Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1939 — Page 4
Fayette Miller is shown resting between ocean dips on the beach at cool
Atlantic Studios. Cape May, N. J.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Miller and the granddaughter of Chief Justice Fenton
2 IY -Bovih ot the U. S. Court of Claims. | . SOCIETY— - | Vacation | Trips Popular Among Hoosiers as Resorts Beckon
ME 5. ELDO WAGNER is expecting to: have several 2 friends for a house party this week at her summer home, Shore Cliff, Epworth Heights, Ludington, Mich. Miss Helen Kizer and Mrs. Walter Greenough left yesterday for Ludington. . . . They were to stop off at Maxinkuckee to pick up Mrs. Theodore Locke at her summer " home there and in Chicago they were to be joined by Mrs. Jean Deupree. . . . Mr. Greenough is to go Thursday to the Greenough’s summer home at Leland and will be
joined by Mrs. Greenough later. ... * Mr, and Mrs. Robert W. Fessler are home from a trip through the New England states and a visit to the New York World's: Fair. +. «Mr. and Mrs. Lyman B. Whitaker and their daughter, Marilyn, are to arrive home today from New York. . . . Another daughter, Betty, is visiting in Washington, before her return here.
Ayres to Visit in Far West
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres and daughter, Miss Anne Ayres, expect to spend the month of August at LaJolla, Cal. . . . Fabien Sevitzky, conductor of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, and Mrs. Sevitzky are at-LaJolla for the summer. . . . Mrs. Ayres is president of the Indiana State Symphony Society’s women’s committee.~. . . Miss Dorothy Knisley who accompanied the Sevitzkys West returned home. ... | a
Staffords to Leland, Mich.
Mrs. William Stafford and her daughter, Miss Barbara Stafford, were to go this week to their summer home at Leland, Mich. . . . . Mrs. E. J. Scoonover is visiting Mrs. Arthur R. Baxter at Lake
Maxinkuckee.' To Attend World's Fair
Miss Martha Nell Plopper and her houseguest, Miss Vance Walk= er of Huntsville, Ga., have gone to New York for a week's visit. . . . They will attend the World’s Fair and visit with Miss Constance Barnard at her heme on Long Island. . . . Miss Walker will return ' to Huntsville and Miss Plopper to Indianapolis on Monday. . . . The young women are classmates at Stephens College. . . . Miss Elinor Stickney has returned from a trip to New York and visit with friends in Green Pond, N. J... . Will Thompsons to Visit in East Mr. and Mrs. William H. Thompson are to leave early next week for a trip through New England and Canada. ... Mr. and Mrs. William H. Wemmer will give a party Friday afternoon in honor of Miss Harriett Anne Rauch and her fiance, Alfred Owen Reynolds. . . . Miss Rauch and Mr. Reynolds are to be married Saturday at the Second Presbyterian Church. . . . The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John G. Rauch. . . ,
Golf Today at Country Club Mrs. Charles Rogers will be hostess for the women’s golf guest day today at the Indianapolis Country Club. . . . Mrs. Herbert A. Pinnell heads the Ladies’ Golf Committee. . . . The Highland Golf and Country Club’s bridge luncheon will be held tomorrow. : . . Mrs. Floyd J. ttice is chairman and Mrs. Benjamin Perk, cochairman.
Kuhns af IXL Ranch Mr. and Mrs. Willis E. Kuhn, 3810 E. 62d St, are at the IXL ranch of Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Harrison near Dayton, Wyo., a six weeks’ visit. . . . : , tor i residents who will go to the IXL next month are Messrs. and Mesdames Jack Ronayne, E. R. Lindesmith, C. R. York and Mr. Albert Rust. Mrs, Donald Carter and daughter, Betty, arrived last week at the ranch. . . . < Mrs. James L. Murray, 64 E. 73d St., accompanied by her daughter, Susie, was to leave today for Pentwater, Mich., to open the Mur- . yay summer home. . . . They will remain until after Labor Day.
