Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 190, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1935 — Page 18

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Halloween Barn Dance to Be Given Highland Club to Be Scene of Party; Mooneys Direct Event. BY BEATRICE HI ROAN Ttmr* Woman * Pace f riitor TARING out you’ - most seedy overalls and gingham dresses and come to our barn dance on Oct. 26. is tho invitation being dispatched bv the Highland Golf and Country Club entertainment committee Mr. and Mr . William J. Mooney Jr. chairmen. hint that the clubhouse won't

be re c o g nized when their committee completes decorations. Barn lanterns are to cast eerie shadows among the corn stalks snd leering pumpkin faces. Sherry Watson's orchestra members are to climb into a haywagon to play horns and trum-

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acts. "It s to be a real haywagon.” George Ehrhardt, the manager, promised as we lunched at the club. The mention of food reminds us that he said "angel on horseback” is to be on the dinner menu the night of the dance. That’s the delectable entree owsters wrapped in bacon, broiled and served on toast with drawn buty > r, parsley, chives and mushrooms. Mr. Ehrhardt went on describing the menu—but we shall rave that for a treat. Mr. and Mrs. Mooney have several members to aid then arranging for the party. They include Charles Moyer, Mrs. Mary Feeney, Messrs, and Me dames Plovd Mattice, C. L. Smith, Ralph Knorle. F’rank Dowling. Leroy Sanders. Ben Perk, .John Schumacher, S. E. Fenstermaker, Edward Zaiser, Glenn Howe, Leo Dwyer, John Welch, Charles J. Pcttinger, L. D. Foster, Walter Hess, Arch Grossman, Mrs. George Hilgemier. Howard Intermill and Charles Rauh. Alter the Halloween dance, keno pariie: are to be held every Sunday nigiit following buffet, suppers. A dance is brung arranged for the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. a a a Eighty-five friends of Mr. and Mrs. William Ray Adams are to be their guests at a dinner dance tonight at the Woodstock Club. The clubhouse is to be decorated in palms and white chrysanthemums. U 111 TLER CO-EDS ON RARE ICS STAFF Butler University co-eds hold important positions on the fall semester .tad of the Butler University Collegian, campus paper. Miss Edna Fielder, Logansport, is assistant city editor. Other co-eds on the staff are Misses Martha Haworth, Jeanne Mitchell, Ruth Hitzelberger, Jean Booth, Margot Stanley. Beatrice Weiss, Virginia Simpson, Ellamae Frohman, Juliana McIntosh, Marjorie Andrews and Charlotte Cox.

Evening Coiffure Can Be Altered for Trip to Office Next Day

BY ALICIA HART NEA Service Staff Writer This season the smart, young business woman who wants to look like a glamorous, silken creature in the evening and still stay within her beauty budget, can have an exotic formal coiffure which, when combed out, looks equally as well the next day in the office. After all, she spldom can afford more than one visit a week to the beauty shop and the hairdresser who understands how to make waves, curls and swirls that are flattering, whether losse or tight, is the one for her. To go with a dramatic, Renaissance gown, short hair ran be swirled across the bark of the head and parted rather low on the right side. This side may be arranged in three or four rather doughnut-

Parties Formed by Patrons of Civic Theater Patrons of the Civic Theater are arranging Dutch treat parties for the season’s opening presentation. "The Bishop Misbehaves,” tomorrow night at the playhouse, 1847 N. Alabama -st. Mr. and Mrs. Horace F. Hill 111 are to attend with Mr. and Mrs. Irving M. Fauvre. Mr. and Mrs. George Ziegler. Mrs. Raymond P. Van Camp and R. Stewart Bailey Jr. In another party are to be Mr. and Mrs. Albert Seaton, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wohlgemuth. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Riegner and Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Rhodehamel. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Willson. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wallerich and Mr. and Mrs. Guernsey Van Riper are to dine together, later stopping in at the Civic for the play. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Goodman and Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Sommers will attend together, as will Mr. and Mrs. Noble Dean and Mr. and Mrs. A Dickinson Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Luckey are to entertain their daughter. Miss Ruth Pauline Luckey; their house guests, Mrs. William Ro’h. Monticellc. and her son Jack Roth, Aurora. 111.; Miss Martha Norman xnd Richard Sinz at supper following the performance. Miss Luckey is to take the part of Hester Grantham in the production. Mr. and Mrs. John Beard Washbum are to entertain several guests at dinner, later attending the play. Card Parties Lauter Mol hers’ Club is o hold a euchre, bridge and bunco party tomorrow at its clubrooms, Greeiy and Market-sts. Christamore Woman's Club is to sponsor a card party at 8:30 tomorrow night at Tremont-av and W. Michigan-st. Mrs. Frank Bernhardt. chairman, is to be assisted bv Mrs. J. M. Twineham and Mrs. B. T. Coleman.

