Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 192, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 December 1933 — Page 18
PAGE 18
Alumni Feel More Proud of Sewanee One of Four Graduates in City is Author of School History. BY BEATRICE BURGAN. Tim** Woman* Pag* Editor INDIANAPOLIS alumr.i of the University of the South, familiarly known as Sewanee, have had pride in their Alma Mater strengthened by an historical sketch, compiled recently by Charles Edward Thomas, one of the local graduates. Dr. Oscar Torian and his son. John T. Torian. Thomas Henderson and Mr. Thomas are the only
graduates of the university In Indianapolis and because of family connections with Sewanee are well aware of its interesting history. Mr. Hhomas, who left today to spend the holidays at Ridgeway, S. C., with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Charlton Thomas, has made an inte resting story of facts, which have given
Miss Burgan
the university the title of ' The Oxford of America.” The first procession of college students in America wearing the Oxford cap and gown passed through Sewanee's cloistered walks, and since then no junior or senior in the college, no faculty member or graduate student has been in the classroom or chapel without a gown. Governed Like Oxford Mr. Thomas writes that even the government is that of Oxford. The kinship was recognized by English enucators several years ago when the chancellor of Cambridge presented Sewn nee a handsome ermine vice-chancellor robs. In the walls of the chapel are hi toric stones from England and Scotland. When the Painswick stone from Henry Vll's chapel, built in 1502 in Westminster Abbey was presented by the dean and chapter of Westminster, a friendly attitude wns expressed. The greetings read: "Expressing the hope that this stone may for all generations be a witness of kinship in blood and a pledge of unity in affection.” Cross Rests in Altar "There's a ston£ from the high altar of Canterbury Cathedral," Mr. Thomas writes, "and imbedded in the altar of All Saints’ chapel is a m°tal cross. A stone which forms a part of this cross was taken from the altar of St. Colomba's cathedral at lona, erected in 1203.” It was presented to the unive ”y by the rector and vestry of St. Andrew's Episcopal church in Glasgow, Scotland. Alumni remember the university chimes in Breslin tower and recall they are those of Westminster Abbey. Mr. Henderson, who was graduated last June, was a classmate of John T. Torian, who will come for the holidays from the University of North Carolina, where he Is doing graduate work.
MISS CLARK, FIANCE TO BE HONORED
Bridal dinner tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club will be given by Mrs. Clarence E. Clark for her daughter. Miss Mary Virginia Clark, and Melvin Edward Robbins, whose marriage will take place Saturday. Covers will be laid for Miss Clark, Mr. Robbins. Mr. and Mrs. M. Earl Robbins. Brown and Robert Robbins. Miss Ann Ratterman, Richard Arnett and Muss Eleanor Clark. Place cards will be miniature brides and bridegrooms. The table will be rentered with Christmas appointments. CLUB GIVES PARTY AT WOMAN’S HOME Residents of the Home for Aged Women were entertained today at a Christmas party, given by the Welfare Club. Women received individual gifts and fruit. The social hour was in charge of Mrs. Nellie Grver. and the executive board arranged the party. Miss Verne Lowman accompanied Miss Ruth Hoover, who told a story from Van Dyke's “Unto Bethlehem." Other entertainment included dancing by Keith Jackson and Rosemary White, and accordian numbers by Herschel Brittenbach. Christmas Part}! Set Annual Christmas party of the Woman's Club of Christian Park will be held at 7 Saturday night at the park community house. Pupils of Jennie Pressel will present a play and dance numbers. Mrs. Harold Darringer is club president.
