Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1940 — Page 9

‘WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1940 meme Re F

Assist With Marian Guild Event

Psi Iota Xi Will Co ntinue to Aid Speech Clinic

Psi Tota Xi Sorority will continue Support of the speech and hearing clinic at Indiana University, the Indianapolis Symphony and the Hoosier Salon. The support was pledged at a recent convention of - the | organization | held at Lake Manitou. = ~ Miss Elsie Sweeney, Columbus, Ind; wil? donate a block of seats amounting to $500 to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra to be used in the coming year by glee clubs, chorale societies and other

organizations for ¢hildren who are] :

interested in music but unable financially to attend the concerts. Next year’s convention will be held at the Spink-Wawasee Hotel

-at Lake Wawasee! with the Delta 58

Gamma Chapter of Ft. Wayne as hostess. Members of the Beta

is er of the Indianapolis Symphony Cup, awarded by_ Mi Sweeney at the convention. The chapter at Franklin also won a Symphony Cup. Winner of the Meyer and Alexander Achievement Cup| was Alpha Chapter at ncie. Mrs. Harry Mulder, East Chic . was| elected grand president; Mrs. Paul Morton, Lebanon, grand vicepresident; Miss Elwynne Griffith, Scofitsburg, secretary; Mrs. Kendall Matthews, Centerville, treasurer; Mrs, E. J. Hancock, Greensburg, editpr and Miss Marie Starkey, Van Went, O,. conductress. Miss Vir-] ginia Lee Brightwell, Jeffersonville, retiring president,!is grand adviser to the council. |

oman’s Club [aps Program

Although the majority of women’s clubs have completed only recently tieir programs for the season, sev~erall organizations already have mapped programs for the new year which opens in the fall. The Indianapolis Woman’s Club, - arcording to its new yearbook, will have a President's Day on Oct. 4. Mrs. Erwin C. Stout is the new president. The arrangements committee for that day will include Mrs. Warrack Wallace, chairman; Mesdames Samuel R. Harrell, Harry V. Wade, I'red Bates Johnson and Edward B. Taggart. f rs. Daniel I.. Glossbrenner is scheduled to read|a paper on “The North Road” at the Oct. 8 meeting and) Mrs. Frederic Krull’s topic for thal meeting will be “Tryphena Gogs Cavalcade.” | Booked for the Nov. 8 meeting are “From an Ivory Tewer,” a paper by Mrs. Fisk Lamders,/and “Perspectives” by Mrs. John E. Hollett. A guest day tea will be Feld Nov. 22. Mrs. Harry V. Wade's paper will be on “Engine, Engine.’ ther speakers, the topics of their papers and the meeting dates include: “Experiences by Proxy,” Mrs. William Burrows, jand “Garden Interpationalism,” Mrs. R. Hartley Shdrwood, Dec. 6; “Portsmouth, IN. H.,” Mrs. William E. Rogers, and “New England, There She Stands,” Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith, Jan. 10; “Reading Maketh ja Full Man,” Miss Gertrude Taggart, and “Then ‘What Is Life’ I, Cried,” Miss Nancy Moore, Jan. 24. i nominating committee will be pamed at the Feb. 7 meeting and Mir§. Archer C. Sinclair will talk on “Of Making Many Books There Is No|End” and Mrs. Brandt: F. Steele wil] give a paper on “Time of My “Life.” Officers will be elected at the Mairch 7 meeting. | Other papers scheduled are “Pionedrs of Play” by Mrs. Charles F. Meyer Jr. and “Leonardo’s Disappointments,” Mrs; Murray N. Hadley| Feb. 21; “The Stricken Deer,” Mrs. Thor G.| Wesenberg, and “Neighbors,” Mr§. Homer Hamer, March 7; “Poet-Librarian,” Miss Margaret M. Shipp and “Old Greenwich Village,” Mrs. George Roke, March 21; “How Many Miles to |Barleybright,] Mrs. E. Vernon Lahn, and “The [Play’s the Thing,” Mrk. Robert S. Sinclair, April 4. Another guest day will be held April 18 when Miss Nora E. Thomas gives a paper on ‘And the Moral of That Is—” At the May 2 meeting Mits May Louise|Shipp’s paper will ve [titled “May Ann” and Mrs. Warradk Wallace's forgettable Days.’ Mdy 16 Mrs. Henry H. Hornbrook will talk on “Marjorie Fleming” and Mis. Wallace Patterson of Evanston, 111] ‘on “Religious Utopias.” Mrs. Pobert B. ‘Adams paper for June 6 is to be on “Portrait in Sepia.” A ted and reception for new members will be held that day.

