Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 88, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Study Club in Irvington Drafts Plans The home with its problems of family life will be the principal interest of the Irvington Mothers Study Club to op°n its 1932 season with a president's day luncheon, Oct. 5. at Whispering Winds. Mrs. J. Ladd Mozley, president, will extend greetings as will Mrs. Charles F. Bechtold. Other officers arc Mrs. J. C. Siegesmund, vicepresident; Mrs. C. E. Eash, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Dennis Dalton, recording secretary, Mrs. E. R Campbell, treasurer, and Mrs. C. E. Flowers, publicity. Plan Special Program Mrs. Bechtold is delegate to the Seventh district, Indiana Federation of Clubs, and Mrs. G. H. Marriott, alternate. Mrs. Irwin Ward will represent the club in the Irvington Union of Clubs, with Mrs. A B. Clark, as alternate. The program committee, composed of Mesdames Nick Puckett, Allen P. Vestal and Karl G. Whitney, has arranged several special meetings. A Christmas program will be given Dec. 7 with Christmas music featured. Election of officers will take place Jan. 11, when a club institute will be discussed. On Feb. 1, charter members will be guests and on March 1 a debate will be held on the present educational system. Organized in 1912 Guest day will be observed May 3 and husbands of members will be entertained at a night party June 7. Standing committees are as follows: membership, Mesdames Silas J. Carr, H. A. Henderson and E. J. Hirschman; social, Mesdames Sylvester Moore, Fay Poarch and C. W. Compton, and lookout, Mesdames W. H. Cooper, E. W. Lawson, Alvin Fisher, C. E. Thomas and C. L. Price. The club organized in 1912 has thirty active and two associate members.

Local Sorority Delegates Will Attend Parley The national convention of Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority, of the colleges of education in the United States, will open Friday at Estes park, Colorado, for a three-day session. Miss Dorothy Cecil Thompson, president of the college of education of Butler university, will irpresent the local Chi Chi chapter, accompanied by Miss Ann Fern, sponsor. Miss Eleen Brown is alternate. They will leave Chicago Wednesday on a special train, to be joined by delegates from the south and east. Mrs. B. F. Lieb, delegate for Chi Chi alumnae, who is visiting in Los Angeles, will accompany the delegates from Los Angeles and San Diego. Other officers of the local chapter are: Mis* Mildred Morgan, vice-president; Miss Elizabeth Kidweli, corresponding secretary; Miss Margaret Isenhour, treasurer; Miss Mildred Enman, recording secretary: Miss Frances Pearce. chaplain; Miss Brown, editor and rush captain. Alumae officers are: Miss Evelyn Hall, president: Miss Bernice Lamb, vice-president; Mrs. Jane Foltz McDavett, ex-collegio secretary; Mrs. Dorothy Ramsey Kariman, secretary, and Miss Margaret Dow. treasurer.

JUNIOR HADASSAH WILL HOLD OUTING Indianapolis unit of Junior Hadassah entertained with a rush party and treasure hunt Sunday at Northern Beach. Members and their guests left the Kirshbaum center at 2. A picnic supper was served in the evening, followed by the treasure hunt, a program of magical tricks and a beauty contest. Miss Barbara Blatt headed the committee in charge, assisted by Misses Lena Rogin, Leah Tavel, Frieda Brill and Rose Einstandig. MRS. 11. C. MOORE TO RECEIVE SUNDAY Mrs. Harry Coleman Moore received informally from 4 to 7 Sunday afternoon at the home of her sister, Mrs. Clark Day, 29 West Forty-second street, in honor of Miss Helen Sinclair's house guest, Miss Hallie McNeil, Miami. Fla., formerly of Indianapolis. Summer flowers were arranged about the home. Mrs. Moore was assisted by a group of old friends of Miss McNeil. There are no invitations. MESSLINGS TO BE FETED BY FRIENDS Misses Rhoda and Polly Roberts entertained Saturday night at their home. 1626 Main street. Beech Grove, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Messling, who will celebrate their fifth wedding anniversary. Other guests will be: Misses rrences Roach. Clara Triplett, Cora Triplett. Marv Virginia Baker Marv Starks. Elsie Canada, Eunice Page and Messrs. Claude Paige. Wtlliam Huffnagel. Lawrence Walsh. Aron Starks. Roy Coutrell. Charles Hoffmeier. Charles Roach, and John Roberts. MISS YOUNG WILL GO TO INSTITUTE Miss Nellie C. Young, director of the children's division of the Indiana council of religious education, will attend an institute to be held at Richmond, Aug. 29, under the auspices of the city and county divisions. The county-wide meeting is interdenominational. Mrs. Myrtle Shallenburg of Richmond is in charge of children's work in that town. H. A. C. MEMBERS GUESTS AT DANCE Members and guests of the Hoosier Athletic Club were entertained with a dance on the roof garden on Saturday night. Th next dance will be held on Saturday night, Aug. 27, after which tha ballroom will be closed until the formal fall openeing. Sept. 17. Otto Rooe is chairman of the Club entertainment committee.

