Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 37, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1935 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Albrights Prepare Cottage
Lake Maxinkuckee Home to Be Scene of Parties During Season. BY BEATRICE BURG AN Tlmn Woman'* Pair Editor. THE first days of spring weather sent Mrs. Chester Albright to Lake Maxinkuckee where she set about pitting *V Albright cottage in order for another season. The Albrights spent Easter at the lake, and they took with them a party of young friends of their son. Rodney,
a cadet at Culver Military Academy. Last night the party of young boys and girls attended a dinner which Rodney gave before the hop at the academy. The girls from Indianapolis were Kitty Lou Fitzgerald, Sally Smith, Ruth Coler, Marjorie Raiser and Elea-
Miss Kurgan
nor Mingle. The cadets were Alexander Mackenzie, Syracuse, N. Y.; Charles F. Urschel Jr., Oklahoma City. Okla.; Charles Haskell, Toledo, O . and Pedro F. Pelegnn, Havana, Cuba. From now until the summer season begins, the Albrights will entertain frequently on week-ends with house parties. a tt tt When the Indiana Audubon Society's annual meeting is held at Butler University on May 3 and 4. one of the special tours will end at Redbud Hill. North Crows’ Nest, property of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Hamer. Mrs. Hamer, president of the Indianapolis Council of Garden Clubs, and Mr. Hamer were the first purchasers of land from the Judge Solomon Claypool estate when the original Crows’ Nest land was divided for sale. For ten years the Hamers have owned the land. They named it Redbud Hill because of the hundreds of redbud trees which bloom there in the spring. The early morning bird hikers will breakfast on the hill where the Hamers expect to build soon. tt a a Mrs. James G. Flaherty and daughter. Mary Ellen, spent Easter week in New York. Mrs. C. C. Robinson’s mother, Mrs. Frank Jay, Brighton, England, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Robinson un il the end of May. Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, their daughter Virginia, Mrs. Jay and Frederick Burleigh motored to Cliftv Falls Sunday. Miss Delores Stemmolen, Louisville, was a week-end guest of Miss Julianne Britz, 4069 N. New Jerseyst. Miss Stemmelen and Miss Britz formerly were roommates at St. Mary-of-the-Woods. Miss Britz entertained informally Sunday afternoon for her guest. Mr. and Mrs. Frances W. Clark will arrive soon from Cleveland to visit Mrs. Clark's mother, Mrs. Anna Dyson, and sister, Miss Marybelle Dyson.
Reservations Made by 500 for Columbia Club Party
Five hundred reservations have been made at the Columbia Club for its formal spring party Friday night when Charlie Davis and his New York orchestra will play. Albert J. Beveridge Jr., chairman of the entertainment committee, and Mrs. Beveridge are chairmen of a committee of hosts and hostesses. Reservations for parties of from four to 18 guests have been made by the following: Messrs, and Mesdames F. Grove Weisenberger, Paul W. Knowles, Charles A. Seidenstirker. Dr. J. H. Kemper, Dr. H. F. Parr. H. E. Berke. Fritz A. Schneider. L W. Horning. Seth S. Wardr T. P. Nirkell, Shelbyville; Uz McMurtrie. L. H. Ridgwav. Don Wilson. Jack Goldberg. Douglas Pierce. Bert Kingan. Louis Barnett. Roy Carson. Scot Wade. Sam Wolfe. John B. Stickle. J. R. Todd Jr., Dr. Leon W. Berger. Herm"n Chalfie. Julian
Shop and Save at Wednesday J One Day Only .1 t 0 ''' SP’’ 11 ’ Regular $1.29 ( EASEL TYPE FT! Curtain | IA, Stretcher S ' $-foo Lou est Price Wednesday for Easel Type ]■ Only Stretchers ... •Neat, compact, convenient, easy to handle. • Easy to adjust; nickle plated pins. • Smoothly finished Pendosa pine wood. . •sxß-ft. frame with center brace. SEARS—Basement. Mail Orders or Delivery, 15c Extra F £Z,!Z' Alabama at Vermont St.
