Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1937 — Page 10
PAGE 10
THE
Lure of Travel Holds Strong Appeal, Meeting Wide Range of Emotions
Desire for Change, for Something New and Longing To Relive Old Experiences Are Dominating Factors Motivating Wanderers, Jane Says.
By JANE JORDAN AT would you do if you had money? In answer, about 85 per cent of persons questioned reply that they would travel. The reasons they give are the obvious ones. They need a rest, a change of scene. The motives for taking prolonged or frequent journeys often are much more profound than those which lie on the surface, so easily understood by all. Human life is dominated by two opposite forces, the desire for change, for excitement, for something new; and the longing to live through old experiences again, which Neitzche calls the “eternal return of sameness.” Paradoxically, travel manages to satisfy both the wish for change and the yearning for sameness. It is easier to see how travel® gratifies the wish for change than to comprehend how it keeps us in touch with a familiar and much desired feeling. Who does not suffer at times from “the pressure of unfulfilled desires, unexplainable agitation, dissatisfaction and restlessness. In such feverish states of mind we plan the journey which is to beguile us into forgetfulness by nsw scenes, faces and experiences. People have various ways of securing relief from tension. Some drink, steal, scold or swear; some escape into the mania for a certain sport, and some travel. The need for a form of expression, the urge to gratify an wunac - knowleged wish, to escape from a pressing experience, or recover from humiliation and disappoint-
Musical Bridge Follows Shower
Miss Dorothy Cecil Thompson was honor guest at a musical bridge and miscellaneous shower recently given by Mrs. Ernest B. Thompson, assisted by Miss Mary Thompson, Bloomington. Miss Thompson is to be married Aug. 29 in the North Methodist Church to Thomas Horall Williams. Guests included Mrs. Paul Nolin
and Misses Edith Yoho and Olive Brandt, Bloomington; Mrs. Joseph | Coffin, Greensburg; Mrs. Frank Car- | rell, Orleans; Mesdames Irwin L. | Thompson, Clyde Miller, Mary Wili son, Thomas Arnold, Ross Freeman, | Ray Holcomb, Clarence Alexander, {D. C. Talbott, William Hendren, . | Mary Hendren, Frank C. Wise, L. A. ment, frequently bursts out in a |; neston and Russell Fuller, and season of wandering. | Misses Bette Miller, Betty ThompOccasionally a trip is regarded | son, Helen Wilson, Ellen Robinson, as a cure-all for a death in the | Rosemary Buddenbaum, Fay Mar-
(shall illi iller. family, for divorce or defeat in a Pid Billie Mille:
personal endeavor. It is a prescription for a variety of pains. Some School Fund to Get Proceeds of Party
run away from self, from marriage, or from wayward impulses which Proceeds of a benefit party on Sept. 1 are to go to the school
must be denied. These are only luncheon and child welfare fund of
a few of the motives which create a powerful urge for moving on. Hadassah, according to Mrs. Daniel Stauber, chairman.
Sameness is attained when one runs after his own past, returning to the scenes of ‘his childhood, at- Mrs. L. L. Goodman is cochair- ! man of the event which is to be of Columbus
tending the class reunion or 8 | Advance sale of tickets is to
: held in the Knights gathering of the family clan. yon ights There is a flight back home 85 be under the direction of Mrs. well as a flight away from home. | Stauber and Mrs. Goodman. The Then sometimes there is a flight | Hadassah fund is used to feed and
which combines both objectives, | Provide milk for school children. when home is left behind in fact
but sought again in symbolic Partv to Honor lt times the wanderer runs | M : B - after an old infantile experience. | mviarion arnes Emotionally he goes backward to | recapture some childish gratifica- | Miss Maxine Chaille, 832 N. tion which he enjoyed in infancy. | Campbell St. and Miss Mary Hull The longing to be a child again | gre to entertain with a linen shower moves him to abandon work for a tonight in the Chaille home for season of irresponsibility. This is | Miss Marion Charlotte Barnes. behind the traveler's glee in free- Miss Barnes is to be married
dom from the clock, from routine, | Aug. 22 to Max Rees Taylor. Decfrom the planned life orations and appointments arc to
Not to know exactly where one |) The table centerpiece is to is going but to follow the impulse | be a miniature bridal party. of the moment, is to return to hts Pr Mig Dig iy a child. | Edi itthoft, eanor Betteriy, the Gelights of the gay of = : Ruth Bartlett, Nelda Johnson, ReIn a sense each jourmey is 2 ,.,n; Eberhardt, Mary Elizabeth setting forth into the land of | Woods, Dorothy Jean Smith, Eva youth, into the Nirvana of child- | Mae Chaille, Winifred Wilson and hood, fras from the pressure of Mesdames Lowell B. Barnes, Floyd one’s adult duties.