Early American Furniture for Guest, Sitting Rooms

This the first of a series of articles on home canning, written by | To make the most of the investment in equipment and raw :

—lnterior from Trutype House, Abraham & Strauss. New York. The emergency guest room above show's the space-saving decorativeness of early American pieces. It is a low post bed beneath the scenic chintz, and the little table is copied from a seventeenth century trestle and stretchers. The silhouettes are excellent for the small walls. The colonial alliance of maple furniture, scenic wallpaper and glazed chintz, provides the charm of the sitting room above. The table is a double gate and the secretary a copy of a very early museum piece. The hunting print on the wall is a coiorful touch.

MAN N£IW‘ no MOI\ALS! TvßvjANt JORDAN xr

YOUNG girls who WTite to Jane Jordan can be sure of an honest answer, based on facts and free from superstition. What question would you like to have answered? Dear Jane Jordan—A group of girls discussing the topics of life would like to have your opinion a* to whether a girl can win a man more quicklv by acquiescing to him or bv letting' him know that she won t indulge in anything like that. Also vour opinion of what men think of a girl who does, even when the man is the first one. And do you think a man reallv loves and respects a gin if he does? JUST PALS. Dear Just Pals —No matter how I answer you. I’m sure to be wrong in part. Men differ, so that no answer is true in all cases. It doesn't take any great amount of brains to figure out that the reason so many marriages fail is that the man was seized with a physical passion for a girl whom he could not take without wedlock. After marriage was consummated he discovered that his passion was solely physical. This soon fades without supplementary interests to keep it alive. Now it stands to reason that, had he been able to gratify this urge beforehand he never could have been persuaded to marry the girl, and tragedy would have resulted for her. For that matter, it is a tragedy for the girl eithei way, and a powers u 1 argument Girl Faces for more careful rr..„, j.. consideration of lra S ed > ,n other factors than Either Case, the physical in mating. The average man also clings to his traditional upbringing, which stresses the necessity of chastity in woman. How' else can he be sure that his children are his own? The desire to leave his property to his own progeny makes him adamant in his demand for a woman of no sexual experience. How else can he make woman go against the dictates of her owm nature by remaining a virgo intacta unless he scorns her for the slightest slip? Few men go through this process of reasoning to learn what makes them lose respect for the girl who gives herself without marriage What this loss of respect really means is that the man has lost confidence in the woman as the guardian of his paternity. Even though a man has posiMan Wants five physical to Re Sure proof ihat he is a io ne auie girl - s first lover of Paternity, he never can be sure that he will be her last. He reasons to himself. “If she gave herself to me without marriage, why not some-

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Orange juice, cereal, cream, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Green pea soup, crotons, grated carrot sandwiches, egg lemonade. Dinner — Baked salmon trout, casserole of eggplant, lettuce and cucumber salad, rice pudding with gooseberry sauce, milk, coffee.