Coat Model Dress BY ELLEN WORTH
Sheer woolens and their near neighbors, as silks and cottons that suggest woo! are very popular this season for dresses of coat type as today’s model. And here's one of the smartest in navy and white silk. White crepe revers give it a very fresh and youthful appearance. A stunning dress for town or travel. Carried out in dusty pink, white, aqua blue, this dress is most attractive and wearable for summer with short sleeves as in back view. Style No. 922 is designed for sizes 16. i8 years. 36, 38. 40, 42 and 44 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3** yards of 39-inch contrasting. Our spring fashion book is beautifully illustrated in color. Price of book, 10 cents. Enclosed find 15 cents for . which send me Pattern No. 922. 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 W. Marylandst, Indianapolis, with 15 cents in coin. Church Group to Meet Mrs. J. K. Leasure will be hostess Thursday for the monthly luncheon of the Martha Hawkins Society of the First Baptist Church. Miss Adele Renard, guest speaker, will describe some French cathedrals.
Manners and Morals
If you’re not making any progress with your problems, perhaps anew viewpoint is what you need; Write to Jane Jordan! Dear Jane Jordan—l have a very beautiful lady friend visiting me and she is quite lonely. I am so busy with my position and the care of my home that I have no way of introducing her to some nice, refined gentleman who would enjoy the companionship of so lovely a person. She is past 40, but looks 30. She is truly beautiful and has a lovely disposition. Can you suggest a way by which I can find a nice friend to take her places and show her a really nice time? A WORRIED FRIEND. Answer —Like most women I suppose 1 am a matchmaker at heart. I never see a lonely woman but what I cast around in my mind for a lonely man who would appreciate her. Nor can I contemplate an unhappy bachelor without trying to find him a wife. But I have been particularly unsucccessful in my efforts to match up my friends and I am afraid to bring strangers together. I have discovered that, for the most part, people are lonely because they have no genuine interest in
Bamberger, H. A. Pfister, Richard T. Hill, C. V. Sorenson, Albert J. Beveridge Jr., Richard T. Lineback, Greenfield: Frank Reynolds. Cambridge City; Pearson Smith. Dr. Sidney Aronson, J. E. Hutchins, John R. Surber. Gail Eldridge, John E. Steeg, Dr. Leon Gray, Martinsville; E. G. Dehnar, Charles A. Bates, Tipton; H. C. Tyson, Donald Teetor, Hagerstown; E. R. Blackwood. John Anderson, J. Frank Miller, Joe N. Gelman. Paul O. Tauer Jr. Charles Bardach, Merlin M. Bailey, Hal C. Meyer, Volney M. Brown. Paul E. Duffy. Theodore S Medias, C. E. White Jr., Skiles E. Test, R. Barry Sample, and Wiliam A. Shepler. Anotl er party of 10 will include Mr. and Mrs. Chantilla E. White, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Reed, Crawfordsvi.le; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Toll, Dr. and Mrs. B. B. Pettijohn, and Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Cain.
5)22
JORDAN.
BY JANE
others. Although apparently lovely and likeable, their thoughts are pretty much wrapped up in themselves. They are agreeable when sought out, but they do no seeking themselves. They accept attention, but do not bestow it. They respond to the appreciation of others but are not actively appreciative of those who make no cordial advances. Psychologists have a word for it, narcissism. Os course, I do not know your friend. She could not be expected to have a wide acquaintance in the city which she is visiting, but what’s the matter with her own home town? Note: lam holding 10 letters for Janet which I will forward upon receipt of her address. Will the gentleman who called me relative to the position of air hostess please call again? I have three addresses for him. Dear Jane Jordan—l am 29 and have a son 12 by my first husband, who is dead. I have been married to my second husband for 10 years. He is just three years older than I am. He drinks a lot at times and doesn’t seem to care much for my son. I have been sick a long time, but I like to go out once in a while. My husband never wants to go anywhere with me, but he stays out and I don’t know where he is. I don’t like to go to a show or anywhere else alone. What would you do? BLUE SUE. Answer—The woman who neglects to make a life for herself apart from her husband is, like yourself, completely lost when the partner
Wmi w Jj§ jllll
Jane Jordan
have no resources within yourself, that you aren't even interesting enough to yourself to have a good time alone, makes you equally uninteresting to your husband? instead of wishing for a change in him, get busy on yourself. Read. Join a study club. Develop a hobby. Learn to do someone thing better than anybody else. Get a jfcb, if you can, and give your energies a chance to ; flow outward instead of inward on the sorrowful contemplation of the j failure of your marriage. You sign >ourself “Blue Sue.” That alone gives me a clew to the | reason why your husband stays : away from home, to the reason why ! he seeks gayety and merriment in alcohol. I am not excusing him. I I have no doubt that he is a bad bargain. But you won him once by some sort of blandishment. I am afraid that you thought your life was settled and your problems solved when you married. You did not realize that love does not last without the perpetual addition of fuel to the flame. Marriage does not lessen a man’s need to be charmed. Your husband has failed, to be sure. Can it be possible that you have failed him, too?