JANE JORDAN-
EAR JANE JORDAN—Two years ago as a girl of 18, I was graduated from ® small town high school to which I commuted from my parents’ farm each day. My father’s income did not permit me to go to college. After two years of idleness my father has promised to send me to the city to attend business college this fall. I would be accompanied by two girls about my age. But -mother objects. She stubbornly insists that 1 am not to be allowed to drift that far from home into the iniquities and- temptations of life in the city. | This controversy threatens ‘o cause a great deal of unhappiness 4n our home unless I concede to mother's backwardness. Yet I am 1 ably tired of our home drudgery and long for a change of scene. 4 I am fully capable of meeting conditions in the city on a moral plane that mother should approve. Whose selfishness should I be guided by, mother’s or my own? Can you suggest any reasoning that I might use with mother? D.K. S.
r—Your mother is so completely and unequivocally wrong u are justified in just getting up and walking out without makeffort to reason with her. Any mother who tries to keep a 20-year-old daughter in a state of dependence, untempted and untried by life or experience, is not only selfish and backward; she is down-
right neurotic. : your mother insisted on feeding you from a nursing bottle, if t you in long dresses and kept you in a playpen with beads to qh, I couldn’t be more shocked. One feels like telling you to
your life. .. al. JANE JORDAN--I have just graduated from high school and my father wants me to take a stenographic course. I have some artistic talent, perhaps not much, but enough to keep me absoJutely breathless with happiness when I am working with a brush. I want to take a short course in art and my father cannot afford to give me more than one course in any subject. > & ot convince my father that I should develop my:talent and yw I will hate business. There is a man of 28 who is in Jove with d he says that if I will marry him he will see that I have all the I want and he can afford to give it to me. I do not love very! much and would not feel right to marry him just to get y from him. Whit shall I do now? MIRANDA R.
Answer—To marry a man without loving him solely because you want him to be a bigger and better father than the one with whom na ndowed you, is to cqurt disaster. * 1 er accept the business course which your father offers as a _ vocation and follow art as an avocation. Many a person who earns “his bread I nd butter by day finds artistic outlet.after business hours. - . I know a manufacturer who paints portraits at night, not well p set the wofld on fire, but well enough to satisfy his own yearnings. I know an advertising man who studies the acby night, and while he does not givé public concerts his per- | satisfaction is ‘great. : 3g Strive for this compromisé but do not neglect the means by which own bread and butter can be eared. JANE JORDAN, ut you probiems ia a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions
v
that | ing
Arrangem sions of a sta this week. Beta Chapter, Theta Delta Sigma Sorority, plans to hold its Founders’ Day celebration Aug. 13. Plans will be made for the party and an initiation tonight at the home pf Miss Rae Bauman, 58 N. Belle Vieu Place.
Pledges of Gamma Chapter, Sigma Phi Sorority, will sponsor a card party tomorrow night cat 6% W. Louisiana St.
Mrs. Ina Mae May is to be hostess to members of Alpha Chapter, Phi Delta Pi Sorority, tomorrow at her home, 2638 E. 10th St.
Beta Chapter, Phi Theta Delta, will meet tonight with Mrs. J. N. Howell, 523 N. Temple Ave.
Alpha Chapter, Phi Theta Delta, will be entertained tomorrow night at the home of Miss Virginia Byrd, 3609 College Ave.
Mrs. Paul M. Cook is the new president of Gamma Chapter of Omega Nu Tau Sorority. Other officers are Mrs. Walter Worrell, secretary; Mrs. John A. Lyons, vice president; Miss Margaret Ulrich, treasurer; Miss Helena Wanner, chaplain; Mrs. Walter Minger, publicity editor, and: Mrs. Wilford Fur.gason, national representative. Mrs. [George Petersen is the philanthropic chairman. “
Members of Indiana Alpha Chapter, Delta Theta Chi Sorority, are making plans for a fall get-together with other state groups on Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 in Logansport. Plans are under way for the state convention, May 18 and 19, 1940. The Alpha Chapter held a rush party yesterday.
Change Makeup To Match Your New Wardrobe
/ Whether your midseason wardrobe pick-me-up is a gay print or a suave black crepe with spic and span white collar and cuffs, it will give your spirits much more of a lift if you wear new makeup with it. If you've worn the same shade of lipstick, rouge and nail polish since last fall, by all means decide to make a change now. Rich, dark wine lipstick and polish ought to be lovely with a bonbon pink of hyacinth blue wool frock. Try one-of the mauve tones
it. To enhance further the streamlined, sophisticatedly smart look a black dress with white touches can give you, dress up lips and nails with the clearest, brightest scerlet lipstick and lacquer you can find. Or, if you've been wearing dark and clear reds all along, do a complete about face with creamy, dusty rose or pale, subtly lavenderish pink lip rouge and polish. It’s a mistake to allow yourself to get in a rut. You wouldn’t buy the same dress year after year, would you? Then why go on wearing the same shades of makeup year after year?
