Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 233, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1933 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Mrs. A. J. Boole, Head of World W. C. T. U„ to Be Guest Here Friday 700 Guests Are Expected to Attend Tea in Observance of ‘Temperance and Mission Day’ at North M. E. Church. Mrs A J. Boole of Brooklyn. N Y president of the world and national W. C T. U , will be honor guest at a tea given at 2 Friday afternoon at the North Methodist church. 3803 North Meridian street, under the auspices of the Corral Union. The affair is in observance of "Temperance and Mission Day." Mrs. Boole who heads the union in forty two nations was elected president of the national organization at, the convention held in Indianapolis in 1927. Approximately 709 guests are expected to attend the tea.

In the receiving line with the honor guest will be the gi\jup officers: Mrs. L E. Schultz, president; Mrs. T. J. Parsons, vice-presi-dent; Mrs. Talmadge Smith, corresponding secretarj; Mrs Claude O. Lowder, recording secretary; Mrs. George Banes, treasurer, and Mrs. F. P. McCoy. L. T. L. secretary. Wear Native Costumes Young women from foreign countries, enrolled in the various Indiana universities and colleges, will wear costumes representing their nhtive land. The dress of Scandinavia, Italy, France, China, Japan, South America, England wnl be uisplayed. A musical program will be provided by Virgil Pnemester, baritone soloist, accompanied by Lee Welker, organist. Members of the hostess committee include Mesdames A. M. Glossbrenner, W. E. Pennington, uvid Butier Jameson, Fred Hoice, William Dobson, Joan G. Benson, D. O. Tayior, John Price, O. M. Pnumger, Fenx McWhirter, C. W. Ackman, Frank P. McCoy, J. W. Esierline, Henry Aslrom, Chanes Mueilcr, Albert Pauley, Charles A. Breece, H. S. Leonard, C. L. Asbury, George Barnes, Claude Lowuer, x Smith, F. A. Durneil, Charles bmiui, Clara Hinman, William C. Rartinger and William H. Foreman. Committees in Charge Committees in charge of the arrangements lor the anair are; Program -Mrs. McWJiirter, Mrs. Pauley, Mrs. Curtis Hoages and Mrs. Dobson. Hospitality—Mrs. Hoke, Mrs. McCoy, Mrs. Benson, Mrs. Abram S. Woodard, Mrs. Esiernne, Mrs. A. E. Pritchard and Mrs. Pittenger. Social—Mrs. Poreman, Mrs. Astrorn, Mrs. Dobson, Mrs. Haninger, Mrs. ,J. A. Sutton and Mrs. j-,ee Welker. RUSH EL'S WILL BE PARTY HOSTESSES Rushees of Zeta active chapter of Eignia Aipha iota, national professional musical sorority, win entertain at a meeting of inu Zeta aiunmae Wednesday mgnt at tne home of Mrs. Arnold Spencer, Oxford Gaoles. Guests will include officers and program committee members of tne active chapter. Ihe hostess wiil be assisted by Mrs. Harold Antrim ana Miss Pried;: Hciaer. there will be twenty-five guests. CHARTER HAY IS TO BE OBSERVED Charter day will be observed by the Indiana University of Nebraska Club Wednesday, Feb. 15, at the Y. W. C. A. A part of the program will include the radio speech from Lincoln, Neb., where the university is located. The day will be observed nationally by all branches of the national association. Officers are John Rosenbaum, president; Mrs. F'loyd Whipple, secretary, and Dr. N. L. Michenor. SORORITY WILL GIVE PROGRAM Alpha chapter. Pi Omicron sorority will present a program at 7 Wednesday night in the Washington. The features w ill be discussions of SocratPS by Miss Nell Quinlan, Plito by Miss Minnie Balay, Aristotlr by Miss Mayme Blades, England's power by Miss Jennie Henshaw, and a book review of “John Brown's Body." by Miss Flora Drake. NAME DELEGATES FOR COXY ENT lON Mrs. C. J. Finch. Mrs. W. W. Gates and Mrs. Raymond Stone King were chosen delegates to the ra'ional meeting of the Daughters of tlfe Union at New York in April, to represent the Governor Oliver Perry Morton chapter, which met Monday at the home of Mrs. George M. Spiegel. 2220 North Alabama street. A birthday cake, bearing eight candles, honored eight members who will celebrate their anniversaries this month.

