Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1939 — Page 23
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- Snyder, 1837 N. Alabama St. Miss
,
- COUNT
" John D. Gallagher. Also attending
- waite and Edward Lindop.
. Mrs. Thomas Longfellow will be as-
-SUB-DEB FEDERATION will en-
rp
' FRIDAY, OCT: 27, 1939
Early Women, Europe, Books
Club Subjects|
Fortnightly Group to Hear
Addresses on Poland And Danzig,
%
Discussions of pioneer women and the European situation and a boek
review are scheduled for programs|
af clubs meeting Monday and dur-
ing next week. Another group has| §
announced new officers.
Two papers on early American
women will be presented at the meeting of the MONDAY AFTERNOON READING CLUB at its meeting Monday at the home of Mrs. Lewis J.”Riddle, 1007 Bradbury St. Mrs. Charles Muir - will talk on “Achievements of Our Pioneer Women” and Mrs. William H. Hampton will diseuss “Qutstanding Indian Women.” Current events will be reported by Mrs. E. W. Bilyeu.
Mrs. Charles Gauding, 53 Layman | §
Ave. will be hostess to members of the LA PHYLLIS CLUB Monday at her home,
Mrs. Cecil Chittenden will review “In These Days” (Prentiss Mournian) before members of the BETA DELPHIAN CLUB at their meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. Max Bardach, 5624 Washington Blvd. Governor Thomas Chittenden, first Governor of Vermont and an ancestor of Mrs. Chittenden’s family, is one of the characters in the book. An exhibit of Barly Americana will be featured at the meeting. Mrs. C. D. Elliott will be assistant hostess. °
Mrs. Ella E. Jarrett heads the DAUGHTERS OF WARRICK following her election at a meeting at the home of Mrs. Edwin Pace. Others elected are Mrs. Ernest Owen, vice president; Mrs. Vernon Nunh, secretary, and Mrs. Russell V. Sigler, treasurer. Mrs. Fred Johns, 5360 Julian Ave. will be hostess at the next meeting on Thursday, Nov. 9.
Members of the EMERA CLUB will meet at 8 p. m. today: at the Calonial Tearoom, 1433 N. Pennsylvania St. Miss Emily Hensley will be hostess.
Members of the INDIANAPOLIS CURRENT EVENTS CLUB will hold a Golden Jubilee tea tomorrow fram 2 until 5 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Carrie Frost Daniel. Mrs. Fred Stucky, dramatic reader, will present the program at 3 o'clock.
Mrs. Edna Raymond will speak and Mrs, Florence Free MacDonald will sing at the meeting of the INDIANA POETRY CLUB tomorrow at the home of Miss June Winena
Ann Hosea will assist the hostess. Mrs. Raymond is to present patriotic poems. Mrs. Thomas D. Watkins will accompany Mrs. MacDonald.
Mrs. Floyd W. Doddridge, president of the INDIANAPOLIS BRANCH OF THE WOMEN’S AUXILIARY TO THE RAILWAY MAIL ASSOCIATION, will represent the chapter at the 28th national convention next week in the William Penn Hotel, Pittsburgh. The convention will open Monday and close Friday. . . , , . Other local delegates will include Mesdames Noble T. Reed, Theodere L. Caldwell, Frank E. Wilson, Paul V. Colet, William C. Sipes and
the convention will be Mrs. Walter H. Vinzant, a national officer from the local group, and Mesdames Clarence J. Finch, Jerauld McDermott and V. S. Lamerson.
Members of the W. 0. W. CLUB of Shortridge High School will entertain at a Halloween party tomorrow night at the home of Miss Virginia Earlywine, 4818 Carrollton Ave. Club members and their guests will include the Misses Rosemary Carr, Beverly Carlisle, Patti Rocap, Helen Rita Swartz, and Messrs. Bill Brown, Warren Fletcher, Melvin Rogers, Charles Thistle-
Mrs. H. C. Tope will talk on “poland, Key to Europe” .at the meeting: of the FORTNIGHTLY STUDY CLUB Monday at the home of Mrs. J. A. White, 614 E. 49th St. ,Mrs. Howard Bates will speak on “The Free City "of Danzig.”
