Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 247, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1933 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Sorority to Fete Chiefs at Parley National Leaders Will Be Honor Guests at Tea on Sunday. National officers of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, who will attend the state luncheon and dance Saturday at the Claypool, will be entertained at a tea from 2:30 to 4:30 Sunday at the Butler university chapter house, 201 Blue Ridge road. The honor guests will be Mrs. G. L. Van Auken of Delmar, N. Y., national president; Mrs. Peyton Wemyss-Smith of Oklahoma City, Okla., national inspector; Miss Mildred Blacklidge of Indianapolis, national secretary; and several of the sorority founders, including Mrs. Ralph B. Clark and Mrs. Scoby Cunningham of Indianapolis; Miss Estelle Leonard of Union City, M*s. James P. Collins of La Grange, 111., national editor of the Lyre, and Mrs. Edward M. Childe of Martinsville, 111. Miss Florence Renn will pour at the tea table, arranged with spring flowers and appointments of lavender and white. Assisting will be Misses Dorothy Stewart, Louise Haworth and Virginia Teague. A musical program will be presented by Misses Mae Henri Lane, pianist, and Jean Lane, violinist. Invitations have been extended to all active and alumnae members in the state, who are here for the state celebration and the Mothers’ club of Alpha Chi chapter, and members of Beta Beta alumnae chapter. Mrs. Van Auken is making an inspection trip to the chapters in the northwest, and Mrs. Wemyss-Smith is inspecting the four chapters in Indiana. Pagrant to Be Given “Famous Mothers” is the pageant to be presented at the afternoon meeting of Naomi auxiliary Friday at the Masonic temple. Mrs. Fanny Stcinmotz will be hostess, Mrs. Charlotte Halter will have charge of the entertainment and Mrs. Mabel Dobbyns will talk on Lincoln and Washington.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Are you In need of sound advice? Write your prolvem to .lane Jordan and read your answer in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young man of 25 years. I read your letters daily and take a great interest in them. I am in love with a girl 13 years old. She looks older, as she is very big. I believe she loves me. I guess the reason I go with so young a girl is that I can get no other. I am very fat and clumsy. I am in Lonesome John's class; I have to wear overalls all day long and part of the night. Every time I see this girl with another fellow it burns me up. i love her so much. Please tell me if you think I should keep on going with her. I guess she is my only chance. I would like to setJ.o down to farming and raising ducks. Do you think a girl of this age could learn to care for a quiet life on the farm? WORRIED WAYNE. Answer —I should like to make an earnest plea for the girlhood of this child. I can not bear to have her deprived of her right to a carefree existence for the next seven or eight years at least, under the protection of her parents or other adults. I want her to have a chance to develop gradually and naturally, instead of being catapulted from childhood into maturity. She is over-developed biologically without a corresponding mental and emotional growth, and she is by no means prepared to be a wife. Every man loves the idea of a girl wife, but he requires that the girl can be a woman when the occasion calls for adult decision and behavior. After your first pleasure in the possession of a little girl of your own. you would find this child entirely inadequate for your needs. Surely you could not be so cruel as to take advantage of her lack, of judgment and persuade her to bury herself on a farm to work like an adult. No doubt her young affections would lead her to go with you now, but later in life she would regret bitterly the loss of her .girlhood. I've never seen it fail. As for yourself, there is no excuse for your being fat and clumsy. Train down and improve until you feel yourself equal to women your own age. It will not solve your own life problem to accept defeat at the hands of your contemporaries by doing what seems the easiest thing, in selecting a child whose tender years put you in a position of superiority. The easiest thing for the moment is, alas, often the hardest in the long haul. It's a snare and a delusion for you to believe you can put off struggling for a legitimate position of superiority by choosing a partner who presents no difficulty in the winning. Do choose from your equals and don’t rob the cradle. Will those women among our readers who have married before they were 16 please write to Jane Jordan and tell her how they feel about it now? Dear Jane Jordan—When a girl thinks of a certain boy constantly at work or in leisure, and worries about when she is to see

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Halves of grapefruit, cereal. cream, salt pork in cream gravy, diced potatoes. milk, coffee. Luncheon — Macaroni and dried beef, hearts of lettuce with French dressing, cinnamon apples, milk, tea. Dinner — Halibut steaks with cheese sauce, steamed potatoes, buttered green beans, stuffed pear salad, cottage pudding, milk, coffee.

