Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 222, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1932 — Page 7
JAN. 25, 1982_
Pick ‘Merry Widow ' for 1932 Follies “The Merry Widow” has been choeen as the script for the 1932 edition of “Fairvlcw Follies," annual Butler university musical production. It was chosen from four selections by Fred Winter, chairman of the script committee, at a Joint meeting of the faculty committee, headed by Professor Dale A. Beeler, and members of the Men’s Union governing board. Norman Hannah will direct the production. Dorothy Jane Atkins, dance director, has announced that tryouts for choruses will be held in the recreation room the first week of the new semester, on Wednesday for girls and Thursday for men. Dates for singing and speaking trials will be held later, according to Edward Green, production manager. Tentative plans have been made to hold- the show at Caleb Mills hall, probably May 13 and 14. Definite plans will be made this week. Production budget is in charge of a faculty auditing committee headed by Professor G. F. Leonard of the college of education. Fairview Follies each year is sponsored by the Men’s Union. Dcta Chis to Meet Delta Sigma Chi sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Misses Olive and Helen Frije, 903 Fletcher avenue. Miss Wasson Hostess Alpha chapter, Theta Chi Omega sorority, will meet for a business session tonight with Miss Marie Wasson, 1259 Congress avenue.
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lETTERS from readers relating ' their own experiences and asking questions about them are invited. Comment on the advice given is invited. The most interesting letters will be published in part. HERE are the letters from men telling how they feel about marrying a girl who has had a previous love experience. I asked for these fetters to throw more light on the way men’s minds work. The letter shows that the average man feels that he ought to grant the woman the same forgivenness which she accords him. but emotionally he is unable to do so. While they have all the sympathy In the world for the girl who has fallen, they hope and pray that they won’t be the one who is expected to marry her. will she make a good wife? Surely! For the other fellow! But may heaven preserve them from such an experience. If men fall in love with a girl before they learn her history, their impulse is to overlook it, but the knowledge persists like a burr in the consciousness and seems bound to mar their happiness to a certain extent. Some prefer to know the truth about the past, but most of them would rather keep their illusions, even at the expense of truth. The conclusion drawn by Jane Jordan, after reading the letters, which she has no space to publish in full, is that the girl whose goal is an idealy happy marriage would better avoid experiences before marriage as she would the plague.
Dear Jane Jordan —May I say a word about the lady who has loved too well? In my opinion, her previous experience very posisbly makes her a better wife for the man she marries, always excepting some damage to her physique or to her psyche, and more especially excepting some social consequence, such as blackmail, which may rear its head later and damage her husband as well as herself. But she is a fool if she -<sks her Joint hnppiness bv telling. We are not governed truly by our nson, but by our emotion. No matter reasonable her husband might be. natter how firmly he thought he had • pled the situation, deep down in him would be a hurt, a resentment, a Jealously, call it what you will, that would spoil the perfection of his feeling for her. Each man wants a Virgo Intacta, and though he admits that experience may be profitable, he wants to furnish that experience himself. MEDICO - " * * Dear Jane Jordan—Yes. a girl with a can get a man and be happy for a while, unless she does not tell all. For the Lord s sake, Billie tell him all beforehand. I married a girl with a past and she told part, but held back the most important thing. We lived in terror for a little more than a year, both suspicious of ths other. Now, we are divorced. So if you want happiness w i 1 S nian - tcll him everything, and If he loves you it will make no dittertnce. BROKEN-HEARTED BILL. Comment by Jane Jordan—But my dear Bill, if you never had
Daily Recipe SHRIMP STEW 11-2 cups canned shrimp 3 tablespoons butter S tablespoons flour 21-2 cups milk--1 medium-sized onion 1-2 cup celery leaves 1 teaspoon salt 1-8 teaspoon pepper 1-2 teaspoon prep ared mustard 2 tablespoons minc ed parsley Melt butter and add onion peel and minced celery leaves, mustard, salt and pepper Simmer over a low fire until onion is tender. Sift over flour, stirring constantly. Bring to the boiling point and strain. Return to heat with shrimps and parsley and heat thoroughly. Serve with a sprinkle of paprika over the top.
