Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 290, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1933 — Page 7
APRIL' 14, 1933.
Vacationing Students to Fete Guests Out-of-Town Girls to Be Given Series of Parties. Spring vacations at St. Mary-of-the-Woods at Terre Haute and St. Mary-of-the-Lake at Notre Dame, has returned to the city many young women who are entertaining house guests and giving parties. The Alumnae Club of St. Mary-of-the-Woods will entertain visiting students and alumnae with a tea on Tuesday at Lady wood school. A business meeting at 2 will precede the tea, with Miss Catherine Lapenta in charge. Mrs. Leroy J. Reach will preside at the tea table. She will be assisted by Miss Rachel Tobin and Mrs. Leon De Sautels. Guests Are Named Visiting students, who will be guests, include Misses Dorothy Scroggins, Dorothy Rail, Josephine Leery, Catherine Guedelhoefer, Margaret Sullivan, Helen and Mary Connor, Ruth and Helen Courtney, Marie Lauck, Margaret Quinn and Rose Dowd. Miss Mary Louise Reach, daughter of Mr. and M r s. Reach, 4311 Broadway, has as her guest, Miss Ernestine Magagna of Rock Springs, Wyo., a classmate at St. Mary of the Lake. She will give a bridge-tea Saturday afternoon at her home, a buffet supper Sunday night, and a breakfast,-bridge Tuesday morning at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Entertains Texas Girl Miss Eileen Rocap will pour at the tea table, to be centered with spring flowers and lighted with pastel tapers. Assisting will b 0 the hostess' sister. Miss Jane Reach. Miss Catherine Bingham and Vary Cecilia Conley. Out-of-town guests will be Miss Marjorie Padon of Tulsa, Okla., house guest of Miss Dowd, and Miss Dorothy Petrillo of Mi. Vernon, N. Y., guest of Miss Guedelhoefer. Miss Margaret Quinn is entertaining Mi.ss Mary Jane Stanford of Houston, Tex. during the vacation. TKACH HRS' SORORITY WILL HOLD DANCE The annual spring dance of the Sigma Beta Tau sorority ($ Ball State Teacher’s college is being held tonight at the Towne club with Miss Dorothy Wise of Indianapolis in charge of the arrangements. Miss Wise’s committee includes Miss Dea Michael of Huntington, Miss Frances CafTrey of Garrett, Miss Doris Neaderhouse of Borne, Miss Dorothy Messel of Chicago, Miss Constance Curniett of Wabash, Miss Kathleen Reely of Larwill and Miss Regina Kruger of Winamac. HEALTH REPORT IS HEARD AT MEETING Mrs. James Bawden gave a report of the program for the education of the new members of the Public Health Nursing Association at the meeting of the board, Tuesday morning in the Majestic building. The course will include a review of the history and background of the auxiliary, a demonstration of office technique and a day in the field with visits to the mothers’ clubs. The first discussion for the benefit of the older members will be given at the May meeting by Mrs. Montgomery Lewis. Mrs. James Terrell reported a gift from the Irvington Woman's club. Party for Children Children of the Indianapolis Day Nursery were entertained with an Easter egg hunt Thursday, by the Audubon Club. Mrs, O. C. Darrah, chairman, was assisted by Mrs. Ralph Tindel.
This Is Story TOWN * The Children's Own Little Shoe Shop and the Exclusive Indianapolis Home of iiilliken Shoes for CHILDREN Let your Easter shoes be Billiken shoes and you'll be satisfied with the way they look: and your mother la|lM3|^Mßj|^ will be more than satisfied with the way they wear! IBEwflgmHHtaatok They’re designed to protect growing feet and insure foot-freedom. Natural fitting lasts and fiexsteel arches. Girls' patent pumps, cut-out sandals and straps. Boys' oxfords in black and white, brown and white, brown calf or elk and combinations. Sizes iQ Sizes QQ 2to 6 Hi 2 to 3... SL,yO Sizes <M 7Q Sizes a q 6i..>t08.... Dl.#7 2*o to 6 A Tt0n....52.79 St, $3.98 BLOCK S—Third Floor.