Daily Recipe TURKISH PILAF 1 large onion 2 cups canned tomatoes 2 tablespoons butter or meat drippings 1-2 cup rice 1 cup chopped meat 1 teaspoon salt 1-1, teaspoon pepper 1-2 teaspoon paprika 1 teaspoon sugar Molt butter in iron frying pan and add onion cut in thin sli' cs. C- ok over a It tv fire for five m.nutes and add tomatoes just as they come from the can. Sprinkle with salt, pepper, paprika and sugar and add well-washed rice. Cover closely and cook over a lew fire until rice is tender and excess liquid has been absorbed. It will take about forty-five minutes. Stir in meat and heat ten minutes before serving. Chopped uncooked meat can be used in this dish if more convenient. In this event, add meat with onion and brown slightly before adding tomatoes and rice.

Graduates of Butler Will Hold Meeting Members of the committee in charge of the monthly meeting of the Butler Luncheon Club, Monday noon at the Columbia Club, have been announced by Mrs. Frank H. Streighloff. 07, chairman. They are Mrs. Richard George Jr., 14; Mrs. C. G. Winders, '2O, and Miss Katharine M. Graydon, '7B. The entire program for the meeting will be presented by women graduates of the university. Women members of the Butler administrative staff will be special guests and Mrs. Domarchus Brown, 97, will be the principal speaker. According to Mrs. Streighloff, all Butler alumni, former students and friends are invited to attend the luncheon. This will be the third meeting of the club since its founding in November. Alumnae Will Be Hostess to Convention Indianapolis alumnae chapter of Alpha Delta Theta sorority of Butler university will act as hostess for out-of-town convention delegates tc the national convention, to be held June 20-22 at the SpinkWawasee at Lake Wawasee. Misses Bernice Giltner, Maude Russell. Dorothy Youngholm. Helen Tomlinson and Mrs. Donald O'Neil, members of the local alumnae group, will serve on committees arranging the affair. Plans were formulated at a meeting held Sunday afternoon at a meeting of the executive board of the organization with members of the Indianapolis alumnae group.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- r 1 *? *> tern No. t) I J *> Size Street City State Name

V\. ! J I i jii/ \ff jii I 5133 )'V i j uil View 1 (;/

A DAY DRESS Here's a grand dress in which to trot about all da*’ long, and look smart every minute. All the oest dressed women in New York are wearing dresses of this type. But this particular model, besides having a flattering cowl neckline and chic dccp-armhole sleeves—is quite easy to make. It would be grand in that rough crepe called matelasse.' in purple gray or salmon. All are new colors. Size 16 requires 3’- yards 39-inch material, l’i yard contrasting. Width about l s yard. Pattern No. 5133 is designed for sizes 14. 16. 18. 20 years. 32. 34. 36, 38. 40. 42 bust. Price 15 cents. Have you seen our new Fashion Magazine? It contains styles for women, misses and children; dressmaking hints; and an article cn wedch* , etiquette. Price, 10 cents.

Home-Coming for Beauty

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Miss Feme McAllister, one of the beauties in the Earl Carroll's Vanities, will celebrate her homecoming with a midnight supper Wednesday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sherman McAllister, 3854 Central avenue. Miss McAllister, a graduate of Shortridge high school, left In-

