Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 127, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Harrison Is in Ceremony of D I A. R. Birthday anniversary of Mrs. Caroline Scott Harrison, for whom the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution Is named, was celebrated by the chapter Wednesday at the chapter house. William Henry Harrison, grandson of Mrs. Harrison, spoke on the history of the seletcion of Washington as the national capitol. Mrs. Maurice E. Tennant, regent, presided. A display of two gowns was a feature of the meeting. One was that worn by Mrs. Harrison, when she and her husband, Benjamin Harrison, occupied the White House; and the other was one worn by Mrs. Chapin C. Foster at Harrison's Inaugural ball. Mrs. Faster was the organizer of the chapter, and the gown was loaned by Miss Mary Edith Faster. Mrs. Harrison's gown is the chapter's property. Announcement w'as made by Mrs. W. s. Rossetter, chairman of the finance committee, that a series of six lectures on contract bridge byMrs. Thaddeus R. Baker would be sponsored by the chapter. The first will be given at 10:30 Thursday morning, Oct. 20, at the chapter house. The program also included a group of songs by Vaghn Cornish, accompanied by Mrs. Dorothy Knight Greene.

Reservations to Hospital Benefit Party Are Made Reservations for the card party to be sponsored by the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild Friday afternoon at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium have been made by the following: Mesdames J. F. Ward. Charles Hogate. Oiklev White, M. F. Niman. Henry E. Thoms, William F. Hurd. A. J. Hueber. Lee Fox, P. C. Rpilly. Mavmc Bverly, Lula Harvey. Floe Kennon, Warren Harrell, 11. P. Willwerth, Mack Coppock, Roy Cilbson. Fred Fox, J. M. Gillespie, A. J. Porter, E. H. Soufflot, H. C McMlllin, R. N. Costin, Robert Mottern. L. E. Dixon. Charles B. Morrison, 8. B. Taylor, Albert Maguire, Mary Rigg. Harry Foreman. Charies Stephans, George Stockton, W. C. Royer E O. Thompson. W. M. Seward, H. O. Warren. Bert E. Bernard and Miss Alice Vclsey. Mrs. H. O. Warren is ticket chairman. Mrs. W. M. Seward is general chairman, assisted by the following members of the ways and means committee: Mesdames H. O. Warren, H. C. McMillin, Mayme Byerly, L. E. Dixon, Charles B. Morrison and Mrs. Robert Motern, in charge of candy. EXECUTIVE BOARD TO HOLD MEETING\ Members of the executive com- j mittee and chairman of committees j for the Indianapolis chapter, women 1 of the Moose, will meet at 2:30 Friday afternoon at the home of the senior regent, Mrs. David Kelsch, 1539 West New' York street. Plans for the winter's activities will be made. The executive committee is composed of Mrs. Kelsch, Mrs. Noel C. White, junior' past regent; Mrs. Theodore Geise, junior regent; Mrs. Arthur Grant’, • chaplain; Mrs. Michael M. Mahoney, recorder, and Mrs. John Neubauer, treasurer. Committee chairmen are: Mrs. Paul D. Lucas, child care and training: Mrs. Fern Burk, library; Mrs. Harry F. Vice, social service: Mrs. Walter D. flhopmaker. wavs and means; Mrs. John Neubauer. membership: Mrs. William Hoover. special relief; Mrs. Noel C. white, publicity; Mrs Charles Hart, entertainment: Mrs. John Roscnmever. refreshments. and Mrs. Vice, nuditing. TROUSSEAU TEA IS GIVEN FOR FRIENDS Miss Delight Baxter, whose marriage to Orien W. Fifer will take place Saturday night, entertained Wednesday afternoon at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Baxter, 5110 North Meridian street, with a trousseau tea. Guests were a group of her most intimate friends and close relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Baxter will entertain with a bridal dinner for their daughter and Mr. Fifer Friday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. ANNOUNCE RITES HELD IN NEW YORK Mr. and Mrs. Abram L. Block, 3117 North Meridian street, announce the marriage of their daughter, Mrs. Miriam Block Lyon, to Joseph N. Gelman, which took place at noon Wednesday in New York. After Nov. 15 the couple will be at home at 4510 North Meridian street. Meeting Scheduled Beta chapter of Rho Gamma Tau sorority will meet Friday night at the home of Misses Dorothy and Helen Naftzger, 2175 North Pennsylvania street. Sorority to Meet Alpha chapter of Lo Sin sorority will hold its weekly meeting at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Marguerite Caldwell. Old members have been invited to attend.

