Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 May 1933 — Page 6

PAGE 6

City Co-Eds End Season With Honors College Activities Bring Out Variety of Talents. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Time* Woman* Pa*e Ml tor r TT'HE closing day? of college activities are bringing honors to numerous Indianapolis girls, whose talents vary from equestrian skill to paint and brush deftness. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E Courtney motored to Terre Haute Memorial day to see their daughter. Miss Frances Courtney, take part in the annual horse, show of St. Mary

of the Woods. Last year, Miss Courtney received blue ribbons in the bareback hurdle, the form event, and the hit, -and- miss class. When Captain W. O. Lancaster, the riding master, selected one student from each class to compete in the bareback jumping event, Miss Courtney was named to

Miss Burgan

represent, the -junior class. In the hit-and-miss class, the rider is appointed to a horse, chosen by officials A strange horse was no disadvantage last year, for Miss Courtney rode from the ring, winner of a blue ribbon. Dr. Courtney looks forward to his daughter's return from college, for they frequently ride together from the Meridian Hills Country club stables. Gains Post of Editor The dignity of hall president wil! be assumed by Miss Norma Keller next year at Stephens college in Columbia, Mo. She is the daughter of Mrs. E. F. Keller. Editorial duties will be undertaken by Miss Alma Lyon when she returns to Sarah Lawrence college next year. As managing editor of the Campus, a weekly newspaper, she’ll be a busy sophomore. Miss Sarahanne Adams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Ray Adams, was honored this month with exhibition of her paintings in the Montrose gallery in New York. She was one of eighteen students whose work was selected. Ivy Planting Traditional Misses Joanne Dissctte, Florence Shaneberger, and Lillian Young wil: be among the Smith college seniors who will join in the festivities of commencement Miss Dissette will hurry away from commencement exercises June 19 t-o attend the last minute details of the senior luncheon. They will parade through the aisle of the ivy chain on Ivy day, June 17. At the end of the line of march, the senior class president will plant the ivy as the class sings the traditional song. One last evening of serenading will mark the week when alumnae and students gather on illumination night, The campus will be lighted with hundreds of Japanese lanterns. When Miss Clemence Dow-, daughter of Mrs. Thomas Barnett, 6155 College avenue, enters her senior year at Ward-Belmont, Nashville, Tenn., next term, she will have charge of social activities of the X. L. Club, one of the ten social clubs of the school. Miss Dow recently was chosen vice-president of the organization. Arnica Club to Meet Mrs. Walter Enoch, 1115 North Riley street, will be hostess tonight for a meeting of the Arnica Club. Following a review of the year’s study by Mrs. Robert Shank and committee reports, a social hour will bo in charge of Mrs. Thurman Washburn and Mrs. Earl Everhart. Music will be provided by Mrs. Bert Everhart. Dimicr Is Saturday A dinner meeting will be held by the Woman's Rotary club Saturday night at the Propylaeum. Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter has announced Misses Helen Brooks and Virgil Fhenister will sing. A trio, composed of Miss Georgia Baumann, violinist; Miss Virginia Leyenberger. cellist, and Mrs. Edenharter. pianist, will play. W. C. T. U. to Meet The Irvington Union of W. C. T. U. will meet at 2 Friday at the home of Mrs. Margaret Ferguson. 312 North Ritter avenue, when the subject will be ‘‘Temperance and Missions.” Dr. Frances Dean will be the leader. Miss Helen Dirks will sing, and Mrs. Lelia Hadley will be in charge of devotions.

Sororities

Mrs. Carl Wilking, 3036 West Jackson street, will be hostess tonight for a meeting of Alpha chapter. Sigma Delta Zeta sorority. Phi Rho Tau sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the Washington. Alpha and Beta chapters of the Omega Kappa sorority will hold a joint meeting tonight at the home of Miss Jean Sullivan. 1409 North Jefferson avenue. Officers will be elected. Gamma chapter. Alpha Beta Phi sorority, will meet tonight at the home of Miss Frances Kestler, 5222 East Washington street.

Daily Recipe CREOLE SAUSAGE prick the little link sausages and place in a saucepan with 1 cup tomatoes and a pounded clove of garlic. Cover and simmer gently until the sausages are done. Remove them to a hot platter and thicken the liquid with flour smoothed in butter and blended with a little cold water. Serve with a garnish of toast points.