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1933 Toys Permit Copying Grown Ups
n emulate activities of grown-ups. For boys who love to make things, there // jhrt is a small-size, sturdy work-bench ra // ' ft ft ‘above) fully equipped with vise, screw ( ‘ r * vers> iiammers - an< i ai *
Manners and Morals
Object to Jane Jordan's answers whenever you feel so Inclined! She will explain her views more fully whenever you challenge her resplies! Dear Jane Jordan—l think your answer to J. K.’s letter might be very wrong provided that the girl cares a great deal and would be willing to change her ways. <J. K.’s girl embarrasses him by drinking too much). She probably is regretting everything now. I think they could make a success of marriage. Perhaps she only drinks at a party when the rest do, and he should be willing to overlook any bad impressions that she might have made when intoxicated. That is, if her cared enough. M. H. C. Answer —You make the common mistake of youth in supposing that if only people love each other,
everything somehow will turn out all right. It is a typical school girl notion that people easily can make vital personality changes, or overlook great mutual disappointments ‘‘if only they care enough.” Granted that love does sometimes work great transformations. It may be that the young
IBfe v
Jane Jordan
lady would And in marriage a happy substitute for her unbecoming release in alcohol. But there is great danger that her conscious resolution to reform would only sink her desire for unrestrained behavior below the conscious level where it would live on to disturb her peace of mind and cause her husband trouble. I still feel inclined to warn J. K. against marrying a young lady whom he feels must change before he can love her completely. At least he should be aware of the change he takes and not marry in a state of blind optimism. tt a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl 23 and very fond of a married man who is 37. He has four grown children, one girl is 18. He seems to think a lot of me. My parents like him very much. It was through my father that I became acquainted with him. I don't get to go out with him much, for his wife knows he goes with me. She told a friend she would have me arrested if she caught me with him again. I don't think he cares for his wife or he wouldn’t think of me. Am I doing wrong by going with him. and do you think he would get tired of me in time? Answer—There can be no doubt that there is a wide difference between a man's and a woman's concept of the implications of a love affair. The man looks upon it as a passing incident, to be enjoyed while it is convenient and cast aside when it becomes inconvenient. The woman, with her instinct for permanence. almost invariably endows
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BY JANE JORDAN
his casual attentions with greater significance than he intends, "and disconcerts him completely by falling in love. This difference in the love attitude of the sexes constitutes a real problem. I have no doubt but that the man enjoys your society exceedingly when he can see you without too must risk to his peace of mind. But this does not mean for a minute that he is going to forsake his family and face the wrath of the community for your sake. Sometimes this very thing does happen, but your lover does not impress me as a man in this overheated frame of mind. tt a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young girl in my teens and keep company with a man in the thirties. Every time he comes to the house he begins kissing me and telling me how pretty I look and how much he loves me. Os course I like to hear that, but what confuses me most is that he kisses me from the time he comes until he leaves. How can I stop him from kissing me so much? I love him and I do not want to make him feel bad, but you know kissing and kissing never ends well. What do you think of a man who wants to kiss, kiss, kiss? B. C. F. Answer—When kissing is never brought to its logical conclusion, it becomes a sort of infantile substitute for a more complete experience. You are right in objecting to a perpetual kissing bee. It is delightful as an expression of affection, but exceptionally boring as a steady diet. I should guess that you have few points of mental contact with the young man and. therefore, do not interest him from the erotic stimulation you provide. You should try hard tc develop a mental side to your comradeship. If your attempts to do not succeed, you would do well to check him out. for physical love unsupported by other mutual interests is short of life and full of disappointments. DANGE WILL HONOR MISS BORINSTEIN Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Borinstein have issued invitations for a formal dance to be held Christmas night at the Broadmoor Country Club for their daughter. Miss Lucille Borinstein and her house guest. Miss Helen Prentis. Detroit. Miss Prentis will arrive Saturday to spend ten days with Miss Borinstein. Miss Helen Borenstein. student at Wellesley college, has returned to spend the holiday season with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Borinstein.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Christmas toys this year are built with realism and allow children to emulate activities of grown-ups. For boys who love to make things, there is a small-size, sturdy work-bench (above* fully equipped with vise, screw drivers, hammers, and all the tools necessary for practical wood working. Sister can learn the fundamentals of home-making with this year's edition of little electric •washer, below, that really washes Dolly's clothes, a folding ironing board and tiny electric iron that works, and an electric stove thst cooks when sister and brother try out simple recipes that mother teaches them.
Holiday Party Will Be Held by Art Club Indiana Artists Club members and guests will meet in the gallery at ! the Spink Arms tomorrow night for | a Christmas party. Each member | will bring a gift to be given to chari ity. Vaughn Cornish will sing ‘‘Ave ! Marie” and Mrs. Cornish will talk cn the painting, "The Sistine Madonna,” by Raphael. Other features of the program will be the waltz song from “Romeo and Juliet,” and "The Little Damzel,” by Novello, to be sung by Miss Eugenia Magidson. Christmas stories will be read. I Walter Heitkam will be master of ceremonies. The program has been arranged by the entertainment committee which includes Mrs. George Mess, Miss Marie Tcdd and Miss Josephine Binninger.
VASSAR CLUB WILL HONOR STUDENTS
Miss Barbara Fowler is chairman of the Indiana Vassar Club's annual Christmas breakfast to be held at 12:30 Friday morning. Dec. 29. at the Propylaeum. Students home from Vassar who will be honor guests of the club are Misses Jean Brown, Mona Taggart, Judith Chambers, Joan Aufderheide, Eileen Booker and Dora Sinclair. Dance Scheduled Alpha Upsilon chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, will entertain members and guests Tuesday with a formal dance in the Seville Tavern. Miss Mary Martha Fogarty, chairman, will be assisted by Mesciames I. M. Slater. Earl Shockney, Thompson Abbett and Miss Louise Harrison.
