Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 168, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1933 — Page 9
NOV. 23, 1033
Oratorio to Be Given by Clubs Union Irvington Board Meets to Arrange Activities for Month. First plans for th* annual presentation of Handel's oratorio, “T:.e Messiah,’' on Dee. 8 at the Irvington Methodist church were discussed at the monthly business meeting of the council of the Irvington Union of Clubs yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Willard Bolte. 243 Downey avenue. Chairmen for the community chorus are Mrs. Tom S. Elrod and Mrs John Paul Ragsdale. J. Russell Paxton is director. Th children’s entertainment committee will hold a children's pingpong tournament at 10 Saturday in the Irvington Presbyterian church. The committee will sponsor an adapted version of Oliver Twist Saturday afternoon, Dec. 28, to be presented by the Irvington playhouse in the Irvington Methodist church. Billy Shirley will have the leading role. Mrs. H. L. Hasbrook is chairman of the children’s entertainment committee. Plans were made for a Christmas clearing house, to be conducted by the union to incorporate all charitable activities of the community during the holidays. The American Legion auxiliary to Irvington post .38 was admitted to membersnip. Mrs. Homer Chenoweth is president. D. Stanley Cain, Waterman research professor ow Indiana university, will give an illustrated lecture Friday night at the art exhibit in Carr’s hall. He will display colored slides made from recent photographs he took in the Great Smoky mountains. Special guests were chairmen of the standing committee of the union, presidents and vice-presi-dents of affiliated organizations. Mrs. Bolte was assisted by members of the executive board, Mesdames W. O. Terry, Charles M. Cunningham, James C. Todd and F. W. Payne and Miss Lolo Conner. Mrs. Walter W. Ward, president, and Mrs. Charles A. Harris, past president, and advisory member-at-large, presided at the tea table.
0. E. S, AUXILIARY TO HOLD PROGRAM
Two plays will be presented at the meeting of the Naomi auxiliary, O. E. S. at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon at the Masonic temple, North and Illinois strets, with Mrs. Nellie K. Srammel as hostess. Mrs. Charlotte Halter is entertainment chairman. Those taking part are Mesdames Ethel Wallace, Catherine Meyers, Mamie Passmore, Genevieve Bard, Bessie Wikoff, Sue Robertson, Etta Johnson. Helen Mitchell, Millie Gilmore, Amy McDaniels. Miss June Cullem and Robert McDaniel, Billy and Charlotte Grosskoff. MRS. HOOKER TO~ ENTERTAIN GROUP Mrs. George Rocker. 1210 North Drexel avenue, will entertain members of the Alpha chapter. Mothers’ and Daughters’ Club tonight. Plans for the club Christmas party will be discussed. Officers of the club include Mrs. C. M. Amacher, president; Miss Mary McGinty. vice-president; Mrs. Rooker, secretary; Mrs. John McGinty, treasurer; Mrs. Nellie Larkins, social chairman, and Mrs. G. H. Smith, publicity. Miss Schort Returns Miss Gwendolyn F. Schort, 1007 East Maple road boulevard, has returned from Brownsburg where she presented a program of readings for the Women's Study Club. She was assisted by Geraldine Martin, one of her pupils.
