Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 167, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1933 — Page 9

NOV. *22, 1933.

Ushers to Be t Directed by Helen Coffey Mix* Hrlpn Coffey will bp head usher for the opening performance tonight of "Rebound'' at. thp Civic; theater. Assisting Miss Coffey will b*- the Misses Jane Fliedner. Margaret Hablch, Maja Brownlee and Helena Sipe. Mrs Harold Victor, head usher tomorrow night, will be assisted by Misses Isabel Guedelhoefer. Norma Deiuse, Rosemary Keogh and Louise Jaeger. Assisting Mrs. Vance Smith on Friday night will be Mrs. William Over, Mrs. Harry Wade Mrs Hal T. Benham. Miss Kllen Rogers and Miss Mildred Blacklidge Saturday night ushers wiil include Miss Marv Margaret Miller, chair- j man, assisted by Mrs. Allen Miller. Mrs. Gaylord Wood. Misses Elsie , Hancock. Ernestine Bradford and Be*tv Jeanne Davis.

ST, JOAN WOMEN TO SPONSOR TALK

Mrs. Helen Schuster Martin will talk on the Life of Joan of Arc’’ at the Uptown theater Friday afternoon under the auspices om the St. Joan of Arc Womens Club. Mrs. Max Sander and Mrs. Leon Desamels are in charge of tickets. Mrs. Joseph J. Gramling and Mrs. William S Ankcnbrock are general chairmen. Assisting the chairmen are Mesdames Joseph Gilson. Carl Habich, Joseph Knue, George Knue, William H KirkhofT Robert Kirby. Rey Keogh, Thomas McGee, Kathleen Moldthan. Scott Shesler, Joseph V. Stout, Leon DeSautels, Vincent D Vincent, Oscar Barry. George Faulstirh, Thomas Colbert. John Dwyer. Ray Rosier. George Spencer. J. P. Sullivan. Thpo. H. Volkert, Henry Schneider, Marv Morrison. David Liggett. Elmer Steffen. R. H. I.osey, Doherty Sheerin, Raiph Tttenbach, Robert, Tttenbach. Herbert Haag. Paul McNamara. Alex Gottemoller. Max Sander. John K. Ruckelishaus, J R. McNutt and E. N. Gass.

Card Pari 11 Set Irvington unit No. 38, American I egion auxiliary, will sponsor a earri party at 2 Fririav at the BannerWhitehill auditorium. Proceeds will he used to buy Christmas baskets for nredv families. Thp committee is" composed of Mesdames Merrill Woods, Richard Kinder, William Polk and R. L. Schutt. Germany io Hr Topic Dr. Elmer G. Homrighausen will alk on his trip to Germany and ie Na/t movement before the meeting of the International study group at 730 tonight at the Phyllis Wheatley Y. W. C. A Mrs. Litilc Honored Mrs. Walter J. Little of Santa Monica, Cal., was guest of honor at a family dinner, given last night by Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Gillespie, 1433 North Pennsylvania street. Mothers io Med Oak Hill Mothers' Chib of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten society will meet tomorrow. Mrs. Josephine Bernitt is president.

A Day’s Menu Break fust — Ripe plums, cereal cooked with dates, cream, crisp bacon, toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Baked cheese and bread, creamed green peppers, blueberry muffins, sweet, potato pudding, milk, tea. Dinner—lamb steak with stewed apricots, sweet corn in cream, stewed okra and tomatoes, sw'eet potato and cocoanut pudding, milk, coffee.

Shoes —Narrow Sizes! A AAA and AAA footwear in new style* as common in our store* as sugar at your grocers. NISIJTS $5 44 No. Penn. St.

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M', r '. I Housewives! Just a Moment Please! Your Date Tomorrow Should he to Hear M iss Ruth Chambers at The Times Free Cooking School Murat Theater Two Sessions Thursday 2P. M.—B P. M. Everything Is FREE!

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Wh*n*v*r hr idmetbinf U 44 t a th? atlvlrr mo rpsd In this write rrictioiM In a letter! Tha he ft letter* will b t Dear Jane Jordan—My troubles are the old. old ones of a girl who has loved not wisely, but too well. I'll be perfectly frank and tell you that for three years I was the mistress of a married man whom I adored. I call it mistress, but during that time I supported myself, although he was in a position to keep me in story book fashion jf

I had demanded it. At no time was I dependent upon him except for love and attention. Within the last few months I have lost my job —and him Due to circumstances beyond our control we were separated and our relationship discovered by both his family and mine. I have been practically

