Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1938 — Page 9
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Running for U.S. Offices
\ Seek Election in Eleven States; Mrs. Caraway Is Candidate.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 (U. P.).— ‘Twenty-one women in 11 states sought election today among hundreds of candidates for the Senate and House of Representatives. This 18th anniversary of nationwide suffrage for women found candidates of all political affilations representing that sex on national and state ballots. There were no women candidates for Governor, but many were among those seeking other state offices. Women candidates for Congress in this off-year election include nine Democrats, six Republicans, two Socialists, thpee Prohibitionists and one Communist. The states they seek to represent in Washington are Arkansas, California, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Massachusetts, MisAouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio
Seeks Re-election
There was only one woman candi- |
date for the Senate—Senator Hattie W. Caraway (D. Ark.), seeking re-election for her second consecutive six-year term. First appointed in 1931 to succeed her husband, the late Senator T. H. Caraway, she was elected to fill his unexpired term. In 1932 she was. re-elected for her first full term. . If re-elected—and nomination on the Democratic ticket in Arkansas is virutally tantamount to election —she will be the only member of her sex among the other 95 Senators. She had that distinction during the latter part of the 75th Congress, too. : Five of the women candidates are incumbents of the house: Reps. Mary T. Norton, (D. N. J.); Caroline ODay (D. N. YJ) > Edith
Nourse Rogers (R. Mass.); Virginia | #8
E. Jenckes, (D. Ind), and Nan Wood Honeyman (D. Ore.).
Mrs. Norton Prominent
Mrs. Norton attained national prominence at the last session of _Congres by her successful efforts to enact the Wages and Hours Bill over opposition of the House Rules Committee. Mrs. Norton succeeded to the chairmanship of the House Labor Committee on the death of Rep. William Connery (D. Mass.). She has been a member of Congress since 1925. Two of the candidates — Miss O'Day and Miss Honeyman — are close personal friends of Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt.
Make First Bids
Democratic women making first bids for Congressional seats are: Mrs. Ruth Hollingshead of Albia, Iowa; Mrs. Elsie Stanton, Wellman, O.: Mrs. C. Dorothea Greene, Schenectady, N. Y., and Mrs. Virginia Spencer, Croghan, N. Y, Republicans making initial bids are: Helen Z. M. Rodgers, New York; Rena E. Pikiel, Chicago; Jessie Sumner, Milford, Ill.; Dorothy Bellanca, Brooklyn, N. Y., and Mrs. George B. Simmons, Marshall, Mo. California presents the only woman Communist candidate for Congress, Nora Conklin of Sacramento. Winifred Wygal and Mary Fox of New York City’s 19th and 12th districts respectively are the Socialist candidates. The three Prohibitionists are from Oklahoma: Lizzie Tarvil, Oklahoma City; Martha Morrison, Cleveland, and Margaret E. W. Austin, Duncan.
fi. Coleman Home \ : v./ Officers Named
Mrs. William H. Morrison today had been re-elected president of the board of the Suemma Coleman Home. Other officers named, all of whom have served on the board, are Mrs. Thomas A. Elder, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Arch V. Grossman, treasurer; Mrs. Harvey B. Belton, recording secretary; Mrs. Ethel Wright, first vice president; Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, second vice president, and Mrs. I. C. DeHaven, third vice president.
1883.”
pending upon the personality of the
son very hard I always see a picture,” she explained recently at her apartment at 265 Riverside Drive. “When I first began doing this I wondered if the picture I saw in my mind Mad any connection with the friend who was in my thoughts. I discovered that it did. The landscapes were symbolic of their lives.” Sometimes the soul pictures materialize quickly. “Then again it takes three or four days to get them,” she said. ‘Frequently I find that the problems and difficulties surrounding my subjects come to me as I work.”
Since Girlhood
Mrs. Scott has painted what she terms “straight” pictures ever since her girlhood in Chicago. They have ranged from French still lifes and Dutch interiors to California landscapes, all done in a competent, academic manner. But the “soul” paintings are a recent development. She attributes their nebulous outlines and shadowy colors to a psychic power that she believes she inherited from her mother. Only
Talbot 4831 was a busy number today as Junior League members at the Next-to-New Shop began to receive reservations for the league’s The show will be presented Nov. 23 at the
“Gaieties of | handling a call
When She Looks at People, She Sees Meadows, Forests
By HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Nov. 8 —When Mrs. R. portrait she translates human features into landscapes. Faces resolve themselves into waterfalls, meadows, forests or mountains for her, de-
T. Maitland Scott paints a
sitter.