Sleeves Are Peeking! Baa aea They're Cuffing Style Around —the Wrists
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R>f NEA Service Hollywood, April 14.— short sleeved coats and capes, with blouse or dress sleeves protruding to make long cuffs, are anew wrinkle in Hollywood styles. Elissa Landi, lounging on the terrace of her Santa Monica
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Dear Jane Jordan—l am 24 years old and married. It seems like my husband never cares to take me to any social doings or to places where I may meet strangers or friends of his. I am polite and mannerly, but I can not think of anything to say and I do not know what to do after meeting someone. Somehow I am afraid to talk, afraid that I will do something wrong. I am not the stuck-up type, but I can not get over with any one anywhere. I have a nice disposition, but no personality. I am not so dumb. I read books and newspapers, ' and have had experiences of different sorts. Would you please advise me if there are any books at all that I can read or anything at all that I can do? My husband tells me that I change altogether when we do go out or someone comes over. Os course I don’t notice it at all, but he says I seem to stiffen and make the air feel taut with electricity. MARY. Answer—l think it is a shame that your husband thoroughly has so discouraged you when you are so willing to learn. The more he criticises you, the more self-conscious you become. What you need is a little encouragement. The chances are you do a lot more thinking than some of the masters of small talk, and wou’d be a lot more worth knowing if people weren’t so quick to judge by exteriors. Why don’t you learn a few parlor tricks just to break the ice? If you'd make palmistry your hobby, you’d always be in demand, for people adore to have their fortunes told. The public library has books which will teach you to read palms. With a little practice you would learn to guess character traits and soon work up a reputation as a seeress. Tea leaf reading, astrology, numerology, fortune telling by cards or parlor magic are great sources of entertainment. Few people are free
Elissa Landi
home, w'ore a string colored jersey outfit, the pointed yoke and long sleeve cuffs being of matching silk crepe and the little jersey jacket’s sleeves ending just below the elbow. She wore a big bow tie of brown taffeta ribbon and the buttons on the frock were brown.
from superstition and most of them love to be fooled. You don’t have to be gifted to learn any of these tricks. All you need is a little application. While you’re at the library, look in the card index for some books on personality. The only one I think of at the moment is ‘‘Strategy in Handling People,” by E. T. Webb and J. J. B. Morgan. nun Dear Jane Jordan—l am a boy of 21, very handsome, but I live in Broad Ripple, and there are too many fellows for the number of girls; so that leaves me out. I have gone with girls, but can’t hold them. I don’t know why, but something is wrong with me somewhere. I would like to have ycur advice on how to keep hold of a girl without her getting tired of me. UNHOLD ERVIN. Answer—ls you are as handsome as you say you are, attracting girls should be duck soup for you. All you need is a dime’s worth of soft soap. The rest is easy. No woman can resist the man who tells her how sweet and darling she is, and that the charms of all others fade beside hers. n n ts Dear Jane Jordan—l am a widow and have been going with a married man. I don’t know what to do, as I can’t work much longer. He can’t help me, as he has no money. Do you suppose when his wife finds out she will leave him and I can make him marry me? I am crazy about him. He also has children. He says I am the only woman he ever loved. Should I believe him? Should I give baby away? I have no one to look to for help. WORLD TROUBLE. Answer —The woman who has to “make” a man marry her is out of luck. If he needs that much urging he isn’t going to be much help in solving your problem. Wives do not leave their husbands just because they discover the other woman in