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'From New American Ho mes Campaign. New York) In the Home of Ihe Future, the kitchen (upper Left), shiny with tailored white enamel has appointments in red. Everything is electric from egg beater ta stove, with compart cupboards and air-condition-ing to keep it odor-free and cool. The living room (upper right), is an illustration of how keeping windows in one wall makes an attractive arrangement of furnishings possible. The color scheme is beige, brown and yellow’, with cork floors and flexwood giving rich-looking but eronomirally-built walls. Below is a bedroom with its closets esperially designed for a man and woman. The masculine closet is walnut finished with plenty of boxes, tie racks and hangers; the woman's closet is papered in glazed chintz; the bedroom color scheme ranges from beige to mulberry.

Mu Phi Epsilon Program Is Set at Fausset Home October program of Kappa Chap- ! rr, Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, is to be presented Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. C. Basil Fausset, 333 Hamp-ton-dr. A buffet dinner is to be served at 6:30. Mrs. Fausset is to be assisted by Mrs. Charies J. Gaunt, Mrs. William N. Fleming Jr. and Mrs. Russell J. Spivey. Mrs. Erwin Luessow is to comment on the lives of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Gluck and their contemporaries as depicted by Bauer and Peyser in the book, "Music Through the Ages.” Miss Violet Albers has arranged the following program: •Chaconne" Bach-Busoni Miss Ramona Wilson ; Allelujah” Mozart O Savior Hear Me" Gluck Miss Ruth Wapjner Piano Concerto in B Fiat Mozart Miss Frances Wishard. accompanied „ , . by string quartet Double Violin Concerio Bach Misses Lois Le Sauinier and Violet Albers. accompanied bv the string quartet including: Miss Mary Kapp, first violin; Miss Marguerite Billo, second violin: Mrs. Walter E. Treanor, viola, and Miss Virginia Levenberger, cello.

shaped curls. The left will show several. With this type, there is no need for finger waves. The top can be finished with one or two curls to match the sides. Next day, the hair can be combed in the usual manner and the curls brushed back into place. Later in the week, mere fluffiness where curls used to be will be attractive. With Greek gowns, halo braids aie especially suitable for business women. You can pile your hair upward from the back and wrap the braid around your head just for the night. If your hairdresser arranges a Grecian hair style without the halo braid, ask him to wave the back of .vour hair as carefully as he does the frpnt. and sides. Then when you comb your hair down instead of up for work the next day. it won't appear to be something left over from the party the night before. Remember, of course, that the tonics you use at home and the amount of brushing you do always aie important, whether you visit n ! salon once a week or several times more than that. You simply can't expect a coiffure expert to be able to do his best with unhealthy hair that is stringy, dull and lifeless. Do your part and his ; work will please you a good deal ; more. LODGE WILL HE HOST FOR PARTY Halloween party is to be held by Mystic Tie Lodge at 8:,5 Saturday, Oct, 26, at the Masonic Temple, Illi- | nois and North-sts. Drama League of Shortridge High School is to present a two-act comedy, followed by dancing, grand march and children's party.

AUTUMN BRIDE

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—Photo by Fritsch. Mrs. I.awerance Fletcher Be;o; - e her marriage Oet. 12 in Sacred Heart Church, Mrs. Lawerance Fletcher was Miss Ruth Klann.