body else? I can’t trust her.” Although his reasoning here is somew'hat faulty, it is true in enough cases to put him on his guard. Even if he marries the girl, he often makes her life miserable by his jealousy and mistrust. No matter how often she reassures him. “There is no one but you,” he makes himself wretched with the counter question, “How can I be sure?” On the other hand, it is futile for any thinking person to deny that there are cases where an engaged couple have anticipated the pleasure of marriage during their engagement without apparent damage to their love. I do not know why Love Lost this works out • • nrif .. well in a few in Majority cases, whereas it of Cases, spells destruction to love in the majority. Perhaps the people involved have a more delicate sense of morality and are not so dependent upon legislation to maintain a decent standard of conduct. One thing you may be sure of—that is, that their love for each other went far deeper than the momentary disturbance of the flesh. Last of all. we have the group of moral rebels who openly defy the vetoes and restrictions of the age in which they live. From their point of view, the emotional life of the individual is none of the state's business. Soviet Russia possibly is the Only state which agrees with the individual in this pronouncement. There, young people may unite freely and separate easily if they find their emotion is Individual insu ff i cient to Suits Splf su PP° rt a lifertuiih chmi tong comradeship in Rusisa. While it is difficult at this distance to determine the truth about Russia, the most reliable writers admit that both good and evil have resulted. There have been ugly complications, which result when people with coarse and greedy senses gratify them without restraint. The higher types have benefited most by the removal of a moral code which crushed their right to erotic expression when circumstances prevented conformity. These moral rebels are in the minority in our country .and are ostracised by the majority, who resist any change in the moral order. It is social suicide for a girl in an unsophisticated community to emulate the example of the minority. Here then, young ladies, are the facts as I see them, without moral adjurations from me. If you want my advice as well as my opinion, it is this: When in doubt, don’t. U O tt Dear Jane Jordan—A letter signed M. E H. in The Times appealed to me \erv much, as I find myself in simiiiar circumstances. I would like to correspond with M E H. A. F. Dear A. F.—Unfortunately. I have misplaced M. E. H.'s address. If she will send it again. I will forward your letter, along with one from M. H. Officers to Be Named Election of officers of Sigma Phi sorority. Alpha chapter, will be held tonight at tha Antlers.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Cost of Living Reduced for Winter If You Can Foods With Judgment This is the first of a series of articles on home canning, written by Sister Mary, food expert for The Times and NEA Service. BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer HOME canning in variety and quantity definitely will reduce next winter’s cost of living and should be considered on a business basis, either when we produce or when we buy foods to can. To make the most of the investment in equipment and raw food products, every homemaker should plan carefully in regard to her own family needs. The number of jars or cans which can be produced from a bushel of fruits or vegetables naturally will vary slightly according to the size of the pieces, the skill with which the can is packed and the quantity of syrup of juice. f

But the following table, showing the usual number of one-quart cans one bushel of a certain fruit or vegetable will make, may be convenient in estimating your own needs: Green or string beans 13 quarts Unshclled lima beans in quarts Peas (in pods) 10 quarts Corn (husked) 6 quarts Peaches 16 to 18 quarts Tomatoes 16 quarts Pears 18 quarts Plums 20 quarts

