, the turret top being a part of the general body design. Control boards are similar to those on airplanes, svith speedometer, fuel gauge and other mechanical devices presentd clearly to the driver. tt a tt Chromium Stressed in Decoration UPHOLSTERY is of substantial, attractive fabrics, and some of the new ears have bright chromium bars across the backs of the seats, similar to the decoration used on modern furniture. There is a trend to beaver tail backs in the sweeping lines of some of the cars, and others have trunks built in as a part of the body. Colors are bright, and show combinations which prove that manufacturers have noticed the attractive ensembles of color used in feminine attire during the past year, and have benefited from them. One of the new Lincolns is in a light shade of gray, with bright red discs on the raditor and hub cups, with modernistic name lettering. tt tt tt Radiators Made More Conservative THE new Chryslers show the airflow lines as in the startling new lines introduced recently, but with radiators built up slightly into more conservati.e design. Other models of the Chrysler are in modified stream lines, and are called air stream models. The chromium bars which form the rounded grill of the new Pontiac run far up along the hood, to the windshield. They are the creation of a designer who has been doing Illustrations for Esquire magazine. He is Count de Saffnosky. former Russian nobleman, who last year designed the body of the Nash automobile. Count de Saffnosky, asked to make a drawing of an automobile hood for the .cover design on a number of Esquire, originated the idea now seen in the Pontiac. Manufacturers, seeing it, became curious, and it was incorporated in the body design of the new Pontiac.

VALENTINE PARTY TENDERED BY CLUB A varied program was presented today by the Wednesday Afternoon Club at its Valentine party in the Sears, Roebuck & Cos. social room. Mrs. Albert Walsman, president, greeted guests and members. Hostesses were Mesdames Eva Wright, N. C. Steffey, F. W. Scheigert, A. A. Dunn, Louis Grabhorn, R. S. Davidson, Andrew Cook and Harold Trotter. Included on the program were the Bible lesson by Mrs. J. W. House; book review of “The Soul of Ann Rutledge,” by Mrs. J. R. Horne; reading of “That Old Sweetheart of Mine,” by Mrs. Homer Trotter, accompanied by Mrs. J, H. Gill and assisted by Mrs. Harry Schwab and Mrs. W. E. Stein; marimba and accordion numbers by Miss Irene Bishop and Robert Rothman, and a style show presented by the store during the refreshment hour. Club Reunion Set All former residents of Fayette County are invited to attend the tenth annual reunion dinner of the Fayette Club at 4:30 Sunday, Feb. 24, at the Colonial tearoom, 1433 N. Fennsylvania-st. Mrs. R. H. Reed is general chairman; Mrs. J. G. Sharks, ticket chairman, and Mrs. Leroy S. Martin, publicity chairman.

Daily Recipe JIFFY CAKE 1 cun sugar 2 cups pastry flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1-2 teaspoon salt 1-2 cup milk 1-U cup soft butter 2 unbeaten egg whites 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Sift dry ingredients into bowl. Make hollow in center and pour in remaining ingredients. Beat all together for two minutes. Bake in layer pans in a moderately hot oven, 375 degrees, 25 or 35 minutes.

FEB. 13, T 035

mad

Mrs. Lindsay

WOMEN’S GUILD WILL ENTERTAIN Valentine party will be given by the Hoosier Athletic Club Woman's Guild tonight with wives of doctors and dentists as hostesses. Assisting the chairman, Mrs. Kyle B. Mayhall will be Mesdames J. Conley Robinson, Thomas P. Rogers, Charles A. Reid, G. L. Young and D. R. Southworth. Valentines will be presented by Deloremay Wertz and a dance sponsored by the basketball team will follow. Wilbur Noll is chairman. Miss Marjorie McDuffee has returned after a two-weeks visit in Chicago.

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