QUESTION BOX ' |

R—Do wome spend annually bre for clothing than men? A—According fo an article in the pnthly Labor Review for Februy, 1940, containing statistics gathbd in 42 cities,| for white and Neob persons in [14,469 families at hith and low economic levels . in 1984-1936, women spend about $15 ! othing, $5 more Jor pre for shoes, and correspondingly greater amounts for underwear and | miscellaneous articles of clothing.

@Q—Please suggest some new topping for cottage pudding? —Try mixing three tablespoonfuls marmalade with a cup ‘of whipped cream. | Or whip the white ofl one egg with one-third cup con-

{fdctioner’s sugar until it is light

and creamy. Then grate a tart apple into the juice of.one lemon, 'it well and beat it in the sugar 1d white of egg mixture.

Q-—What food furnishes the esntial needs for good nourishment ore completely and economically an any other single food? A—Milk.

Q—How may I clean an enamel yoking utensil in which food was irned? ok : 'A—Soak the food loose with water, by boiling a weak soda solution it. A feldspar abrasive may be | used lightly, but enamelware shoud

Crapeaqa []

BEAUTY

rmimies Photo. Mrs. John D. Gallagher and Mrs. Lillian M. Koontz will assist

with the card parties to be given at 2 and 8 p. m. tomorrow at Marian College.

The Marian Guild is sponsoring the events.

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I am an attractive girl 20 years old. I have always been very popular with boys, but for the first time in my life I am really in love. My problem is this: I have been in the habit of dating two or three different fellows a week. After taking a girl out and showing her a good time, the majority of them feel entitled to a good night kiss and I usually give it to them as I liked the fellows or I would not have dated them in the first place. Well, two or three dates a week for about four years adds up to lots of fellows and consequently to lots of kisses. Not a single one has gone the tiniest bit beyond that, but I still feel guilty about it whenever I'm out with the only fellow I've ever. loved. Po I know he loves me, too, but would he if he knew how many others I’ve kissed? Am I good enough for him? I have kissed none since I've met him six months ago. Please hnswer. WORRIED.

» 2 ”

Answer—Hew nice it would be if no girl had any more than kisses on her conscience! A kiss, lightly given, is nothing but gesture of affection, carrying no unpleasant consequences. The fact that a girl has kissed her escorts, whom she liked well enough, over a period of years should not cause her to be laden down with guilt. Young people are warned against kissing by anxious adults because sometimes it leads them into deep waters, but in your, case this isn’t true. You knew where to stop. The boys themselves -are responsible for a girl's inhibition about kissing because they hold her in low esteem if she is easy to kiss. Their egos require that each time she kisses she makes them feel that it is a special concession and not a usual occurence. The kiss itself is trivial. It is the attitude of the young which makes it important or unimportant. i When you ask yourself if you're good enough for the young man, use something more significant than kissing as a measure of your character. It is better to ask yourself if you know how to co-operate with another. Can you give as well as take? Are you willing to accord the first place in a partnership te the young man and play. the secondary role without resentment? Are vou tactful, kind and generous in your judgments? Are you in sympathy with the boy's general aims and purposes in life? How do you react to disappointment when it comes? . These are the things that decide whether you are good enough for him and whether he is good enough far you. Dismiss the kissing from your mind as a phase of your adoles-

‘cence, and don't discuss it with him. The average young men doesn’t

expect a girl to reach the age of 20 without having been kissed. The chances are that he would have considered her lacking in attraction for. men if she hadn't. He hopes to find her discriminating in her choice, conventional in her conduct, but not unkissed. Forget it. JANE JORDAN. Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.

By ALICIA HART

IT'S A MISTAKE FOR any woman to dismiss news about and directions for applying evening makeup by shrugging, “But I wear formal clothes so seldom!” Evening makeup is for every woman— to wear after dark. It doesn't matter whether you are in formal clothes or not. Artificial light calls for special cosmetics, skillfully applied. It's all a matter of light and shade. For instance, if nature endowed you with altogether too little chin, try using a lighter-than-skin-tones foundation film on the short, receding chin and see what happens. Or, if you want to. emphasize the hollows in your cheeks, try using dark foundation in them and a lighter shade on the cheek bones above. : ’ Remember that light foundation highlights, and therefore makes any feature more prominent: A dark shade achieves just the opposite effect. For subtle evening makeup, it is necessary to have one shade of foundation film which inatches exactly your natural skin tones, one three shades darker and one a couple of shades lighter. ” ” ” ” ” 8 .

WITH THESE THREE, THE woman who wants to conceal a double chin and emphasize high cheekbones would blend the matching foundation over face, throat and forehead. Then she would carefully blend a bit of the darker shade across

"the double chin and a speck of the light shade on each cheekbone.