Ideal House Features Co-Ordinated Plan

BY MARY MARGARET M'BRIDE NEA Srrvire Staff Correspondent NEW YORK—The moderately priced house of the not-too-distant future, according to the New American Home Committee, is to have logical room sequences and arrangement, windows placed for interior effectiveness rather than exterior design, with 15 per cent more wall space as a result, year-round air conditioning, scientific lighting and a co-ordinated unit plan of furnishing that insures comfort, economy and good taste. Sounds like the millennium, but there is already such an architectural and decorative phenomenon in Rockefeller Center, and other similar houses soon are to be opened in the country. Outdoor Living Room, Too The indoor living room (the front yard is arranged as an outdoor one) is not really large, but by careful planning from the inside out, it is made to appear much larger. Air conditioning makes it possible to put all the windows on one side in a group. This leaves more free wall space. Doors are concentrated at one end of the room to the same end. The living room mantel is about half as high as the ordinary mantel and the picture hung over it is thus brought more intimately to the gaze of the beholder. A glass brick half-partition is used -instead of the usual wall to separate the dining alcove from the living room. The glass hides the kitchen entrance from the eyes of those in the living room, and yet, being glass, does not shut off light. Flexible chair-sofa units are arranged architecturally on two walls, giving the space-saving advantage of built-in furniture. Only two of the four walls match. These two are painted in putty color. Another wall is tinted yellow. The fourth is done with the glass bricks. The floor is cork, easy on the feet and easy to keep clean. Closets Meet Special Needs The master stroke in the bedroom is one closet for the mistress and another for the master. The master's is done with flexwood walls and a fine arrangement of tie rack, shoe case, trousers bar and sturdy hangers finished to match the wails. The mistress’ is a feminine affair with fittings of every conceivable sort —they can all be bought at budget prices, incidentally —in glazed chintz. Two bedroom walls are painted, one is papered, and the fourth is of flexwood. Two Types of Nursery Wards Living room, oedroom and dining alcove have sunken lighting fixtures in the ceiling p'aced above the piece of furniture which most needs direct and reflected light. The living room floor lamp can bs adjusted for three intensities. A chromium tube on a metal base, used as a desk light and very similar to the lights over the beds in the bedroom, directs the light to one spot when adjusted. Even the nursery has the variegated wall treatment. Three sides are done with a blue polka dot paper. The fourth is papered in plain blue. The chest of drawers has varicolored knobs which are matched by the insides of the drawers. The idea is that the child will learn colors and neatness at the same time. The practical crib can be mociified and used for a bed when the boy or girl grows older. There is even a child-height window in the toy closet. The kitchen has all - electric equipment, red accessories, shellpink wall, a floor of black rubber and a lighting system backed with a white metal refleotor and hung from the ceiling to avoid glare and shadows. The bathroom is made up of prefabricated units. In one panel are the sink, mirror, medicine chest and clothes hanger under the sink. In another are the tub and shower. CHURCH GROUP , TO MEET NOV. 6 Entertainment is being arranged for the Nov. 6 meeting of the St. Joan of Arch Woman's Club, according to Mrs. Charles Auckley and Mrs. Clara Slattery, chairmen. A committee and officers are to assist them. DR. EMERSON WILL BE CLUB SPEAKER Dr. Charles P. Emerson is to talk on "The Christian Buddhist” at a meeting of the Indianapolis Literary Club Monday night at the club rooms at the D. A. R. chapter 1 house.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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Teachers Hear Headmaster of Eastern School Dr. Burton Fowler, headmaster of Tower Hill School, Wilmington, Del., was guest speaker at a luncheon meeting of the Association of Childhood Education yesterday in the Riley room of the Claypool. Miss Ruth Patterson presided. James Shaver. Logansport, directed a musical program. A Muncie trio, composed cf Misses Louise Jameson, Virginia Dean and Bessie Pope entertained. Miss Jean Shaver, pianist, played several numbers, and the group sang several songs. Officers elected for two-year terms were Miss Inez Howard, Marion, president; Miss Esther Schneider, Lawrenceburg, vice president; Miss Margaret Hill, Mishawaka, secretary, and Edna Oelgeschlager, Terre Haute, treasurer.

