Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 279, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 March 1932 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Chocolate Healthful and Tasty BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer Chocolate is one of the most popular flavors the cook has at hand and, cleverly used, will make many an otherwise uninteresting dessert attractive. Aside from this, chocolate is a good food and contributes many calories to any dish to which it is added. Put the chocolate on a piece of wax paper in a saucer and place over hot water until melted. The paper can be thrown away and the dish is washed easily. Combination Takes Care You may have had much trouble in combining chocolate and liquids. Try melting the chocolate in the top of a double boiler over hot water; then add the liquid, which should be warm or about the same temperature as the chocolate. Add very slowly, beating constantly. Or you can cut the chocolate in small pieces and put it in the double boiler with cold liquid. Place over hot, but not boiling water and heat slowly so that the chocolate will melt as fast as the liquid heats. Beat with a rotary egg beater until the mixture is smooth and perfectly blended. CHOCOLATE BREAD PUDDING Chocolate bread pudding is very little trouble to make and exceedingly good. Two cups stale bread crumbs, two cups milk, two squares bitter chocolate, two-thirds cup granulated sugar, one egg, one-fourth teaspoon salt, one-half teaspoon vanilla. Soak bread in scalded milk for thirty minutes. Melt chocolate over hot water, add half the sugar and enough milk taken from the bread and milk mixture to make of consistency to pour. Add to bread and milk mixture with remaining sugar, salt, vanilla and egg slightly beaten. Turn into a buttered pudding dish and bake forty-five minutes in a moderate oven. Serve with hard sauce or whipped cream. CHOCOLATE RICE PUDDING Chocolate rice pudding is a good, nourishing dessert for young and old. One-third cup rice, two cups milk, one tablespoon butter, one egg, onehalf cup granulated sugar, one square bitter chocolate, one-eighth teaspoon salt, one-half teaspoon vanilla. Scald milk in top of double boiler, add rice, salt and butter and cook until rice is soft. Add chocolate, cut in small pieces, and sugar. Cook until chocolate is melted. Add yolk of egg well beaten and remove from fire. Fold in white of egg beaten until still and dry. Add vanilla and turn into a buttered pudding dish. Bake thirty minutes in a moderate oven and serve with sugar and cream. Dates or raisins can be added with the chocolate if wanted.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Patrick, 425 North Pennsylvania street, are at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York. Miss Marie Lauck has returned to St. Mary of the Woods college, after spending .spring vacation with her parents. Miss Beatrice Fulwiller, Tampa. Fla., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. McCord, 3434 Guilford avenue. CLUB WILL HOLD FASHION PARADE Mothers Club of the Wallace Kindergarten will have a fashion show and bridge party at 2 Friday afternoon at the L. S. Ayres auditorium. During the show a musical program will be given by the Brahms trio, composed of Misses Mildred Lawler, cellist; Irma Mae Steele, violinist, and Nell Baylor, pianist. Other games besides bridge will be played. Mrs. Walker Baylor is in charge of arrangements, assisted by Mesdames Harry Watson, Earl Shuck, Paul Wessell and F. M. Malley. Mrs. Clarence Taylor is president of the club and Mrs. John Moffatt president of the kindergarten. MISS WHITEMAN IS HOSTESS AT PARTY Miss Mary Beatrice Whiteman, 3114 Central avenue, entertained a group of college friends at home for spring vacation at tea Tuesday afternoon. Asa feature of the afternoon. Miss Whiteman presented Webster Russell Jr., a dramatic art pupil, in a group of readings. Guests Included: Misses James Bradlcv. Mary Helen Boreherdlng, Mildred Jane Black. Winifred Currier. Ruth Emhardt. Mary Alice Giiek. Esther Olltner. Mardenna Johnson. Alpha Joslin, Jean McColgin. Helen Van Liew, and Gwendolyn Schort. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Omer S. Whiteman.