City Graduates at Smith College

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Miss Florence Shaneberger

Three Indianapolis girls, former Tudor Hall students, will receive degrees from Smith college at the commencement exercises Monday morning, June 19. They are Misses Joanne Dissette, Florence Shaneberger and Lillian Young. Miss Dissette, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James I. Dissette, 3665 Washington boulevard, has been active in extracurricular affairs since her entrance at the Smith after attending Tudor Hall and Stoneleigh school of Rye Beach, N. H. She is a mem-

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Spill your troubles to Jane Jordan and you'U feet better. She will help you see your way out of a jam by her answers in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young man 24 years old. I married about a year ago and everything went fine until my business went had and I lost about all I had. Then my wife began to nag at me. I am her second husband and I am crazy about her. She left me last February and now is getting a divorce. She is working in a dow'ntown drug store, but she won’t even let me talk to her or see her at all, and recently I saw her with another fellow. I can’t eat. I can’t sleep. I am ruining my health and I am nearly crazy from grief, because I love her so. Please tell me what I should do. H. C. F. Answer—You should pull yourself together and fill your life with other interests. What pleasure is there in pursuing a woman who does not

want you? The chances are that you are not in love with her at all, but in love with your own idea of her. Every man dreams of his ideal woman, and when he meets someone who takes his fancy he tries to make her fit into his dreams. When she insists on being

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Jane Jordan

herself instead of what he thinks she ought to be, he is miserable. It doesn't occur to him that she would be equally miserable in conforming to his dream pattern. No one has a right to build up an ideal image and then try to force someone else to fit it. Unless you love a woman for what she actually is, let her go. Your union only will torment you both to distraction. If you're honest with yourself, you'll see that you do not like your wife as she is- You simply can't give up what you hoped to make of her. o a a Dear Jane Jordan—l had a few dates with a fellow from one of the high schools in the city a few months ago. He seems to think he can get a date with me the last minute, but when I object, he always has an excuse of some kind. He doesn’t seem to think he should do anything to please a girl and always is doing something to make me angry with him. Should I stop seeing him or go on as we have been, just fighting and making up? GNOME. Answer —What happiness is there to be gained from a situation which constantly provokes quarrels? A young man intent on pleasing himself alone is a good person to forget about. u tt tt Dear Jane Jordan —When a fellow gives his fraternity pin to a girl is that a sign they are engaged? NORA. Answer —Not unless he proposes to her when he puts it on. O tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—l am 17 and have been going steady with a fellow of 20. I like this boy very much, but he is influenced easily. The other night he said he was through with me because of something my girl friend told him I said. He will believe anything she tells him. Meanwhile, I have met another fellow. He is just the opposite. He is gay and happy where the other is silent and moody. He is ready to believe the best where the other is ready to believe the worst. Which should I choose? WONDERING. Answer—l'd choose a cheerful character in preference to a gloomy one, without an instant's hesitation Life is hard enough as it is without the person who always is ready to put a still gloomier construction on events. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l'm in love with a man thirteen years older. He is engaged to another woman, but as thpv have illicit relations I do not know whether this is love or not. Could it be? Do you think I have a chance of winning this man, and if so how? XXX. Answer —How would you feel il you were the girl he is engaged to? You'd probably feel insecure enough without having to cope with the machinations of a younger and less fa- ! miliar woman. Apparently, women

FURSsrI INDIANA FUR CO. I ? E. <>*l<i St. Lincoln 219© I

Miss Joanne Dissette

ber of the senior class luncheon committee of the judicial board and was vice-president of the house of representatives, the student governing group. She majored in English. Miss Young, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard S. Young, 4353 North Pennsylvania street, will receive a degree in history. Listed three years on the dean’s high scholarship list is the record of Miss Shaneberger. daughter of Mr- and Mrs. Edgar T. Shaneberger, 3040 Washington boulevard. She majored in history.

have absolutely no feeling for each other where a man is concerned. They never stop to reason that the man whom they win from another woman just as easily may be won from them. The important thing is to get him and regret it afterward. The illicit relations of this couple argue 1 that the girl is in love. If you let her alone, shp may have a chance to straighten out her life by marrying him. It won’t do you any harm to think about somebody besides yourself for once. MRS. D. B. RAY TO ENTERTAIN GUESTS Mrs. Dillon B. Ray, 515 East Sixtieth street, has as her guests, her daughter, Mrs. Harrell V. Baily, Mr. Baily and son David of Houston, Tex. Mrs. Ray will receive informally from 3 to 5 Thursday afternoon at her home in honor of her daughter.

Mrs. Sherrin to Be Hostess for Voters’ League Luncheon

Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin will be hostess for the luncheon meeting of the executive committee of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters Thursday at her home, 4330 Central avenue. Fall and winter programs will be discussed and plans made for the appointment of committee members. Appointments will be made for the following committees; Efficiency in government, with Mrs. Leo M. Gardner, chairman; international co-operation, with Mrs. R. S. Sinclair, chairman; education, child welfare and women in industry. Members will be considered for the committees in living costs, social hygiene and legal status of women at a later date. Members of the executive board of the league will be guests of Mrs. J.

