Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 248, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 February 1933 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Butler Events to Push Spring Social Calendar Off to Flying Start Many Activities Sponsored by Campus Groups Are Scheduled for March and April; Include Whole School. The social calendar for the approaching spring season will get “off to a flying start” in March and April. Many activities are sponsored by educational and social units of the Butler university campus. Various types of affairs, from sorority dances to all school recreational programs, promise entertainment and interest for students, instructors and alumni.
A program for the entertainment of the entire school, friends and faculty, is being arranged by Theta Sigma Phi, women's professional .journalistic sorority, in conjunction with the Y. W. C. A organization of the college. The affair is in the nature of a recreational night to be held March' 3. On April 8, the Pan-Hellenic group will present a program with the Y. W. C. A. and the April 28 Scarf Club will take part. Dances to Be Held The final social function of Scarf Club, honorary organization for sophomore women, will be the luncheon-bridße March 4 at the Marott. A national Greek honorary organization to appear on the campus in September will take the place of the club. March 4 is the date named by three Greek organizations for their state day celebrations. Active members now on the campus and alumni from Indianapolis and neighboring cities in Indiana will attend the dances held by Phi Delta Theta and Kappa Delta Rho fraternities and Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Miss Marydell Rous is chairman of the annual card party and style show to be given Saturday afternoon at the L. S. Ayres auditorium by the Pi Beta Phi pledges. She will be assisted by Misses Isabelle Drueckcr, Betty Jean Deupree and Ruth Repschlager. Freshman Rose to Lead Dance The ‘ Freshman Rose” to be selected from the sorority candidates will lead the dance given by the freshman class the night of March 11 at the Marott. Kappa Alpha Theta and Delta Gamma sororities will hold state celebrations March 11. Kappa Kappa Gamma Mothers’ Club has scheduled a meeting for Friday noon and afternoon on March 17 at the chapter house, 821 Hampton drive, and *t night the pledges of Sigma Chi fraternity will hold a dance with Cecil Marion and Harry McClelland in charge of the arrangements. A totfr of the Arthur Jordan Memorial hall will be taken by the members of the Mothers’ Club of Pi Beta Phi sorority March 13. Mrs. W. K. Gearan, president, will be in charge of the affair. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority has named March 18 for the state luncheon and dance and Sigma Nu freternity has set it as a tentative date for their annual celebration. April Promises Activity Miss Janet Jerman will direct the chimes party at the Campus Club on March 22. and Miss Jeanne Spiegel is chairman of the Pi Beta Phi pledge dance the following Friday. The last two events dated for March are the dances and luncheons to be given on March 25 by the Delta Delta Delta sorority and the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. April promises activity, as the Kappa Beta group will hold a na- j tional convention from April 7 to 9 with Miss Aliena Grafton, the uni- I versity sponsor, in charge. Saturday of that week, another in the series of tours to be made by mothers’ clubs of the university organizations will be taken by tl e Kappa Alpha Theta group with Mr;. William Adams, president. Zeta Tau Alpha will hold state day April 22 and both Delta Zeta and Pi Beta Phi sororities will celebrate April 29. RECEPTION GiyEN FOR NEWLYWEDS A reception honoring Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crippen, 3319 Park j avenue, was given Thursday night by Dr. and Mrs. Karl H. Kayser, at their home, 3309 Park avenue. Mrs. Crippin was Miss Christine Owens, daughter of Walter Owens, 3315 Park avenue, before her recent marriage. Guests were Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Crippin and family, Mr. Owens, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Fleming and family. Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Glick and family. Mr. and Mrs. I W. W. Binchman and family, and ! Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Ryker and family. CHICAGO SINGER TO GIVE RECITAL Miss Ruth Braun. Chicago, will give a song recital in the Columbia Club ballroom Tuesday morning. Her accompanist will be Charles Lurvey. Among those sponsoring the recital arc Mesdames John W. Kern Sr., Arthur V. Brown. William H. Coleman, James Lilly. Wilbur John- i son and Charles A. Pfafflin. New Officers Named New officers of the Twentieth Century Club are: Mrs. Frank Warn-. L. Fellows, recording secretary; Miss j pier, president; Mrs. Robert T. Ramsay, vice-president; Mrs. Louis i Carolyn Thompson, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Joseph W. Sel- j vage. treasurer.