Card Parties
A card pany at 8 tonight at Bond Baking Company, 826 West Vermont street, is sponsored by the Tau Delta Phi sorority. Auxiliary to Indianapolis chapter, No, 393, O. E. S., will hold a card party Friday at Banner-White-hill auditorium. Mrs. Charles Ziegler, 861 Sanders street, will entertain division No. 10. L. A. O. H. at cards Friday afternoon and night Club to Entertain McGuffey Club will give an entertainment at 7:30 Friday night at the Denison. Music and games will be on the program. Mrs. Heller Hostess Mrs. Mervin Heller, 1542 Pleasant street, entertained the Semper Fidelis Club at luncheon today. Home Board to Meet Board of directors of the Florence Crittendon home will meet for luncheon Friday at the home, 2044 North Illinois street.
6 6 6 LIQI ll) . TABLETS HALVE SSS Liquid or Tablets used internally and Mt Sain externally, make a ramplete and effect Ira treatment for Colds. fdost Speedy Remedies Known
WHA T’S IN FASHION?
Knitted Costumes Fashionable Directed by AMOS PARRISH
NEW YORK, March 31.—Watch what's worn by feminine golfers, cruisers, collegiates, motorists. They’ll all vouch for the same story, that knitted costumes are decidedly in fashion among sportive people. Logical, too, because they’re practical. Plenty of give and take to them. They give to every motion and can take much hard wear. •Good enough reasons why you'll also find knit costumes as popular for every day as for sports. For business, shopping, walking or just about the home. Slip into a breezy, one-piece dress of angora-knit or ribbed jersey knit imakes you think of corduroy) or a really hand-knit; in one of those intricate stitches that delight the expert knitter. Looks Like Handwork Even when they’re not knit by hand, they look so. Clever—these modejn knitting machines. You’ll find it fits just like any well-made silk or wool dress and has any smart detail you like. Puffed sleeves —scarf necklines—diagonal seamings button trimming. Just name what you want and you'll find it in a knitted dress. Two-Piece Garb Fashionable Two-piece costumes are just as fashionable as one-piece—a skirt and overblouse top. The one illustrated has a contrasting color yoke and sleeves. And three-piece outfits—skirt, blouse and jacket—are as useful as a tailored suit. Sweaters, too, of course. Now they’re in the same fashion class as blouses. And if you’d like to knit anew two-color sports one with smart round yoke, or Irish crochet a dressy one, just fill out the coupon below. CLIP COUPON AMOS PARRISH INDIANAPOLIS TIMES N Y. FASHION BUREAU. 500 FIFTH AVE.. N. Y. Please send the scarf bulletin mentioned above. NAME ST CITY Note; Stamped, addressed return envelope must he enclosed.
iConvriKht. 1932. Amos Parrish! Next: New china makes a fine spring tonic. Union of Clubs to Hear Talk by Professor Irvington Union of Clubs will hold a guest meeting at 8 Friday night in ihe auditorium of George Julian school, corner of East Washington street and Ritter avenue. Professor J. J. Haramy of Indiana Central college faculty will be guest speaker with “Russia” as his subject. Professor Haramy spent several months each year in Russia during his boyhood. The following members of the executive committee will receive the guests, Mesdames Louise Bruck, Otto Gripe, Walter Montgomery and C. D. Vawter, with the following study class chairmen: Mesdames W. W. Ward, Merritt Harrison, Joseph Ostrander, Tom Elrod, John Kingsbury, Frank Davidson, Mark Reasoner and Nelson Ellitt.