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BUTLER Y. W. C. A. OFFICERS ELECTED Butler University Y. W. C. A. cabinet, as the result of recent elections, has announced its officers for the 1935-36 school year. They are Misses Gayle Thornbrough, president; Esther Hoover, vice president: Betty Humphreys, secretary, and Doris Jane Meuser, treasurer. New members of the cabinet for the coming school year are the following committee heads; Misses Alice Porteous, social; Evelyn Wright, freshmen; Ruth Repschlager, Girl Reserve; Dorothy Thompson, student industrial; Alice Marie Woolling, social service; Mary Katherine Mangus, program; Dorothy Reasoner, world fellowship; Betty Beckman, worship; Jane Rothenburger, inter - racial, and Jean Anderson, assistant social and freshmen chairman. The new officers will be installed before the end of the present semester. Miss Frances Stalker is the retiring president of the organization.
Mrs. Putnam to Be Honored by Tea at Butler Daughters of members of the Phi Delta Theta Mothers’ Club of Butler University will assist past presidents in serving at a tea from 2 to 5 Thursday in honor of Mrs. James W. Putnam, wife of the university president. Members of the campus sorority and fraternity mothers’ clubs, house chaperons of the sororities and fraternities and members of the Woman’s Faculty Club will be guests. The girls assisting will include Misses Mary Margaret Ruddell, Jean Lowther, Alice Wilde, Gretchen Mary Yeazel, Martha Coddington, Marjorie Raiser, Janet Sorenson, Betty Jo Roberts, Louise Brandt and Jean Worsham. Mrs. Blanche Yolton Harbor, Phi Delt house chaperon, will assist the club members. Mrs. Arthur L. Gilliom and Mrs. Urban K. Wilde Sr. are co-chairmen. Mrs. J. Harry Green will sing and the Butler University Varsity Eight will play from 3 to 4. TWO MARIONETTE SHOWS SCHEDULED Harry Fowler will present his marionettes in two shows, “The Man on the Flying Trapeze,” and “Little Black Sambo.” in the recreation hall of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church at 10 Saturday under auspices of the Mothers’ Club of the Sunday school. Mrs. A. W. McDonald is committee chairman.