Table Cloth Should Match or Harmonize With China Design

New York Grandmother would have laughed at the idea that the pattern of your linen table cloth should match or at least harmonize with the design on your china and that both should be definitely related to the tracery on your crystal glasses. Yet the present vogue takes all that as a matter of course. Grandmother rarely embroidered her own table cloths, but embroidering all her household linens is grand-daughter’s fad of the moment. Her table cloths, by the way, are getting bigger, indicating, according to those who know, that entertaining in a big way is coming back. Women embroiderers are choosing floral patterns for gay informal table cloths with cross stitch or lazy daisy stitch and then matching with china and fresh flowevs. The very newest rote for the woman who stitches her own is im-

State Chiropractic Auxiliary Reception, Entertainment Set

Reception and entertainment at 7:30 Sunday night at the Lincoln has been arranged by the Women's Auxiliary of the Indiana Chiropractic Association for husbands and association members as a feature of the state convention. The auxiliary is to meet Monday morning for an address of welcome and nomination of officers. Luncheon and a trip conducted by the

PRIZE CHAIRMAN

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Mrs. Edward A. Lawson Mrs. Edward A. Lawson is chairman of door prizes for a card party to be held Oct. 25 in the Manufacturers' Building at the State Fairground under the auspices of Sunnyside Guild.

State D. A. R. Official Is to Be Honor Guest at Tea

State officers of the Daughters of the American Revolution, members and regents of the Cornelia Cole Fairbanks, Gen. Arthur St. Clair and Irvington Chapters are to be guests of the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter at a tea from 3 to 5 Thursday at the headquarters, 824 N. Pennsylvania-st. The tea is to honor Mrs. Wilbur Johnson, state vice regent. Mrs. James A. Sutherland is chairman of tea hostesses with Mrs. Waldo B. Rossetter, vice chairman. Other committee members include Mesdames Henry C. Ketcham, Edward L. Kruse, Jesse C. Moore, James M. Ogden, Edward B. Raub, Obie J. Smith, Ernest De Wolf Wales, Merle N. A. Walker, M. E. Tennant, A. E. Sterne and Charles P. Lesh. To Present Guests Mrs. Bertram Day, chapter regent, is to present Mrs. Johnson and other honor guests: Mrs. Roscoe C.

ported linen especially designed and woven to accommodate the embroidery pattern. Thus, a popular fall cloth is woven with a damask and filet border and the design is stamped on a middle section, left plain. Guest towels have a voven-col-ored border in a theme repeated in the woman’s own work. The tropical fish craze comes out in towels stamped with guppies. Cut work is done, too. Cross stitch, however, is almost the most popular needlework of the moment because the straight lines and uniformity lend themselves so well to the modern motif. It’s a soothing kind of hobby to have—embroidery—or at least, so the occupational therapists declare. Anyway, they’ve put it into hospitals, believing that rhythm induces a calmness of mind for mental patients.

Indianapolis members are to precede the dinner. Officers are to be elected Tuesday morning and tentative arrangements made for the national convention. Mrs. Fean Watson, Ft. Wayne, is to preside. Other officers are Mrs. Evelyn Warrington, Wabash, vice president; Mrs. R. H. Siples, Ft. Wayne, secretary, and Mrs. W. H. Gwynn, Indianapolis, treasurer.

Hobbies and Professions to Be Inter Arts Club Meetings’ Topics

Meetings of the Inter Arts Club for the year are to be in charge of Miss Miriam King, president; Miss Ruthanne Carson, vice president; Miss Virginia Brookbank, secretary, and Mrs. James E. Lesh. treasurer. Topics for meetings to be held at Sororities Mrs. Roland Bussel is to be hostess Monday night for a meeting of Alpha Chapter. Theta Sigma Delta Sorority, at her heme, 1321 Comer-av. Alpha Chi Chapter, Sigma Alpha Sorority, is to sponsor a benefit bridge party and style show tomorrow afternoon in Ayres’ auditorium. WINNERS. NAMED IN BRIDGE PLAY Winners in the Woman's Contract Club play yesterday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club were North and South, first, Mrs. Frank Abbett and Mrs. Conley Alexander, and second. Mrs. Harlan Hadley and Mrs. Robert Stempfel; East and West, first. Mrs. V. A. Newcomber and Miss Doris Ellis and second. Mrs. Reagan Carey and Mrs. Arthur Pratt.