SPECIAL. For a Limited Time Longer PERMANENT WAVES OUR STANDARD WAVE JHRpEKr jMnßjlly. $•. oo BfS&Mr value Wjfm J^gHULfT Given In j any t> I e JBSI jgMp*. aw dr'inil h.v IMm mEvtSa BgMKW Kk JHljSr operitlr r Beautiful and Lasting houia'wood tfjnT rri PUSH-UP V^aw" Paris Yif Alvetta Marie | Wave, Wave, A5 f Shampoo OSf** B®** jjo oriel ~" 3C for |

Straight Line Brim and Return of Beret Feature Millinery

Models from Miiiinerv Quality Guiid_ Inc 4 Another version of the back \ Robin Hood feather accents the high back of the all-black antelope turban shown at the left | y Hlfc KgpPllli tipped sailor is shown above, ii bovc. Al the right ian evening casqur made of black velvet strips appliqued to cloth of silver. A circular AM,”?" " Will Install If |d SO i m k > ' h t rK i P ' iZZ 'exp'a o ined h lavish her affections and center her J <■ March 28 in Greencastle. Mr. an , , ‘ , ' , .!r" n P^n n b " l^,;’ b 'P s 0 h If not n P° rson - then some cause be 3209 Park avenue aftpr ° ct - 10 - pon e d d ent. Wr ‘'why “anTttSy'be in charge of Mrs. I TU/irt J

Models from Miiiinerv Quality GuiltL Inc. A Robin Hood feather accent* the high back of the all-black antelope turban shown at the left above. At the right is an evening casque made of black velvet strips appliqued to cloth of silver. A circular nose veil trims it.

MANNTRW" MORALS TTvBvJANfe JokdAnxP

If something puzzles you which you would like to have explained, write a letter to Jane Jordan. Or, if you want to express your own opinion on a point, write. The best letters will be published. “ A LL women are queens of tragi\ edy” writes a masculine correspondent. "Why can't they be happy? Os all the fascinating things to be enjoyed in this world, woman is interested in only onelove. "I know a woman with all the money in the world who is wretched because she lives alone. If I had her money, I would have a swell time, traveling from one end of the earth to the other. She won’t go anywhere because it is no pleasure to travel alone. Why is it that women can’t have any fun by themselves? “Even when they’re in love, it doesn’t seem to make them happy. They only stew around because the man they have succeeded in snagging won’t behave in the way they expect. In love or out, I insist they're queens of tragedy. “As such I’m sorry for them, but I don’t them at all. They only make life hard for themselves.’’ It is true that woman's dependence on others for happiness is more or less tragic. She must have some person besides herself on whom to

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lavish her affections and center her ambitions. If not a person, then some cause which enables her to exercise her concern for others. She has an insistent need to be loving others and to have them love her in return. tt tt tt MAN is far more able to satisfy his longings independently. Ambition is more important to him than love. Wealth, honor, fame, and power are satisfactions which he can attain successfully alone. And his sensual longings are stilled easily by any pretty woman who crosses his path. When she is gone, another will do. A woman can not enjoy wealth alone. Honor, fame, or power leave her cold, unless there is a particular person who appreciates her efforts. She can not even enjoy a sunset or a tea party properly without sharing her impressions with somebody else. She is peculiarly dependent upon the approbation of her loved ones and keeps an ever-watchful eye on the reactions of other people toward her. A man will slave his fingers to the bone for a woman and works hardest when he has a woman to work for. But it Is the work and not the woman that’s important. He needs her to appreciate his prowess and to receive his trophies when he brings them home. But if his adventure-loving soul •calls him to the south pole for a two-year stay when his wife is expecting a baby, he is off in a gale of mud. tt ts a A MAN is perfectly happy in a gathering where there are plenty of well-dressed women, women whom he never will see again and whom he has no ambition to annex. It is enough just to look at them and wink wisely at his neighbor if he spies a pretty ankle beneath an indiscreet skirt. A woman in a gathering of men can not help viewing them all as prospective husbands or lovers, and wonders which ones she will be able to charm. In a gathering of women she constantly is comparing her own charms and desirability with those of other women and is downcast or exalted by what she discovers. Woman is happiest when she is intensely aware of herself and her influence on others. That is why a new hat or-a new dress gives her so much enjoyment, by lightening her consciousness of her own desirability. Man is happiest when he has forgotten himself completely. A suit new enough to call his attention to himself makes his acutely miserable and he never feels at home in it until it's a little bit worn. Woman's instinct is to feel, to suffer, and to enjoy, and to lose herself completely in some other creature. Man’s instinct is to flee from himself and reality, to avoid all emotion, and to lose-himself in the outer world. a tt tt / EVEN selfish women who care only for their own advantage still think of themselves in relation to others. They want to outdo their women companions and to drag as many men as possible at their chariot wheel. While their ambition is not to give service, but to exact it, still It is ethers who occupy their attention. The why and the wherefore of woman’s devotion to others is beautifully explained in the words of Gina Lombrosa. 'Feminine altruism is a necessity of the species. If the females were not endowed with it. the life of the world cease, since creation and education of the young presuppose a parent willing to sacrifice all or part of her existence to new creatures, and this parent can not be other than the parent who creates, that is, the mother, the female.’’ tt it a Dear Jane Jordan—Would like to say a few words in answer to a letter published in your column signed by "Yours With a Chuckle.” Mr. chuckle, did vou ever stop to think that the girls are just reflections of the men? They think they must be sophisticated to please the men. Thev are not that wav because they really want to be. It's Just because it's expected of them. You spoke of clean-minded men. How many are they? In all my roamings around the world. I never have found many men who we~e clean minded. I don't know whether vou would think me lovable and sweet or not. but please. Mr. Chuckle, ff you are clean-minded, stay that wav and let everybody know it. I hope a lot of men will copy you. UNSOPHISTICATED DEE.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