BEVERIDGE WEDDING INVITATIONS ISSUED

Invitations for the wedding of Miss Elizabeth Lincoln Scaife and Albert J. Beveridge Jr., at 4 June 21 at Milton, Mass., have been issued by the bride-elect’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Livingston Scaife of Milton. The ceremony will take place in St. Michael's church. The bridegroom-elect is the son of Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge of Indianapolis and Beverly Farms, Mass. A reception will follow' the rites.

Personals

Mrs. Thomas J. Finneran, 2956 Princeton place, has as her guest her daughter, Mrs. Charles Dana Rollings of Louisville, Ky. Final Meeting Set The final meeting of the National Association of Working Women will be held at 6 tonight in the Washington when initiation of new members will be held. A musical program and social hour w T ill follow. Luncheon Is Thursday Past Presidents' Association to the B. of R. T. will hold a covered dish luncheon meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. J. W. Wickiiff, 2128 Napoleon.

“Just give folks Quaker,” grandma / j "I’ll guarantee they'll be well fed.” \ Then o'er her dear old face there J| The Smile that won’t come off. A 1 Creamy richness luscious flavor extra nourishment QUICK QUAKER OATS AT ABOUT Vi THE PRICE OF A YEAR AGO!

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ",

Miss Lillian Young

Miss Gates Is Bride in Rites on Southside Miss Ida Agnes Gates, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Gates, 1219 Southern avenue, became the bride of Eugene F. Irwin in a ceremony Tuesday morning in St. Catherine’s church. The Rev. James M. Downey officiated. The bride wore a gown of angel skin lace and a veil, with the cap caught with orange blossoms. She carried bridal roses and lilies of the valley. Her only attendant was Miss Nina McAtee, who wore a gown of Eleanor blue and carried roses and delphinium. Ray Sweeney was best man. Miss Kathryn Dudenz, organist, played bridal airs, and Misses Beatrice and Gertrude Sweeney sang “Ave Maria.” A wedding breakfast for the bridal party followed at whispering Winds. The couple left for a trip through the east, and will be at home at 1631 Tabor street after June 11.

J. Daniels, at her home in Brendonwood next Wednesday. Mrs. Daniels is the newiy elected president of the league. TUDOR HALL WILL HOLD GRADUATION Commencement exercises of Tudor Hall School for Girls will be held at 8 Friday night, June 9, in the First Presbyterian church. Members of the class are Misses Eileen Bingham Booker, Mary Nading DePrez, of Shelbyville, Marjorie Gilmour Emerson, Julia Carolyn Freyn, Katharine Fulton, Mary Phyllis Gordon, Philena Jane Hamill, Martha Lisette Hammerschmidt, Elizabeth Jane Hartong, Anne Katharine Hoffman, Betti Louise Kahn, Ruth Lilly, Helen Irving Moxley, Lynette Sabine Potlitzer, Mary Osborne Prentice of Terre Haute, Hope Reisner, Alida Sherwood, Sara Jayne Smith, Rhoda McKinney Steckel, Anne Tennant, Betty Jane Tharp and Mary Fox Wildhack. BRIDE-ELECT TORE FETED AT SHOWER Miss Roseann O'Brien, bride-elect, will be honored tonight with a kitchen show'er given by Mrs. William McKibben, 549 North Emerson | avenue. Guests will be Mesdames William Moran, Roscoe DeVore and John Finnertey of Terre Haute, Misses Virginia Lyons, Margaret Maley, Ellen Cain, Margaret Borst, Louise Kernel, Helena Frye, Carolyn Rosenfelt and Mary McKibben. Students to Dance Benjamin Harrison Law school will hold a dance Thursday night at the Columbia club following the dinner and commencement exercises. Leßoy Hunter’s "Black Cats” will play.

Card Parties

June committee of Altar Society of St. Roch’s church will sponsor a dance Thursday night at 3600 South Meridian street. Mothers Club of the Holy Cross church will hold a euchre party tonight at the home of Mrs. John Shanahan, 534 North Oriental street. Prizes will be given.