Club Meetings
TOMORROW St. Margaret Hospital Guild will hold an all-day meeting at the home of Mrs. L. H. Earle, 170 E. 71st-st. Final arrangements will be made for a guild party to be held Friday, May 3, at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. Willis B. Conner Jr. is in charge of reservations. Regular meeting of the Christ Church branch, Girls’ Friendly Society, will be held in the parish house. Woman’s Missionary Society of the Third Christian Church will sponsor a Japanese tea at the Ban-ner-Whitehill auditorium at 2:15. Inter Nos Club will elect officers at a meeting at 2 when Mrs. E. A. Brown entertains at her home, 5420 Centra'-av. Mrs. T. P. Haymaker will talk on Ruth Bryan Owen; Mrs. Herbert Luckey, Queen Marie and Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, Alice Longworth. The group will discuss “Has Mrs. Owen Opened a New Field of Activity*for Women?” An institute on the church will feature a regular meeting of the Irvington Catholic Women’s Study Club. Mrs. Roy Babcock will lead discussion. Mrs. William Strack, 412 N. Drexel-av, will entertain the group. THURSDAY Thursday Lyceum Club members will hear Mrs. William Somers discuss William Bolitha’s “Twelve Against the Gods” at a meeting with Mrs. O. W. Cross, hostess. Mrs. E. F. Brown, 1616 Woodlawnav, will entertain members of the 1908 Club at its regular meeting. Members of the North Side Study Club will hear a review of Peter Fleming’s “Brazilian Adventure” by Mrs. A. A. Goodwin when Mrs. George Reid entertains the group at her home, 2116 Central-av. “Some Youthful Irritations” will be Frederick Kautz’ topic for a meeting of the Portfolio Club. The supper committee includes Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Wheeler, Miss Marie Chomel, Miss Blanche Stillson and Paul Hadley. FRIDAY Mrs. Leo N. Burnett, Glencoe, 111., will present “To Assume a Pleasing Shape” and Mrs. Albert L. Rabb will talk on “They Ate with a Runcible Spoon” at a meeting of the Indianapolis Woman’s Club. Meeting of the Friday Afternoon Reading Club is scheduled, with Mrs. S. G. Gifford and Mrs. G. H. Healey hostesses. The biography of Pearl Buck and an analysis of Chinese women as told by Mrs. Buck will feature the program. Mrs. Robert V. Gilliland, 33. E. 33nd-st, w’ill entertain members of the Government Science Club. Mrs. F. Neal Thurston will talk on “Old Glass."
defaults. Do not let the indifference of your husband defeat you. Instead let it awaken you from the long sleep in which you were not conscious of yourself as an individual but only of the man and the child for whom you lived. Can't you see that the fact that you
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Garden Club Session Set at Richmond
State Organization Will Assemble in Annual Meeting May 24. Fourth annual convention of the Indiana Federation of Garden Clubs will be held at Richmond on May 24. Following business sessions and lectures in the morning, the meeting will close with a garden tour. Places of interest to be visited include the Hill Greenhouses. Earlham College, Easthaven State Hospital, Art Gallery, historical museum, municipal gardens in Glen Miller Park, the William Rindt garden, winner in Better Homes and Gardens contest; Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph G. Leeds’ estate, Mr. and Mrs. William Dudley Foulke estate, Mrs. Charles Mitchell’s garden, and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Wolcott Hayes’ estate. Mrs. H. H. Muff, president of the Richmond Garden Club, is program chairman and is being assisted byMrs. E. C. Cline and Joseph H. Hill. Speakers will be Mr. Hill, president of the Hill Floral Products Cos., and Mrs. Silas B. Waters, Cincinnati, president of the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs. Mrs. Eugene K. Quigg wil be hostess for a tea. Mrs. J. A. Eudaly, Richmond, is chairman of the nominating committee appointed by Miss Mary Louise Carmichael, Muncie, federation president. Also on the committee are Mrs. Perry O’Neal, Indianapolis, and Mrs. W. D. Bosticki Ft. Wayne.
Contract Bridge