other excellent way to bolster up your lagging spirits. If you are pretty weary of your upswept, how
short and wearing it in soft little ringlets all over your head? A long bob might very well be exchanged for a shorter version or for a modifled upswept. : Strive for a translucent-looking complexion. If you've been south, stick to to your dark suntan powder until your coat of tan fades away. Otherwise, see that your powder matches exactly or is one shade lighter than your skin. And if your skin isn’t light enough
kind of routine which, if practiced
segulanly and correctly, will {lighten it, :
Personals
daughter, Margaret, and grandpected home this week from a trip the Grand Canyon.
and Miss Lorene Mitchell.
celebration of their 40th wedding an-
leon tomorrow at the | Masonic Hall.
with a print which has a great deal| of the lavender or purple shades in|
Changing your hair style is an-|
about having your hair cut pretty]
to begin with, better work out some]
Mr. and Mrs, William Lynch, their|’ daughter, Joan Arszman, are .ex-| to the Golden Gate Exposition and| They were ac-|' companied by Mrs, Bernard Wulle|
Mr. and Mrs, Frank Rathsam were | feted recently at a garden party in|
Miss Mary Helen Madden (left) and Miss Joan Fox with the tournamen$ which the Central Indiana Tennis
Times hoto. are assisting Association
is sponsoring this week at Highland Country Club.
Theta Delta Sigmas Will Give Founders’ Day Dinner Aug. 13; Sigma Phi Pledge Party Set
ts for a Founders’ Day dinner, card party and discusconvention are on deck for members of local sororities
O.E.S. Chapters Plan Lawn Fete, Lunch, Meeting
An initiation, lawn fete and allday sewing meeting will be held this week by various lodge groups. Naomi Chapter, O. E. S,, is planning a lawn fete for Saturday. The party will begin at 5:30 p. m. at Oakland Ave. and Washington St.
The Broad Ripple O. E. S. Auxiliary will hold a covered dish lunchBroad Ripple
The Women of the Moose will ini-
tiate candidates Thursday night at
Moose Temple, 135 N. Delaware St. A card party is planned for 2:30 p. m. Thursday at the hall. Mrs. Clara Neerman will be in charge.
Keystone Chapter of the O. E. S. will meet today with Mrs. Mark Moore of Castleton.
An all-day sewing meeting will be attended tomorrow by members of Koran Temple, Daughters of the Nile. Mrs.- Alberta May will be hostess.
. The Past Chiefs Association of the Myrtle Temple, Pythian Sisters, will hold a covered dish luncheon Thursgay at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth ell. ;
Mrs. Pearl Hull is arranging the card party to ‘be sponsored by the Burns-West-Striebeck Post 2999, V. F. W.,, Saturday night at 8:30 p. m. at the hall, Denny and E. Washington Sts. .
Gives Sorority Party Miss Mary McNeely, 2342 N. Harding St., will entertain members of Bet Chapter, Omega Kappa Sorority, at 8 p. m. tomorrow.
Lawn Parties Popular With Church Units
Fetes Arranged to Raise Funds to Carry on Charity Work.
Card parties and lawn fetes are popular with several church organizations as a means of raising funds to carry on their benevolent activities. Several are set for this week. The July Committee of St. Patrick’s Catholic Church was to sponsor a card party this afternoon at the Foodcraft Shop. Mrs. Frank Kattau is chairman.
A pillowslip card party is planned by the July Committee of Holy Angels Catholic Church for Thursday at 2 p. m. in the Holy Angels school hall.
The July Group of the Christain Mothers’ Society of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church will sponsor a luncheon and card party at the Sacred Heart Hall at 12:15 p. m. tomorrow. The arrangements committee includes Mesdames Henry Ritter, Oscar Stumpf, Chris Kunkel, Fred Sauer, Leo Goebes, Frank Felske and John Moriarty.
The J. I. M. Class of the Immanuel Evangelical and Reformed Church will hold a lawn festival beginning at 5:30 p. m. tonight on the church lawn, 1035 N. New Jersey St.
The Marion County units of the W. C. T. U. will hold an all-day outing Friday at Bethany Park.
"Miss Irene Duncan will speak st 10 a. m. Thursday to the Mothers’ Club of the Wheeler Mission. B. P. Jones and a group from the Unity Methodist Protestant Church will have charge of this evening’s services at the mission. i
Flower Show Aug. 5-6 The Marion County Gladiolus Socity will hold its seventh annual show Aug. 5 and 6, at the Brookside Community House. Leo Matthews is
president.