Jane Idkdan

cast off by my family. I am endured, that is all. He has told me never to communicate w'ith him in any way again. That statement did w’hat nothing else has been able to do. It killed my adoration of him. But life is empty. Everything I have done for the last few years has been centered around him. I never dared make an engagement, until the last minute because he might w’ant, me. I wore certain clothes, certain colors, said certain things, went certain places just because he demanded it. I’m told I’m too smart to attract The normal run of young men. As you know, men like to think their women are beautiful but just a little dumber than they are. I will watch with interest to learn just what you think you w'ould do in my place, and earnestly hope you can set me straight on anew course. THREE YEARS LOST Answer—No three years are lost that have been spent in learmag. Even mistakes have value if they're educational. The important thing for you just now’ is to understand what happened to you and how to avoid, making a similiar mistake in tile future. To begin with your love affair w'ith this man was not on a reality basis. According to your ow'n confession you were not being yourself at all, but the woman your lover hoped to find in you. You acted a part, you dressed a part, you thought a part. Sooner or later a love affair founded on this basis is bound to fail, because it depends on Illusion for its life instead of reality. According to Jung, the Zurich psychoanalyst, every man has certain feminine characteristics of w hich he is completely unconscious. He goes about searching for a woman who symbolizes the represented feminine element in his nature. If this theory is correct, the chances are your lover saw in you only the feminine counterpart of himself. It, was not the actual you whom he loved, but this feminine half of himself which he projected on to your person. The story of creation in Genesis beautifully symbolizes mans unconscious need for a feminine personality. Eve is made from Adam's

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rib. Bhe emerges as a part of himself and exists not for herself but as a helpmeet for man. In the early stages of her development, almost every woman strives to play this role. She does not conceive of herself as a separate entity at all, but only as the feminine soul of man. Some women have a sort of genius for playing this part. They are girls who attract flocks of boys without knowing exactly how they do it. Every one is familiar with the little nit-wit who leads the men around by the no*e, while her more intelligent sisters wonder why they are wall flowers. It merely means that she is the universal symbol of femininity for which men unconsciously hunger. Possibly it explains the enormous vogue of some movie stars. Jung claims that the woman thus gifted is never a decisive personality. but a vague sort of person w'ho acts as a mirror for man’s moods. When he laughs, she laughs. When he grieves, she grieves. Always he sees the submerged element of himself reflected in her. He never conceives of her as a person in her own right, with ideas of her own. She lives in his accomplishments, but does nothing of her own accord. This is what w r e mean by love which j? based on illusion instead of reality. The lover w'ho sees only himself in the beloved is doomed to disappointment. After all, woman has come a long way since the fable of Adam and Eve. She has discovered herself as a separate entity with a will and wishes of her ow r n. When love is on a reality basis, the partners do not seek to project their owm unconscious values on to each other. Each loves the other for w'hat he is and for the real values which he contributes to the union. They find a certain strength in each other which they could not achieve alone. The next time you fall in love, subject your feelmg to a more critical analysis instead of hiding your brains in order to play a part,

Daily Recipe PLANKED GROUND BEEF Season tw'o pounds of ground beef w’ith salt, pepper, minced onion, and Worcestershire sauce; bind all together with one egg beaten into onehalf cup of milk. Form into a thick steak and cook for fifteen minutes in a hot frying pan. turning once during cooking. When nicely browned remove steak carefully, to avoid breaking, to the center of a hot plank. Pipe a border of t mashed potatoes afound the edge of the plank. Arrange around the steak small cooked carrots and small white onions w'hich have been boiled until tender and a little of the center scooped out and filled with buttered crumbs. Season all with salt, pepper, and butter and put in the oven for ten or fifteen minutes until the steak is cooked and the potatoes are nicely browned.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Louise Schmitt Will Entertain for Miss Quinn Handkerchief shower and bridge party tonight will honor Miss Margaret Quinn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Quinn, whose engagement to John Barton Griffin has been announced Miss Louise Schmitt, assisted by her mother, Mrs. Herman H. Schmitt, will entertain at her home 4229 Central avenue. A centerpiece of red chrysanthemums will be used on the serving table which will be lighted by blue tapers. Guests w’ith Miss Quinn will include Mrs. Paul McNamara, Mrs. Herman Winkler. Misses Helen Geiger, Helen Leppert. Mary Cummins, Mary Frances Terry, Margaret Branson. Regina Fleury, Jane Sherer and Miss Jane Stanford of Houston, Tex. Miss Stanford and Miss Quinn were classmates at St. Mary's college at Notre Dame. M rs. Heller Entertains Mrs. Wallace Heller. 650 West Forty-third street, entertained the Semper Fidelis Club this afternoon with a card party.

Not Just Another PillTo Deaden Pam Bat a wonderful modern medicine which acts upon the conditions which CAUSE the pain. Take them regularly and you should suffer less and less each month. PERSISTENT USE BRINGS PERMANENT RELIEF. Sold at all good drug stores. Small site 50 i. LYDIA L PINKHAM’S TABLETS FOR RELIEF AND PREVENTION OP PERIODIC PAINS

Stubborn Coughs Ended by Recipe, Mixed at Home Big Saving! No Cooking! So Easy! Here is Ibe famous old recipe which millions of housewives have found to be the most dependable means of breaking up stubborn coughs. It takes but a moment to prepare, and costs very little, but it positively has no equal for quick, lasting relief. From any druggist, get ounce* of Pinex. Pour this into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with granulated sugar syrup, made with 2 cups of sugar and one cup of water, stirred a few moments until dissolved. No cooking needed—it’s so easy! Thus you make a full • pint of better remedy than you could buy ready-made, and you get four times as much for your money. Tt never spoils and children love its taste. This simple mixture soothes and heals the inflamed throat membranes with surprising ease. It. loosens the germ-laden phlegm and eases chest soreness in a way 1 hat is really astonishing. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of Norway Pine, the most reliable healing agent for severe coughs. Tt, is guaranteed to give prompt reliei or money refunded. —Advertisement.

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