Today’s Contract Problem Do you think that South should make a forcing twobid with his holding? If South plays the hand at four spades, can he make the con- j tract ? * J A Q 10 3 2 * •! 9 6 498 5 2 A 10 7 A• 7 S N ~1 A * *A K ' C VQIOB 5 4 Q .1 1 0 3 W 42 *QJ9 3 b ♦ 7 Dealer AB6 5 4 AAK 9 8 * 7 3 4AK 6 4 AA K 2 Solution in next issue 16 BY W. E. M’KENNEY Solution to Previous Contract Problem Seeretary, American Bridge League CERTAIN players have a knack for discovering unusual hands. One such chap is a young New York attorney, Fred Kaplan. Seven odd can be made on this hand, which Mr. Kaplan showed me. After working it out for awhile, see if you will not agree with me that it is one of the prettiest hands of the year. In the bidding, North was confronted with a problem after Souths bid of one spade. The hand was not quite strong enough to bid two no trump and, of course, with only three trumps, a double raise in spades was out of the question. AQ 3 I*7 6 4 3 4A 6 5 AA 7 6 a * 2 *.l 10 95 w, rVQ 8 4Q 10 8 4 . 49 7 3 A952*A Q 10 8 4 Dealer 3 AAK J 5 4 *A K 2 4K J 2 A K J Duplicate—All vul South West North East 1 a Pass 2 Pass 3 A Pass 4 A Pass 6 A Pass Pass Pass Opening lead —* J 16 North elected to make a constructive bid of two hearts. South then showed strength by jumping to three spades, and as soon as he found his partner with a fit in spades, he went to six. , B B B WEST'S opening lead was the jack of hearts, which the declarer won with the ace. His next play was the ace of trump, followed by a small trump, which was won in the exposed hand with the queen. The declarer "had to find either the queen of clubs or the queen of diamonds right to make his contract. If he tried the diamond finesse, the heart king would be knocked out, so he had nothing to lose by trying the club finesse. If the club queen were right, he would be able to discard his losing heart on the ace of clubs. The club finesse worked, so the declarer drew out the last outstanding trump and cashed his king of clubs, king of hearts, and two thumps. He was left with the deuce of hearts and the king, jack, deuce of diamonds. West had three diamonds to the queen, and the 10 of hearts. Dummy had the ace and six of diamonds, the ace of clubs and the seven of hearts. A small diamond was played and won with the ace. The ace of clubs was cashed, the declarer discarding the deuce of hearts. West was squeezed. A heart discard would establish the seven of hearts, while a diamond discard would give the declarer the last two tricks with the king and jack of diamonds. (CoDvrieht. 1935. NEA Service. Inc.) NEWLYWEDS WILL RESIDE IN CITY Following a wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Faris will come to Indianapolis for Mrs. Faris was Miss Mabel Britton of Parkersburg, W. Va., before her wedding recently at Parkersburg. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Marshall were attendants. a
BRIDGE FETE TO BE NURSERY BENEFIT
A bridge party to be given by the Alliance of Delta Delta Delta Sorority on May 11 at the Columbia Club will be used to start a fund to build a wading pool at the Indianapolis Day Nursery. A style show will be presented at the party by the William H. Block Cos. Mrs. William Shirley, alliance president, has appointed Mrs. Marion Eppert, general chairman. Miss Katherine Stanley is chairman of arrangements, assisted by Miss Jessie Martin and Mrs. Harry Hooley. Other committees are: Style show, Mrs. C. C. Crumbaker and Mrs. Willard Bray; prizes, Mesdames Dana Jones. Wendell Hicks. Robert Boyer and Marvin Lugar. Misses Virginia Taylor and Marjorie Carr; tickets, Mesdames Pauline Heiney, Howard Bates, John Bruhn, James Baird, Laura Wadsworth. Roger Beem and William Mace; telephone. Mrs. Otto Jensen, and candy, Miss Lillian Martin. The alliance reef tly financed decorations of two of the nursery rooms.
Betrothed Couple to Be Honored After Daniel W. Layman Jr. arrived Sunday from Los Angeles, he and his fiancee, Miss Betty Lee Burns, became the center of attention among their friends. Before their marriage Saturday at the Burns’ home, they will be honor guests at several parties. Yesterday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. David Andrews entertained with a cocktail party. Today Mr. and Mrs. Henry Adams were to entertain with an informal party, and tonight Henry Johnston has invited in a few of the couple’s intimate friends. On Thursday night Miss Hope Pfafllin will be hostess at a dinner party in Miss Burns’ and Mr. Layman’s honor. Miss Melissa Wadley’s dinner party will be tomorrow night. Mr. Layman is with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Daniel W. Layman. MOTHERS WILL BE GUESTS AT BUTLER All mothers of Butler University students have been invited to attend a meeting of the Butler University Mothers’ Council at 10:30 Friday morning in Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall. An address will be given by Richard Lieber. Mrs. Frank Reissner Sr. will preside. “Conservation” will be the topic of Mr. Lieber. The address will be open to Butler students and faculty members who are interested in reservation, according to an announcement by Mrs. i. .