Manners and Morals “BY JANE JORDAN

If vou disacrre with Jane Jordan, do not hrsitate to write and tell her so. letters of opinion always are welcome, and the best ones will he published. Dear Jane Jordan While I think you have many fine ideas and an uncanny gift of knowing human nature, it sort of chills a person—the things you say. The world is dark enough and you have a tremendous power of the press to do good or bad. If I had it, I would do wonders with it. You uphold men in everything, but are hard on your own sex. B. C. A. Dear B C. A.—ln the same mail ; with your letter comes ore from “Nasy.” inquires. “Why do you always take sides with the men and razz the women to death?’’ j lam not unsympathetic with my own sex. If I had to live in a world peopled with no one but men, I | would lose my mind in short order I and turn into a gibbering idiot for | want of someone sympathetic to j talk to. I I always have feit that women i had a much harder time in life than I men. For hundreds of years westJ ern civilization has given the domi inant position to men. The prop- | erty, liberty and even the concsicnce of a wife belonged to her husband. The case of woman has been stated eloquently in the following words by Samuel Schmaihausen: | “Woman's plight on earth is tragic. She is tortured by the problem of I age as man is not. She is frightI ened by sex in a sense man hardly ; ever knows. She is subjected to | ego-frustration, with more attend- , ant deprivation and humiliation I than man experiences. Her creative ! power is discouraged or derided. | t'Sir, a woman’s composing is like a dog's walking on his hmd legs. It is not done well, but you are surprised to find it done at all.') “Her desire to leap beyond sex into humanness is on every side obstructed and thwarted. She is discouraged from using her mind and then lambasted for being emotional and infantile. She is brought up to be so servile, dependent and compliant that forever after she is rendered unfit for life's profundities. "She dares not be as critical of man as he naturally and perenially is of her, for fear of losing his respect and love! Subtle servility in the female: arrogant egotism in the male: there's life's equation for | ccmpemonability —in a civilized j world!” n tt a i This is the status of woman in ; the world today as I see it. Within the last fifty years, women have made enormous strides in gaining equality with men. They can inherit and own property; they can vote and sit on juries; they can take part in the government and follow professions; they have equal rights in their own children, and their earnings belong to themselves. “But they have not freed themselves from a subconscious dependence men, nor can the average woman achieve a happy life without annexing a man of her own. What I try hardest to do in this column is to interpret men to women. Unless they understand this masculine creature of whom they have such great need, how can they hep? to adjust themselves to a lifetime ot living with him? Wcmon forever are baffled by the behavior of men and forever in j search of a method by which to make them conform to their own ' ideal of the way a man should behave. * n e When I point out the causes for a husband's or a sweetheart's be- | havior, I am not necessarily “taking sides.’’ I am only stating some facts about masculine psychology which I am powerless to change. I long since have given up the notion that you can change a man's nature merely by giving him fits for the things he dees, or by passing laws ; commanding h rn to be good. "Laws must be written in the I heart before they are written on paper." writes Havelock Ellis. It is Hair dyeing Xatinna 1 1 ,v know n Inecto Nn'oj iispil S rxftnuivel.v. Color* I liair ln*idr uhrro nature dor* • P BEAUTE ARTES SOI Roorvrlt Bide- —SOI Platt Studi*; Entrance. LI-061'} 888

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Miss Fern McAllister

dianapolis four years ago to become a dancer. She is a niece of Dr. Thomas Walsh, local sportsman, and Mrs. Beatrice Walsh, who will be guests at the party. Other famous beauties of the show who will attend the party are Adelaide Martin, Gladys Schooner. Louise DeForrest, Melba Krugar and Joyce Jackson.

cn the heart of man that woman must make her attack, for there is nothing to be gained by throwing statutes in his teeth. I am very fond of men and would find it as dull to live in a world without men as 1 would in a world without women. I simply am reconciled to them as they are and have ceased to take their emotional excursions seriously. When properly understood, men are simple, direct, and pathetically easy to please. I have only the interests of my sex at heart when I urge them to look upon men more as children and less as gods. U tt tt Men need women almost as much as women need men, and the need is not wholly biological. A few lines from Virginia Woolf contain wisdom which no woman who wants to bind a man to her can afford to ovarlook: "Women have served ail tnese centuries as lookingglasses, possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural size.... For if she begins to tell the truth, the figure in the lookingglass shrinks; his fitness for life is diminished. "How is he to go on giving judgment, civilizing natives, making laws, writing books, dressing up and speechifying at banquets, unless he can see himself at breakfast and at dinner at least twice the size he really is? “The looking-glass vision is of supreme importance, becaues it charges the vitality; it stimulates the nervous system. Take it away and man may die, like the drug fiend deprived of his cocaine."

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Chilled tomato juice, cereal. cream, shirred eggs, toast, milk coffee. 9 Luncheon — Baked minced ham and celery with cheese, lettuce sandwiches, lemon snaps, milk. tea. Dinner — Hungarian goulash, boiled potatoes, chiffonade salad, dried apricot cobbler, milk, coffee.

i |—. ' ...^,lm.mm.mi .. —!. /TRY RINSO NEXT MONDAY AND /wEll IF IT SAVES ) / : ; SOVC KAm*. r ~ Qnd I net" SEE WHAT THICK SUDS IT GIVES I BACK-BREAKING / f-WD ROSALIND, ITS SO ECONOMICAL A I Y Mrs. R. D, Wtlffs nf Dm. .• I IN OUR HAPO WATER. SEE HOW ] WORK, I'M ALL J } I DID THE BIGGEST, WHITEST WASH I DINSO i s e ), t most °* * OntlOC, Mir 4. ] RINSO WASHES EVEN COLORED J S FOR RINSO / |wHH ONEYAUmERINSO. FOR OCTWSSH- w. Q*,*. ' 1