Sky's the Limit on New Costumes for Bathing

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'.7 NEA Service Hollywood, Feb. 23.— Girls who go down to the sea in ships, or just to bathe, are wearing a wide variety of costumes these days. Pauline Stark, out stretching her sea legs the other day in preparation sor 1 the seventh annual midwinter regatta at Los Angeles harbor, wore white

him again, and wants to be with him always, is she in love with him? I am afraid I am falling in love with a certain boy and there are many good reasons why I should not. I must not fall in love with him, yet I must remain a friend of his. Can you suggest any way for me to stop the feeling? K. B. Answer—The answer to your first question is "Not necessarily.” You may be merely in love with the idea of love and not the lad himself. You may have the spring fever and blamed the handiest object for ycur malady. A dash of hunjor is the best check I know for this particular form of madness. And if you're very, very busy with other things, you don't have much time to build up illusions. Don't take it seriously and j'ou’ll keep your balance better. Dear Jane Jordan—Thank you so much for your splendid talk to me in answer to my letter. I hope hundreds of women read it, as it surely will tell them that they have misunderstood a really wonderful personality. I'm a shutin, and I guess I get a wrong view of things, although I strive desperately against it. B. A. C. Dear B. A. C.—Perhaps our readers will not remember that you and several women took me to task for "razzing” my own sex. I replied in defense of women. I thank you cordially for your compliment. I have a weakness for praise. I have t 'eat sympathy for your situation, as it is difficult for any one to keep balanced in a never-changing environment. Write me again sometime. Mother’s Club Will Entertain for Sorority Active, pledge and alumnae members of Delta Sigma Epsilon sorority of Butler college of education will be entertained by the Mothers' club at a bridge and jig-saw puzzle party Friday night at the chapter house, 2062 North New Jersey street. Mrs. G. A. Fogas and Mrs. H. A. McDonald are in charge of entertainment. The refreshment committee is composed of Mesdames Alice Padcn, Fred Madden and Roy Egbert. The serving table will be decorated with spring flowers and the sorority colors of olive green and cream.

Card Parties

A supper and card party will be sponsored by the Barbara Fritchie Castle 76. Daughters of America, Friday night at Addison and West Washington streets. The supper will be from 5 to 7 and the card party at 8:30. A benefit card party will be held Friday afternoon and evening at 1614 Union street. Mrs. Joseph Yetter is the sponsor. St. Anthony Altar Society will entertain with a benefit card party Friday afternoon and night at the parish hall. 369 North Warman avenue. Mrs. John Collins is chairman. Garfield unit 88 of the American Legion Auxiliary will give a card and bunco party at the headquarters, Carson street and Troy avenue at 8 Saturday night. Service post 128. American Legion, will give a benefit euchre and bridge party at 8 Friday night at Legion hall in Oaklandon. The committee is composed of Jesse Combs, Everitt Johnson. Mrs. Espie Walton and Mrs. Jennie Beaver. A benefit euchre and bridge party will be given at 8 Friday night at the Holy Cress hall, 1421 East Ohio street.