Your Child Make Home Something to Child More Than ‘Filling Station’
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Children live in a terrible rut —so do mothers. No wonder life gets uninteresting and everybody becomes obsessive, living in a big dream world of what-could-be, but isn’t! We are all packed full of suppressions. All of us are off dreaming somewhere, anywhere, but here, and we learned it as children^ The average home is so full of commands. It must be kept neat and clean! That is the first call of all! The children must always be ladies and gentlemen, neat and clean, too. The table cloth must be spotless! Feet mustn't stamp or make a' noise! No finger must touch the windows, chairs must not be moved, meals must be one long .span of politeness and quietness! No wonder children get bored to death and start to dream. We are so busy paying attention
TOURNEY AID
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—Photo bv Dexheimer. Mrs. Grace Buschmann April has been designated as “bridge month” in Indianapolis, and part of the month’s program will be the sixth annual interclub duplicated bridge tournament Thursday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. Grace Buschmann is chairman of arrangements, assisted by Lawrenqe Welch, Walter Pray, William ZdJer Jr., F. Rolland Buck and McFarland Benham,
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Central Avenue M. E. Women Organize White Cross Guild
A White Cross Guild to the Methodist hospital was organized today by fifty-five women of the Central Avenue Methodist Episcopal church meeting at the nurses home. Mrs. John G. Benson spoke on
WATKINS CELEBRATE 20TH ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Watkins, 2919 East Washington street, entertained with a dinner-bridge Wednesday night at Whispering Winds, in celebration of their twentieth wedding anniversary. The tables were decorated with spring flowers and lighted with green tapers. Guests were: Messrs, and Mesdames Cecil Barkley. Leonard Bishop, Earl Lodermilk, Fred Hildebrandt. Kenneth Frv. James Sprague. Arthur Riedl. Miss Dorothy Rose Barkely. Miss Mildred Engle. David Dake and Elmer Barkelv.
to these more or less superficial things that we are forgetting suppressions—the urges shouting silently for outlet. We can. not let homes go, of course, to become masses of chaos and confusion. This, too, has a bad effect, as it destroys self-re-spect and system; and system and order are needed up to a certain degree in a home just as they are needed in a business. But system can be a terrible master, and souls and hearts are offered up too often as a sacrifice to its routine cruelty. Bea Homemaker The truth is that most mothers have gotten into the rut of being “housekeepers” instead of homemakers. What is a homemaker? Well, I should say, a mother who thinks more of making her children into real people than into starched little puppets who will be neat and clean and quiet and sit around all the time and not touch anything. Our ideas' are coming out of the dark and enlarging. We used to buy toys for looks. Now we buy them for interest and to teach the children to do things, to develop them and give them initiative, thought and action. The idea of the home itself IS fast falling into line with the toys. Fairness Must Rule Not that the children are to be allowed to turn vandal and destroy and tear up to their hearts’ content. That would not do; but to let them know that the house is j theirs to really live in is a differ- 1 ent thing. If lessons of respect for prop- 1 erty, and justice to their mother j and all of the work she has to do, ' as well as politeness and fairness to each other are understood —pounded in, I should say—the new freedom of the house won’t greatly up- j set things. Suppose Ted crawls out of a window and uses the roof as a stage while he delivers a rousing address to a row of Roman senators on his bed, will that hurt anything? He may forget to straighten the curtain afterward, but put up Ted’s growing oratorical ability against a curtain and what have you? Inside he wouldn't have given that address perhaps. He would probably have dawdled on the floor all afternoon with a book, j I think our homes are going to be ] real factors in the lives of the chilj dren, not just filling stations in i which to eat arul sleep, but places to do real things and to learn.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
the organization and the following officers were elected: Miss Alta Robbins, president; Mesdames Madison Swadener, first vice-president: E. W. Stockdale, second vice-president; W. C. Borcherding, third vice-president; George W. Combs, recording secretary; Ernest N. Evans, coresponding secretary; Brandt C. Downey, treasurer, and David Ross, parliamentarian. The guild will sew and make bandages for the hospital, scrap books for children in the hospital and will meet once a month at the nurses’ home. Mrs. Stockdale arranged the meeting. Dance to Be Held Job’s Daughters, Bethel 1, will entertain with a “depression dance’’ at 9 Friday night at Castle hall, 230 East Ohio street. Music Will be furnished by Bob McKitrick’s orchestra. The committee in charge is Misses Betty Heiber, Edna May Leonard, Velma Riddell, Virginia James, Beulah Hopping, Beulah West, Elsie Heckman and Marjorie Ferrer.
* Distress After Eating
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Here are the facts about INDIGESTION !