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Time to get the electric sweeper into action! Is yours in the best possible working order? Maybe just a minoi’ adjustment . . . maybe a complete overhauling . . . will bring it back to its most efficient self. The BAKER ELECTRIC SHOP, 3426 N. Capitol, will call for and deliver your electric sweepers in A-l order. TA. 6232. B B tt This thing called “Loofah” is creating quite a stir ... a vegetable sponge from the tropics . . . made into friction brushes for the health bath ... as u'ell as absorbent insoles for summer shoes. B tt tt Luggage? Tickets? All ready for a European holiday? I’m simply carried away wfth the thought of
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ules for this summer. And in my “shopping around” I find Europe at a real bargain. Their Economy Allexpense Tours this year are so unbelievably true that I think you really ought to know . . . “carefree days at sea ... on splendid ships . . . ideal land arrangements at amazingly low’ rates” . . . sightseeing planned by experts to save you time and money. Investigate now the 50 different all-expense tours from $295 to SB2O . . . can you imagine? By the way, when is your vacation? You can sail May 17 to August 24. Take your travel inquiries to the MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK ... and get a good start for the summer! B B U If I were ijou, I’d start knitting a smart bathing suit. Hand-knitted bathing ensembles are going to be smarter than ever this year. B B B The BROOKSHIRE PHARMACY takes pride in dispensing only the best drugs—their prescriptions are filled precisely “as the doctor ordered." And—at lowest prices! I just wish you’d stop, shop and compare—2l7 N. Pennsylvania St. Or, they’ll deliver, if you telephone LI. 2094.
Sense of Humor Declared Strongest Feminine Lure Where Man Is Concerned
Opinion Based on Replies to Question Put to Numerous Males; Women Who Laugh Held Desirable. BY HELEN WELSHIMER NEA Service Staff Writer IF you want to please a man, cultivate your sense of humor. For it is of more importance to you than a figure that would ensnare Hollywood or a platinum halo about your puzzled head. Men want women who will laugh with them. Men want women who will see something at 4hich to laugh! That is the concensus of answers to innumerable questions asked of distinguished literary men. psychiatrists and scientists. True, if your godmother didn't put the golden spoon of humor in
your mouth at birth, you are not especially blessed, but polish up what you have of laughter. The advent of a recognized sophistication made many of us believe that it was smart to make a remark that bespoke wit, or had an undercurrent of irony. One girl came to New York with a mind filled with laughter. Not the noisy kind. "Noise and mirth are not necessarily even remotely related. A quiet, .understanding, merry laughter. But she found that the so-called sophisticates didn't laugh. She was afraid she would be criticised. So she tried to lock up her mirth. It took her a few years to learn that the persons around her didn't laugh because they didn’t know how. T :n j _ .
wiU do more to tone U P >’ our soul than physicians’ pills or psjehiatrists teachments. It denotes a general relaxation. A mere vocal sound is not a laugh. Mirth is an inner quality and you have to let the merriment come out. tt B B „ „ „ Broadway Hits Prove Point r T''HE success of recent Broadway productions which are erected on a J- platform cf humor and mirth is one of the most outstanding proofs that persons want to laugh, laugh, laugh. Not only want to. but need to! There is “Three Men Or. a Horse.” It is a simple story’ of three sporting men who take possession of a simple verse-writing man who has a knack of choosing the winning horses. While he prates of Mother's Day and Easter in rhyme, they draw out lucky numbers. Night after night the audience is convulsed. Or take “The Bishop Misbehaves,” in which a high church man has some good fun for himself by foiling a robbery and rescuing two young lovers. The audience is hilarious because the bishop has a good time. Oh, :’fs! There is “Petticoat Fever,” which has nothing but laughter to recommend it —laughter most cleverly promoted, of course. The wireless operator, in the wilds of the north, entertains you in the good oldfashioned way, with his antics when a man and woman, and later an old love, make their appearance He hadn’t seen a woman for more than two years. The audience really laughs. tt tt tt tt tt tt Vice Versa Is Appreciable, Too RELAX. Forget to be tense. This is the first step in the development of a sense of humor. Don't take your problems too seriously. Don’t take your transgressions too much to heart. Laugh and go on! That is the thing that men seek in women. And—if we may drop a hint to the interviewed men—it also is desirable in a man.