sistant hostess. . The 8S. I. S. CHAPTER OF THE
tertain with a Halloween party and scavenger hunt tonight at the home of MisssMary Ann Strawmyer, 5336 Broadway. ’
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Personals
Miss Marie ‘Theresa Keach, daughter of Leroy J. Keach, is a member of the poster committee for the informal dance which will be given this evening by the Women’s Athletic Association of St. Mary's College at Notre Dame. -
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Kelly, 2013 Hoyt Ave., and Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Procter of Maywood are expected to return home today after a visit in New York. Miss Joan Dougan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Dougan, 5603 N. Delaware St., freshman at Northwestern University, was pledged recently to Alpha Phi Sorority, ; Miss Nancy Heath, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Heath, 5251 N. Delaware St. also a freshman at Northwestern, is pledged to Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. Miss Dugan and Miss Heath are graduates of Shortridge High School. Mrs. Edward G. Mead, Oxford, 0O., national chairman for advancement of American music in the Children of American Revolution, was a luncheon guest recently of Mrs. Kenneth D. Coffin, 3431 Guilford Ave.
-
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A new group of young women, bachelors and young married couples at the Riviera Club will hold its first dance there tonight. Assisting with plans are (left to right) the Mesdames Frank T, Sisson, J. Edwin Aspinall and G. Emerson Newhouse.
Shortridge P.-T.
A. Will Stage
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —
Club Tonight
Clubs’ Forum : Scheduled at I. U. Thursday
Safeguards for Democ-| racy to Be Theme at Third Annual Institute.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Oct. 27.—"‘Safeguards for Democracy” will be the theme of the third annual Federation of Clubs institute which will begin at 10 a. m. Thursday in Alumni Hall on the Indiana University campus. Mrs. W, 8. Bittner of the I. U. Extension Division will open the forum and Dr. Edwin H. Sutherland, head of the sociology department at the university, will preside at morning and afternoon sessions, Mrs. Bittner and Dr. Sutherland have arranged the program. Croan Greenough, representing President Herman B Wells, will extend greetings. A demonstration of a radio roundtable discussion will open the program at 11 a. m. and will form a basis for discussions to follow,
Three to Conduet Roundtable
John V. Mueller and Frank L. Sweetser, department of Sociology, and Edward H. Buehrig, department of government, will conduct the roundtable. The conference is concerned with an analysis of the dangers to democracy and the
Nh.
Shell for Style
Oyster Gives His
‘Open House at School Nov, 7
The Shortridge High School Parent-Teacher Association will hold
open house and give a program Tuesday evening, Nov. 7, at the school. A special invitation has been extended to alumni. .
DeWitt S. Morgan, city schools superintendent, will speak at the
program beginning at 7:45 p. m. Emmett A. Rice, assistant principal,
methods by which democracy can be safeguarded against such dangers. Among topics to be considered are popular ignorance regarding
appearance in jewelry. public questions, distorted public in-
It might disturb the oyster to know that now milady is liking his shell quite as much as his pearl this season for her jewelry. Lucille Fairbanks of the films wears lacquered “oyster seeds” in matural coloring. They are light in. weight but give that sought-after bulky
formation through propaganda, restrictions on freedom of speech and
FOOD
By Mrs. Gaynor Maddox
UICK cinnamon buns are something to make a man roll out of bed early in the morn=ing. Here's a 12-minute recipe. | Quick Cinnamon Buns Eight teaspoons baking powder, 11% teaspoons salt, 4 cups flour, 8. tablespoons shortening, 13; cups milk, 4 tablespoons melted butter,
3% cup raisins, 6 cups nuts, 1% tea- |
spoons cinnamon, % cup brown | sugar, a Sift baking powder, salt and , flour together. Cut in shortening, Stir in milk, Knead and roll out to %-inch thickness on floured board. Brush with melted butter, | Combine raisins, nuts, cinnamon and brown sugar and dust over | flat dough. Then roll up like a jelly roll. Cut into 1%-inch For Pan: One-half cup brown sugar, 1 cup butter and % cup pecans. Place these ingredients in bottom of shallow pan. Then lay the cinnamon slices on top, cut side down, Bake for 12 minutes in hot
the breakfast bell. | Eggless Cake i After breakfast, you may want to bake this eggless cake, i One-third cup butter, 11% cups sugar, 1 cup milk; 2% cups eake flour, 1; teaspoon salt, 4 cup raisins, teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon | cream of tartar, 1-3 teaspoon va= | nilla, % teaspoon almond extract. | Cream butter, add sugar gradue | ally and beat until light. Add; sifted dry ingredients alternately | with milk. Fold in vanilla and | raisins. Pour in a well-greased | loaf cake pan. Bake about 45 min= | utes .in a modern oven (350 de- ! grees F.). Test with a straw. | Frost, after cooling slightly, with anw favorite frosting.