Canned Goods Important The question of what to can is, of course, largely an individual one, but every household should have a canning budget based on its needs. There are 1,095 meals to be prepared during the year, and if nutrition and economy are considered, canned foods play an important part in these repasts. After a home maker knows how much canning she wants to do, she can market to advantage. A small canner or pressure cooker, which fits over one burner, makes it possible to can three or four jars of vegetables daily when one is in the kitchen preparing luncheon. The processing is taking place while the foods are being made ready and cooked. A large canner or cooker, which takes care of twelve or sixteen jars of course takes up so much room on the top of the stove that it is almost impossible to do any other cooking. Use Pint Jars If you are a family of two or three it is sensible to can most fruits and vegetables in pint jars. A well-packed pint jar will be sufficient for one meai, while a quart can would be too much and the remaider might be wasted if not used quickly. Even a family of four will find such vegetables as peas and lima beans packed in pint jars sufficient for their needs. The family of four or more will use quart jars to advantage. Before you begin to can, it is a good idea to estimate hov many jars you probably will need during the winter for family meals and also for company dinners. A few jars of extra fine products for special occasions are an asset to your stock. Although families differ in the amounts of food used, the calculation for one person can be multiplied by the number in the family and an adequate working basis reached. Here Is a Budget For one person for thirty-two weeks, allowing one serving of tw r o vegetables besides potatoes each day, the following budget has been worked out: Tomatoes. 3 servings a week, Vi cub size of serving, 24 pints. Green beans. 2 servings a week. Vi eup a serving, 16 pints. Corn, 1 serving a week. >-4 enp a serring. 8 pints. Peas, 1 serving every two weeks. Vi cup a reeving, 4 pints. Beets. 1 serving per week, M cup a serving, 8 pints. Carrots. 1 serring a week. Ifc eup a serving, 8 pints. Soup mixture. 3 servings a week, eup a serving. 24 pints. Spinarh, 2 servings a week. Vi cup • serving, 16 pint'. If winter vegetables which are stored, such as cabbage, celery, squash, rutabagas and parsnips, are used regularly, the quantity of canned foods required is naturally decreased. Twenty Pounds Enough If you figure on serving cabbage three times a week, allowing less than one-fourth pound a serving, twenty pounds should be calculated

for each person over a period of thirty-two weeks. Twenty-one pounds of onions will allow two servings a week. The dried vegetables, peas, beans, corn and lentils, do their share toward decreasing the amount of canned foods necessary to take one through the winter, too, and should be included in every canning budget.

Card Parties

Center Council, Security Benefit Association, will have a benefit card party at 8:30 Tuesday night at the hall, 116 1 a East Maryland street, fourth floor. George H. Thomas. Woman's Relief Corps 20, will give a c#rd party at 2 Wednesday at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street. Center Council 1836 will have a euchre and bunco party Tuesday night at 11614 East Maryland street.

DEMOCRATIC CLUB TO HOLD PARLEY Autumn meeting of the Indiana Women’s Democratic Club will be held Oct. 5 at Richmond. All Democratic state candidates are invited to attend. Luncheon will be served at noon. Many prominent members of the party from over the state will be present. Mrs. Timothy P. Sexton, Indianapolis, vice-president, is a member of the committee in charge. WEDDING OF CITY COUPLE ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. John Parson Lucas, 806 Fairfield avenue, announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Virginia Lucas, to Paul Willard Finney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Finney, 3868 Carrollton avenue. The wedding took place at noon Saturday in the parsonage of the Broadway M. E. church.

MISS THELMA KING ALUMNAE HOSTESS Miss Thelma King entertained members of the Alpha Chi Omega Alumnae Club of Butler university with a bridge party Saturday afternoon. Guests included: Mesdames Marvin Cochran. Robert Brown. Kurt Ehlert. George Walker, Leota Barclay and Misses Leila Shipman. Marjory Moore, Dorothy 7 Patterson, Lucinda and Katherine Smith. La Donna Lamb and Dorothy Lambert. Hold Edwards Reunion Twenty-second annual reunion of the Edwards family was held Sunday at Columbus with fifty-two present. Aug. 20, 1933, was chosen as the date for the next reunion to be held at Garfield park. City Man Marries Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Eloise Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Harris, Antwerp, 0., to Richard Scott Orton. 312 North Ritter avenue, Indianapolis, which took place Saturday in New York. They will live in Indianapolis. Luncheon Is Held Social service department of the Women's Department club of Municipal Gardens held a covered dish luncheon today. Following luncheon members sewed for the Needlework Guild. Mrs. Lat Gatewood was chairman.