DR. HENNEL TO ADDRESS GROUP Dr. Cora B. Hennel of the Indiana University mathematics department will speak Thursday night before the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’s Club. The meeting will be in the form of a banquet at the Woman’s Department Club. “Vision” will be* the subject of Dr. Hennel’s talk. Dr. Hennel is a graduate of Indiana University, and is a member of
Heigh-ho! I bet you’re housecleaning! Y ou’l! find some hints on the subject within this shopping corner (never forget the corners). You’ll find a bit of other news too. And I hope you don’t stay too close home . . . because it's fun gadding around these deliciously spring-like days. Clean aw’hile—and then step out . , . and then go back the* next day and finish superintending the housework.
Don’t forget that I just love to give you further information and full details and such . . . and that I really like to shop personally for you. Write a little note or phone RI. 5551 . . . and ask for
vacation . .. pest er in g the Travel Department at the M e r chants National : Bank with 'endless que s t i o n s about rates and sched-
Public Enemy, the Moth, can do no lasting harm. Just take your damaged textiles to the HALL STUDIO. Every day they remove holes, cigarette burns, worn patches, and snags from fine fabrics ... by simply reweaving the threads back into their original form. 402 N. Meridian, Apt. 22, LI. 4080. tt tt tt Crisp, dainty little Wafer Cups are just right for serving caviar and appetizers. B B B This SO-AM Yerba Mate every one is making such a fuss about merits everv bit of praise you hear.
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countries of South America and is sometimes known as “Paraguayan tea.’’ Mate is a very pleasant alkaline beverage for correcting acid conditions of the stomach. Order it at your favorite club or grocery . . . if such thing should be that they haven't it yet . . . sts . . . sts . . . phone me . . . and we’ll see about that!
It’s going to be an even smarter beverage in Indianapolis during warm weather because it stimulates, nourishes, energizes, and gives one that feeling of well-being. After all, it’s a universal beverage in the warm
APRIL 23, 1935
the Phi Beta Kappa scholastic society, Sigma Xi honorary science organization, Mortar Board and Pi Lambda Theta. She is also a member of numerous women’s clubs and mis held offices in many state and national professional societies. Alpha Chapter, Omega Kappa Sorority, will meet tomorrow night at the home of Miss Mary Bardy, 2611 E. Michigan-st. Chi Beta Kappa Sorority will hold a business meeting at 8 tomorrow' night at the Y. W. C. A.
Brown-and-white shoes are good again. Aren’t you glad? Start wearing them right now . . . you
needn’t hesitate a minute for this prediction comes right out of MAROTT’S SHOE STORE, the second largest shoe store in the world. And they’re terribly style con-_2—-scious, guess I've told you that be-
a __ ire- $ ight T’S <SM\ the ilu hoe 'vL L yisr* I’ve -T-l be- 1 \
fore. I just saw one very striking white kid slipper with brown stripes adorning the toe—a decidedly smart shoe by Rice-O Neill. And isn’t that nuff sed? If you are familiar with MAROTT'S Paradise line of footwear, you’ll appreciate their very dashing new summer creations . . . including scores of all-white models. And I know you’re going to need several ni irs all-white this white summer that’s just ahead. Some of the interesting new white materials include a very fine buck skin and a delicate fabric in novelty weave. I like to mate!} ’em up with hose, Gordon Hose, right while I'm there. See for yourself, right away tomorrow —at MAROTT’S. a a a Just read that doing-over-a-room calls first for a proper background of walls and floors . . . how well we
know! But, what of the floor coverings? I went a-shopplng through the second floor of the COLONIAL FUR NIT UR E C O. admiring the complete assortment of all
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such rugs that hang high and great heaps of Oriental reproductions rich and deep with luxurious color. There’s a type for every sort of room. Curious and woman-like I had to ask the prices of certain things . . . which brought to light a very enlightening letter just received by the rug buyer. It went something like this—place your order this week—prices are destined to advance. And it does sound logical, now doesn’t it? This tendency to rise is just what we may expect when we know that many of the raw materials which go into the manufacture of rugs have already gone up. The very simplicity of the hooked rug patterns will enhance your “Colonial” furniture. And the Karastans, those excellent reproductions of real Orientals, will thrill you. Consider the COLONIAL —for rugs. tt tt tt Again on Thursday you'll find more of my shopping chatter. Until then, i am Faithfully yours,
Helen Welshimer