Gentle patting on edges between different shades of foundation eliminates blotches and hard lines. Afterward, she would apply rouge and powder in the regular manner, using powder which matches her skin. ’

honor,

.the Poppy

Women Are Heroines! In Fire Fighting

OGDEN, Utah, June 19 (U. P.).— Women often are the unsung heroines of forest fire fighting and go entirely without recognition except among the men they may tem-

porarily direct, it was disclosed at a western regional conference of national forest officials. Wives of forest service dispatchers and lookouts frequently take over when their husbands are called to the fire lines. The women are left to direct the| activities of all fire fighters concerned until their husbands return to their posts.

BIC 12 OUNCE BOTTLE

Couple to Wed ech Grove

The marriage of Miss Eileen Weishaar, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anton Weishaar, 626 Terrace Ave. to Joseph Gilliland, son of Mr. and

St., Beech |Grove, will be at 8:30 p. m. today in the Beech Grove Christian Church. The Rev. William Nelson will perform the ceremony before a background of palms interspersed with candelabra. Mrs. Fred Byrum will sing “Because” and “At Dawning” and Mrs. Mabel Cook will play the bridal music. i Mr. Weishaar will give his daughter in mariage. The bridal gown, of white organdy, is made with puffed sleeves, a square neckline and a full skirt edged with a wide ruffle forming a slight train. The fingertiplength veil will fall from a braided satin halo cf ught at either side with

The bride will carry white roses. ! Mrs. Paul Weishaar,

matron of will wear blue organdy fashioned ith a low, square neckline and short, puffed sleeves out-

'|lined with lace, and a very full skirt.

Miss Marie Williams, bridesmaid, will wear:pink organdy made in the same style. i velvet bo 5. in their hair with streamers falling to the waist, and will carry colonial bouquets. William Gilliland Jr., brother of the bridegroom, will be best man and ushers will be Paul Rowe, Topeka, Kas, and Paul Weishaar, brother of the bride. " The mothers of the couple will wear flowered sheer gowns with Talisman rose corsages. ‘A reception at the a ome of the bride’s par-

ents will follow the ceremony. Out-of-town guests will include Mrs. Rowe, Topeka, Kan.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Millar, Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stuck, Greensburg, Ind., and Mr. ap Mrs. Harry Ransdall, Louisville, Ky.

Legion Unit to Elect

Officers Tomorrow

East Indianapolis Unit 13 of the American Legion Auxiliary will hold its Toni i mesiing at 8 p. m. tomorrow in [the War Memorial. A final report will be mecde on Day sales. Officers will be elected, Mrs. Stanley Eiken-

Mrs. William Gilliland, 64 S. 11th

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES "—= om Bridal Party Is Announced for

ET

Davidson-Messick Wedding; ~ Joann McDermed Feted

Selection of bridal attendants and parties are claiming the attention of young women who are to be married soon. Miss Marian Messick, whose marriage to Joseph Harold Davidson will be June 29 in St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church, has named her

wedding attendants.

Her sister, Frances, will be maid of honor and bridesmaids will be |

Miss Harriett Neu, her cousin, and Miss Marjorie Mueller.

Kenneth Herron will be Mr. Davidson’s best man and Thomas Elbreg, Albert Buennagel and Val Jurgell will be ushers. The bride-to-be is the daugher of Mr. and Mrs. Edward N. Messick, 4144 Central Ave. and Mr. Davidson is the son of Mrs. Helen Davidson, 1925 Broadway. 2 8 =n’ Miss Maryella Elizabeth Julian, whose mariage to Charles William Hutchings will be June 30 in the Fairview Presbyterian Church, will

be honor guest at a kitchen shower given tonight by Mrs. Norman 8S. Peine at the home of her mother, Mrs. Charles Wurtz, 4171 Carrollton Ave Miss Julian is the daughter of Mrs. Clarence E. Marshall, 2353 Central Ave., and Mr. Hutchings is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hutchings, 3158 Kenwood Ave. Shades of green will be used in appointments for the shower, Guests besides Miss. Julian, her mother and the bridegroom-to-be’s mother will include her grandmother, Mrs. Charles Brinkman, Mesdames Wurtz, Fred Peine, Kenneth Harker, Milton Skaats, Royal Colby and Robert Faris and the Misses Jane Hamilton, Ruth Cooke, Margaret Schofield, Arda Knox, Cornelia Kingsbury and Carol Kendall. i » ” ”

Misses Ellen Hamilton, Dorothy

'Wehling and Carleen Becker will

entertain tonight at Miss Hamjlton’s home, 5350 College Ave.; with a kitchen shower for Miss Aline Bailey who will be married to Robert E. Jones of Goshen, Ind., July 6. Mr and Mrs. Maxwell V. Bailey, 3054 N. Pensylvania St., are the parents of the bride-to-be. Mr. Jones is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Jones of Bicknell, Ind. . The hostesses will be assisted by their mothers, Mesdames O. B.