‘Luck’ Is No Element in Cooking Art Attention to Details is Chief Factor for Success. Thla Is the last of thro* special articles bv Sister Mary outlining cooking helps for the bride. BY SISTER MARY NE4 Service Writer Many a bride approaches her first days in the kitchen with some misgivings but the science of cooking is as definite and obvious as two plus two. Undoubtedly, there is a “knack” for various branches of cookery, but success is not a matter of luck. It is just that there is a right way and wrong way of doing things and the right way is quite as easy as the wrong if you know the fundamentals upon which success is dependent. If you think of a recipe as nothsion in method of procedure and careful attention to detail. And remember that those cooks of long standing who say they “never measure a thing” do measure. Repetition has taught their eyes and hands to gauge the quantity with comparative accuracy. Sugar Toughens Skin There are certain well establishrules for the cooking of meals and fruits and vegetables. Since this is the season for fresh fruits and vegetables, let’s begin with them. Whenever fruit is cooked, be it fresh or dried, do not add sugar until the fruit is tender. If sugar is added sooner, the skin tends to toughen and the texture of the fruit is hard, nor will the fruit be as sweet and delicately flavored. • The more acid the fruit the more essential the rule. Keep this in mind when making apple sauce. Never let fruit stand in water. Wash it thoroughly and carefully, then drain and use. This same rule applies to vegetables, too. Wash them well and prepare for cooking. If they are wilty, they may be put into water just long enough to freshen them. This should be done before they are trimmed or cut,in any way. Vegetables should be cooked in ing more nor less than a “formula” you will understand the necessity for accuracy in measuring, precias little water as possible to preDon’t “Brown” Vegetables vent burning. Take care not to over-cook them and serve them as soon as they are done. Cook in actively boiling water and add salt when they are half-cocked. Since most of the succulent summer vegetables will cook in twenty to thirty minutes, add salt at the end of ten minutes if the “halfdone” stage confuses you. Cook green vegetables uncovered if you would preserve their color. Strong-juiced vegetables, such as cabbage and onions, should also be cooked uncovered and in a larger amount of water. When a sauce is made for vegetables, it will be finer flavored if half milk and half vegetable stock is used. White Sauce Recipe Given White sauce of varying, degrees of richness is generally liked with most vegetables. A thin sauce, the consistency of rich cream, is delicious over green beans and peas. A thicker sauce that coats the vegetable is used for new potatoes and cauliflower. But no matter how thick the sauce may be, it is always made the same: Melt the butter, stir in the flour and slowly add, stirring constantly, the liquid which should be cold. Two tablespoons butter, from two teaspoons to two tablespoons flour and onehalf teaspoon salt are the proportions to use with one cup of liquid to make one cup of white sauce. The less flour, the thinner the sauce. Vegetables must of course be drained before combining with the sauce. Most recipes make too much for a family of two. The average recipe is planned to serve from four to six persons so that using half the recipe will give generous servings for two persons. Be sure to use half of each ingredient when you reduce a recipe. If five eggs are called for it’s a good idea to use three small one for half the amount and if three eggs are needed use two small ones. Leader to Speak Mrs. Margaret Wells Wood, associate chairman of the committee on social hygiene of the National Congress of Parent-Teachers, will speak at the May meeting of the Decatur Central Parent-Teacher association at 2:30 Friday in the Decatur Central high school gymnasium.

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ARRANGING DANCE

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Miss Rhoda Roberts

Miss Rhoda Roberts is chairman of a dance, to be given Tuesday, June 6, at Holy Name church in Beech Grove. Music will be provided by Bill Epstein's orchestra.

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C o o 1 tern No. D l Size Street City State Name

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CAPE FROCK Just get into print these days and your social success is asssured, especially if it’s a silky cotton print. There’s nothing swankier for your new cape frocks. And when we say cape frocks, we mean this cape frock. It’s designed to make you look and feel as glamorous as your favorite movie star. The cape is not the only reason why this frock belongs in every wardrobe. The velvet sash and the touch of flow'ers are gay little feminine touches that you’ll see again and again as the season advances. Why not be the first to wear them? Even if you’ve never made a frock before, you'll find this one easy. And there are more like it in the new r summer fashion book. Size 16 requires 3M> yards of 39-inch material, Vi yard ribbon. Width about 2 yards. Pattern No. 5231 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 bust. New summer fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and inclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern, 15 cents. (Copyright, 1933, by United Features Syndicate. Inc.) Talk Is for Girls * Mrs. Margaret Wells Wood, New York, of the American Association of Social Hygiene, will sptak at the Y. W. C. A. at 6:40 tonight on “Business Girls Face Love and t,ife.” The talk is open to all business girls in the city.

Conservative Colors in Men’s Wear Giving Way to Pastels for Summer Light Hues Prominent in Displays of Shirts, Ties and Hose; ‘Slack Sox’ Shown for Use by Sportsmen. BY HELEN LINDSAY THE well-dressed man this summer will break away from conservative colors, and wear pastel shades. Shirts, ties, hose and even garters are made this year in light blues, greens, and all the pale shades Oi yellow. Strauss is showing robes, shirts, hose, and ties in yellow. Thr newest tie is the “cat’s whiskers’’; a bow with pointed ends, shown m plain or figured India madras.