COLDS, / Use This i Aspirin Prescription \ S The first dose of Laxa-Pirin 1 # brings real relief. It’s the way 1 I doctors give aspirin for colds, I I complete with every thingneeded, I m phenacetin, caffeine, laxatives, M \ etc. Quick, sure relief. 25c. M dGwa/Bi/um, Pleasant* -No Quinine
CHOOSE RIGHT DIET
Select Children’s Food With Care
Thi* 1* th* fourth of > srie* of six daily article* on the proper care and natrition of children, published in thi* newspaper in co-operation with the American Child Health Association. The present depression and anemployment ha* made thi* a *rave problem in many families where a dollar mast to farther now than ever before. BY SISTER MARY Written Especially for NEA Service end The Times. WHEN we are planning low cost menus we should give children the first consideration. Unless an adequate diet is provided, much harm may result, not only through childhood, but adult life as well. Naturally, the foods that make up the list for the planning of low cost meals are limited in variety. However, clever seasoning and proper cooking will do much to make the cheapest and simplest meals interesting.
BREAKFAST MENUS Breakfast No. 1 — Apple, whole wheat cereal with whole milk, commeal muffins with oleomargarine or butter, milk for children and coffee for adults. (Since apples are chosen as the breakfast fruit a crisp bread is not necessary.) Breakfast No. 2 Banana, rolled oats, whole milk, crisp toast with nut butter, cocoa, coffee. Breakfast No. 3 Tomato juice, cornmeal mush fried for adults and older children and steamed and served with milk for small children, crisp broiled bacon, milk, coffee. Breakfast No. 4 Whole orange (orange juice for baby under 3 years of age), whole grain combination cereal, whole milk, spiced milk, coffee.
known anything, you would have been married yet! And why did the mere date of the confession, rather than the confession itself, so vitally affect your happiness? n u a Dear Jane Jordan—Here’s what I think: Why blame a cirl for the past? If she is making an effort to be good, there is no reason why a fellow shouldn t marry her. A fellow's past is usually more scarlet than a girls, but he can outlive It. while she must sufier a long time. But here's what I would do: I’m frank in saving that if the incident happened to me. I wouldn’t marry the girl. I’d thing only what my friends would sav. I’d be too selfish to fnnk of mv own short comings and mistakes. It would be easy for me to criticize her You never know until the crucial test comes, however. YOUNG FELLOW. tt a tt Dear Jane Jordan—Women are wrong in thinking that we men expect the women we marry to be angels. We don't. But after marriage we do expect teem to be faithful, virtuous, agreeable and helpful. A man who wouldn’t overlook one slip would make a poor husband under any consideration. What the woman did shouldn't matter so much as what she does now and continues to do. c. W. A. Dear Jane Jordan—ls a girl made her mistake only because she really cared for a fellow, that's not so hard to overlook. But if she wanted thrills, excitement. and dated as many fellows as nossible: if she smoked and drank and accepted clothes and money; tfflpn if she tired of it all and wanted to ‘get married and have children, that’s worse. A. tt tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—As for marrying a girl with a past, that is a hard thing for a boy to decide. If a boy loves a girl well enough to marry her. if he has a nast himself, and the girl confesses “to boot.” I don’t see where the boy has much room to object, JOSE.
Card Parties
St. Patrick’s Social Club will give a bazaar Tuesday afternoon and night and a card party Friday afternoon and night at the school hall, 946 Prospect street. Mrs. Joseph Abers will be in charge. Mothers’ Club of the Holy Cross church will hold card parties in the school hall, 1417 East Ohio street, Wednesday afternoon and night. Mrs. Thomas Griffin, president, is general chairman, assisted by Mesdames Thomas Quinn, George Heid, Thomas Marshall, William Snyder, Harold Morrow, William Jones and James Sullivan, euchre committee; Charles Hanrahan, Charles Lund, Charles Jonas and James Conerty, bridge and 500 committee; Lawrence Kestler and Timothy Corcoran, bunco committee, and Joseph Swallow and Anna Sage, lotto committee. Games will begin at 2:30 and 8:30. Auburn committee of the Central Universalist church will give a card and bunco party at the Bond Bread bakery. 326 West Vermont street, at 8 tonight. Liederkranz women’s society will sponsor a card party at 2:30 today at 1421 East Washington street. Hostess to Sorority Kappa Delta Theta sorority will meet Wednesday night at the home of Miss Betty Mclntyre, 5685 Central avenue.