THINK of sitting do'm to a meal without having to worry about indigestion! Think of eating anything you like— and all you like— without gastric distress. * * * To get rid of “stomach trouble,” you must get rid of its cause. But first it’s important to grasp these few simple facts. To begin with, the bulk of digestion occurs, not in the stomach but in the intestines. It is here that the nourishment in your food is extracted and absorbed into your blood. Imagine, then, what happens when you let your intestines become clogged! Waste matter accumulates, stagnates. Poisons filter into your blood ... back up
Not a “Curtail Yeast is a health food thousands eat
D. A. R. Will Plant Tree at Capitol Indiana Society, Daughters of the American Revolution, has issued invitations for a tree planting on the Statehouse lawn at 3 Friday afternoon, April 8. The tree to be planted, a “Washington elm grandchild,” is the gift of the Maryland society, D. A. R. Governor Harry G. Leslie, state officers of the society and members of the state bicentennial commission will be honor guests at the ceremony. Mrs. James Bliss Crankshaw, Ft. Wayne, vice-president-general of the society and chairman of the bicentennial committee, will be present. Serving on Mrs. Crankshaw’s committee are Miss Carolyn Ford, Madison; Mrs. Frederick Krull and Mrs. Charles Keyes. Mrs. James H. Dorsey, chairman of conservation and thrift of the Maryland organization, has offered a tree to each state society, to be planted on the lawn of each state Capitol. The trees all have been grown in Mrs. Dorsey’s nursery in Baltimore. ---------------------- Marriage of Mrs. Recker Is Solemnized Marriage of Mrs. Josephine Link Recker to Clarence Ralph Nesbitt, Englewood, N. J., was solemnized at 4 Wednesday afternoon at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Frank La Foe Link, 3335 North Meridian street. The Rev. George Arthur Frantz officiated. The bride was attended by her sister, Mrs, Walter A. Weidely, Cleveland, as matron or honor, and Carl Nesbitt, Mineola, Tex., was his brother’s best man. Mr. and Mrs. Nesbitt will be at home in Rye, N. Y„ after May 1. Mrs. Nesbitt is a graduate of Tudor Hall, and is a member of the Junior League and the Dramatic Club. Nesbitt is a graduate of Columbia university, and a member of Phi Delta Theta. Mr. Weidely also attended the wedding. ------------------------ CHURCH CIRCLE TO SEE STYLE SHOW Circle A of the women’s auxiliary, Church of the Advent, will sponsor a fashion show at 2:30 Friday at the church. Miss Helen Ready, stylist for William H. Block Company, will talk on the new mode, illustrating her talk with models. Following this, tea will be served in the parish house. Mrs. George S. Southworth and Mrs. Cone Barlow will preside at the tea table, which will be arranged with pastel flowers and lighted tapers. The afternoon has been arranged by Mrs. Frank C. Olive. . Plan County Dance Former residents of Perry county and their friends will give a dance and card party at 8:30 Saturday night at the Washington hotel. Any former citizen of the county may attend. The committee in charge is Captain G. J. Hauser, chairman; L. E. Hall, C. A. Howe, Andrew Jacobs, G. J. Lindeman and Dr. James M. Davis. Pledge Service Set Pledge services will be held by the Beta chapter, Alpha Beta Phi sorority tonight at the Antlers, for Misses Agnes Bonowski, Mary Healy, Mary Keating, Emma Etter, Margaret Long and Dorothy Oliger.
“Sour stomach”— belching distress after meals... doctors say these are almost always signs of poisons hacking up from clogged intestines
into your stomach. And when this happens, they contaminate the food awaiting digestion there! Is it any wonder you lose appetite—that your tongue is coated, your breath bad—that you have “that bad taste”? Fortunately, doctors have discovered a very simple, natural way of correcting this extremely unhealthy condition—entirely without the use of drugs. “Every day," they advise their patients, "eat three cakes of Fleischmann’s Yeast." Fleischmann’s Yeast is a food. It con-
MANNERS AND MORALS By Jane Jordan
BRING your troubles to Jane Jordan, who will help you understand your situation better and suggest something for you to do about it. Dear Jane Jordan—I read your article in tonight’s Times, and there is no doubt in my mind that I am the “other woman’’ to whom you refer. I don’t know why I should think that—guilty conscience, perhaps. Therefore, I am going to try to square myself. I will admit the affair and say that when I met the man I didn’t know he was married. I loved him too much to give him up after that. I have no excuse other than that. After his wife found out about us, he lied to her and told her he would give me up, but he didn't, and I was fool enough to keep up the farce. He really was very square with me. He told me he loved his wife and that she meant everything to him, but that he also loved me. Then I met his wife through mutual friends. I liked her and she knew I was the other woman. To all outward appearances she had forgiven us for our
GUILD SPEAKER
Mrs. Wilbur Johnson “Going Places and Doing Things,” will be the subject of a talk by Mrs. Wilbur Johnson for the More Light guild of All Souls Unitarian church, Saturday night. Mrs. Johnson just has returned from a European tour. She spent February in Egypt and Palestine.