I A Day’s Menu | i Breakfast — ! 1 i , Baked winter peas, cereal. ’ cream, egg toast, milk, j I coffee. j ! Luncheon — I Baked potatoes stuffed I I creamed salmon, browned j i pineapple slices, lettuce j sandwiches, hermits, milk, f tea. j I . - Dinner — * Baked halibut mold with } white sauce, anchovy po- j } tnto balls, beet cups filled j with peas, endive salad. : coupe St. Andre, milk. I I coffee. )
French Group to Hear Talk by Professor Present day economic problems of France will be explained to the Alliance Francaise -by Andre Allix, professor of the University of Lyons, France, at its meeting Thursday in the Washington. Professor Affix is making a lecture tour of the United Slates and Canada under auspices of the Federation of Alliance Francaise ot New York. He is a professor of i science at the University of Lyons and a director of the Institute des Etudes Rhodaniennes, a French ; center for scientific study and research. He has contributed nuj merous articles to scientific publications in Europe and the United ! States and has written books on world geography. A dinner in honor of Professor Al- | lix will precede the lecture. A mu- ; sical program will be given by Miss Irma Chambers, violinist, accompanied by Donald Carter. Shower to Be Held in Honor of New Bride Mrs. James McAdams Zoercher will entertain tonight with a crystal shower and party at the home of Mrs. Phillip Zoercher. 68 Whittier pace, in honor of Mrs. Buford Cadle, who was Miss Marjorie Goble. Table decorations and appointments will be in rose and green - . • Guests with Mrs. Cadle and her sister. Mrs. Layman Kingsbury, will be Mesdames James R. Loomis, Robert Crawford, and Misses Ruth Landers, Margaret Thompson, Isabelle Layman, Evelyn and Constance Forsyth, Bertha Corya and Mary Brown. MRS. CUNNINGHAM WILL GIVE DINNER Mrs. Scoby Cunningham will entertain with a dinner party preceding the Alpha Chi Omega state dance at the Claypool Saturday. Her guests will be Mrs. Gilbert Van Auken of Delmar, N. Y.; Mrs p eyton Wemyss-Smith of Oklahoma City, Okla.; Mrs. James P. Collins of La Grange, 111.; Mrs. Edward M. Childe of Martinsville, 111.; Miss Estelle Leonard of Union City, Mrs Ralph B. Clark, Mrs. E. H. Jenne and Miss Mildred Blacklidge.
Card Parties
Gold Mound Council 145 will give a card party Saturday night at the heme of Mrs. Florence Strubbs, 434 Bradley street. Altar Society of St. Roch’s church. 3600 South Meridian street, will entertain with card parties Sunday afternoon and night. Supper will be served from 5 to 7. Hostesses will be Mrs. Andrews Fromhold and Theodore Adolay. Druids Busy Bee Club will hold a benefit card party at 8:30 Saturday night at the Druids hall, 25 South Delaware street. Mrs. Mary Geider is in charge.
STATE'S 'FIRST LADY' IS HONOR GUEST
Mrs. Posey T. Kime entertained at the Marott Thursday with a lunch-eon-bridge party in honor of Mrs. Paul V. McNutt. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Frank Finney of Martinsville, Mrs. Benjamin E. Buente of Evansville and Mrs. Cecil Whitehead of Anderson. Yellow tapers and spring flowers were used. CITY GIRL RESERVE HEADS AT PARLEY The five state conference of Girl Reserve secretaries this week-end in Chicago has attracted three local representatives. They are Misses Jenna Birks, Marian Smith and Jane Cartwright. Miss Birks is Indiana's member of the executive council. Misses Harriet Fautz and Vivian Parnell will b' v in charge of the patriotic party, given Saturday during play hours at Central Y. W. C. A. Miss Rachel Cartwright is arranging the play hours at the south side center, 1628 Prospect street. plant~aL Tthority TALKS AT MEETING Mrs. Edith Banghart of Medina, Wash., gave an illustrated lecture at 2:30 this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Nicholas H. Noyes. 5635 Sunset Lane, at the meeting of the Indianapolis Garden Club. Mrs. Banghart. an authority on Alpine plants, talked on “Plants for the Rock Garden.” Tea was served to the guests. Mrs. W. Richardson Sinclair. Crow's Nest, gave a luncheon at her home today in honor of Mrs. Banghart. Dance to Be Given Old and new dances will feature the dance to o? given Saturday night by the Women's cilub of Christian Park community at the hall. The affair is open to the public. Exhibit McXutt Painting An ofl painting of Governor-Paul V McNuit. which has teen on display in the Spink-Arms. has been sent to Miss Marie Goth, artist, for a special exhibit at the John Herron Art institute.