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Pig Knuckle Feast Good With Beer Bockwurst and Cheese Also Are Favorite Brew Viands. BY' SALLY MACDOUGALL Times Special Writer A good way for a housewife to make a hit with the men *of her family would be to have on hand a j generous supply of different kinds of food that go well with foaming j glasses of beer. Here are a few’ suggestions: Pigs’ knuckles boiled with sauerkraut, hamburger steak topped with slices of Bermuda onion, ham cooked with cabbage wiener schnitzel, a variety of hot and cold sausages, cold sliced ham, cold smoked eel, kippered herring, radishes, goose liver, several kinds of cheese, plenty of rolls and rye bread for sandwdehes, and, of course, pretzels. The Luscious Knuckles Pigs’ knuckles have a place of honor in the best markets today. To make them into a delectable dish, all they need is to be boiled two or three hours with sauerkraut—about a pound of kraut to four meaty knuckles. Bockwurst. with its delicately seasoned stuffing of yeal, eggs and milk, long a favorite hot sausage of j beer drinkers, is shown in the stores, I displayed beside bratwurst, knackwurst, bologna, frankfurters and country sausages. The inexperienced cook should take care not to boil her sausages. Simply plump them into boiling water, turn off the fire, cover the j dish and in ten minutes they will be done. Boiling Bursts Jackets Boiling them would burst their | jackets. Country sausages should be given a second cooking in the frying pan. Rye bread with or without caraw r ay seeds is best for sandwiches and snacks, and this is no time to be stingy with such cheeses as Limberger, liederkran, Camembert and Swiss, which should be topped with a slice of Bermuda onion. A rye bread foundation is also grand with goose liver, liverw’urst, cold ham—all washed down with beer. Welsh Rarebit Tasteful Put enough beer in a saucepan to cover the bottom and add a pound of American cheese, chopped or grated, also a tablespoon of butter. Stir constantly and as the cheese melts add enough beer to keep it from sticking to the bottom. When the cheese is melted and smooth stir in a beaten egg, a teaspoon of Worcestershire sauce, half a teaspoon each of dry mustard and black pepper and a very small pinch of cayenne. Do not cook longer than three minutes—after putting in the egg—and keep stirring constantly. Spread thickly on toast or crackers and serve with beer. the case. They hang on tighter than ever and persecute the other woman. I should take his statements of love with a grain of salt. Evidently the children in the case sit lightly on your conscience. It always shocks me when I hear of a woman who is wiling to give her baby away. If that's the way you feel about it, perhaps the little one would fare better with foster parents. .
Dear Jane Jordan—l would give anything in the world if I could meet a lady and have dates. I am so lonely it is driving me cuckoo. I am 39 years of age and I have four children to live for. I want a companion who is interesting to talk to and who will plan the future with me. Then I could be happy. Is there one? C. T. C. Answer—lt’s a large order to ask any woman to be stepmother to four children, but it has been known to work. Please do not expect me to find someone for you. as mail order love is not to be trusted. tt a u Dear Jane Jordan—For two years I have associated daily with a fellow. I was advised by ah elderly woman to allow familiarity a few times, which I did. The last time we were together, he told me that if he cared for a girl in the marrying way, he never would approach her in that matter. I have a fine position, but am considering making a change. I would like to go to some other city. As long as I’m around him, I’ll always care for him. YOURS TRULY. Answer—As long as men feel as they do, it is an intelligent girl who suppresses her immediate desires for the benefit of her future welfare. I’ve known other women who ran away from love to find that they took it with them, after all. Every one longs for anew environment when the old one becomes painful. If you can achieve it, it might divert you somewhat. But watch your step, for jobs aren’t the easiest things in the world to replace. nutt Dear Jane Jordan—How can a girl get acquainted with a boy without being introduced by her brother? How can she tell whether lie likes her or not, without going out with him? Should ~ a mother let a girl 18 years old go with fellows? BRIGHTWOOD GIRL, Answer—Any mutual friend can introduce you to the boy. Liking is developed or destroyed by closer acquaintance. Girls of 18’ deserve a little freedom to see boys at their home or the homes of other girls.
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