Audubon Group Head Speaker Before Club Dr. Earl Brooks, president of the Indiana Audubon Society, will be the speaker at a meeting of the Nature Study Club of Indiana Saturday night at the public library. The club will hold its April open house Sunday afternoon at the clubhouse in Woollen’s gardens. Tea will be served from 3 to 5. Wallace P. Taylor will lead a bird walk, starting from the clubhouse at 3. Hostesses will be Mrs. Ralph Pierson, Misses Mary Helen Borcherding, Margaret R. Knox, Louise Thompson, Reva Thompson and Elinore Young. ------------------ Chapter to Install New officers of Delta chapter, Alpha Beta Gamma sorority, will be installed Friday night at a meeting at the home of Miss Ina Smith. They are: Mrs. Clyde Barker, president: Misses Martha Sisk, vicepresident; Flossie Wise, secretary; Ina Smith, treasurer, and Mildred Brannon, corresponding secretary. Miss Martha Sisk is retiring president. Sorority to Meet Alpha Gamma sorority will meet tonight with Miss Ruth Stewart, 5108 College avenue.
Is Almost Always a Sign ♦ Of Sluggish, Unclean Intestines! ♦
tains elements that actually “tone” and strengthen the sluggish muscles of the intestinal tract. At the same time fresh yeast moistens and softens the clogging food residues in your body. Thus, it fosters the regular, daily elimination of poisonous waste. And as fresh yeast purifies and straightens out your system, appetite responds. Digestive juices flow normally again. You derive greater nourishment from your food. Biliousness, belching, discomfort after eating are gone!
affair. All this time I was loving him so much it was hell! But I definitely had made up my mind to give him up. All this happened six months ago, after I had gone with him for two years. Please don’t judge me too harshly, but I still love him and always shall. I wouldn't cause trouble between them for the world. They are both too sweet. Please let other girls take my advice and let married men alone. It's too risky on the heart. A READER. Dear Reader—The “other woman” whom I scored in the column to which you refer herself was married and the mother of one child. You are a single girl and quite a different type. Although I think you have not loved wisely, but too well, I have respect for you for your honesty and for your determination not to cause any more trouble between a reasonably happy couple. It is quite possible for a man to love two women equally, but in a monogamous society he can not have both without causing serious unhap- Cling to piness to each One, Leave woman and to himself. the Other Without doubt, the majority of husbands do a little plain and fancy cheating on the side and get away with it. These temporary contacts never scratch the surface of their affections, a fact that no normal woman ever understands. But when a man finds his affections equally engaged by two women, it is an entirely different matter. The only thing he can do without tearing out the hearts of all three is to cling to one and leave the other. In your case, you are the woman who is left. It is not half as big a tragedy as you think. I am going to shock you by a psychological truth which you may not accept at first, but which is deserving of your most earnest consideration. The reason you hang on to your mistaken love for this man is that your self-esteem Truth Here is so low that you That Will do not believe you can get another Shock You one just as attractive as he is! Almost every human being makes too low an estimate of his own possibilities. When you gather up your courage and self-confidence to the point where you firmly believe you can attract a man who is free to marry you, your love for this man will begin to ebb, and when a real lover appears on the horizon, offering you his heart and his hand, you know very well that you will forget your married man with the speed of greased lightning! Look deep into your own heart with honest eyes and write me another letter, telling me whether or not I am right! * * * Dear Jane Jordan—l am 17 years of age and badly disappointed in a boy. At first he seemed to think a lot of me. Then he just quit coming. I asked him for my picture and things. When he brought them. I asked him why he quit and he said he was just tired. He told some friends of mine that he wanted a girl who would smoke, drink, and stay out till all hours of the night, and do what he wanted her to. I didn't see him until the other night. He and some others had been drinking. We went out in the country and got stuck in the mud. I went to the nearest farm house and got home all right. I lost one home over him and if I fool around with him again. I’ll lose my other home. I love him more than any one else and can’t keep from going with him. Advise me what to do. A DISAPPOINTED LOVER. Dear Disappointed Lover—Look for somebody else. He’s not grown up enough. He has come to that awkward age when he is neither boy nor man and tries to act like both. He feels that he owes it to his approaching manhood to assert his liberty and to stay out late at night. He takes to drink because it is forbidden and it makes him feel heroic if he succeeds in getting it. For the same reason he takes to premature love experiences, for he thinks that it is sex that makes the difference between the boy and the man. You can’t help him while he is going through this stage. And you can’t afford to let him disturb your economic status.