Norma Chooses
niversary at the home of their| daughter, Mrs. George C. Bruce.| Other children of the Rathsams'| who were hosts included Mrs. Ver-|
Linen Costume
H
Miss Nancy Lockwood (right) and Miss Shirley Williams of F on a recent polo game between Rolling Ridge and Ft Harrison at the
days through Labor Day.
es. w oi 2 8 2 3 Miss Jean McGrayel, daughter of Mrs. Jean McGrayel, will become the bride of John C. Sweeney Saturday in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Mr. Sweeney is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford D. Sweeney. ® 81s : Miss Jane Bosart, who will be maid of honor at the marriage of her Pi Beta Phi sorority sister, Miss Rita Johnson, to Robert W. Whitham on Saturday, Aug. 5, will entertain in honor of the bride-to-be on the preceding Wednesday, Aug. 2, at her home. : Miss Johnson is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chase IL. Johnson, 766 W. Drive, Woodruff Place. The wedding will be in the Irvington Pres‘byterian Church, . 2 8 Bp ST Mrs. Edwin Green will be honored by members of Beta Chapter of Phi Gamma Tau Sorority at a shower this evening at the home of Mrs. Elwyn Liverett, 5921 University Ave. Mrs. Liverett and Mrs. Robert Collester: are to be hostesses for the party. wy Yl Np 2 ® ”®
Mrs. Katherine Baker, Valley Mills, has announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Sara Eva Baker, to Charles T. Riddle Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Riddle, Castleton. The wedding will be at 3:30 p. m. Saturday, Aug. 5, in the McKee Chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. 8 2 8
The engagement of Miss Harriet Evelyn Dixon to Robert J. Hadley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hadley Jr., Brazil, has been announced by her mother, Mrs. Anna Dixon. The wedding will be Saturday, Sept. 2, in the Belmont United Brethren Church. os 2
2 2 Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Kaser announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Marjorie Louise Kaser, to Marion Roscoe Disbrough, Evansville, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen T. Disbrough, Indianapolis. The couple will be married Saturday, ‘Aug. 26, in the Irvington
© | Methodist Church,
2 8 8 The engagement of Miss Jean
Shaffer to Vernon Parish, son of
Mrs. John Greene, has been an-
: Inounced by her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. L. Shaffer. The wedding
: | will be Saturday, Sept. 2,"in the
| Tuxedo Park Baptist Church.
Mrs. Delia Col has announced
the engagement of her daughter, : | Miss Helen Co
, to Charles B.
: | Wolfla, son of Mrs. Lena ‘Wolfla.
| | The wedding : 14, in St. Anthony’s Catholic
will be Monday, Sept.
Chyreh. EVENTS
SORORITIES Phi Gamma Chi. (7 p. m. today. Quaint. Inn. Dinner followed by skating party at Riverside Rink. Rho Chapter, Sigma Beta. 7 p. m. Wed. Mrs. R. L. st, hostess at home of her mother, Mrs. F. A. Parker, 6417 E. 34th. Picnic and initiation. | : ! Tuesday Thrifty. Today. Mrs. E. Market, hostess. . 1 p. m. today. Marott Hotel. Luncheon for former students and fri now attending Butler University Summer Sessions. bis : ; LODGES Myrtle Temple 7, Pythian Sisters. 6:30 p.'m. today. Covered dish supper. Hall, 612 W. 13th. Bethel 3, Order of Jgb’s Daughters. 7 p. m. Wed. Miss Margaret McAnally, 5632 Guilford. Pubic white ‘elephant auction. | : :
White Cross Chapter Plans Benefit Party Members of the Alpha Omicron Alpha Chapter of the White Cross Guild will sponsor a benefit card
home of Mrs. Lee O. Nicholson, 6121
party tomorrow afternoon at thel
August and September Vie With June as Bridal Months; Local Wedding Dates Are Set
August and September are proving to be popular months for weddings despite the claim of June as “The Month of Brides.” The parents os several young women today had announced their approaching mar-
Committees for Annual Butler U. ‘Tea Announced
Miss Lucille Craigle today had named committees to assist with plans for the annual Butler University tea from 2:30 to 5 o'clock Aug. 3. Representatives of campus organizations will be hostesses to prospective coeds. Prof. George A. Schumacher, alumni secretary, will be in charge of a program to follow tea in Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall. Committees include: Invitations and name cards, Miss Betty Sanders; chairman; Misses Lucille Mayhill
and Patty Hill. Calling, Miss Ruth Ann Lett, chairman; Misses Eileen White and Martha Mason. Refreshments, Miss Dina Barkan, chairman; Misses Helen Ruth Berry and Joan Hixon. Entertainment, Miss Betty Noonan, chairman; Misses Mary
“ |Hul and Ruby Shelton; : Decora
tions, Miss Jaynet Pickerel, chairman; Misses Ruth Hair and Eleanor Randall; and honor invitations, Miss Margaret Kayser, chairman; Misses Janett Williams and Betty Walsh. :
Conn., are shown intent Fort. The games are held on Sun-
Entertains for Delta Deltas at Lake Freeman
Mrs. William Steck Host ess; Sunshine Club to Hold Luncheon.
