Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 226, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1933 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Bridge Event Is Scheduled at Avalon Mrs. Howard E. Xyhart Is General Chairman of Club Affair. Mrs. Howard E. Nyhart is general chairman in charge of the luncheon-bridge to be held at the Avalon Country Club at 1 Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Robert Sander and Mrs. Oscar C. Haug will assist Mrs. Nyhart. Appointments will be in the Valentine motif, with appropriate table decorations, flowers and luncheon menus. Guests arriving before 1 will receive a bonus oi 250 points, as has been the custom in the last lunch-eon-bridge meetings. Between sixty and seventy are expected. A bridge tournament of the club has been organized to meet the second and fourth Thursday afternoons in each month for six meetings. A luncheon will precede the bridge play. The tournament is open to members of the club and their friends. Mrs. Clark W. Day has charge of arrangements. The first meeting is scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 9. Auction will be played.

COMPOSERS’ GUILD TO MEET SATURDAY

Edward Bailey Birgc of Indiana university school of music will speak on ‘•Nationalism in Music” at the Composers Guild meeting at 2 Saturday in the Severin, following the monthly meeting of the executive board of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs. A program of original compositions will be presented by members. Mrs. Frank B. Hunter, president of the federation, will preside at the board meeting at 10. EUREKA CLUE TO GIVE FETE TONIGHT Dr. Andrew Soudah of the SunnySide sanatorium staff and Murray A. Auerbach, executive secretary of the Indiana Tuberculosis Association, will be honor guests at a party sponsored by the Eureka club at 8 tonight in the Washington. All former patients of the Marion county tuberculosis hospital and other tuberculosis institutions have been invited. The program includes magic tricks performed by Billy Steinmetz and music provided by the Steiner studios. Joseph Hamilton is in charge of the arrangements. The Eureka club is composed of former Sunnyside patients who are interested in rehabilitation of tuberculosis patients. G. If. ESTERLINE WEDS TULSA GIRL Announcement has been made of the marriage oc Miss Ann Miller of Tulsa, Okla., to George W. Esterline. son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Esterline. 5105 North Meridian street. The wedding took place last week and Mr. and Mrs. Esterline have motored to New York and Washington. Mr. Esterline attended Dp Pauw university, where he is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. JEWISH COUNCIL TO HEAR REVIEWS Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review ‘'Real RomanofT,” by Bodkin, and ‘ The Fountain," by Morgan, befor the book review club of the Indianapolis section, National Council of Jewish Women,” at. 10:15 Wednesday morning at Kirshbaum Community Center. JOB'S DAUGHTERS TO HOLD DINNER Miss Mary McColloh is chairman of the committee in charge of the annual dinner to be given Friday night at the Foodcraft shop by Job's Daughters. Bethel 4. Cards and dancing will follow. Assisting the chairman will be Misses Marian De Hart and Dorothea Maple. VAGABONDING TRIP TO BE DESCRIBED ‘‘Vagabonding in Southern Indiana” will be described by Mrs. E. C. Rumpler before the dinner of the Pi Alpha class of Central Christian church. Tuesday night, at the Foodcraft shop. A playlet, "Fifty Years Ago in an Indiana Home.” will be directed by Mrs. M. D. Didway. Mrs. Rumpler is teacher of the class. PAST HR ESI DENTS ARE PAID HONOR Mr. and Mrs. George Everett. 122 North Kealing avenue, gave a dinner Sunday night at their home for tiie Past Presidents’ Club of the Harold C. McGrew Auxliary 3, United Spanish War Veterans. Honor guests were Mr. and Mrs. William Ashford and husbands of the members. Mrs. George Everett is the club president. Remy Is Speaker William H. Remv addressed the assembly of Park school this morning on "The Importance of Laws in a Complex Society.”