McGuffeyites Will Install New Officers Installation of officers and a Riley program will be held Saturday by the Indiana McGuffeyites of School 1 in the Cropsey auditorium of the central library. The installation in charge of Mrs. J. E. Holt is scheduled for 1:30 with the Riley birthday program following at 2. Responses to roll call will be Riley quotations. A musical program will be presented under the direction of Mrs. M. D. Didway. Mrs. F. John Herman will sing special numbers. Appearing on the program will be: Mesdames T. M. Nuzan, Rose Saddler. Martha Bishop, Gertrude Lovelle, Martha Kendall, Carrie Swail and Messrs. M. C. Martz of Mooresville, Charles Mozey and Joseph Malia. Classes to Meet Persons interested in the classes being offered this season by the Actors and Workers Guild of the Civic theater, are asked to meet at 7:30 Monday night at the Playhouse, when those teaching the classes will be present. Final arrangements for the courses will be made.

Daily Recipe BAKED OATMEAL AND APPLES 2 cups quick-c o o kin g oats a U cups boiling water 1 teaspoon salt 6 tart cooking apples 1-2 cup sugar Mix salt with boiling water. Add oats and cock for five minutes. Wash and core the apples and place them in a greased baking dish. Fill the cavities with the cooked oatmeal and use the remainder to fill the spaces between the apples. Sprinkle the sugar over the top, cover and bake in a moderate oven for 35 minutes. Then uncover and cook ten minutes longer. Sprinkle powdered cinnamon over the top, which adds extra deliciousness.

DOYOI wake up more tired than Fleischmann's Yeast not only sos- \j%jaS?' when you vent to bed ... body tens clogging waste matter, hut ac- - A&L, Jff ,'?'" unrelaxed .. . brain throbbing .. . tually “strengthens" the intestinal legs like logs? muscles that help remove it. <•.,.. It’s probably self-poisoning you're Your body is soon able to help j '■'' suffering from, brought on by con- itself. Appetite returns. Digestion | '#?£o j |L> ']R* stipation, commonest of all ills! improves. You sleep more soundly j '<, oP lL L. :. ; . -j We eat rich foods, lead irregular ♦• • wake up refreshed .. . Because ;• IPI W^*'hours, neglect important bodily self-poisoning is checked! jjjj^ And as a result our systems cannot eat 3 cakes of Fleischmann’s Y east f \ throw off their accumulated waste every day, before meals, or between W* W- *W matter regularly. Poisons seep into meals and at bedtime—plain, or in I vl& dMWfr the blood. \Ye are subject to head- water (a third of a glass). You can ' 'IN&k '' aches, skin blemishes, colds. We suf- get Fleischmann's Y east—rich ''ZO? |pi fer from bad breath, coated tongue, in vitamins B, G and D—at v x l|yjp jflm B “that tired feeling.” grocers, restaurants and Now , throughout practically the en- go home at night comtire civilized world, leading medical pletely exhausted. I’d try opnitH. ore. saa*rt Bm.<i iocomor*u< authorities are treating such case, ' mME 0,V < WORLD!"-that’s how you wake up in W 1 3S ons success. as tired as the night be- ' vS?^C i g the morning when you’ve got rid of constipation. They are prescribing fresh yeast f ore .. . Then I started ymM+L. - ;*- regularly three times a day ... a yeast. I can’t tell you p (Left) Here's the simple fresh yeast method doctors adsimple, safe, natural food remedy! how much better I feel!” Add Fleischmann's Yeast to your diet now! Fleischmannafresh Yeast is a Remarkable Health Food thousands eat — 3 Gzto D^y/

The gray felt sailor, shown above, has a tumed-up back brim, and it is worn straight across the brows. The trimming is silver chain applied in looped motifs.