An outing and several luncheons are among activities of women’s clubs for this week.
Mrs. William Steck,” 4923 College Ave., is entertaining members of the Delta Delta Club this week at Lake Freeman. ;
The monthly luncheon of the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside will be held tomorrow noon at Joslin’s Chicken Dinner Place. Mrs. Otis Carmichael is chairman, assist ed by the Mesdames Lynn Adams, J. E. Haniki, William Shaffer, Curtis Burke, H. F. Herrold, E. V. Boyer and R. C. Griswold. :
Mrs, John F. Kerr will be hostess at luncheon tomorrow for members of the Sunshine Club. J
The West Edgewood Homemakers’ Club will entertain the members of the East Edgewood Homemakers’ Sub. today at a picnic at Longacre ar .
The 20th Century Club will meet Thursday at the Horuff Chicken Dinner Place. Mrs. Ora Wingfield and Mrs. Carrie Bassett will be hoste esses. :
The Alliance Francaise will hold a luncheon Saturday noon at the Hoe
tel Washington.
New York and Paris Styles Hint Bustle’s on Its Way Back
By MARIAN YOUNG NEW YORK, July 25 (NEA).—There’s no doubt about it—New York and Paris designers are flirting with the idea of getting women back
into bustles.
Summer collections hinted at back fullness. The sashes on a great many summer evening gowns tie in huge bows at the back. Peplums
—narrow in front, wide and flaring in back—are
prevalent on both eve-
ning and day dresses. Tiered effects are stressed.
As a mafter of fact, a few couturiers are doing - more than merely hinting at the idea of zreviving the bustle. Alix, for instance, has in her current collection a rose and black striped moire evening gown with an honest-to-goodness bustle back. Schiaparelll puts an out-and-out bustle on a long balck dinner suit with long, pointed jacket.
Bustles—High, Low
In New York, Sally 'S recent fashion showing in the Persian Room at the Plaza featured the bustle silhouette in every conceivable manner, from high bustle arrangements to low-down bustle fullness, achieved by shirring the skirt-back beneath a smooth-fitting shield or yoke. Between these ex-
{tremes were tiered flounces, perky
peplums and all types of back bows. Among the smartest costumes in this fashion show was a black silk chiffon apron dress with its bustle Sugges ted by a bouffant bow and en ; A formal black silk taffeta evening gown with huge bustle bow in back was covered from hipline to hemline with rows of tiny white lace ruffles. A dawn-gray organza gown, hand-painted in white helterskelter design, had fullness massed at the back of the skirt. Also chic was a floor-length dinner gown of white organza, beautifully embroidered all over, with basque bodice ending in a peplum beyond which flared a tunic that
emphasized the sweeping back fulle ness of the skirt. : Along with bustles and bustle ef fects, wide-brimmed hats of Quaker inspiration are creeping into the fashion picture. On Ladies’ Day at Chantilly recently, Paris style scouts reported that Quaker bonnets were very much in evidence, 3 You don’t have to worry right now about these, or, for that mate ter, bustle effects either. But think about them Just the same—especially bustles. They're on their way in. Whether theyll catch on like wildfire or just sputter .a bit and burn out remains to be seen. Howe oven: the chances are they'll catch
Marian Guild to Give | Benefit Garden Party,
Members of the Marian Guild will sponson a garden party on the
Marian College campus on Aug. 6 to ~
raise funds for new tennis courts. Mrs. Harold Purdy and Mrs. E. A, Kelly are cochairmen in charge of
arrangements. One of the aftere.
noon’s attractions: will be the show
ing of African water lilies, known’
as “Egyptian loti,” which grow on the campus. : " Other committee aids .are Mrs, J. H. Lang and Mrs. A. J. Ullrich, tickets; Mrs. John Gallagher and Mrs. James B. Mahan, refreshments,
and Mrs. W. I. Seal and Mrs. Mare;
garet Eagan, candy.
Use plenty of cooling; refreshing Old Spice Talcum=~and follow (discreetly!) the coquetry rules inscribed on this exquisite little fan. ‘You'll be enchanting; your admirers enchanted, ‘The fan is a token to you with each purchase
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