KOTEX reduces prices. Now, jEp women who want the best, the most comfort-giving sanitary protection can easily afford it. Ana LSI 7.77 ...7 7 "1 they are assured of the utmost pro tection to health .. . when they The fact that hospitals used choose Kotex. 24,000,0CX) Kotex pads last year is No miestion mark hovers over reason enough for selecting Kotex. Kotex. No incessant doubt as to When buying it wrapped, make how it was made, where, under sure you get genuine Kotex. w’hat conditions. 7. 77 -, v- „ Never pay more than 35c Kotex, you know, is cut, r r folded, even packed by machine. _ Made of tested materials. In air* §Y fl washed rooms. Inspected 76 times yy | y/ duxftg the cou*. of maQu&cture. S.oif.,, N.fki..
The choice of cereals is fairly wide and the home-maker should take advantage of this by varying the breakfast porridge each morning. • The whole grain cereals are available in corn, oats and wheat in various forms that are cheap and full of food value. A dish of well-cooked cereal served with fresh or an “evaporated” milk furnishes many carloads of protein, fat and carbohydrates, as well as some mineral constituents. tt u THE breakfast fruit is essential, but remember that tomatoes, canned or fresh, can take the place of oranges. Apples, bananas and prunes are usually cheap and are good sources of vitamins A and B. Tomatoes and oranges and grapefruit are the richest sources of vitamin C. When oranges are 1 cent each they can be used as the breakfast fruit, otherwise it’s a good idea to use a cheaper fruit or tomatoes. When tomatoes are used in some other meal during the day, apples or bananas may be relied on to furnish vitamins and minerals for the morning meal. A crisp bread, such as toast or bread sticks, is important with every meal, but especially with the breakfast made up of a soft fruit, soft cereal and beverage. The crisp food not only enforces tooth exercise, but is an aid toward digestion. u a THE beverage for children should never be tea or coffee. Older children may have a “cereal” coffee, but small children should have milk or cocoa. Evaporated milk and milk in its similar forms are adequate and will help greatly to cut food expense. Professor Sherman of Columbia university says, “Any kind of milk is nutritionally more like any other kind of milk than is any other food.” When we realize that one “tall” can of evaporated milk with an equal amount of water added is as good for children as one quart of pasteurized whole milk, it becomes less difficult to provide that necessary “quart of milk for every child." The absolute minimum amount of milk on wihch a child can grow is one pint. If fresh bottled milk can not be procured, evaporated milk can be flavored slightly with cocoa or a little spice, diluted with water and used as a breakfast drink. A breakfast of this type is simple, cheap and nourishing. Cereals are one of the cheapest sources of energy aand go far to allay the actual pangs of hunger. While cereal proteins lack certain qualities, they can be made efficient if supplemented with a small amount of protein rich in the substances they lack. This explains the necessity of serving milk with cereals. The accompanying breakfast menus may help you plan others. Next: Luncheon Menus. Sorority Hostess Misses Erith Powell and Virginia Neff entertained members of the Alpha Upsilon chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, and their guests, with a bridge party Sunday afternoon at the Seville Tavern,
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Stewed dried peaches, cereal, cream, tomato omelet, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Shrimp stew, apple and cabbage salad, jellied prune ring, grape juice. Dinner — Chile con carne, head lettuce with Russian dressing, rye bread, pineapple upside-down cake, milk, coffee.
STAINLESS Same formula .. same price. In \ original form, too, if you prefer Wcotos VICKS OVER W million jars used yearly
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Rowell to Talk Before Vote League Miss Dorothy Goodrich will introduce Chester H. Rowell of the National Foreign Policy Association when he addresses the Indianapolis League of Women Voters Wednesday night at dinner at the Propylaeum. Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin is chairman of the arrangements committee, assisted by Mesdames Elias C. Atkins, George E. Home, Edwin M. Craft, Neal Thursdon, Enrique C. Miller, Charles Latham, Charles Harvey Bradley, Mortimer C. Furscott, Oscar Bauer, Joseph W. Stick - ney and Miss Clara Goe, Reservations for dinner may be made with Miss Florence Kirlin, executive secretary of the state league, at headquarters in the Illinois building. Child welfare committee has arranged a discussion meeting Wednesday forenoon at Rauh Memorial library. Mrs. Donald Jameson and Mrs. Ralph Henderson will speak on "Child Labor in Indiana” and Mrs. William H. Morrison will speak on “Illegitimacy.” Elwood Pair to Wed Marriage of Miss Lenore McKenzie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. I. McKenzie, Elwood, to Leo B. Fettig, son of B. J. Fettig, Elwood, will take place Tuesday in the Old Log chapel at Notre Dame university. Tire P.ev. Theodore Fettig, Monroeville, brother of the bridegroom, will officiate. The bridegroom is a graduate of Notre Dame and the bride of Mt. St. Joseph college. They will live in Elwood.