Daily Recipe JELLIED VEAL Put 1 knuckle of veal, onion, few slices of carrot and 1 stalk of celery in boiling water and simmer until veal is tender; remove knuckle from liquid and cool both; when former is nearly cold cut into small cubes or chop fine; remove fat from liquid, reheat and stir meat into it, seasoning with salt, pepper and other desired seasonings; pack hot mixture in mold, cover with buttered . paper, place weight on it and let stand until set; chill and serve.
Miss Barry Picks Aids for Dance St. Agnes Alumnae to Be Hostesses for Benefit Fete. Miss Martha Barry, general chairman of a benefit dance to be given j Dec. 28 by the St. Agnes Alumnae Association, has announced her committees. The dance will be held in the tenth floor ballroom of the Indianapolis Athletic Club, which will be decorated in keeping with the Christmas season. Miss Mary Catherine Slattery is chairman of the tickets committee, and will be assisted by Misses Mary Gertrude Killilea, Mary Joe Wagner, Winifred O'Brien. Dorothy Boyle, Mary V. Feeney, Helen Fogarty, Marjorie Schilling, Elizabeth Sowar, Martha Jane Foerderer. Dolorous Strack, Catherine Guedelhoefer and Margaret Mitchell. Patrons ana patronesses for the occasion will be obtained by a com- ; mittee, headed by Miss Marie Black- ; well, assisted by Mrs. Paul S. Mc- | Namara and Misses Mary Rosalie Beck, Patricia O’Connor and Margueritte Blackwell. The reception committee is composed of Miss Josephine Madden, chairman; Mesdames William R. Freaney, Walter Stuhldreher, P. C. Furgason, George Potts, William Mooney and Misses Jane Keene, ! Rosemary Rocap. Frances Kotteman | and Sara Jordan.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Colin G. Jameson, Boston, arrived today to visit Mrs. | Jameson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. j Morton L. Gould, 4150 North llinois j street. Dr. and Mrs. Joel Whitaker and I daughter, Miss Courtney Whitaker, ! 1707 North Pennsylvania street, have motored to Warrentown, N. J., for a week's stay. They will join Myers Whitaker, who attends the University of North Carolina. Mi-, and Mrs. Edgar Preston Richardson, Detroit, will arrrive Saturday to spend the holidays with Mrs. Richardson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Coleman, 4314 Central avenue. Miss Martha Julia Coleman, another daughter, has come from De Pauw university for the holidays. Arriving from Chicago tomorrow to be holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley E. Shea, will be their daughter, Mrs. Frederic Von Ammon, and Mr. Ammon and their son, Harrie Shea. Mr. and Mrs. George Q. Biegler will be visited during the holidays by their daughters, Mrs. James A. J Erwin, Mt. Vernon, and Mrs. Wil- ! liam J. Lang, Lafayette, and Mr. Erwin, Mr. Lang and son Jay. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Alexander Troy, Hammond, will arrive this week-end to visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred N. Hooker and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Troy. Miss Ora | Hooker, New Washington, Mr. Hooker’s sister, will be a guest. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Du Shane, Columbus, arrived last night to spend the holidays with Mrs. Du Shane's mother, Mrs. Henry J. McI Coy. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Daugherty, j 3440 Central avenue, will have with | them for Christmas their daughters, j Mrs. Robert Slater and Mrs. Robert I Bolles, both of Louisville, and Mrs. ! William Linn, Norfolk, Va., who will j be accompanied by Mr. Slater, Mi’, j Bolles and Mr. Linn. Also coming j from Louisville will be their son, ! Jack Daugherty, Mrs. Daugherty and their children, Dean and Betty Scott. Miss Lucy Link, student at De Pauw university, has come to spend the holidays with her father, Dr. Goethe Link, 4207 North Pennsylvania street. Miss Kathryn Kent, Detroit, who has been visiting Miss Agnes Davis, 34 Maple court, has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo B. Chapman, 2447 North Delaware street, will have as holiday guests, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chapman, Des Moines, la.
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Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for Pat 5 4 0 8 tern No. Size Street City State Name
Si? •• < "\ |j? / u? 5408
FUR JACKET
A welcome addition to any wardrobe—the litle fur jacket. It is eternally useful with woolens for the morning stroll through the park, with afternoon crepes, even with formal velvets and satins for evening. No one can afford to be without one, and certainly every one can afford one when this is so easy to make. It’s not really fur. of course, but made in the fur cloths they have nowadays, it’s almost impossible to tell the difference. Everything about this model is fashion-right. The collar and ascot tie are new and becoming. The shoulders have smart modified width. And it may be made waistlength or hip-length. Size 16 requires 2% yards 54-inch fur cloth, 1% yard 39-inch lining. For the latest fashions for every occasion for women, misses and children, consult the colorful pages of our new winter fashion book—just out. Patern No. 5408 is designed for sizes, 12, 14. 16, 18. 20 years, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 bust. Our new fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern 15 cents. (Copyright, 1933. by United Features Syndicate. Inc.)