Daily Recipe FRENCH PANCAKES Sift two cups flour with a quarter teaspoon of salt, then mix in unbeaten eggs. Add enough milk to make a thin batter, about two cups, stirring it in a little at a time. Strain the mixture and flavor with a spoon of grated orange rind Butter a small frying pan and cook the cakes in that. They should be very thin. After the pancakes are brown on both sides spread them with currant jelly, roll them and sprinkle with powdered sugar. Serve as dessert.

White Dining Room Is Newest Type a a b nan American Maple Furniture Gives Added Touch of Beauty

• (From Gimbels, New York.l With white walls and rubbed maple woodwork, a rag rug and maple furniture in early American design, this dining room is an example of consistent arrangement.

BY JULIA BLANSHARI) NEA Service Writer NEW YORK. Jan. 27.—Now that families are reunited in homes, whether they are there from choice or just because they can’t afford to go places and see things, is immaterial. The thing to do is to make the home so attractive that the habit will last. Dining rooms have increased importance this year. There is something magic in the charm of a home-cooked meal served in pleasant surroundings that makes such hospitality remembered long. White dining rooms are the new-

Radcliffe Dean to Be Honored in Visit to City Miss Bernice Brown, dean of Radeliffe college, will be honored at two affairs here while visiting Mrs. T. C. Howe, 4226 North Meridian street. Members of the Radcliffe Club and Miss I. Hilda Stewart, principal of Tudor Hall, will be hostesses. Miss Stewart will give a tea at 4 Monday at the school, and the alumnae club will entertain with a luncheon Tuesday at the Propylaeum. Invitations for the luncheon have been issued to various Radcliffe clubs in Indiana, wives of the deans at Butler university and other college alumnae clubs. Mrs. Evans Woollen Jr. is in charge of the luncheon. Mrs. Austin V. Clifford, president, will preside. Miss Brown will leave Tuesday night.

W. C. T. U. Notes

Irvington union, W. C. T. U„ will meet with Mrs. Anna Dirk, 50 Kenmore road, at 2 Wednesday when Mrs. Maude Rumpler will address the group on “The Value of Total Abstinence to a Life.” Mrs. Lillian Shortridge will be the leader for the day. Devotions will be in charge of Mrs. Fannie Hildreth. A group of piano numbers will be played by Miss Virginia Hitchcock. Miss Irene Trueblood, president, will preside. Meridian union will hold its Frances Willard memorial meeting at the home of Mrs. C. E. Carter, 4905 College avenue, Wednesday. The devotional hour will be conducted by Mrs. Hiram Gemmer. and Mrs. Philip Zoercher and Mrs. William Rothenberger will be speakers. The new president, Mrs. A. C. Hawn, will preside. Nina Brigham union will meet at 7:30 Wednesday with Mrs. Florence Anderson, 1026 South Sheffield avenue. Devotions will be given by Miss Mary Porter, and the musical program by Mrs. Anderson. L. E. York, superintendent of the Indiana AntiSaloon League, will address the meeting on "Prohibition's Outlook at the Present Time.” Mrs. Addie Lancaster, president, wlil preside.

Card Parties

Corinthian Auxiliary will give a bridge and euchre party Friday night at the Evergreen Masonic Temple, 2515 West Washington street. Drill team. Women of the Moose, will give a card party at 8 Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Fred Kinnan. 829 South New Jersey street. Mrs. Jean Butze is drill captain.

Sororities

Pledges of Alpha Gamma sorority will meet Tuesday afternoon at the home of Miss Mary Jane Holliday, 515 East Forty-second street. Alpha chapter of Rho Delta sorority will entertain rushees with a spread at 6:30 Thursday night, at the home of Mrs. Joseph Kersey, 3007 East Tenth street. Beta Theta Chi sorority will meet tonight at the Wilking Music studio. TWO COUPLES WED IN DOUBLE RITES In a double wedding ceremony Friday, Miss Doris J. Davis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Davis, 925 West Thirtieth street, became the bride of Merlvn Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arlon C. Walker. and Miss Lucile Rice of Spencer was wed to Herman Stewart. The ceremony was read by the Rev. Aubrey H. Moore, pastor of the Seventh Christian church, at the home of the couples. 974 Eugene street Mrs. Davis entertained with a dinner following the ceremony. Sjhe was as.-isted by Mrs. Harry Rice. Mrs.. Wal'.er Harmon and Mrs. Harry F. Hobart.