A Little Money and a Little Work Will Beautify Your Kitchen a’ an a a a ana a a a a a a Make Your Floor Dark and Warm, Tint Walls and Ceilings Like the Sky
BY DOROTHY TATZ, Written for XEA Service 17 VERY kitchen should radiate “candy and spice ’n everything nice.” Unsightly worn patterns in the linoleum can play havoc with the loveliest of rooms. Old linoleums, patched and the who.e floor treated with a coat or two of paint and one of varnish and shellac, can lay the foundation for a charming room. Follow Mother Nature—keep your floors dark and warm in color, walls light and ceilings the tints of the sky. Happy the kitchen with a sunny exposure! To temper its warmth, walls of cool tints such as green, orchid, or blue should be used. Paint is the most practical and cheapest wall treatment. Anybody can paint a room; why not make it a party! Washable papers of good designs are decorative and if the woodwork is painted to match the background, the result is stunning. If you room is north-facing, use warm colors, such as yellow-, orange or red. Let your imagination run riot as to color in your kitchen. You spend so much time there, you can not keep cheerful if it is drab. Flat, monotonous kitchens that simply can not be redone this year may be happily transformed by repainting the woodwork in contrasting color: Yellow walls with blue woodwork, or even red. D-nb gray or tan walls come alive by touching up moldings in Vermillion. Cream combined with almost any color is smart. n a ♦ LIGHT is so important in a kitch/en that if you must have a shade, begin the day by raising it out of sight. Tw-o-tier curtains are test for kitchens, the lower tier for privacy, the upper softens the window's harshness. A tie-back for the upper sash is something different and interesting. An unusual combination is to have the upper tier in plain colored voile and the lower tier of the same fabric as the valance. Get printed materials for curtains for plain walls and plain ones for
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
The longer the letter, the easier it is to answer it. Give all the facts about your problem if you want an intelligent answer. Dear Jane Jordan: Have you ever known a father who turned against his only child? And without reason? This child is 15 and until three years ago he couldn’t love her enough. If she were a bad girl. I would be able to understand it. but she is very quiet and respects her parents and teachers. She is loved by everyone except her father. When I ask him to explain his attitude, he says she doesn’t deserve any better treatment. His own father says he is acting the part of a fool. This treatment has made the child so unhappy that she is unable to be her natural self, and she hates her father. He acts r.s though he would like to turn her in the street, calling her such names as “dumb hog.” “nuts,” “snake,” “parasite,” and “useless.” If she happens to have some of her friends in for an evening, why, it’s just made too unpleasant for them to remain. At times I’m desperate. Has any mother had this problem to solve? What do you think of it? HEARTBROKEN MOTHER. Answer: It is my opinion that in ail conflicts between parents and children, the children always are innocent and the parents always guilty. This may not be apparent at first glance, but a little research into the upbringing of the children invariably places the blame on the shoulders of the parents. This father has not turned against this child without reason. I do not mean that his reason is a good one, or that the child is in any way to blame. But rest assured there is a reason, buried somewhere, which you can unearth if you try. I can suggest no solution for the trouble other than to remove the child from the father’s house, unless I know what causes his behavior. Is this father a jealous person? Is he deeply in love with you, or has he repudiated you along with the daughter? Does he feel that the child has displaced him in your affections? Does he suspect you of untoward behavior with other men, and has he ever questioned the paternity of the child? n u a ts he in financial difficulties, and does he regard his daughter as a heavy burden? Has he accused you of over indulging her whims and tastes? Whom does the child resemble? Caii it be that he is treating her abominably to punish you for some real or fancied grievance? What is the state of the man's health? Has he ever had a serious illness? If so. what was it? These are only guesses flung out in the dark to help you in your search for the cause of this disaster. Look for secret sources of resentment. it is of the utmost importance to the child that this problem be solved. A girl of her age is more than likely to base her concept of all men upon her father's behavior. If she is obliged to hate him. it may be emotionally impossible for her ever to be happy in marriage. When you have collected more facts, write me again. I will be glad to keep anything confidential which you do not want published. _ an tt Dear Jane Jordan—l am reaching my 21st birthday, and I go with a young man of 24. He said he loved me and I worshipped the ground he walked on, but I can’t understand him. He comes when I least expect him. If I am not hoftie. he won't call for a week or two. He often talked of getting married, but he knows my income is the only support of a family of eight. My first duty is to my familv is it not? He says that I can not work after I am married. What shall I do? Will I be forced to give him up? I know it will cost me his love or my position, but will it not destroy the family’s faith in me if I quit my job? POOR WORRIED ME. Answer—ln ordinary times l would say that a young girl's first duty most decidedly was not to her family, but to herself. I do not believe that it is right for a young person to gv 2 up the major satis-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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Paint your kitchen and re-cover the floor, if you can. If you can't, dress it up with little silhouettes in the cupboard door glass, give the cupboard shelves little detachable gingham or percale skirts, add quilted chair pads and make a matching colorful shade for the light. With window curtains to carry out the idea, your kitchen will have a complete new dress.