O'Byrne, Brookville, vice president general of Indiana; Mrs. John N. Carey, honorary vice president general of Indiana; Miss Bonnie Farwell, Terre Haute, state regent; Mrs. James B. Crankshaw, Ft. Wayne, former vice president general of Indiana; Mrs. James L. Gavin, former vice president general of Indiana, and Mrs. Lafayette L. Porter, Greencastle, central director. Assistant hosteses are to be executive board members of the hostess chapter. They are Mesdames George Scott Olive, Alexander L. Taggart, Charles A. Pfafflin. Odand A. Church, George S. Row, Leroy H. Millikan, George Caleb Wright, William C. Bartholomew, James Perry Hoster, Frederick E. Matson and Roy K. Coats, and chairmen of standing committees. Other Assistants Others are Mesdames Frederick D. Stilz, Walter H. Green, Alice H. Ervin, Harry Allen Van Osdol, Kenneth Dix Coffin, John Downing Johnson, Frank F. Wocher, O. L. Watkins, Clay L. Ward, Henry G. Blume, G. B. Taylor, Hulbert J. Smith, Harry E. Listerer, Ruth M. Kilkene, Ira M. Hoimes, Charles F. Voyles, Frank C. Groninger, Frederick Terry, Fred P. Carter, Austin Sims, Theodore D. Craven, Samuel Lewis Shank, Henry I. Raymond Jr., Lawrence F. Orr, Walter B. Smith, Nellie P. Winings, and Misses Julia E. Landers, Carolyn Thompson, Mary Lucy Campbell and Florence Eva Dillan. The serving committee is to be composed of Mesdames Eugene H. Darrach, Felix T. McWhirter, Alexander G. Cevins, Horace Mitchell, Minnie B. Link, Michael A. Ryan, Hugh H. Hanna. William F. Kegley, B. K. Elgin, William Henry Harrison, Robert D. Armtsrong. Donald R. Mote, members of the Wheel and Distaff Society and Mrs. Noble W. Hiatt, its president. Mrs. Russell M. Bosart, president of the Old Glory Society, is to be in charge of the pages, Margaret Millikan. Patricia Gilliland, Nancy Kegley, Maryan Winterrowd, Anne Holmes, Helen Margaret Bosart and Eleanor Winslow.

SWEET BRIAR CLUB HOLDS LUNCHEON

Sweet Briar Alumnae Club members met yesterday for a luncheon and meeting at the cabin of Mrs. Allan V. Stackhouse in Brown County. Miss Sally Heahard is president; Mrs. Louis Lowe, vice president; Miss Marcia Morrison, secretarytreasurer, and Mrs. William Garstang, publicity chairman.

the homes of members, are to be concerned with hobbies or professions of the speakers. At the November meeting a wiener roast is to be held with Miss Joan Johnson and Miss Helen De Veiling hostesses. Miss King, Mrs. Maurice Klefeker and Mrs. Oscar A. Jose Jr. are to be speakers. The Christmas party is scheduled for Dec. 9 at the home of Miss Elizabeth King. 3121 N. Delaware-st with Miss Margaret Coombs, assistant for hospitalities. Other special meetings include a supper program scheduled for Feb. 10 with Miss Miriam King, 2616 N. Alabama-st, hostess, and the annual club party, June 13, when a guest program is to be arranged. Other talks during the year are to be made by Miss Betty Carolyn King, Mrs. Lesh, Miss Carson. Miss Betty Hisey, Mrs. Royer Knode Brown. Misses Brookbank, Johnson and De Veiling. Treasurer Elected Mrs. John L. Helmer, charter member of Alpha Sorority, was speaker at the dinner last night at the Washington. Miss Marjorie Carlton, Anderson, was chosen state treasurer.