EDITOR

'fy.x —Photo by Voorhis. Miss Julia Ann Sprague

Miss Julia Ann Sprague, Batavia, 0., is editor-in-chief of the Reflector, bi-weekly publication of Indiana Central college. Miss Sprague was chosen to edit the college publication after three years of work on the staff. The editorial staff is: Associate editor, Delmar H. Moore; feature editor. Dorothy Cooper; society editor, Marietta Leland; sport editor. Huber Gilliatt, and columnist, Alva Ward. The business staff includes Edgar Gault, business manager; Edward Shaw, circulation manager. Mrs. Anna Dale Kek is faculty advisor.

Balls’ ’Second Annual Horse Show Slated Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ball, Muncie, announce that they will hold their second annual horse show Sunday afternoon at the Orchard Lawn Riding Academy. There will be a number of entries from Indianapolis, including one from Ft. Benjamin Harrison in the hunters and jumpers class. Other Indianapolis persons with entries are: Messrs, and Mesdames Donald M. Test, August Bohlen and George M. Bailey; Mesdames Alex Metzger and Orland T. Church; Misses Dorothy Metzger and Audrey Pugh; Messrs. H J. Lacey. Charles E. Jewett. Lee Messier, Frank Dalton, Hugh Dempsey and Douglas Davis.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Grapes, cereal, cream, codfish balls, corn bread, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream of squash soup, croutons, open bacon and endive sandwiches, hermits, sweet cider. Dinner — Boiled mutton in spaghetti border, turnip cubes and beet marbles in lemon sauce, jellied cabbage and carrot, salad, pumpkin pie, milk, coffee.

Another version of the backtipped sailor is shown above, in lavender felt, but this one is worn slightly aslant across the brows. City Girl Is Wedded Mr. and Mrs. John J. Kennedy, 5545 North Meridian street, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Mary Katherine, to Thomas J. McCauley, son of Mrs. O. L. McCauley, which took place March 28 in Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. McCauley will be at home at 3209 Park avenue after Oct. 10.

TWICE AS CRISP extra nourishing because SHOT FROM GUNS dainty crisp grains can be so kif&H richly nourishing! Here’s the reason.Whengrainsofwheat r, * WM and rice are sho from guns, i cAn||njfl|H every food 1' is broken open. Its contertj steam L JfiSH cooked. Made so coi ipletely digestible that a single di h and Puffed Rice have been of Puffed Wheat or Rice,with made twice as crisp as ever top milk and sugar, gives the before. Twice as good. Get energy value of a baked these extra crisp, extra nourpotato or a lamb chop! ishing grains from yourgroAnd now Puffed Wheat cer today. Now “Twice-Crisped”! Puffed Wheat-Puffed Rice

OCT. 6, 1932

Shower to Be Held for Miss Leslie Mrs. Warren Dawson and Miss Florence Hinshaw will entertain tonight at the home of Mrs. Dawson, Ninetieth street and River read, with a bridge party and linen shower in honor of Miss Elsie May Leslie. a bride-elect. Miss Leslie will be married Sunday, to William Frenzel. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Leslie. Haverstick Park. The bridal colors, rose and white, will be carried out in the decorations and bridge appointments. At serving time a wedding bell in the colors will hang over the table, and other appointments will be In bridal design. Guests, with Miss Leslie and her mother, will be: Mesdames H B Millspaugn, Harriet Ida Wells, Charles K. Mulvev. E R. Pruitt. Velma Peters. Kenneth Harvey. Carl Hanske. Dr Oertrude Hinahaw. Misses Dorothy Baldridge. Elizabeth Blssell. Mabel Pruitt, Mary Elizabeth Cordes Katherine Thurston. Marian Whetstine. Dorothy Randall. Laura Duffv. Lois Ann Hodgin* Rosemary Brown. Marian Master.. Hilda Smith, Elaine Smith and Florence McDonald. MISS~BYRD named SORORITY LEADER Miss Virginia Byrd was elected president of the Alpha chapter. Phi Theta Delta sorority, at a meeting held Wednesday night at the home of Miss Alice Collester, 2338 Kenwood avenue. Other officers chosen are: Mis*i Alice Keller, vice-president; Miss Collester. secretary; Miss Dorothy Blue, treasurer; Miss Ethel Huse, sergeant-at-arms, and Miss Sarah Jane Bennett, chaplain. The next meeting will be held Wednesday at the Severin.