est kind you can have. Chaste, white walls, white curtains, white woodwork, or polished pins, and pure white table linen is considered smart once more. Against this background you can let your love of color run riot in your drapes, your *"igs, your china end table decorations. And the ensemble gives you a certain restful beauty that highly colored walls never achieved. Combined with white walls, no furniture is more appropriate and as inexpensive as American maple. In an eight-room house of colonial influence, on exhibition, all the rooms are finished in maple and all the furniture is maple. Sur-

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis. Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C 1 o 1 tern No. O I 1 Size Street City State Name

(pi) jL vp \ t AS a \ $ 1 V;J si3i |mm L -y,yY /■ < W ! Jl | i f?

SMART CONTRAST A smart new w r av to use contrast —and did you know that Fifth avenue's latest, is to com- ] bine two shades of one. instead of sharply contrasting colors? For this stunning but easily-made frock, smoke and pearl gray rough crepe was used. Not the effective joining of the contrasting sections, with a deep point in front which tops the .in-verted-pleat. The belt-ends are included smartly in the seams. j Size 16 requires 14 yard 39-inch light. 24 yards dark. Width about 14 yard. Patterns No. 5131 is designed for sizes 14, 16. 18. 20 years. 32. 34, 36. 38. 40, 42 bust. Price. 15 cents. Send for our Fashion Magazine. It contains new, easily-made styles, helpful dressmaking" hints and an authoritative article on wedding etiquet. Price. 10 cents. ASSEMBLY CLUB TO HEAR DR. RICE Dr. Thurman B, Rice will discuss 'The Program of Economy” at the luncheon of the State Assembly Woman's club at 12:30 Wednesday in the Columbia club. Mrs. I. N. Trent of Muncie, president, will introduce the speaker. Reservations are in charge of Mrs. Trent at the ClaypooL

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

[ prisingly inexpensive and absolutely I charming reproductions of historic pieces have been made. Smart With White Walls The dining room is particularly smart -in its white walls, maple woodwork, and its early American furniture. j Along one side is a large sideboard iof very early type. A high cupboard \ arrangement with three drawers is | coppied from the upper part of an : old water bench. The butterfly table, | a copy of an original dating about j 1700 now in the Wadsworth Athe- | neum, can be closed to make a i breakfast table. The chairs are reproductions of early American ones, made of maple, too. The entire center of the room is covered with a handsome round rag rug, of rose and rich blues and yellow, with a handsome black border. Overdrapes Are Ruffled The dainty ruffled window curtains have overdrapes that also are ruffled, made of a reproduction of early American hangings, in cretonne of the same colors as the rug. For this room, the old-fashioned style of using fruit pictures is revived. Over the sideboard there is a vivid still life of fruit and flowers, and smaller fruit pictures, all framed in black with white mats, hang about the room. Two old-fashioned glass lamps are electrified for the top of the sideboard. If you are interested in doing your dining room over in white walls, you can get stunning results in the use of plain colors for the rugs and window drapes, instead of figured. A medium blue, used with white borders for the drapes, with a tiny gold line between the white and the blue, are most effective. Your rug could be the same blue. Green makes a nice foil for white walls, too.