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NEW PRESIbENT
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Mrs. Edwin Musselman
Mrs. Edwin Musselman, 6184 Buckingham avenue, is the newly elected vice-president of the lota Kappa sorority.
MISS GARNER IS BRIDGE HOSTESS Miss Vance Garner, 4833 College avenue, entertained with a luncheon bridge Saturday at the Lumley tearoom. Appointments and decorations were in keeping with the Valentine season. The hostess was assisted by Miss Florence Guild and Mrs. Will Eastmand. Guests were: Mesdames Florence Falvev. Ross Campbell. John Schumacher. Robert Fitzgerald. Bruce Mclntosh. Francis Smith. Clinton Glascock. Misses Jane Strain. Marcie Follit. Mabel Goddard. Sara Ewing. Freda Lillis. Halcvon MendenhalL Marv Winter and Ann Thatcher.
New Cook Book Covers Routine of Homemaking Prospective bridegrooms and dyspeptic husbands take heart! Ida Bailey Allen’s “Modern Cook Book” —“taking the guess out of cooking” —has been published in a dollar edition. Mrs. Allen an authority on food, cooking, diet, nutrition and home economics, is founder and president of the National Radio Home-Makers Club broadcasting daily over a coast-to-coast network. In three parts the book covers all the phases of home-making. An interesting and unusual feature is a chapter on “From Our Foreign Neighbors,” in which are given representative recipes from other countries, and the delicatessen shopper will find pleasure in a chapter, “How to Use Canned Foods.” CHURCITS CALENDAR CIRCLE TO MEET Calendar Circle of the East Tenth Street Methodist church, will meet at 2 Tuesday at the church community house. Mrs. Edward Hughes, president, will preside, and Mrs. Harry Coyner will have charge of the program. A display of quilts will be a feature. Devotions will be given by Mesdames W. F. Holmes, William Jester, Henry Cage, Utica Dunlap and Coyner. Mrs. W. T. Randell will give a reading and Mrs. Martha Higgs will sing. A playlet, “The President of the Roaring Lions Club,” will be presented by Mrs. George Gamber, Mrs. W. G. Boggs, Mrs. Carl Gruelle and Mrs. R. F. Dalton.
- iOTOGRAPHER TO ! SPEAK BEFORE CLUB Calendar Club of the North Methodist Episcopal church, will | hold a luncheon-meeting at 1 Thursday in the social room at Vie ! church. Following the luncheon, Uzzie Phillips of the photographic ) department of the Methodist hospital will speak on “Hospital Highlights,” illustrated with motion pic--1 tures. Mrs. D. C. Wilbur will sing a group ; of songs, accompanied by Miss Alice Cahow. Mrs. A. E. Pritchard is i chairman of hostesses Kappa Club to Meet lota Club of Kappa Kappa Gamma will hold a luncheon meeting at 12:30 Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Hughes Patten, 34 East Fiftyfifth street, with Mrs. James Costin and Mrs. Joe Rand Beckett as assisting hostesses.
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PAGE 7
Musical Club Will Feature Ten Pianists Ten pianists of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary musical sorority, will be presented In concert Feb. 2 at Caleb Mills hall. The pianos will be grouped on the stage and the ensemble, coached by Bomar Cramer, will be conducted by him. Musical numbers have been orchestrated for a ten-piano group by Frand Renard of Dallas, Tex. Mrs. Marie Dawson Morrell, violinist, will be assisting artist. Robbye Cook, lyric soprano, will represent the scholarship students, for whom the benefit is being given. She is a pupil of Glenn Friermood, voice teacher at Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music.