Alumnae to Hold State Dav Frolics Six Organizations Set Dates for Annual Celebrations. Alumnae clubs of national college sororities are devoting their meetings to discussions of their annual state day celebrations. Six organization have selected date for their luncheon and dance entertainments. They are scheduled as follows: Feb. 25. Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Phi; March 4. Phi Omega Pi; March 11. Delta Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta, and March 18, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Mrs. Ermal Brown Hedden. presi- [ aent of the Indianapolis Alumnae | chapter of Phi Omega Pi, has apI pointed committees for its observance. Committees Are Named They are: Luncheon. Mrs. Lillian Setzer. Miss Maxine Dille and j Miss Dora Ulrich; dance, Misses I Sara Louise Earl, Audry Carter, | Clara A. Moore and Dortha Walls; i invitations, Mrs. Nellie Demlow, 1 Miss Mary Carroll and Miss Value | Timmons; program, Mrs. Helen J. j Harrell, Miss Eleanor Hoagland and Miss Adrienne Schmedl, and publicity, Misses Imogene Mullins, Katherine Pepper and Betty Hauss. Mrs. Frank Levinson has been appointed chairman of the luncheon program committee for the Kappa Alpha Theta celebration. Mrs. John Paul Ragsdale is president of the Indianapolis alumnae chapter. Other committee members are: Mrs. Charles J. Van Tassel, chairman luncheon arrangements, assisted by Mesdames C. B. Dyer, Arthur B. Shultz, Neil Waterbury, Dale Hodges, Layman Schell and Miss Elizabeth Bertermann. Bridge to Be Held Mrs. Emory R. Baxter is chairman of the dance committee, composed of Mesdames Coburn T. Scholl, Francis H. Sinex and Walter Krull and Misses Isabel Layman, Mary Lou Tyman and Marjorie Spencer. Mrs. Baxter will be hostess at her I home, 5676 North Pennsylvania street, Friday night, for a 6 o'clock luncheon bridge party. Mrs. Charles ; Binkley is chairman of hostesses, j who will be Mesdames Foster Clip- | pinger, A. D. Hitz, Edward Foster I Smith, Mrs. Sinex and Misses Dorothy Barrett, Jeanne Lee Stewart, Louise Wills and Mildred Morgan, WEDNESDAY CLUB MEETING IS FIXED Mrs. R. W. Roberson, 2451 Parkway, will be hostess Wednesday for a meeting of the Wednesday Afternoon Club. She will be assisted by Mrs. Eva Wright. The program will consist of devotions by Miss Florence lanham, readings by Miss Elizabeth Irene i Snider, and piano numbers by Miss Ohio Katherine Snider. Valentine decorations will .be j used. _______ ___________ Personals Mr. and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, ; Kessler boulevard, are visiting Mr. j and Mrs. Henry B. Babson in Chi- | cago. Mr. and Mrs. Hillary G. Bailey, 1909 North Pennsylvania street, will Igo to Chicago this week-end in I connection with the Hoosier salon ! in the Marshall Field galleries. They | will be guests at lunchon given ; Saturday by Philip Maxwell, presi- ; dent of the Chicago Alumni Asso- | ciation of De Pauw university and | publicity director of W. G. N. Mrs. Thomas J. Little of Detroit, | formerly of Indianapolis, will leave ! Wednesday for her home after a ! visit with Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. | Walk, 4375 North Meridian street. During Mrs. Littfc's visit in the | city, several informal parties were 1 given in her honor. MOZELLE EHNES HEADS SORORITY Miss Mozelle Ehnes has been chosen president of the Butler uni- | versity chapter of Alpha Chi Omega I sorority. Other officers are Misses Josephine Bennett, vice-president; Barbara Varin, treasurer; Mary Helen Karnes, corresponding secretary l and I historian; Geraldine Swarthout, | recording secretary and chaplain; j Elinore Young, warden; Ruth HallI stein, rush captain, and Pauline i Smith, Lyre editor and out-of-town J rush captain.