SPA
y
oven (475 degrees F.), Then ring ,
by Miss Christine Housemah, organist; Joe Louis, organist; the Shertridge Choir and the Boys’ and Girls’ Glee. Club. Mrs. Laura OC. Moag and Miss Geraldine Trotter are choir and glee club directors.
Visiting alumni will register in the Charity Dye Library, where memorabilia will be exhibited. Work in progress in the art department which will be displayed includes figure drawings, jewelry, pottery and mechanical drawings. Displays of total internal reflection of light, high frequency phenomena and new magnetic materials will be demonstrated in the physics laboratories. The biology and commercial departments also will show exhibits of work by the students.
Tea Planned For Rushees
Several teas honoring rushees and guests and a business meeting are among week-end sorority activities. Miss Estella Austermiller, 5915 Forest Lane, will be hostess at a formal tea for rushees of ALPHA UPSILON CHAPTER OF ALPHA ZETA BETA at 2:30 p. m. Sunday. Yellow and brenze chrysanthemums will decorate the house. Assisting Miss Austermiller will be Mrs. Gus Riehter, Miss Henrietta Jones and Miss Marcia Shank.
Members of BETA CHAPTER OF OMEGA KAPPA will entertain guests at ‘a rush tea Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Columbia Club. Miss Mildred Twietmeyer and Miss Patricia Wolfanger are cochairmen of arrangements. Guests will include the Misses Beulah Davie, Mary Dorsett, Dorothy Guthrie, Ida Mae Hill, Yvonne Jarvis, Mary Kraus, Margaret Piper, Bette Reagan, Virginia Stevens and Frances Tourjie. Halloween decorations will be used.
Miss Arlynne Bonewitz will he hostess to members of PHI KAPPA LAMBDA at & meeting this evening at her home.
Past Presidents’ Banquet Outlined
The Past Presidents’ Club of Harold C. Megrew Auxiliary 3 of the United Spanish War Veterans will hold its annual banquet at 6 p. m. Sunday at Cifaldi’s Villa Nova on National Road 40, east of Indianapolis. Mrs. Elizabeth Gwin is chairman of arrangements, assisted by Mrs. Pearl I. Xraus and Mrs. Marie C. Williams.
and Mrs. Frank Hanna, commander
and president of the Megrew Camp and Auxiliary, and Mrs. Louella D. Porter of Indianapvlis, president of the Indiana Auxiliary Department. Other guests will include past national officers and several present and past department officers.
Holy Cross Meets Today
Members of the Holy Cross Unit of the National Council of Catholic Women will meet this evening in the school hall following services in toe Holy Cross Catholic Church at p. m.
will talk on “Our Seventy-fifth Anniversary.”
Music will he provided
Lodge Planning Carnival Today
An indoor carnival, a chili supper and card party and a social meeting are among women’s lodge programs for this evening and next week. Members of the DAUGHTERS OF AMERICA COUNCIL 78 will sponsor an indoor carnival at 7 p. m. today in the dance hall of the Crossroads Cafe.
The ways and means committee of ALFARATTA COUNCIL 5 QF THE DEGREE OF POCAHONTAS will serve a chili supper and entertain at a card party tonight at the hall, North St. and Capitol Ave. Mrs. Louise Hale is chairman of arrangements.