Art Leader, Librarian, to Be Heard P.-T. A. Council Meeting to Be Held Wednesday at Herron Institute. Wilbur D. Peat, director of the John Herron Art Museum, and Luther K. Dickerson, librarian of the Indianapolis Public Library, are to address the October meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Parents and Teachers. scheduled for 1:30 Wednesday at the art institute. Music for the meeting is to be provided by a Capella choir of Cnspus Attucks High School under the direction of Norman Merrifield. Mrs. Edward J. Thompson, council president, announces that National Education Week is to be observed Nov. 11 to 17 when visits to Indianapolis schools are urged.

Alumnae of Wilson Meet for Luncheon Wilson College Alumnae Club's activities are' sponsored to raise funds to make contributions to the college library, according to Mrs. Don Brewer, president, who led a business meeting today. Miss Genevieve Scoville. 2050 N. Delawarest. was hostess for the luncheon before th emeeting. Miss Scoville was assisted bv her sister, Mrs. W. N. Wishard. Guests were: Mrs. Harlan Montgomery, Seymour; Miss Mary Shultz, Logansport; Mrs. Henry Watts. Vincennes; Mrs. Henry Mueller, Bloomington; Mrs. Brewer, Mrs. Uz MeMurtrie’, Mrs. H. L. Cushwa. Mrs. George Mahoney, Mrs. William Cowan. Mrs. Jeanne Crowder Bose, Mrs. O. H. Rudy. Mrs. Edna Wallace Warren and Mrs. Raymond Stone, all of Indianapolis. Miss Sara Frantz, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. George Arthur Frantz, is a freshman student at Wilson, located at Chambersburg,

Attendants at Griffey-Tharne Wedding Named Attendants are announced by Miss Mary Jayne Griffey and Arthur W. Thorne, who are to exchange marriage vows Nov. 9 at the Third Christian Church. The bride-to-be is to be given in marriage by her brother. Bernard W. Griffey. Miss Barbara Baas is to be maid of honor and Misses Jane Wise and Dallas Newman, bridesmaids. Carll Young is to be best man and Russell Stropes. John B. Griffey Jr. and James Cecil, ushers. Miss Griffey is a daughter of Mrs. Pleasant B. Griffey and Mr. Thorne is a son of Leland P. Thorne. MISS RYAN TO BE HOSTESS FOR CLUB The program originally arranged for the Nov. 2 meeting of the Magazine Club is to be presented tomorrow at Miss Corinne Ryan’s home. Miss Margaret Houston is to describe "Story of the Piano.” Miss Frances Mahan, Mrs. L. J. Shirley, Mrs. Roy Thurman and Mis. Hubert L. Wann are to assist the hostess. RECENT BRIDE TO BE SHOWER GUEST Mrs. Monroe Bettner, formerly Miss Marie Spicklemire, is to be honored at a miscellaneous shower to be given tonight by Miss Iva Mitchell and Miss Frances McCready at the home of Miss Mitchell, 1201 N. King-av. Other guests are to be members of the Co-Wa-Ma Club.

Camera Use to Be Discussed by University Women’s Speaker

Artistic uses of a camera are to be explained by Brandt C. Steele in a talk at 10 Tuesday morning at the Rauh Memorial Library brfore members and guests of the arts and interests group of the Indiana Branch, American Association of University Wcrnen. Mr. Steele studied at the Sorbonne, Paris, France, and at the University of Munich, Germany, under noted portrait painters and artists. He has. done painting, sculpture, pottery design, interior decorations and exterior friezes. He also was one of the founders of the Camera Club of Indianapolis and for several years devoted much of his time to camera studies.

WED IN CHURCH

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—Photo by Fritsch. Mrs. Edward Sargent Before her marriage Saturday in Holy Cross Church. Mrs. Edward Sargent was Miss Mary Elizabeth Wendel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Wendel.

OCT. 18,1935

Maimers and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

If Ton want n hnnnt answer In a pnrrling question writ* to Jane Jordan, who will replt to oor letter in thta column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a constant reader of your column and often have found very good advice in it. For some time I have wanted to ask this one question. Is it possible for a 17-year-old boy to become so wrapped up in th" friendship of another boy as to forget his girl friends? Sometimes it seems that I live only to see one certain boy friend of mine. Is there something wrong with me or is it true that such rases of friendship still exist as they did in the parlv Greek and Roman davs? I wiil be hoping and watching for an answer in your column. CONSTANT READER. Answer Every individual goes through several stages in his emotional development before he reaches maturity. The first and most infantile is his absorption in \ his own body and its sensations.