Hamilton, Paul Wehling and C. H.

Becker. Appointments for the party will be in red and white. ; Members of the bride-to-be’s bridge club will be guests.” Others will be Mrs. Bailey, Mrs Jones, Mrs.

Mary Keegan and Miss Sally Heilman who is to be Miss Bailey's only attendant for the .wedding,

s 2 #

Miss Lenora Clark will entertain with an open house at her home, 601 N. Oxford St., from 2 to 6 p. m. Sunday for her sister, Frances Mary, whose marriage to Leo John Fischer, Arlington, Mass, will be July 2. Miss Clark is the daughter of Mrs. Delia Clark and Mr. Fischer’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. William J. Fischer of Arlington.

» " x

Mrs. John L. Coleman will entertain with a dinner and bridal shower tonight at her home, 1700 W. 30th St. for Miss Louise Mayes whose marriage to Byron L. Donough will be in early September. Approximately 35 guests, including the bride-to-be’s mother, Mrs. Wil=liam B. Mayes, will attend.

» » »

Miss Betty Reed and Miss Mary Jane Kruse will entertain tomorrow night at Miss Reed’s home, 4231 Central Ave., for Miss Mary Catherine Markey, whose marriage to .C. William Mason Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. C. William Mason, 3030 N. Pennsylvania St., will be June 27. Miss Markey is the daughter of Mr. and® Mrs. Thomas S. Markey, 3133 Ruckle St. The wedding will be at 9 a. m. in St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church. The bride-to-be Has chosen her sister, Mrs. Edmund J. Bradley, as matron of honor. Mr. Mason is to be his son’s best man: and ushers will be Thomas S. Markey Jr., Ak-

ron, O., brother of Miss Markey,

PAGE

TT

PATTERN 8735 |

Beautifully simple and exquisitely flattering, this dress will convince people that you've lost| several pounds! The sweeping, paneled line

L# 4 | y

| Give

and Harley Griggs.

Cool, SI enderizing Dress

of the front has a wonderfully’ slenderizing effect, and the waist line, high in front, is drawn in smoothly and suavely by back= fastened side belts. Remember the ° number, design No. 8735, and send for it as soon as possible, because you'll enjoy every moment of wear=-

ing.

Pattern No. 8735 is designed for sizes 36, '38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires, with short sleeves, 4 yards of 39-inch material (without-nap; with long, 47s yards; 2% yards trimming. ; For a PATTERN of this attractive model send 15 cents in coin, your name, address, style, number and size to Pattern Department, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St. - Pattern, 15¢ Pattern Book, 15c. One [Pattern and Pattern Book ordered together, 25c. !

Y

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at our'expense! yourself a new beauty experience! Just a touch of the POWD'R-BASE bampden foundation stick keeps your makeup fresh, lovely, lasting. Helps conceal lines, din ooo Ends shiny nose. Makes .

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[ NAME. ccsoccessssassveasvoiabossstonccse

Lo Stunnnnssincsnesernieess ff

berry, president, will preside.

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Play Shoes!

IV-Throats, Perforations,

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medium, low or walking

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FREE [PARKING FREE BUS

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| Think of it . . . A thrilling sale of better white shoes in the. newest 1940 styles and materials '. . . Shoes for every occasion

| MATERIALS: Crushed Kid, Frosty White || Soft Smooth Kid and Calf!

WHITE AND COMBINATIONS

STARTING TOMORROW—3Day

GREAT DAYS

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beginning" of the season—just when you need ‘them and want them most—to wear right now! You'll be amazed at the style and quality! At 12.98 and 3.98 they were outstanding values— at 2.39 they're sensational! Stock up for summer!

STYLES: Spectator Pumps, Sandals, [Dressy Pumps, Oxfords, Latticed-Back Pumps, Ties,

Open or Closed Toes, Plain or Latticed Backs,

Stitching, Lacing, Bows

and many other new style details!

Suede,

'HEELS: Boulevard heels, high heels, Wedgies,

heels!

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| All white or white combined with brown, blue, ‘black or tan. Also new red, white and blue

WOMEN'S SHOES--FIRST FLOOR.

Purchases of $10 or More Sold on Sears Easy Payment Plan

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n Every Thursday and Saturday Night Until 9 o’Glock © Sh

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© $2.98 and $3.98 VALUES!

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SIZES 4 TO 8 IN THE GROUP IN A GOOD RANGE OF WIDTHS

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Friday, Saturday

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