Club Women onTourVisit Scandinavia Fourteen members of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs visited recently in Scandinavia as one of the stops in the fifth annual good will tour, according to Mrs. Geline MacDonald Bowman of Richmond, national president and leader of the tour, The grounds of Brottningholm. for several hundred years the summer palace of Swedish kings, was the scene of a luncheon given in their honor. Mrs. Axel Wallenberg, wife of a former Swedish ambassador to the United States, was hostess at the affair which ended a series of entertainments for the American party. Besides being feted by Mrs. Wallenberg, the group was enteratined at tea in Stockholm by Mrs. John Motley Morehead, wife of the American minister to Sweden. A special program of songs was broadcast in honor of the American party in the Norwegian capital, Oslo, at an entertainment given by Mr. and Mrs. Christian Sinding. In the Hanseatic tow r n of Bergan, a concert of typical Norse music was arranged by the municipality at Haakon’s hall in honor of the American tourists. The party has visited in Paris, Berlin, Warsaw. Kiev, Moscow. Leningrad and Helsingfors. It is the third tour in Scandinavia.

Country Club Golf Tourney to Be Started Qualifying rounds in the annual women’s golf championship tournament at the Indianapolis Country Club began at 9:30 this morning, continuing until Wednesday, when match play will begin. Competition for the title will close Saturday noon when prizes will be awarded to the champion and other winners. Miss Ruth White, 1931 champion, will defend her title. Miss Elizabeth Lockhard is chairman of the tournament activities, assisted by Mesdames Burrell Wright, P. R. Matthews and H. D. Ridgley. Other tournaments to be sponsored by the club are an invitational meet Sept. 12, a mixed two-ball foursome tournament Sept. 15 for the Haueisen cup. and a guest day event Sept. 8.

Personals

Mrs. Lou Casey, 3061 North New Jersey street, will go to Chicago to attend the hairdressers’ convention to be held Aug. 23 to 25. She will be accompanied by her grandson, Jack Lederer. Mrs. Felix T. Me Whir ter, 5241 North Meridian street, has gone to Ocean Grove, N. J., to be the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Frank F. Hutchins. On her return, she will visit the General Federation of Women’s clubs’ headquarters in Washington. Mrs. Henry E. Ostrom and daughter. Ethel Mae, and son, Henry, 1512 North Meridian street, left today for Montreat, N. C. Mrs. Lafayette Page, Woodstock drive, and Mrs. Wendell Sherk left today for New York. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Helm and daughter of Detroit are visiting Mr. Helm’s parents at 2342 College avenue. Among the Indianapolis residents registered this week end at the Edgewater Beach hotel, Chicago, were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ames, 1511 West Washington street; Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Davis. 2509 College avenue: Mr. and Mrs. George Sadlier, 2102 North Meridian street; Miss Mary Jane Sadlier, 2209 North Capitol avenue: Mr. and Mrs. O. B. 5775 North Delaware street; Mr. and Starks Jr., 4923 East Washington street: Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Weinman, Mrs. John A. Welch, 3969 North New Jersey street, and M. C. Jones, 5542 North Delaware street. Miss Adelaide Gould has returned from Meridian, Miss., where she has spent the summer with her parents. She is now living with her grandmother, Mrs. J. E. Randall, 414 East Fall Creek boulevard. Dr. and Mrs. Frank Gastineau, 5344 North Pennsylvania street, have returned from Glacier national park. Miss Bernice Grant has gone to Sioux Falls. S. D.. to visit Miss Nina Mae Jarvis, a former roommate at Butler university. William Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Clyde Hoffman. 5315 North Pennsylvania street, has gone to Estes Park. Colo., to attend the national convention of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. John David Millett, 4177 fcarrollton avenue, also will go to the convention. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Kennedy and* Miss Mary C. Kennedy, 5545 North Meridian street, are at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York. Miss Primrose Selden of Cedar Rapids, la., has returned to her home after several weeks’ visit with her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Townsend, 2919 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Townsend entertained last week with a bridge party for her niece. Dr. and Mrs. Urban F. D. Stork, recently married here, will be at home at 2037 Bellemeade avenue, Evansville, after Sept. 1. Miss Eloise Palmer is the house guest of Miss Anna Stanfield of South Bend. Miss Frances Marshall is visiting Miss Marian Bothwell at Martinsville. Mr. and Mrs. Urban K. Wilde and daughter. Miss Alice Wilde, 2358 Kenwood avenue, and William F. Becker, 4116 Park avenue, are taking several days’ motor trip. ZETA TAU ALPHAS GIVE BRIDGE TEA Indianapolis Alumnae of the Indiana university chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority entertained with a bridge tea at the Columbia Club Saturday afternoon, for thirty girls who will matriculate at the university this fall. Miss Elizabeth Siefert was chairman of the committee in charge, assisted by Mrs. Theodore Applegate, Mrs. Robert Andrew. Mrs. Carl Turpin, Misses Laura Shultz, Hilda Siefert and Ruby Beil.