! Daily Recipe j BRAN DELIGHTS I I 1 1 4. cups sit ted flour s { fJ j. tenspodns combina- j | tion baking powder | { i .teaspoon salt j j l-o tablespoon grated I | orange rind j S Vi cup butter or other j { shortening I ) 1 cup sugar { j 1 egg, well beaten j j 1 tablespoon milk I i 1 tablespoon orange j s Juicc s ■ l u 2 cups Bran pokes Sift flour once, measure, add j I baking powder and salt, sift* I | again. Add orange rind to j i butter, and cream thoroughly, j ! Add sugar gradually and ! | cream together until light and I i fluffy. Add egg. milk, and j ■ orange juice, beating well. I Add flour, then Bran flakes I | and mix thoroughly. Chill j i until firm enough to roll. Roll i ? inch thick on slightly j | floured board. Cut in desired | j shapes and bake on imgreased j baking sheet in hot oven ! I i42S'FJ 5 to 10 minutes. { | Makes 4 dozen cookies. |
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Miss Teetor Engaged
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Miss Winifred Teetor
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN '
If you are too close to your own problem to see it clearly, write to Jane Jordan for an impersonal viewpoint. Letters of comment on the problems presented are invited. * Dear Jane Jordan—l am an orphan who had an unhappy life from the ages of 8 to 20. Before that my childhood w r as so perfect that the deprivations that followed made me long for comfortable things, a home, nice clothes and nice surroundings. At 19 I met a man eleven years older, who fell sincerely in love with me. He had a comfortable *! fortune, excellent family, social B& '” L *lißy | position and fine Yip v i j character. At JTfrmr first I liked him j for all the nice things he did for * me, but I ioon Ik/’ '1 learned to care deeply for him. He is an extreme- T - . Jane Jordan ly likable person. but decidedly cold, which ’is his greatest fault. Then- I met a young man my own age, divorced from his wife. We fell madly in love. Within three months the older man proposed. The turmoil that arose in my mind caused many, many sleepless nights! On one hand there was a fine, solid, dependable man whose kindness had been proved, and for whom I had deep respect and admiration. On the other, a younger man. just as dependable and fine, of a nice family, but no money. I married the older man, certain that I could force a mad infatuation out of my life and make myself into a good wife. After two years I am most unhappy, but have concealed it from my husband, who is happy. Immediately after marriage I found that he had no physical attraction for me. In fact I hate being a wife to him. He never has had an affectionate nature and does not see my restlessness. Recently I have seen the younger man again. He gives me the fun and joy of living, and he still loves me. I love to be with people my own age and enjoy ■laughter and light heartedness. I know now that my feeling was not an infatuation. A divorce would hurt my husband terribly. I don't want to hurt him as he is a fine, good man. but I do feel that I could find real happiness with the other man. I want a family but my husband does not care for children. He has one by a former marriage to whom he pays not the slightest attention. Leaving the other man out of the question, I feel that the only fair thing to do is to /leave my husband. I can support . myself without help from him. He ! will feel bad, but not as bad as if he finds out I am living with him because I don't want to hurt him. What is your opinion? CYNTHIA. Answer —To the modern viewpoint it is more moral to break a contract than to keep it when it is no longer possible to fulfill its most essential feature—love. There is much to be said for the honesty of this | stand in a situation where it is so obvious that the letter kills whereas ; the spirit gives life. However. I do think tnat a woman | ought to subject herseif to a severe : psychological investigation before i she embarks on divorce. It is not wise to run away from a situation simply because you do not like it. I but it is a very bad preparation for the problems to come. To walk out on a difficulty is not to escape it, i for every one drags the weight of his unresolved conflicts behind him, to dog his footsteps in each new adventure. Because of your childhood's hardi ships you came to believe that cco-
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Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Teetor, Hagerstown, announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Winifred Teetor, to F. Delbrook Lichtenberg. The ceremony will take place Jan. 20 in Hagerstown.
—Photo by Dexheimer.
nomic security was the only thing worth having. When life offered you a choice * between the risk of love and the ease of plenty, you throttled love and eloped with plenty. You had to live a while longer before you discovered what scant nourishment is to be drawn from material things—before you learned that you cant assault instinct with impunity. Now you would like to turn the clock back and start all over again with love as your choice. It is your second attempt to escape from something without coping with it. Repetition of this pattern is bound to lead you from failure to failure. The chances are that your husband never has had a chance to make good with you because you put him in the place of the father you lost. The whole setup was an unconscious attempt on your part to establish a replica of your childhood home, in which you functioned as a child whose needs are supplied by an allgiving father. Under these conditions it is not surprising that the physical fires of love failed to ignite between you. You are blaming your husband for underdevelopment on the erotic side. His coldness may be due to the fact that he regards you as a daughter more than a wife. And men do not make ardent love to their daughters. It is quite possible that the two of you could make a satisfactory adjustment on a more mature plane. Os course what I have said is in some measure true of every divorce. But it is not as if your husband were stupid, cruel or hopelessly selfish. He has done everything he knew to help you attain your goal in life. If that goal has been changed, he has a right to know it. You can't act a part with him forever, to be sure. It is better to let him face the problem than to conceal it. Surely this husband deserves a fair chance to cope with his difficulty in the open, for no man can fight without knowing his adversary. If you fail to work it out together after the cards are on the table, then divorce is the best solution for you both.