Daddy Must Make Sacrifice So Tot Can Get His Sleep

BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON TT is best for very little children to go to bed early—before dinner, unless you are so situated that noon dinner suits best, and the lighter evening meal is at 5 or 5:30, as happens in many country districts. But right here arises a big problem. When is daddy to see his children if not after he comes home from work? He goes away in the morning usually without time to do more than kiss them a hurried good-bye. If he lives near his work, he may be home for a few minutes at noon, of course, but most fathers, especially in large cities, never see their children until evening. The older children he may see, and even have time for a story or a romp with them before bedtime. Stranger to Tot It is the child under 5 that he may be a stranger to if the proper routine of sleep is adhered to. And to put a child of this age to bed at 6 o’clock is proper. After he is 5, a little boy or girl should be in bed by 7 or not later than 7:30. I believe it is due to this problem about fathers that so many mothers do not approve of the early bed time. And who can blame them? They want their little childen to know and love their daddies. Besides, if dad comes home night after night and finds the baby in bed he is likely to raise a rumpus and declare that this idea of putting kids to sleep at such an hour is all tomfoolery and nonsense. Child Needs Sleep It is right and human that a man should know his children when they are little. He loves them as much as their mother does. But there is one thing to remember. The things that are best for a child (and close to thirteen hours sleep at night is one of them) seem almost invariably to call for sacrifice on the part of one parent or the other, or both. Moreover, a child's memory when he is older usually does not cover this early period. When he is old enough to stay up a little later, this is the time when real memory begins. His father has plenty of time to become his beloved hero and friend. Besides, there are Sundays, too, and perhaps Saturday afternoons if he is working. These hard times, like all other ill-winds, have their good points. Men are seeing more of their families, even if the hours so spent are full of worry and heartaches. Temptations at Table If the family rises late, of course, a young child being thus assured of his full quota of sleep, can be put to bed a little later. But this brings complications. He wants to be at the table with ! the family where he sees pork and beans or potatoes cooked with I cheese, rich gravies, perhaps pie or cake. This is only guessing, but we all

Rushees to Be Feted by Delta Zetas Traditional Rose Dinner Be Given at Chapter House Tonight. The traditional rose dinner of the Delta Zeta sorority at Butler university will honor rushees tonight at the chapter house, 342 Berkley road. Miss Dorothy Wright, president, will be toastmaster and will preside at the candlelight service following the dinner. The table will be centered with an arrangement of Killarney roses, the sorority flowers. Candelabra will hold rose tapers. Place cards will bear the sorority crest. Miss Harriet Ford, soloist, will sing a group of sorority songs, accompanied by Miss Marjorie Campbell. Special guests will be Miss Mary Carriger, president cf the alumnae club, and Miss Harriet Kistner, alumnae adviser. The sorority will hold pledge services Wednesday night for women entering the university the i new semester. Miss Florence Condrey Is chairi man in charge. Her assistants are ! Misses Marguerite Bader, Edna Cabalzer and Maurine Campbell. Luncheon Fete to Be Held by Mothers’ Club Members of the Mothers’ Club of Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority of Butler teachers’ college will meet Wednesday for a luncheon and a business session at the home of Mrs. Howard McDavitt. 4818 East Eleventh street. Mrs. McDavitt is entertaining the club for her mother, Mrs. F. B. Foltz, who will be the hostess. Fourteen will be seated at the table, which will be centered with white sweet peas and red tapers. Each guest will receive a spray of sweet peas. Assistant hostesses wall be Mrs. H. F. Emick, Mrs. William Scott Dow and Mrs. H. C. Hall. brwgeTgiven by HELEN NICHOLSON Miss Helen Nicholson, 6103 Park avenue, entertained members of the Tri Beta sorority with a Valentine bridge party Sunday afternoon. Special guests were Misses Madeline Seiner, Mary Armington, Norma Hart and Mrs. Edward Mooney. SORORITY COUNCIL TO GIVE LUNCHEON The national council of Alpha Omicron Alpha sorority will sponsor a luncheon at 1 Tuesday at the Washington. Mrs. Marian F. Gallup, superintendent of the Indiana womari’s prison, will be the speaker. Mrs. John R. Sentney, national president, will preside.

YOUR CHILD

know that adult food is not baby food. And to deprive him causes trouble. If meals are simple and the kind he can eat, then there is no argument. But fathers do not enjoy such meals as a rule. The evening meal should be a light meal for very little people, and indeed for all children. * Each mother must adjust her work and her schedule to suit her particular case. But it is becoming more and more the custom to tuck the little people into bed early, after their own light little supper at 5, .and gradually men of family are becoming adjusted to the new rule and are making the best of it.