your fort
School to Be Visited by Parents Visiting day will be observed at the Hibben school, 5237 Pleasant Run parkway, from 10:45 to 12 on Monday. Parents of pupils are invited to attend and observe classes in their usual routine, observing methods of instruction. All departments of the school will participate, including day school, primary and the kindergarten. Hostesses appointed for each class Include Mesdames Thomas White, J. E. Angell, Carl Niesse, T. Wabnitz Nelson, J. D. Langdon, Bruce Long, V. A. Newcomer and F. W. Richardson. Students of the dancing, dramatie art and piano departments at the school will entertain their parents at a musical tea from 3:45 to 5:30 Tuesday afternoon at the school. This will be the first visiting day for parents in these departments. The dancing pupils are rehearsing for an operetta, with the pupils of all ages in the cast. The program also will include readings and music. Tea will be served by the hostesses, Mrs. Mahlon E. Bash, Mrs. Will Forsythe and Mrs. W. J. Wiesner, assisted by the following members of the senior class: Misses Betty Alpha Bloom, Mary Lou Rasico, Martha Jane Bash, Constance Forsyth, Yevonne Pasquel and Phyllis Nordstrom. -------------------- Miss Alexander to Be Honored Guest at Club Miss Melinda Alexander will be honor guest at luncheon Friday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club following her lecture at 11 at English’s theater as Indianapolis Town Hall’s final presentation of the season. Miss Alexander’s lecture subject is “A Square Look at Life's Angles.’’ She will be introduced by Mrs. Alice Baxter Mitchell. At the speaker’s table will be the following persons: Mesdames Henry I. Raymond Jr., Marie M. Bowen, Kate Milner Rabb, Walter S. Greenough. Adah O. Frost, Myron R. Green; Misses Forba McDaniel, Lucy Osborne, Stella Franz, Bessie C. Morgan, Mamie D. Larsh, Fannie Graeter and Margaret Shipp. ----------------- VINCENNES CLUB TO HOLD BANQUET By Times Special VINCENNES, Ind., March 31— The Business and Professional Women’s Club of Vincennes will hold its annual public relations banquet here tonight with James M. Knapp, Hagerstown, as speaker. Members of the club have invited their employers as special guests. More than one hundred reservations already have been made which includes many guests from clubs in nearby towns. Knapp, serving his seventh term in the state legislature, will speak on some phases of state government and taxation.
Mon.-Wed.-Fri. Evening FREE-FREE MARCEL WITH THIS COUPON FREE FINGER WAVE when you set a Manicure, Shampoo or Arch. Given under expert supervision. Same FREE offer every day except Saturday. A small charge is made for treatments. CENTRAL BEAUTY COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg. Lincoln 0432
Just try it! Eat three cakes of Fleiach* mann’s fresh Yeast every day, regularly—before each meal, or between meals and at bedtime—plain or dissolved in water (a third of a glass). You can get Fleischmann’s Yeast, you know, at grocers, restaurants and soda fountains almost everywhere, and every cake is rich in three vitamins—B, G and D. * * * Important— Fleischmann’s Yeast foe health comes only in the foil-wrapped
cake with the yellow label. It’s yeast in its fresh, effective form the kind that famous doctors recommend . Ask for Fleischmann’s Yeast by name!
~3 cakes a day
.MARCH 31, 1932