Strauss is also stressing the return of the Norfolk jacket suit, made with pleats and belt. “Ev-R-Up” is the name of the new men's hose made by Phoenix, which needs no garter to keep it from wrinkling down over the top of the shoe. Made about four inches shorter than the ordinary hose, this hose has a hand of lastex woven into the top. which holds it securely. These come in all colors, particularly in the light summer shades, and are shown at H. P. Wasson & Cos. For sports wear “slack sox” are shown at Wassons. They are English ribbed hose, with deep turned down cuffs. The popularity of slacks for sport wear brought this type of hose into fashion. For the man who still prefers to wear plus fours, the new slack sox are to be worn, with bare legs between their tops and the bottom of the knickers. In the more conservative hose for men, small figures and clocks still are good.

“Slax” are the new narrow garters in pastel shades, to be worn this summer with sports wear for men. They are made by Paris. a a a a a a Introduce Auto Smoking Accessory FOR the motorist who smokes as he drives, there is an automatic cigarette holder and lighter shown at Charles Mayer's. It has a space for a complete package of. cigarettes, and is made to be fastened to the control board of the car. At one touch of a button, a cigaret is dropped into a receptacle at the bottom of the holder. Another touch and the cigarette is lighted, by contact with an electric lighter. It is adaptable to all automobiles. tt tt tt a a a Patrons Kept Abreast of Fashions FIVE thousand Indianapolis women, selected from a special list marie up at the William H. Block Company, receive ' Trend,'’ which is Block's own fashion magazine. The magazine is published four times a year, -with the beginning of the different fashion seasons. Nationally famous fashion experts contribute to its pages, and individual creations featured in the store are reproduced in the illustrations, in a recent window display. Block’s reproduced the front of the cover and a part of the middle page of illustrations of the May, June and July number, which recently was sent out.

Indiana Women Paid Honors at Chicago World’s Fair

BY' MRS. MAURICE MURPHY Times Staff Writer CHICAGO, May 31.—Names of the Indianapolis Council of Women and the May Wright Sewall Indiana Council of Women appear on the large tablet among others in the National Council of Women of the United States in a corner of the attractive exhibit hall in the Hall of Social Sciences. It is here that the picture of Mrs. May Wright Sewall will hang. Women everywhere well may gaze with . pride upon this, the only strictly speaking woman's exhibit at the fair, and upon the mural painted by a noted woman mural j artist, Hildreth Meiere. “The ‘canvas portrays the great movements in which women found themselves caught up byHhe march of the century and how these movements gradually brought about their emancipation from the more hampering influences of the home. “Most of the figures are symbolic, although a resemblance to Clara Barton is traceable in the Civil war scene and the portrait of Susan B. Anthony, carrying a suffrage banner, is unmistakable.” Names of the seven living women of the thirty who are conceded to j have influenced the life of the century and whose miniature likenesses are shown in the narrow border include Cora Wilson Stewart, Dr. Florence Rena Sabin, Dr. Alice Hamilton, Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, Judge Florence E. Allen, Amelia Earhart, and Frances Perkins. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s silver inkwell, Susan B. Anthony's red shawl, the mitts of Frances E. Willard, a tiny cross sent by Jean Ingelow to Louisa Alcott and the helmet and goggles with which Amelia Earhart made the trans-Atlantic flight are among the mementoes shown in the exhibit for which the mural is a background. Scrapbooks contain clippings of she activities of women and the

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31 AY 31, 1933

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Mrs. Lindsay

work of modern women in the thirty-one organizations connected with the National Council of Women is shown in a series of handsomely bound books. Blue, taupe and deep red are predominating colors in the attractive hall, where indirect lighting is used. The furniture is of modernistic design of painted blue and walnut chairs have red-cushioned seats. I'.-T. .4. GROUP TO HOLD LAST SESSION P.-T. A. of school 45 will hold its final meeting of the year at 1:45 Thursday at the school. Members of the 8A class and their mothers will be honor guests. A business meeting and election of officers will be followed by a puppet show r and social hour. The puppets were made and will be presented by members of the 8A does.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Stewed figs, cereal, cream, crisp broiled bacon, potatoes hashed in milk, breakfast radishes, toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Ham and spinach, timbale, rye roils, pineapple and cheese salad, milk, tea. Dinner — Casserole of lamb, buttered new potatoes, jellied cabbage salad, snow pudding with custard sauce, milk, coffee.