Cine-Modes

Pauline Stark

linen shorts, a crew-necked, shortsleeved blue jersey pullover with white anchor decorations and a blue skull cap. At Palm Springs, over the weekend, Mary Carlisle wore one of the new white rubber bathing suits, with a bib top tied over the shoulders in pert bows and snapped to her very abbreviated trunks. On the sands of the beach near Hollywood, Irene Helm wore a gray jersey suit with the new square neckline, a very low square in the back and a higher one in front. Her scarlet clogs looked very nice with the gray of her suit. Sally Eilers wears white bathing suits, one in particular being wide waled ribbed weave, with scarlet and navy stripes zigzagging down the front, from left shoulder to right shorts leg. One day, in the Mirador pool, she wore a suit with a white backless top and blue trunks trimmed in white. The two little pockets in the trunks were decorated with white anchors. Marlene Dietrich, loitering by the pool where her precious "Heidede,” as she- calls little Maria, was swimming, wore a ’smart shorts and shirt wool suit of gray.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, ' Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Inc. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C 1 /< Q tern No. O 1 O Size Street City State Name

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PLAID TAFFETA BLOUSE This is just the kind of blouse that smart young things describe as “full of pep." Made in plaid taffeta, it will add a welcome flash of color to your midseason wardrobe and will be just right for early spring. And taffeta, by the way, is anew fabric with a bright future. The nicest thing about this blouse

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Bride to Be Honored at Card Party Mrs. Robert L. Hanna to Be Guest at Bridge, Shower Tonight. Mrs. Robert L. Hanna, a recent bride, will be honor guest at a bridge party and personal shower, given tonight by Miss Mary Paulyne Stark, 1 East Thirty-sixth street. Mrs. Hanna was Miss Jayne Copeland, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Copeland, 2539 Broadway, before her marriage Jan. 14. Appointments and decorations will be in pink and green. Guests with the bride and Mrs. Copeland will be Mesdames Ralph E Hanna, Walker Knotts, and Misses Betty Anne and Florence Copeland, Alice Marie Woolling, Mary Beth King, Lou Mehring. Beatrice Alter, Jane Staudt, Virginia Rother, Regina Fleury, Retha Hogue, and June Byfield. State Officer to Be Guest of D. A. R. Group Mrs. W. H. Schlosser of Franklin, secretary of the Indiana Society, D. A. R., was honor guest at the annual Washington anniversary luncheon, held by the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter of D. A. R. Wednesday at the chapter house, 824 North Pennsylvania street. The 150 members attending the luncheon were seated at tables according to the months oj their births. Decorations w'ere suggestive of the months, ranging from snowballs and white tapers, representative of January, to roses and rose tapers for June. Hostesses at the tables for the twelve months were Mesdames Frederick E. Matson, Robert D. Armstrong, Edward H. Harte, Harold R. Cunning, Charles F. Vovles, Hugh H. Hanna, Maurice E. Tennant, Miss Margaret McCarty Day, Mesdames William Ross Teel, John McLean Lochhead, Franz C. Bopp and Alex L. Taggart. Vaughn Cornish sang patriotic numbers and Mrs. Eugene Fife presented a group of appropriate readings. Survey to Be Made of City Garden Space The Irvington Union of Clubs will make a survey of available garden space to be loaned to Indianapolis Community Garden Center, according to decision made at a meeting Wednesday at the Irvington Presbyterian church. A collection of seeds and tools also will be made. Mrs. Perry E. O’Neal spoke as a representative of the community garden center, explaining its aim to help the unemployed man produce food for his family. An arts and crafts exhibit will be held the week of April 15 under the direction of Mrs. George Gahagan, chairman of arts and crafts committee. The lecture which Mrs. Demarchus Brown was to have given on George Bernard Shaw in the Union Study groups, has been postponed until May 10. CHEER GUILD TO HOLD CARD PARTY Additional reservations for the luncheon and card party of the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild Friday at the Foodcraft shop include the following: Mesdames Forrest Danner, A. L. Leatherman, J. B. Phillips. Jesse Tindall, Laura Blanton, J. B. Ireland, Edward France. A. J. Kassler, Carl Hack, D. H. Campbell. O. N. Ebert, Grover Long, Mary Hanks and Lizzie Remy and Misses Dorothy Phillips. Clara Morrison and Jane McComb. ‘LEGISLATION TEA’ PLANNED AT Y. W. Mrs. Jessie Gremelspacher, head of the women's and children's bureau of the state department of labor, will speak at a legislation tea, sponsored from 3 to 5 Sunday at the Y. W. C. A. by the industrial relations group of the Y. W. industrial department. The speaker will discuss problems of women who work. Miss Ethelyn Christensen heads the group. The committee in charge is composed of Misses Mary Eggleston, Beulah Lee, Mildred Crake, and Sylvia Brewer. Miss Dashiell Hostess Miss Elizabeth Dashiell, 3414 Ruckle street, was hostesss for the fifth anniversary dinner meeting of the Sorelle Club Wednesday night. Mrs. Raymond Thompson was elected president of the group and Mrs. Thomas P. Newett, secretarytreasurer. Personals Mr. and Mrs. Walter Curt Brown, 3106 Washington boulevard, are sailing Saturday on the Lafayette for a West Indies cruise. Miss Rosamond Van Camp, Michigan road, has as her house guest Mrs. James Holcombe Genung of Crestnut Hills. Philadelphia, Pa. Alpha Gamma sorority will hold a spread at 5:30 tonight at the home of Miss Virginia Host,, 4801 Park avenue, preceding the regural meeting. Miss Lois Buskirk. a student at the Butler College of Education, will | spend the week-end with her par- ' ents. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Buskirk of Terre Haute.