What’s in Fashion?

Fur-Trimmed Coats Economical Directed By AMOS PARRISH

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YORK, Aug. 22.—Fall’s furtrimmed coats—and they’re lovely!—sing the tune of the times ... a fine, rousing, “get-together” song with an air of “practical economy.” That doesn’t mean they're cheap coats—or trickily got up to make folks think they’re getting lots for their money. Because that’s neither practical nor economical . . . because it’s neither fashionable nor enduring. This fall’s fur-trimmed coats are brimful of quality. Their fabrics and furs are durable as well as beautiful. Their colors are easy to wear. Their lines are quite simple. But though lines are simple, collars and sleeves are quite decorative. Sleeves Are Full There’s comfortable fullness in most sleeves. It's inserted in or above the elbow in many unusual ways, resulting in seams and gathers and gorges that look intricate and difficult to do. There are sleeves that look very leg o’ mutton-ish with snug wrists and fullness up high near the shoulders. Sleeves with spiral bands of fur. Sleeves with fur encrusted on to generous puffs of fabric. Sleeves that are almost half fur. Fur cuffs are few. When you find them you’ll usually find, too, that they’re set back from the wrist. Practical, since they don't rub so easily. Shawl Collars Flattering Collars are stunning! Shawls of many kinds—that fasten high or fasten low . . . flattering to wear and warm. Coats with fur revers that push up to make a lovely frame for the face. Collars that circle the throat close and cozy . . . and can be opened and pushed out over the shoulders. Scarfs that drape and button. Sometimes fur makes a deep plastron or bib effect down the front. Or a yoke that goes down over the shoulder line. Sometimes it makes the whole upper part of the bodice. There are capelets of fur (and how 1890ish these look!) and a few

WE EXPLODE GRAINS to 8 times normal size Why are Puffed Wheat and Rice "shot from guns”? Because this process breaks jQ open every tiny food cell. Steam cooks the contents. Makes every grain so com- In addition Puffed Grains pletely digestible that a are now made twice as crisp single dish of Puffed Grains, as ever before. Twice as dewith milk and sugar/gives licious. Buy them today. No the energy value of a baked cereal is like*the food that’s potato or lamb chop. shot from guns!” Now “Twice-Crisped”! Puffed Wheat-Puffed Rice

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coats really have deep capes that come down to a point in the back. Fox is smart. Silver Fox touches up many black coats. And sleekly shining black fox, too. Anew shade —burgundy—is just a bit more mauve-like than the becoming blue fox and is striking on a brown or wine red coat. Mink and kolinsky . . . furs of luxury and long life ... are used in shawls and revers on brown or beige coats. Flat furs, too .. . caracul. Persian and beaver. They are worked into almost any kind of collar there is. There’s no one fur—or way of using fur—that you must have if you’re to be smart this fall. There are many. And the smart one is the one that fits your face, your figure, and your purse. Next: “Hour-glass" figure is revived for fall.

Daily Recipe CREAMED HA M AND MUSHROOMS ON TOAST 2 cups baked ham, diced 1-2 pound fresh mushrooms 4 tablespoons butter !+ teaspoons flour 2 cups milk Salt and pepper Wash, peel and cut up the mushrooms. Fry until browned in the butter. Remove the mushrooms. Add flour to the butter and stir until smooth. Add milk and cook until it begins to thicken. Add salt and pepper, diced ham and mushrooms to this sauce. When thoroughly heated serve on rounds of toast.