“If I think of a particular per-<
Hately has she been conscious of | this curious talent. In the past her phychic gifts have been limited to clairvoyance, telepathy and occasional spirit communications. Her appearance does not agree with the popular conception of a medium. On the tall side with graygreen eyes, she wears her long, light brown hair twisted in a psyche on top of her head. : She and her husband, Major R. T. Maitland Scott, a writer of mystery stories, have lived in New York since 1919. Their only son, R. T. Maitland Scott Jr., edits a magazine in Minneapolis, : The Scott’s home, an old-fash-ioned, high-ceilinged apartment, which overlooks the Hudson River, is filled with mementoes of their travels. Huge royal blue Sevre urns, inlaid cabinets, teakwood taborettes and Venetian glass chandeliers lend color to their drawing room which, like Mrs. Scott, is reminiscent of the French salon era. Today the soul paintings added a
bizarre touch. Some leaned against
Business meeting.
EVENTS
SORORITIES
Beta Chapter, Omega Phi Tau. 8 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Charles Lawrence, 4246 Sangster Ave., hostess. Alpha Nu Chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta. 6:30 p. m. Wed. Hotel Lincoln. Kappa Chapter, Alpha Omicron Alpha. 8 p. m. Tues. Taylor, hostess. Business meeting. Alpha Chapter, Omega Nu Tau. 8 p. m. Wed.
Mrs. Ralph Hotel Lincoln.
—Ashby Photo.
Naval Armory. Mrs. Howard Fieber (left) and Miss Josephine Mayer (right) are shown busy at work
and checking reservation lists in
preparation for the opening.
gilt chairs. Others rested on easels. I'hey were of a uniform size, 18-20, done on canvas in oils and framed by a small silver or white molding. A few repeated the vivid blue of the arched drawing room ceiling. Several reected the white tones of the paneled side walls.
Mrs. Scott said that her mind pictures usually had something to do with the subject's past, present or future.
“They reveal his or her deeper, inner life,” she declared, “not simply the personality.” For instance, when she thought of her friend, the Baroness Erna Bilkau, she saw a blue arch with a cross above it and a bit of scarlet in the foreground.
“The Baroness is quite a believer in reincarnation,” she said. “The minute she saw the portrait she recognized an arch she had passed through at the time of the Crusades.” The soul portrait of the Baroness stood on an easel. Near it was a painting of a white peak juxtaposed against an irridescent sky. “Helen Hayes,” Mrs. Scott identified the picture. “She has a distinct life, completely apart from the world which no one knows anything about. I sensed in this impression of her which came to me, that she possesses to an extraordinary degree, the ability to shut herself off from other people.” Close by Helen Hayes’ portrait was a study of a blue sky with a pink cloud floating across it. “A portrait of a gentleman,” explained Mrs. Scott. “A person of great strength, but almost effeminate sensibility.” This gift for analyzing and sometimes revealing the destiny of her friends attracted the attention of Phillip Collins, a probation officer studying psychology . at Columbia under Garrner Murphy. He made Mrs. Scott the subject of his master’s thesis.
" |singer.
Eggs Make Substitute For Meats
Hope Hampton Uses Them When Serving Late Suppers.
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
Eggs in the larder guarantee a good dinner on the table. Hot eggs, boiled 10 minutes and peeled, make an excellent meat substitute course. Serve with butter and seasoning. Or try these agreeable suggestions of Hope Hampton, film star and opera She uses them for late suppers. Eggs a la Goldenrod
(Serves 2) Three hard-cooked eggs, 2 tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons flour,
salt, paprika, 2 cups milk. Chop up the whites of the hard-
1 cooked eggs. Make a sauce by meli-
ing the butter, adding the flour, salt, paprika, and mixing thoroughly. Add the milk slowly and bring to the boiling point. - Put the whites of the eggs in the sauce and reheat. Rub the yolks
: through a strainer over slices of
buttered toast. Pour the sauce over all. Corn and Egg Cutlets (Serves 4 to 6) Two tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons flour, 3 teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoon pepper, 4 teaspoon paprika, ‘1 cup milk, 3 hard-cooked
, |eggs chopped, 1 cup cooked corn, 1
teaspoon parsley chopped fine, 2 eggs slightly beaten, % cup sifted crumbs. Melt butter in top of double hoiler. Add flour, salt, pepper and paprika and blend. Add milk and cook until smooth and thick, stirring constantly. Remove from fire. Add eggs, corn and parsley. Spread mixture in shallow pan and chill until stiff. Cut into cutlets with 2%:inch biscuit cutter. Roll in crumbs, then in eggs beaten with 2 tablespoons water, then in crumbs. Fry in hot butter 1 inch deep in heavy frying pan until brown. Drain on absorbent paper. Serve with pimento sauce.