Taylor and I. H. Hull. Travel holds many deep satisfac-
tions for the majority of people | DINNETrWare Revives which do not meet the eye. Flower Patterns
It is | an excellent and desirable outlet | Dinnerware has gone from the
for a myriad of emotions. Like]
" : ‘ | modern feeling to a revival of the everything else it can be carried to | floral patterns of several years ago. extremes which interfere with the These floral patterns are somewhat successful life instead of aiding | different from the old floral patand abetting it. He who cannot| terns, in that they are brilliantly
yest in ‘one | colored, and smaller in figure.
lace usually craves ! . : ‘ . Sts or ot in | Often a single spray, in bright some form of gratification MOV In | yn. js ysed on one side of a dinharmony with his environment. | ner plate. The revival of interest
| be in the bridal colors, pink and |
|
| un un i
| This is the year for college girls
Barbara Martin (left) from DePauw University, and Dana Wilking (right), Butler University student, University coed, on the college clothes question.
” u »
10 Schools to Be Represented In Collegiate Fashion Showing
to set their own styles.
are permitted to choose their own courses of study and make their own
| campus dates, so the William H. Block Co. gave them free run of the college shop to select their own clothes for the college show which was |
| given at 2:30 p. m. today in Block's auditorium,
| Coeds from 10 universities and®
colleges chose the fashions in which they paraded. Sweaters and skirts top the list with suede jackets and ski suits for campus wear a close | second. | Date dresses of sheer wool with swishing skirts and neat trimmings will make the boys sit up and take notice this school year, if these coeds have anything to do with it! | A surprise feature of the show consisted of two coed costumes of the class of 1910. A tam-o-shanter | and an enormous merry widow hat of beaver set the college styles of | that day. With them the models | more boot-top length pleated skirts | with wasp-waisted jackets of many | gores. Jane Cooling speaks for the De- | Pauw University students and orders | the wearing of the green. Marjorie | Raisin, DePauw coed, followed her dictates and modeied a Scotch plaid skirt with a spruce green twin | sweater set. Louise Handly, from Purdue Uni- | versity, voices her choice of cu- | lottes for active sports. Dressy aftlernoon frocks are popular choices |there for rush and tea dates and | Louise Bain wore a typical Purdue | outfit of black velvet with white point lace coliar.
Selects Gray Kidskin
| Dorothy Spahr is the Northwest|ern University representative, who | wore a gray Kkidskin swagger coat | with matching scarf. | The Stephens College representa- | tives were Betty Lichtenberg and Martha Moore. Their selection runs | to soft sweaters and skirts for class- | room wear. | Indiena University coeds must | have at least one date dress apiece,
| sweater, is a rah-rah number se-
| lected by Betty Thorpe, Smith College student, and it was shown by | her classmate, Eleanor Caldwell. Martha Morrison, from the University of Illinois, votes for plaid | woolens in soft, subtle tones. A | Charles Armour dress of this type with wide bell- sleeves was worn in the show by Dana Wilking.
INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Coeds Dictate Own Styles This Year Science Aids
ET EER tn
Just as they |
Times Photo
confer with Dorothy Spahr (center), Northwestern
Jeanne Mitchell and Mary Ruddell
are the Butler representatives who |
»
“suited themselves” in three-piece lustre outfits with wolf Bernice Brennan, St. Mary-of-the- | Woods student, also wore a two-
| wool with sporty lines, chosen by | her schoolmate, Ruth Cartney.
Jane Ludwick, who modeled a black fitted coat with Persian lamb trim. | Every question . . . from the in{evitable “what shall I wear on a | date?” to “How many pairs of flannel pajamas shall I buy,” will be | answered by these representatives of the 10 schools who will sit in ( judgment behind information booths for the next two weeks. modeling is to be on the daily pro-
gram, following the formal show to-|
day, which was in charge of Miss Helen McNeice, Block fashionist.
In Diagnosis | Cao
2 Of Allergics
en 7 Long List of Items Found To Cause Reaction in Some Persons.
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By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN
Editor, American Medical Journal
Among the greatest discoveries of modern scientific medicine are those observations which point to the fact that people may sometimes be born
collars. |
piece suit of dark green Shetland |
Ward Belmont was represented by |
Informal |
| with bodies so constituted that they | react in various extraordinary ways | to certain substances or conditions. | The substances to which they re{act may include such items as the | pollens of plants, house dust, the | dandruff of animals, various foods | and drugs, the bites of insects and | similar materials. | The physical conditions to which | | they react include light, heat, cold, {smoke and perhaps even atmospheric pressure.