The baby is the renter of his own universe. He is not conscious cf others except as they exist to serve him. Next he learns that he is not alone in the world and begins to adjust himself to the people about him. For a time he prefers his

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Jane Jordan

own sex for playmates. Little boys gang together with scorn for little girls and vice versa. An amusing rhyme arises from this separation of the sexes: "What are little girls made of? Sugar and spice and everything nice. What are little boys made of? Snakes and snails and puppy dog tails.” If the individual proceeds along normal lines, he does not remain in eithpr of these stages, but travels steadfastly onward to a heterosexual goal, which means that he is attracted to persons of the opposite sex. Usually this last phase is entered into during adolescence. You are a little late in making the emotional transfer, that is all. Are you, perhaps, too closely tied to your mother or a sister? Have you had too much feminine companionship in your home and not enough masculine leadership? When too many passive traits are absorbed from the wome in the family it is done at the expense of masculine aggression. That is, if your tastes lean toward the feminine role, you will naturally find completion for your lack of aggression by seeking a masculine companion. But if youy have modeled yourself on the malps of the family, you will make up for your lack of passivity by seeking a feminine companion. Your task is to encourage your more aggressive tastes and to assume the masculine attitude toward life more willingly. Break away from your mother and the feminine pattern of life to depend on yourself alone. The Greek and Roman civilizations have passed away. Adapt yourself to the culture in which you were born. a tt a Dear Jane Jordan —If people were taught to control their impulses. if doctors and preachers taught where unrestraint leads to, there would be less grief and more heaven here on earth. I refer to "Gray Top’s” letter whose husband is getting into the quicksands of sensuality. One must learn control over the whole body before he can control others or anything. Really, animals have better morals than the majority of humans. Keep up your good work, Jane Jordan. Praechers and doctors do not talk as plainly as you do. Your column helps many who. never had good teaching. You are ' worth what The Indianapolis Times pays you and more. ANONYMOUS. Answer—This is high praise and I appreciate it. The purpose of this column is not to advise people exactly what to do in any major issue of their lives, but to enlighten them as to the psychological facts of their situation, which often are hidden even to the wise and prudent. When the individual is sufficiently enlightened the solution arises spontaneously from within.

Business and professional women comprising the evening study group of the association are to hold their first fall meeting at 6 Tuesday at the Sheffield. Following dinner William Rowland Allen, personnel director of L. S. Ayres & Cos., is to speak on “The Fine Art of Discussion.” This top*c is to be the group's program theme for the year. Miss Kathryn M. Bowlby is chairman with the following hostesses: Mrs. Jacqueline Ulbrich, Mrs. Everett E. Campbell and Misses Dorothy Helmer. Virginia Holt, Mary Armington, Belle Ramey, Eleanor Jones and Frances Graney. Motion picture committee is to meet at 7:30 Monday night with Mrs. A. A. Trefz, 953 N. Audubon-rd. . Mrs. Paul R. Summers is to talk orrr “Previewing.” The consumers research group is to visit the plant of Kingan & Cos. Monday. Following luncheon a 3 guests of the company, a dietitian is to demonstrate the preparation and serving of meats. Mrs. Paul J. Stokes, chairman, is receiving reservations. CHAPTER TO MEET WITH MRS. TAYLOR Mrs. Burt Taylor, 59 S. Gladstoneav, is to be hostess at 3 Monday night for a meeting of Jenny Lind Chapter, International Travel-Study Club, Inc. Mrs. S. R. Artman is to discuss “Women of America.” Benefit Party Set Auxiliary of Corinthian Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, is to entertain with a benefit card party at 2 Wednesday at Evergreen Masonic Temple, 2515 W. Washington-st. Mrs. Mamie Butler is to preside at a business meeting at 10:45. Mrs. ’ Louise Archey, card party chairman, has as assistants, Mesdame3 Ruth Hancock, Ina Dorsey, Malinda Fowler and Emma Clark.