Pimento Sauce (1 cup) Two tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons flour, % teaspoon salt, dash. of pepper, 1 cup milk, 1 pimento forced through a fine sieve. Melt - butter in saucepan. Add flour, salt and pepper and blend well. Add milk gradually, stirring constantly and continue stirring and cooking until thickened. Add pimento.
Mutual Society To Hear Talk by | Travel Speaker,
Mrs. Demarchus Brown, travel lecturer, will be guest speaker at a 6:45 o'clock dinner meeting next Monday, Nov. 14, at the Propylaesum for members of the Mutual Service Association. Among guests who have made reservations for the dinner are Mesdames Mary Hanson Carey, J. W. Atherton, Jean S. Milner, Benjamin Hitz, O. G. Pfaff, J. Raymond Lynn, W. Coleman Atkins, W. A. Miskimen, William L. Taylor, S. M. Timberlake, Edward Zink, Walter Marmon, Raymond P. VanCamp, A. P. Conklin, Albert E. Metzger, Byron
Fletcher Prunk, Oliver Stout, India”
Griffin, John W. Kern, Walter R. Mayer, Roy Brandt, Virgil W. Samms and Florence Webster Long. Life members who will attend are Mesdames George M. Wickson, Stella Colman, James Cunning, William H. Coleman, Samuel Lewis Shank and Annetta Wilson; Miss Florence Fletcher Barrett and Mis Ila Williamson. .
Ripple W.C. T, U.
Will Meet Tomorrow
The Broad Ripple Woman’s Christian Union will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Frank Eaton, 6127 Bellefontaine St. Mrs. Fred Pruitt will conduct devotions. Reports of the recent state convention will be presented by Mesdames Ida Titus, Josie Summers and Ella Montgomery, according to Mrs. S. C. Young, president.
DAY'S PATTERN
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8318 o Jif]
This afternoon dress has the suave, subtle simplicity that large women wear so well, and it is detailed in such a way as to reduce your poundage just magically, anyhow so far as looks are concerned. Pattern 8318’s bodice fits easily and slimly, with no bulkiness and no tightness, because of scarcely noticeable shoulder darts, and clever gathers above the lifted waistline. The V-neck
all is that of cutting the middle section in one with the front and back skirt panels. There never was anything more slenderizing! In velvet, wool broadcloth, rayon Jersey or silk crepe, this will be your favorite dress for afternoons and informal dinners. Pattern 8318 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. With long sleeves, size 38 requires 5% yards of 39-inch material. With short sleeves, 5% yards. Threefourths yard lace edging. The .new Fall and Winter Pattern Book, 32 pages of attractive designs
UAT A LAAT
IL La / your. Cook
W/LSONS
for ev je | is now ready. ! dresses made from these patterns being worn; a feature you will enjoy. Let the charming designs in this new book help you in your sew=~ ing. One pattern and the new Fall and Winter pattern Book—25 cents, Pattern or book alone—15 cents. To obtain the pattern and step-by-step sewing instructions inclose 15 cenis in coin together with the
above pattern number and your size, your name and address and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St, Indianapolis, Ind.
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Wilson’s Evaporated Milk improves
everything you cook—makes dessertsdelicious. It’s good, rich cow’s milk in the safest form —because it is-steril-ized. Reinforced with Vitamin D by ultra violet ray irradiation. Based on
IRRADIATED FOE EXTRA "SUNSHINE"
and pointed closing have a lengthening effect. But the best trick of
VilaminD
its food value, Wilson’s Milk is most economical, too. At your grocers.
VEE af
S717: N13
Save the labels for useful premiums. Bring your labels to our local premium store=or write for catalog.
250 CENTURY BUILDING 36 So. Pennsylvania Street © indianapolis
sell
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YOUR Edetice SERVANT
L Ve & L.
ALSO HELPS YOU AS AN
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employees at service
Whether or not you work for this company you're
en Ai Ah
bound to profit in some degree from its payroll, which amounted to $2,208,607.28 last year—~not
counting hundreds of other Indianapolis men em-
r— Phir
Rho Chapter, Sigma Beta. 8 p. m. tonight. Miss Virginia Collier, 1904 S. Eastern, hostess.
SN A
CLUBS
Narrators. Wed. eve. Miss Anna Gilpin, 1227 Park Ave. hostess. Election of officers. : Elite Friendship. 11 a. m. Thurs. Miss Mabel Oder, 1933 N. Keystone Ave. hostess. Covered dish luncheon.