t Person Affected Is Allergic
When a person has a reaction | beyond the normal response to the | introduction of such substances or {to the effects of such forces, he is | (said to be allergic. Other terms | used for this condition are hypersensitivity, hyperactivity and hy- | perresponsiveness. | The amount of the substance to which the person reacts need not be great. A person who is seriously sensitive may react to an in- | finitesimal or microscopic amount | {of the agent concerned. A baby may be so sensitive to one of fashion's most imporsomething in eggs that even Kissing tant silhouettes. Shown in this its mother after the mother has |design without belt (Pattern 8908), | had some egg may bring on an at- |it follows the natural figure in a tack of asthma. A person may be | manner that is becoming and easy | so sensitive to fish that the licking | to wear. The panel at center startof a postage stamp with fish glue [ing from a low shoulder gives a |may produce a swelling of the flattering width to the top of the tongue and throat. | silhouette and its unbroken line Labels Source of Trouble |adds slimness and youth to the
. i re. | Cases are reported in which a per- figu : o . |son sensitive to something in glue | This is another of those simple | got a serious illness merely by pick= | dresses ‘that look so well on the ling up a beer bottle with a wet label. | campus and for casual wear around | Obviously sensitivities of these | OWN. Young business women, also, kinds may make life exceedingly | will choose this dress as suitable | miserable for those who have them. | for daytime wear. [Tt is fortunate that medical methods |
: toad 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20; 30, 32, 34, 36 bowtie . " ; . | ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ y |exist for determining whether the | 38 and 40. Size 14 requires 4%
| itiviti ; sent hat ; | sensitivities are present and t | yards of 39-inch material and 4 [there are methods of hygiene for |? d of 35-incl terial for coh eliminating the possibility of tue [YATd Of S5.inCh meteral for Con. % : \ | rast h . 3 varas OY | sensitive reaction. Finally, meth- trasting ec .
— Cuviets | needed for the bows. ods of desensitization may be ap- | To obtain a pattern and Step-by-
plied, in some cases effectively, 10 | gir Sewing Instructions inclose 15 | effect a cure or make the patient |conts in coin together with the comfortable. above pattern number and your size, Tests Show Sensitivity your name and address and mail HE person who feels that he is | to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis sensitive to some substance or | Times, 214 W. Maryland St, Indiwho reacts in the manner described | anapolis. should have the tests which have | been developed. Most of the tests | skin, have now become a part of involve application to the skin di- | the routine medical practice of many rectly, or by injection under | physicians. As time goes on, more the skin, of an extract or concen- | and more is being learned about | trate of the suspected substance. the possibilities. | This will produce a reaction in the| The chief conditions known to skin far beyond that produced by be the result of sensitivity are hay an injection of a substance to which | fever, asthma, hives, eczema, certain the person is not sensitive. | forms of headache, certain disorders These skin tests or patch tests, as | of the stomach and intestines, and
HE Princess frock continues as
they are called when a patch con- | some other rare and unusual condi- |
| taining the substance is put on the 'tions.
Pattern 8906 is designed for Sizes |
grid,
TUESDAY, AUG. 10, 1937 ‘Today’s Pattern Suntan and
Fall Suits Don’t Mix
Black Just Doesn’t Go With Brown Skin, Writer Says.
By ALICIA HART (NEA Service Staft Writer) The minute you start wearing black street dresses again and begin ( to consider seriously fall suits and | frocks, stop exposing your skin to bright sunshine and do all you can to get your coloring back to normal, Suntan is lovely with summer pas tels, white and navy blue, but not | with black. [ “Don't permit your skin tones to | resemble the shade of faded leaves,” | says one cosmetic expert. ‘At the | first cool nip—just as you are be- | ginning to slip into the ‘high valler* | stage, toss aside all summer makeup which has traces of yellow in it. Use | rosy powder 10 combat the citron {hue of your skin. Then, with a splash of bright red lipstick, vou | can at least be presentable until bleach treatments have done their work.”
Don't Overdo
Discarding your slightly yellowish summer powder does not mean that you should immediately start to use & light shade such as you wore last | winter. No, indeed. You must stick |to a dark tone, but it can be pinkish instead of yellowish and dark. Get [the clearest scarlet lipstick you can find, turning your back on the rust lone you have liked since July, If you need rouge, let it match the vivid lipstick. Incidentally, if your | first black dress has short sleeves, | better use pinkish foundation and a | bit of face powder on arms as well |as face and throat. Do all you can to hasten the [bleaching process. Suntan will dise appear fairly soon anyway, but you might as well help nature a bit, | Among the homemade bleaches, (plain tomato juice or pure cucumse ber juice cannot be beat. Supple {ment either of these with a weekly (egE mask. If you get a commercially pree [pared bleach, be sure to use it ace [cording to directions. And, prepared [or homemade, any bleach is likely to have slightly drying effects, so use night cream faithfully.
rn
‘New Paprika Imports | Have Varied Flavors | New flavors and degrees of | piquancy may now be enjoyed in | paprika. Heretofore our supply | came entirely from Spain, but the | war cut exports. The pungent red spice now comes [| mainly from Hungary, which supe | plies not only the hottest variety but several mild flavors also. Pape [rika is one of the oldest of food products and has played an ime portant role in history. When Rome was captured by Aleric in 400, it was ransomed by paying 3000 pounds of paprika, which was | then fabulously valuable.
w———— —
theyre planning an All-Electric Kitchen
The wandering habit can be as|in plaids in the womens wear field | says Harriet Crocraft. elia R : sa} a C t. So she se pestilential as the drink habit, drug > also Sik felt in Hee Dis ge. | owl a ea ER va. orei . | One arge manufacturer as | piece frock worn by Mary Pell, wo il By ey see I a | brought out a dinner service em-| The classic camel's hair coat, ahaesthetize ‘one’s self agains © | bossed in plaid. [worn with a boat-neck cashmere demands of reality. |
Carl J. Toths
On Bridal Trip|
Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Toth are on a trip through the East following
in St.
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