is that it goes together almost like magic. All there is to do is join the front and back and stitch the epaulets on the shoulders. It could not be simpler, could it? Size 16 requires l 3 * yards 36-inch material. Pattern No. 5148 is designed for sizes 14. 16, 18, 20 years, 32. 34. 36, 38. 40. 42. 44 bust. Price, 15 cents. Send for our new Spring Fashion Magazine. It contains the latest easily-made styles as well as helpful sewing hints for home dressmakers. Price, 10 cents.

Keep a Watchful Eye for Spring Suit Individuality nan a a a a a a a a a Be Careful of Color and Fabric Combinations to Achieve Exclusiveness

■ —by CAS/oigfU*

[wTEMOW ANdL M TO V THE REE j /Culx pTr f ° H ' C . OOKING ftND HOMEMAKINGfSEAWAY w£S J ™ AT PICTIJRE * WHATS I 1 SHES GOING TO TELL ABOUT A I IAWAY1 AWAY WITH I n E GIVEN RV that THIS EXPERT GOING < | HARD-WATER SOAP THAT WASHES \ ) WASHBOARO DRUDGERY 1 \ LECTURE /NEVER SCRUB CLOTHES. THE MODERN |||| {§§g|f DID YOU THAT?W INDEED 1 DID) AND I ]|!| IS TO SOAK OUT THE OIRT. JUST SOAKING CLOTHES gl HAR^ Y AITUNT,L NEXT WASHDAY . r I “ ” I “ —s great! \ Famous Home-makinq Expert, OU DON'T / _ a i , bit TtREDJ Dorothy A. Loudon, says: ~ ~i **TT is our business to find the easiest and most economical wav of doing v /%: i every household task. Our tests show us that nothing is so satisfactory | \ 45 t * ie nso method °f doing the week’s wash—not only because this O famous granulated soap saves scrubbing and boding, but because it adds so much to the life of clothes. Ce find that it st'nesudsthatmakeßinsosoeffective. In anv kind of water, jff]/ Rinso suds are thick, lively and long-lasting. Just soaking clothes in these i /,‘ SU<^S CtS t * lcm so swcet and snowy that even boding isn't necessary. “Ue recommend Rinso not only for use in tubs and washing machines, but for dishes and all cleaning." THE HOMECRAFTERS, Inc. WmfJat7///jA Don’t miss the amazing demonstration yV-grt.-.fT, ...d/y. today. And be sure tp get Rinso in time <3 Marvelous suds for dishwashing, too. 1/ A PRODUCT Os LgVEK BRCT TtERI CO. yWflfj The hard-water soap that’s so easy on hands Wonderful home-making lecture —don’t be late! The Indianapolis Times Expert, Dorothy A. Loudon, will continue her demonstrations at the English Theater, 8 P. M. Today.