PARTY SPONSOR

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Miss Bethel Monical Miss Bethel Monical is a member of the committee of pledges of the Butler university chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, which will sponsor a card party at 2 Tuesday afternoon at BannerWhitehill auditorium. Miss Dorothy Winter is general chairman. Other members of the committee are Misses Eileen Rocap and Virginia Sheely. NURSERY MANAGING BOARD WILL MEET The monthly meeting of the board of managers of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Association will be held at 10:30 Thursday morning at the nursery home. 542 Lockerbie street. Mrs. R. A. Dennis, president, will be in charge. Recital to Be Given Billy Dean, 514 East Twentieth, will give his first dramatic art recital at 8 Saturday night at the Y. W. C. A., assisted by Phyllis Little. Both are pupils of Mrs. E. R. Bebout. His program will include a group of nine readings, two of which are costume numbers: ‘’Brownie Life ’ and ‘Dixie Land.’’

Collar ‘Makes’ Costume

The galyak collar which turns down the front of the thin woolen jacket and skirt sketched above is one of this spring's novel devices for formalizing a strictly tailored ensemble. The slight puff of the sleeve just above the elbow- offsets the masculine link-button cuff.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Tell your story to Jane Jordan for an impartial opinion. Your questions will be answered in this column. Write your letter now! Dear Jane Jordan —Six years ago, after four years of marriage, I was disillusioned greatly concerning men, including my husband. I tried everything in my power to make things right, and finally got a divorce so that my husband could marry the woman he wanted. The most consoling remark to me at the time was that it evidently had to happen for some reason that I probably would know in the future. About a year after this. I met a man in whom I was quite interested from the beginning. He was very frank in telling me about his marriage and why he was so terribly unhappy and dissatisfied. He told me many times that he would be divorced if it were not for his children. lam very familiar with the married man's story of not being understood, but this is different. During the last five years I have been with him many times. I understand why he is so unhappy, and I positively know that if I decided never to see him again that it would not make things any better, and that he probably would seek some other woman’s company for diversion. He says that he knows positively that his liking for me is not a matter of infatuation, as it never would have lasted over such a period of time. It seems to me as if I must adore this man, as time does not seem to take him far away from me. What I want to know is this: Do you think I am doing a great wrong? ONCE A WIFE. Dear Once a Wife—That dppends on what you mean by wrong. If you mean do I think you are a woman whose sins are as scarlet, the answer is no. If you mean do I think you are ordering your life in an ill-advised manner, the answer is yes. Sophisticates, like Mr. Mencker,, may contend that a woman rather would have a half interest, or even a fifth, in a real man than own the whole of a fool, but I believe that women love too possessively to be content in sharing the man whom they love with another woman. I am not sure that your lover is doing his children any good by living with their mother when he is definitely unhappy in such arrangement. Children are not benefited by union of parents who live together for duty’s sake. If he had more courage, he would make the break and insist upon a more intelligent solution of his problems. Married men, as a rule, are not willing to pay a high price for their love affairs. If there is to be anying in the way of an outside affair, ;it must not cost too much. Few | women are willing to subsist on half I rations all their lives, and I suspect j that you are no exception to this j generalization. tt n tt Dear Jane Jordan —I am 21 j years of age and have been going

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas H. Noyes, 5625 Sunset lane, are visting at the St. Regis hotel in New York City. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Haymann, 5751 Washington boulevard, are guests of the Hotel Everglades in MiaVni. Miss Lucy Link, daughter of Dr. Goethe Link, 4207 North Pennsylvania street, is visiting in South Bend and was a guest Saturday night at a dinner party given by Miss Mary Ann Frash and Robert Frash. 'Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Shields and their son, James Roentgen Shields, 1321 North Meridian street, left Saturday night for a month’s vist at Miami Beach., Fla., and the Bahama Islands. 70 Are Entertained Heath Hustlers Married Folks class of Heath Memorial Methodist church entertained seventy members and guests at a dinner party on Friday night. STAINLESS Same formula . . same price. Id \ original form, too, if you prefer W-sV&KS OVER MILLION JARS USED YEARLY