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Awful Looking Eruptions over % Face and Neck. Cuticura Healed. "My face and neck were affected with blackheads. After a while these turned into big, sore eruptions that were very painful. They scaled over and were scattered over my face and neck making them very awful looking. My face waa terribly irritated by scratching for they burned terribly. This caused me to lose much sleep. “This trouble lasted six or seven months. Then my mother told me about Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I sent for a free sample and then purchased more and at the end of two months I was completely healed.” iSigned)Miss Lavoy Little, 1225 Ohio Ave, Wichita, Kans., Jan. 31,1933. j Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 59c. Talcum 25c. V*J Proprietors: Potter Dm St Ckemic.l Cor*.. Malden. Mom.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Highland Club to Entertain With Supper Highland Golf and Country Club will entertain members at a buffet j supper to be followed by keno and bridge at the clubhouse at 6:30 Sunday night. The committee arranging the affair includes Messrs, and Mes- j dames Harrison M. Bennett, S. E. i Fenstermaker, Arch V. Grossman, j T. M. Kaufman, John J. Kennedy. J. J. Lang, Fred Schumacher and John A. Welch. Others assisting Include Messrs, and Mesdames Edward Zaiser. Floyd J. Mattice, George Desautels, Robert N. Dedaker, Dr. Goethe Link and John C. Ruckelshaus. The club has scheduled a junior supper dance for Thanksgiving eve which will be attended by young persons home for the holiday.
MISS FITCH WILL HOLD STUDIO TEA
Miss Josephine Fitch will entertain members of her dramatic art class and their mothers at a Thanksgiving studio tea at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon, at the D. A. R. chapter house. Those taking part on the program will be Adele Herwitz, Joan Hen dren, Noell Patenaude, Betsy Bowen, Vera Nicolai, Iva and Oreta Bossert, Phyllis Jean Paidrick, Lois Randolph, Lorraine Piercy, Mary Linda McKinstry, Betty Poole, Mary Jane McGuire, Catherine Ruth Heithecker, Nancy Hurt and Martha Ann Shaw. LEGION AUXILIARY SCHEDULES PARTY Mrs. Ruth Hawkins is chairman of the card party to be held .tomorrow night at the American Legion Canteen Club, 963 North Pennsylvania street, under the direction of the American Legion auxiliary drum and bugle corps. Assisting Mrs. Hawkins are Mesdames Pauline Raindon, Eleanor Schultz, Gladys Sullivan, Marie Bush, Violet Wilson, Mary Ann Long, Margarete Ray, Alice Volstad, Emily Franke, LaVerne Ingstad, Davie Miller, Zelma Monroe. Others are Mesdames Blanche Breedlove, Christina McCleary, Dorothy Andrus, Elsie Johnson, Eva Van Meter, Leland Dyer, Thelma Jones, Reva Clair, Emma Lantz, Marie Hays, Marie Myers and Grayce Piercefield and Miss Irma Huff, Miss Geneva Hickman and Miss Lillian Schwieter. Kappas to Entertain Pledges of Butler university chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will entertain actives with a dance Saturday night at the chapter house, 821 West Hampton drive. Miss Edith Marie Overtree is chairman and will be assisted by Misses Dorothy Dunbar, Mrs, Lou Baker and Betty Schellschmidt.
j A Day’s Menu j | Breakfast — I • i j Grapes, cereal, cream, = bread crumb pancakes, | honey, milk, coffee. j ! Luncheon — J ! j Vegetable chowder, crou- ! tons, head lettuce with I French dressing, rice cus- j j tard pudding, milk, tea. I Dinner — Baked bluefish, potatoes I an gratin, baked tomatoes, j | Chinese cabbage and cel- = ery in lime jelly salad, ! pumpkin pie, milk, coffee, i j J
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