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Baked apples, cereal, cream, minced ham on toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Iced bouillon, salted crackers, macaroni baked with cheese, brown bread, blackberry cream puffs, milk, tea. Dinner — Breaded veal steak, diced potatoes in cream, ring mold of beet greens with buttered beets, melon sherbet, milk, coffee.
Popularity of Holly and Mistletoe for Christmas Decorations Is Unabated Greenery Symbolic of Kiss Even More in Demand This Year Than Lately; Bertermann’s Offers Many Variations. BY HELEN LINDSAY. FROM the days when the yule log was the main Christmas decorat: holly wreaths and mistletoe have been the accepted expression cf the holiday spirit. Holly and mistletoe still are the chief decorations used at Chn.-t----mas. With them Bertermanns now is showing other festive decorations in unique and individual combinations There are white and red wooly clothed figures on skis, displayed ::i beds of holly and mistletoe, for centerpieces on the holidav table Mini iture artificial yule logs are shown. Holly also is used in decorative holders, in which the bright red Christmas candles are to
be placed. Both American and English holly are used in the Christmas decorations originated at Bertermans. Irwin Berterman calls English holly "postal card holly.” because his first impressions of it were the reproductions he saw of it as : child, displayed on Christmas cards It has leaves shaped differently than those of the American holly. The berries of the English variety are much larger than the berries on American grown holly. English holly, however, has been brought to America, and the climate and soil have been found which are suitable for its growth. These are on an island in Puget Sound, from which much of the holly used in the United States is obtained. More mistletoe is being used this year than for several years previous. All Christmas flowers have .been reduced in price from 10 to 15 per cent. Another kind of holly which was grown originally
in England has variegated leaves: dark green, with the edges showing white. They are so unusual as to appear artificially colored. nan Fir, Cedar and Spruce Used in Decoration LAUREL and deer-tongue are among the green foliage used in decorafive ideas at Christmas. Salaal foliage is also used. It is from a California variety of lemon tree, and has large shining green leaves Wreaths this year show the use of many evergreen branches. Doug las fir. Northwestern cedar and Colorado blue spruce has been used in the development of huge holiday wreaths, to accent the Christmas spirit as they swing by' brightly colored ribbons from doors and windows Many of these have been made with pine cones fastened among the branches of evergreens. Poinsettias are shown in the usual abundance, but are potted and combined this year in unique manner. “Four-in-a-row” is one style of vase, shown in both white and colored pottery. It has four compartments, in each of which a single poinsettia has been planted. a a a Fern and Poinsettias Combined POINSETTIAS have been combined with maiden-hair fern and other plants in other pots. Small English bay trees have been lacquered red and green and ar n displayed in colored vases. Christmas trees and holly have been painted silver for decorative effects this year. Some of the most unusual flower gifts offered at Bertermanns are “Hearts of Christmas.” They are old-fashioned bleeding hearts, packaged in water-proof containers. Directions on the packages for their care insure blooming in a few weeks. X For the Christmas corsages this year, there are huge and fragrant English violets, in deep purple.
CCffl This Handsome \ Electric | I jfj Smoker j I . As | A Gift Any Man g^ffl! | Pictured) I Will Appreciate! '1 | ft i Extra well made bases . gg|? / $ | JJ-‘ I in stipple effect. U* /j % —Large top with all • M ((‘om- \ necessary smoking ac- Kwj | cessor * es ' H| plete) \Wsc- K j Friday and Saturday We Shall Include a [ Y I Fine Automatic Electric Iron With Every New 1934 -y- ---| ‘Paramount' Electric Washer jg|?§| I $42JL dfam Convenient % j Truly a Woman’s Best Friend! The kind JLMH ■of a washer a woman wants! !| 'Dj £ \ Beautifully finished and completely it ; equipped , . . ready to give her the % I leisure hours she has wanted. The Automatic ; - A most practical Christmas gift! Electric Iron [ Convenient terms! Is Our Gift to You! ! Directly Opposite Statehouse Delightful Winter Cruises to the West Indies For the traveler who desires to combine a refreshing vacation with an escape from cold weather . . . but whose time is more or less limited ... a West Indies cruise answers the exact requirements. Here are quaint, interesting lands that will introduce him to new- traditions and customs . . . and a winter climate incomparably delightful. Plan to go this season . . . and let the Union Travel Bureau arrange all the details of your cruise. RICHARD A. KURTZ, Manager Travel Bureau The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis S UNION TRUSTS 120 JE. Market St. RI ley 3341
JDEC. 21, 1933
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Mrs. Lindsay