papered rooms. Take a piece of the wall paper along or a sample of the paint, so your curtains will match your color scheme. Unbleached muslin banded with checked gingham makes nice curtains. Cheesecloth comes in color
factions of life to which every individual has a right, for other people. However, these are extraordinary times. Every person with a job is carrying somebody else without a job, and I do not see how the situation can be escaped. May I be frank with you? I do not like your young man. I think he is a very selfish person, without a single grain of understanding. I can not- see how in the world you could be happy with one who so patently is interested in no one but himself. He has no right to ask you to quit a good job unless he is able to shoulder your burdens. If he gives you up instead of standing by in this emergency, he isn't worth his salt.
Informal Reception to Precede Butler Founders’ Banquet
An informal reception from 6 to 6:30 will precede the annual Butler Founders’ day banquet Saturday night on the mezzanine floor of the Claypool. All alumpi, friends former students of the university are invited to attend. Members of the various Founders’ day committees will be in charge at the reception. They are Miss Katharine Merrill Graydon, Dr. Daniel W. Layman, Miss Sarah Sisson, Miss Florence I. Morrison, Miss Corinne Welling. George Schumacher, Lee O. Garber, Seth E. Elliott, Miss Ida B. Wilhite, Clide Aldrich, Bruce L. Kershner and Evan Walker. President Walter S. Athearn will preside at the dinner, to be held at 6:30 in the Pompeian room. A special table will be reserved for members of the 1933 graduating class. Music for the affair will be pre-
! Daily Recipe j GRILLED TOMATO j i Cut tomato in slices a quar- j ! ter of an inch thick. Lay in j j melted butter, season with ! | pepper and salt and toss in j ! fresh bread crumbs. Broil j I until brown on both sides.
Stronger than He Was at Twenty
li -' k .jL
FIFTY-FIVE years old, and still going strong! Do you want the secret of such vitality? It isn’t what you eat, or any tonic, you take. It’s something anyone can and you can start today and see results in a week! All you do is give your vital organs the right stimulant. A famous doctor discovered the way to stimulate a sliggish system to new energy. It brings fresh vigor to every organ. Being a physician’s prescription, it’s quite harmless. Tell your druggist you w ant a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin. Get the benefit of its fresh laxative herbs, active senna, and that pure pepsin. Get that lazy liver to work, those stagnant bowels into action. Get rid of waste matter that is slow
and when the curtains are very full, they are lovely. Mosquito netting in colors, with deep hems done in colored w-00l are light and nice for summer. Percales and'calicoes talk for themselves. If you are tired of curtains hung in dish closets, anew idea is to buy
Founders’ Day to Be Observed by Sorority Seventh annual founders’ day of the Theta Nu Chi sorority will be celebrated with a dinner and dance given by the Alpha and Beta chapters at the Lincoln tonight. The committee in charge includes Misses Eleanor Egan, Ruby Anderson, co-chairman; Stella Bertram, Margaret Jteid, Virginia Mock, and Margaret Raffensperger. Founders of the organization will be presented with gifts and purple and silver will be used in the appointments. Purple tapers in silver holders will be encircled with violets.
'sentea by a trio of students from the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music. CHI DELTA CHIS TO GIVE RUSH PARTY The second of the three rush parties to be given by the Chi Delta Chi sorority will be held Saturday night at the Robinhood inn. 600 West Tenth street, with Miss Alberta Peyton and Mrs. James N. Nelson in charge. Guests will include Misses Daisy Saunders. Louisa Wilcox, Lavonne Van der Mark, Faye Comiskey, Colette Wayman, Dolly Whetstine and Mrs. Dorothy Eggerding. Mrs. Alfred Eggert 1217 Shannon avenue, will be hostess for the final party Tuesday night at her home. FREDERICK POLLEY TO GIVE ADDRESS A talk on “Etching Grounds” will be given at 8 tonight at the Cropsy auditorium by Frederick Polley, before the meeting of the Indiana Artists Club. Preceding the lecture the directors of the group will hold a business meeting. Polley, widely known Indianapolis etcher, will talk on the subjects of his etchings.