EVANS' wsm FOR ALI PURPOSES

with a girl three years my junior for nearly a year. She is the kind of girl I always have wanted for a wife, and she is very much in love with me. But there are times when I have a desire to go out with other girls. For a while I stepped out on her, but I quit because I knew if she found out, it would hurt her greatly, but I still want other company. Do you think this is caused from lack of love for her, or am I just too young to settle down! I WONDER. Dear I Wonder—Both of your guesses are right. It is useless for you to suppress your desire to be with other girls when you are 21. It only will rise and smite you later and perhaps cause you a great deal of unhappiness. I have no doubt that you are very fond of the girl in question and that it is not her fault that she is insufficiently interesting to be all women to you. You do her no kindness to refrain from seeing others because you are sorry for her. Pity may be akin to love, but who would accept it instead? Dear Jane Jordan—Here’s what I have to say to "Just Mag,” who criticised me so exactingly. So you think I am too vain to be attractive? I'm not half as vain as I seem to be. To be truthful, there are times when I have an almost inferiority complex. GIN ELLYNE. Dear Gin Ellyne—l suspected as much.

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Itcay X 7'ejdL ftiil of Pip. V After the birth of twins four years ago, I was run down, nervous, irregular, always tired and very disagreeable. Now I feel full of pep. My periods are regular. I never get tired and L am always cheerful. I give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound the credit for the change.” MRS. MARY LIDMILA Box 296, Odebolt, lowa Why don’t you try this medicine? Get a bottle today. Its tonic action may be just what you need to give you more strength and energy. Sold by druggists everywhere. ,

Lyriia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound!

-7AN. 30, 1933

35 Women Added to New Guild St. Vincent’s Group Will Hold All-Day Session on Feb. 6. Approximately thirty-five new members have been enrolled in the St. Vincent's Guild, since its organization last week at the hospital, according to Mrs. Ellard B Duane, who has announced the first allday meeting for Monday, Fob. 6 f in the Louise de Marillac hall ot the nurses’ home. Actual work on the various charitable projects in co-operation with the sisters of the hospital will be started. Mrs. Duane will announce committee chairmen and their assistants. Mrs. Paul C. Furgason will be in charge of the luncheon, assisted by Miss Helen Carroll, Mrs. Philip Derham. Mrs. William Mooney Jr. and Miss Eile°n O'Connor. The work of the guild will be divided into units and new members will be assigned to the division in which they are interested. A meeting of officers was held this afternoon a r the home of Mrs. Duane, 4053 Ruckle street, for the purpose of organizing the committees. Hialeah Draws Many Hoosiers to Turf Races pi/ Timex Special HIALEAH PARK. MIAMI, Fla., jan. 30— Hoosier vacationists frequent the daily races of the Miami Jockey club and center many of their entertainments there. J. V. Stout of Indianapolis entertained last week with a luncheon for Mrs. G. E. Nelson of Indianapolis and other guests. J. H. Trimble of Indianapolis is an active member of the Hialeah club. Guests at a luncheon given by Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Stilwell were Mr.and Mrs. Perry N. Bryan and Mrs. George Forrey of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Shutts of Indianapolis and Miami entertain frequently in their box. Judge and Mrs. A. B. Anderson of Indianapolis were their guests recently.

HONOR GOVERNOR AND MRS. M’NUTT

Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt will be honored at an informal dinner given tonight by Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Weinhardt, 529 North Central court. CITY MAN TO WED TERRE HAUTE GIRL The engagement of Miss Dorothy Wittenberg, daughter of Mrs. Mary Wittenberg of Terre Haute, to Roscoe McPherson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles McPherson of Indianapolis, has been announced. The wedding will take place in April, and the couple will live in Terre Haute.

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