Bride on Visit Here

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Mrs. Harry B. Smith

Bride-Elect to Be Honored at Shower Party Miss Katherine Sue Kinnaird, whose marriage to Charles Guy Bolte will take place Feb. 25 will be honored tonight at a bridge party and glassware shower, given by Mrs. Bruce Savage, 3540 North Pennsylvania street. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. James Ray Thomas. Guests with the bride-elect will be her mother. Mrs. Robert Steven Kinnaird, and the bridegroom-elect's mother, Mrs. J. Willard Bolte, and Mesdames E. M. Aikman, Jack Gulling, Benners Milligan. Harold Gauker. M. Stanley MrComas Jr., John Bolte and Misses Virginia Ballweg, Betty Jeanne Davis. Margaret Gabriel and Elsie Hancock.

BRILLIANT WEDDING IS SET THIS MONTH

One of the most brilliant weddings of recent years at Evansville will be that of Miss Kendrick Orr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Orr, to Albert O. Trostel Jr. of Milwaukee, Wis., on Feb. 25 at the First Presbyterian church. Miss Orr is a niece of Mrs. Edgar Garvin Sr. of Indianapolis, who is visiting Mrs. John Stuart Hopkins of Evansville, a sister of Mrs. Ralph Lemcke, 1321 North Meridian street. There will be eighteen attendants at the wedding. MRS. DOWNEY IS T* HExYD AGAIN Mrs. Brandt C. Downey was reelected president of the Indianapolis Y. W. C. A. Monday at a meeting of the board of directors. Mrs. Walter P. Morton was reelected vice-president; Miss Marian Davis, recording secretary, and Mrs. Frederick Gifford, treasurer, -and Mrs. George Buck, re-elected corresponding secretary. BUTLER WOMAN GIVES ADDRESS Mrs. Thor Wesenberg of the English department of Butler university addressed the assembly of the teachers’ college at Twenty-third and Alabama streets at 2 today, her subject being “Countess of Conway.” Miss Emma Colbert, assistant to the dean of the college, will be guest speaker at the north central district meeting of the Association of Childhood Education, which will be held at Wabash Saturday. Miss Colbert will speak on "Emotions of Childhood." Thesi Club to Meet Thesi Club will meet tonight at the home of Miss Jeanne Bugbee, 3466 Kenwood avenue. Guild to Convene St. Margaret’s Hospital Guild will hold an all-day meeting today at the home of Mrs. Clara Stutz, 3656 Washington boulevard.

Mrs. Harry B Smith of Lowell. Mass., who was Miss F 1 o rence Efroymson before her marriage in September, is visiting her father. Meyer Efroymson. 3627 North Pennsylvania street. Jack Efroymson. a sJudent of the Michigan university. is home between semesters.

Judge Nisley’s by quality not by price TDJUJJUr. ;xrr SptT <9s n colors the shoe Vogue is in the following order-Admiralty blue, Chaff or Corosan shades of beige, black, Indies brown and finally grey in slight demand. Pumps and ties, sandals and straps M in the order named. Nisley stores are showing these as rapidly as Nisley sacWide strap sport sandals will exceedingly popular this season. This one is named in honor of the Moore family. Just now provided in Indies brown and very soon will arrive in Chaff. 'TI : J fj I IIA l CT in YL 44 NO. PENNSYLVANIA ST. Mail Orders Fill*) Promptly hn accompanird by parchis. pnet ind 15c postagt

FEB. 7, 1933

City Jewish Council Unit to Give Tea Affair to Be Given by Member Committee of Organization. A Japanese garden scene will form the centerpiece of the tea table at a tea to be given Wednesday afternoon by the membership committee of the Indianapolis section. National Council of Jewish Women, at the home of Mrs. Albert Goldstein. 4425 North Meridian streei. Spring flowers and miniature trees will predominate in the scheme of the table, which will be arranged with an antique silver service and red tapers. Mrs. Louis Wolf. Mrs. Nathan Kahn. Mrs. Samuel Hahn, Mrs. Sol Kiser and Mrs. Harry A. Jacobs will pour. Hostesses besides the membership committee, headed by Mrs. David Lurvey, chairman, and Mrs. Dora Wolf, vice-chairman, will be the executive board, past presidents, officers and the hospitality committee. headed by Mrs. Jacob Solomon. Mrs. Sultan Cohen, president, and Mrs. Louis Wolf, national director, will give greetings.