poison so long as it is permitted to remain in the system. The new energy men and women feel before one bottle of Dr. GaldweWs syrup pepsin has been used up is proof of how much the system needs this help. Get a bottle of this delicious syrup and let it end that constant worry about the condition < f the bowels. Spare the children those bilious days that make them miserable. Save your household from the use of cathartics which lead tc chronic constipation. And guard against auto-intoxication as you grow older. Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin is such a well known preparation you can get it wherever drugs are sold and it isn’t expensive.
little silhouettes or pictures and paste one inside each pane of your cupboard doors. Use a coat of paint to match the walls over the entire glass, covering the silhouttes. Incidentally, by giving the inside of the cupboard a
DRAMATIC CLUB TO PRESENT REVUE St. Philip Neri Dramatic Club will present “Topsy-Turvy,” a musical review' with a singing and dancing chorus of fifty young men and women, at the parish auditorium Sunday and Monday nights. Miss Jane Sherer will direct the dancing choruses, accompanied by Thomas Lanahan at the piano. Features of the program include the black face drama, “De Discobery of America,” and scenes from “Show Boat.” Members of the women’s cast are Misses Julia Casserly, Eileen Fletcher, Betty Tuttle, Henrietta Tuttle, Rosemary Shea, Agatha and Margaret Hague, Dorothy Nugent, Ruth McAtee, Mary H. Brook, Margaret Koers, Mary Naughton, Katherine McHugh, Alberta Gerlach, Rose McCarthy, Eleanor Eldridge, Dorothy Woods, Jane and Rita Connor and Virginia Maier.
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coat of paint to match % your moldings. your dishes will glow. nag ■pERCALE. gingham or any washable, cheery fabric may be used for shelf ruffles. They are three inches wide, finished with a picoted edge and gathered to a bias band a hah inch wide. You stick them into place with colored thumb tacks, so they come off easily for laundering. To save on picoting. use six inch strips of fabric, hemstitched down the middle, and cut through this hemstitching to get two ruffles with picot edge. Put all your cups on screw hooks. Also many of your pans can be hung up, and long-handled spoons, too. If you can't paint and can't paper or get new linoleum, at least you can give your pantry shelves new- skirts, put silhouettes in the door panes, and make a colorful little chair seat pad and a lamp shade to match. Quilted muslin or a bed pad (bought in any department store > serves as a foundation for the seat pad. By biasing the gingham or percale on one side of the foundation and following the quilted stitches on the other side, on the machine with colored thread, you get a quilted effect. a a a WHEN the quilting is finished, cut the pads to fit the one chair in the kitchen. To give pads a smart look, use a cable cord covered in a color to match the quilting thread and join the ruffle to the pad. Tti to chairs with perky bows and the humblest chair thus becomes interesting. To cover the unsightly bulb that disfigures many kitchens, get a teninch wire frame, cover it with gingham to match your chair pads and shelf skirts and finish it with a ruffle about two inches wide. Even if you can't paint your walls and get new- linoleum this spring, these little individual touches will give your kitchen an air.
Alberta Reep to Be Bride of R. F. Charles Mr. and Mrs. Albert Reep. 3110 Broadway, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Alberta Guild Reep, to Robert Franklin Charles, son of Judge and Mrs. James Franklin Charles, Marion. The wedding will take place at 4:30 this afternoon at North Methodist church, with the Rev, Warren W. Wiant officiating. Mrs. Charles attended Butler university and is a graduate of John Herron Art institute. Mr. Charles attended Indiana university, and now is enrolled at the Indiana law school. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. The couple will live’ in Indianapolis until June.
.TEB. 24, 1933
Bride Will • Be Honored by Friends Newlyweds Continue to Hold Social Stage in Indianapolis. Brides continue to hold the social stage in Indianapolis and two young women will be honored teday by their friends. Miss Eunice Dissette will entertain with a tea from 4 to 6 today at her home. 3665 Washington boulevard, in honor of Mrs. Henderson Wheeler. who was Miss Frances Hamilton before her marriage this winter. Miss Dissette will be assisted by a group of her friends, including Mesdames John P. Collett, Thomas Madden. Henry C. Atkins Jr., Thomas Kackley Jr., R. Kirby Whyte and Misses Josephine Madden and Harriett Denny. An out-of-tow-n guest will be Miss Mary Goeke of Wapakoneta, 0.. house guest of Miss Madden, 4621 North Meridian street.
Sororities
Kappa Sigma Chi sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the Lincoln. Mrs. E. L. Davidson will be hostess. Pledges of Beta chapter of Theta Nu Chi sorority will hold a bridge tournament at 2:30 Sunday afternoon at the home of Miss Marcella West, 924 North Rural street.
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