LODGES
Association of Past Matrons and Patrons, Marion County O. E. S. 6:30 p. m. Thurs. Irvington Masonic Temple. Dinner. Members of Irvington, Englewood and Cumberland Chapters to attend. Mrs. Ethel Payton to preside. Indianapolis Chapter 393, O. E. S. 8 p. m. tonight. Temple, 1522 W., Morris, hostess. Daylight Chapter 553, O. E. S. 1:30 p. m. Fri. Masonic Temple, North and Illinois. Corinthian Auxiliary, O. E. 8. 2 p. m. Wed. Temple, 2515 W. Washington, Business meeting at 11 a. m. Cards in afternoon.
CARD PARTIES
Ladies’ Auxiliary to the General Protestant Orphans’ Home. 8 p. m. Thurs. Home. Mrs. Alfred R. Leeb in charge. Monthly card party. Big Four Railway Auxiliary 116, American Legion. 1:30 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Clyde Reed, 220 N. Keystone Ave., hostess.
Beauty Baths*
*Registered
BRING YOUNEW LIFE , . . «. . « PEP
J for S10
(single treatment, $3)
Mind Your Ayres’
Manners
Test your knowledge of correct social usage by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. Is it good manners to scrutinize food on a cafeteria counter so as to select the choicest serving?
2. If there is no check stand at a cafeteria, what should you do with bundles you may have? 3. Should a waiter pick up a glass with his fingers at the top? 4. Is it good manners for beauty parlor operators to talk continually with each other while they are waiting on customers? 5. Is it ever excusable for a manager to call down an employee before a customer?
What would you do if— You and a friend are eating in a cafeteria and you wish to pay for his meal, although you had not asked him to be your guest in the first place? . (A) Ask the cashier who to- . . tals the bill to give you th. the check? tr ) Ask guest to give you ++ © his check? (C) Inconspicuously pick up his check as his food is put on the table?
8 ® Answers
er ——
ployed in our construction work. Every cent received from 64,825 average residential electric customers (about two-thirds of the city’s homes) was paid out as wages and salaries. What happened to all that money? It provided a living, first of all, for about 5,000 persons in our employees’ families. And then it If you're trying to reduce that waistline, or if you're just plain "worn out" .. . do the smart thing—take a Beauty Bath. The investment is paid many times over with your renewed energy and joy of being alive!
spread out through all the local channels of busi- :
rn ness and job-making; for our employees live and
SIRVES BEST COSTS LESS
spend their earnings in all parts of Indianapolis cos buy groceries... payrent... furnish homes... purBEesipEs the work it does—for which you pay only as and if you use it—your Electric company helps you and your city in many other ways.
chase clothing . . . support churches . . . patronize
entertainment . . . pay taxes.
This payroll is not only one of the largest in
T us, MORE THAN ANYTHING the city. It's also one of the steadiest, affected
ELSE, HAS BUILT OUR BUSINESS
The patrons we have served during our years in business have invariably been pleased by the complete and thoughtful funeral service received. They have told others about us. Gradually the word has spread that here is a funeral chapel of unusual beauty where fine funeral service may be secured at reasonable cost. Before making a decision, why not ask those we have served.
My Guarantee Protects You
HARRY W. MOORE
2050 E. MICHIGAN ST. CH. 6020 You All Know This Undertaker
Shut your eyes and visualize less by hard times or seasons than in most other this: exercises, invigorating salt scrub and body shampoo, steam room, needlepoint shower and a soothing, scientific body massage.. That's what you get in a Beauty Bath!
Less Than a Dime a Day paid for ALL Electricity used
by our average home customer last year—and now rates are LOWER]
businesses, because Electric service must be main-
tained 24 hours every day in the year. Forty-nine :
of our men and women have continuous employment records of more than a quarter-century, and _800 others from five to 24 years. ayroll makes business, and business makes additional jobs. In keeping up its payroll year after year your Electric company helps substantially to
| Leer
PICK UP THE PHONE NOW ... CALL RI. 944I FOR AN APPOINTMENT
% SPECIAL RATES FOR BUSINESS WOMEN
AYRES’ BEAUTY BATHS, EIGHTH FLOOR
L.S. AYRES & CO.
» This is one of a series of advertisements,
in the interest of Indianapolis progress, to maintain employment and circulate cash so that help you gain a better understanding of
what your Electric company 1s and poes,
1—No. 2—Put on nearby vacant chair or under your chair. 3—Not any place where customer's lips must touch it. 4—No, nor is it good business. 5—No.
Best “What Would You Do” solution— (A).
this city—your home and ours—may thrive and grow for the benefit of everyone in it.
TI LE 2 I LL
a Ph Riley 7622
Electric Buil
ding, 17 N. Meridi 5