(From Sady Weiss, New York'

BY JOAN SAVOY NEA Service Writer YOU have to look sharply this year for individuality in your new spring suit or you will meet Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Grundy wearing the exact duplicate. And you know what a good feeling that gives a woman! The two-toned suit is a bit more high-styled than the monotone. Moreover, with a combination of color or fabric, you have a better break toward a suit that is yours and nobody eises. Particularly if you see to it that the neckline is something else besides the regulation one. jour coat has some touch or other that gives it personality, and the blouse that completes your suit is one that is infinitely becoming to you and part and parcel of vour outfit. Schiaparelli has done a slick job with spring suits this year. A particularly gracious one. a very individual one, is made of two-toned gray, the skirt slightly lighter than the coat. This having the darkness come above the h:ps is one sure trick of slendering a lady, incidentally. The blouse to this original little number is of pink and black printed crepe, made in softly tailored fashion, so its diminutive rolled collar cur\es to almost nothing right in front, where ties of crepe, black lined, rhake a small bow. The suit and the blouse both fasten with Schiaparellis famous clips, and the collarless coat has a deep V cut to it. then laps over with the clips fastening the lap at the top as well as the sides, to hold it in place. Pocke.s are placed at each side of the coat and a single pocket smack in the front near the hemline, something new and different, voull admit. 4 4 4 The swirl of silver fox is separate. The little black tricorn hat is made of \ery hea\j crepe, bound in shining piping. The purse matches the hat.

College Head Is Guest Here of Alumnae: Luncheon Held

Dr. Guy Winslow, principal of La Salle Seminary at Auburndale. Mass., was guest speaker at the luncheon meeting attended by alumnae of the college in the state and in Indianapolis at noon today at the University club. Mrs. Rov K. Coats, who was in charge of the arrangements for the affair, presided at the luncheon table and introduced the speaker. Dr. Winslow, who is on his way to Kansas City to attend a junior college meeting, stopped to meet the COUPLE IS WEDDED IN CHURCH RULES The marriage of Miss Marguerite Stauffer, daughter of Mrs. Frank Derry, 625 South West street, io Thomas S. Sinneran. son of J. W. Sinneran, 1048 South West street, took place at 7 Wednesday morning in St. John Catholic church. The Rev. E. M. Bosler officiated. The bride wore a gray suit with matching accessories and was attended by Miss Mary A. Sinneran, the bridegroom's sister, who wore a blue suit with gray accessories. Louis Meisberger was best man. A wedding breakfast was served the bridal party at the Spink-Arms. After a motor trip, the couple will be at home at 16 North State street. Dance to Be Given The Women's Club of the Brookside Community are sponsoring a dance to be given Friday night at the community house. The Royal Nightingales will play.

FEB. 23, 1933

Indiana group and attend the luncheon. Guests with Dr. Winslow were Mrs. Harry Brown of Bluffton. Miss Edith Williams of Bloomington and alumnae for Indianapolis: Mesdames John Ray Newcomb, Edna F. Vajen. Obie J. Smith. L. G. Zersas, Periy Lcsh, Oscar Pantzer, Carl Vonnegut. R. Hernley Boyd, Misses Gertrude Taggart, Bernice Reagan, and Joan Johnson.

Daily Recipe ! CREAM MUFFINS j Sift together three cups | flour, three quarters teaspoons I baking powder. Add the beat- | en yolks of four eggs, half a ! cup of melted butter, one cup | of cream and a tablespoon of > sugar. \ Beat well. Whip the four \ egg whites to a stiff froth and I add this gently. Bake in j greased muffin pans eighteen • to twenty minutes in a mod- ! erate oven. j

Permanents 1 Beautiful “LUXOR” life WAVE S|: BEAUTE ARTES 60! Itlflg. 601 IVriitt Studio Entrance. LI-0610. ""