Members of the OLIVE BRANCH PAST NOBLE GRANDS ASSOCIATION will be entertained Wednesday at the home of Mrs, Nettie Harding, 1534 Sturm Ave. Assisting Mrs. Harding will be Mesdames William Gaskill, Herbert Kimbrel, Atcherly Safford and Miss Martha
EVENTS
SORORITIES Gamma Delta Chi. Sat. eve. River Edge Estates. Wiener roast honoring pledges. } Sigma Rho Chi. ‘Tonight. Miss Daisy: Overman, hostess. Masked Halloween party. Mrs. Francis Gallagher, chairman. Alpha Chapter, Phi Theta Delta. 8:30 p. m. Wed. Miss Pauline Loos, 808 Tecumseh Place, hostess.
CLUBS Pa-Lo-Sis. Tonight. Mrs. Thomas Culver, hostess. Mrs. Edwin Pattison and Mrs. Don Reiman, guests.
Tip Top Chapter of Sub-Deb. 1
Pp. m. today. Miss Dempy Mathis, 914 Iowa, hostess. Halloween party for members. Zephyrette Klub. 7:30 p. m. Mon. Miss Marjorie Starkey, 4815 E. New York, hostess. Seventh meeting of club, B. W. H. Tues. eve. Halloween dance at 211 N. Delaware Billy Banta orchestra. A. W. T. Embroidery. Thurs. Nov. 2. Luncheon at noon. Mrs. Grace Farr, 1803 Singleton, hostess, SUPPER Betsy Ross Federation. 5-8 p. m. today. 2728 N. Sherman Drive. Fish fry and jitney supper. Members and friends invited.
Manual Freshmen To Be Entertained
Freshman girls and girls new at Manual High School will be entertained at a Halloween costume party Monday after classes in the girls’ gymnasium. The English II group of the Girls’ League will have charge, assisted by council members. Other English groups have charge of reception, invitations, fortune telling, grand mareh, games, floor show, group
singing, decorations, prizes and re-
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economic crises. Constructive proposals for the reduction of such dangers will be outlined. Roy V. Peel, department of government, will discuss the democratic process as mainfested in political organizations, partisan and nonpartisan. Dr. Lee Norvelle, division of speech, will present a demonstration / of special techniques of panel discussions,
Dr. Bryan to Speak
Luncheon will be served from 12:30 to 2 p. m. in the Union Building, with Mrs. George Jaqua, state federation president, presiding. Dr. William Lewe Bryan, president emeritus of the university, will be guest speaker. A. B. Hollingshead of the department of Sociology will talk on “Propaganda: What It Is and How It Works,” at the afternoon session. Samuel E. Braden, department of government, will talk on “Can Demoeracy Withstand Another Depression?” C. Leonard Lundin of the history department will talk on “Is the Present International Situation a- Crisis for Democracy?” Each woman attending the conference be presented a certificate. he November Federation board meeting will be held in the Union Building following the forum.
Towa Coed Is ‘DePauw Queen
Times Special GREENCASTLE, Oct. 27.—Miss Margaret Lancaster, Kappa Kappa Gamma, will rule as Old Gold Day queen on the DePauw University campus Friday and Saturday, Nov. 3-4. Miss Lancaster, a junior student from Ottumwa, Ia., was elected by male votevfrom a field of nine contestants selected by Kappa Tau Kappa, inter-fraternity organization. Runners up, who will serve in the court of honor,. are Miss Gwen Vitek, Delta Zeta; Miss Mary Helen Meinerding, Alpha Phi; Miss Rachel Waltz, Alpha Gamma Delta; Miss Jean Carroll, Alpha Chi Omega; Miss Jerry Meyers, Kappa Alpha Theta; Miss True Davis; Miss Frances Chase, Delta Delta Delta, and Miss Lila Seneff, Alpha Omicron Pi. : / Sororities on the campus will decorate their houses during the day for the annual event and fraternity houses will feature illuminated night exhibits. Prizes for the hest sorority decorations will be presented by Pan-Hellenic, and for the best fraternity decorations by Kappa Tau Kappa.
end host.
JANE JORDAN
EAR JANE JORDAN—I am a divorcee 45 years old. I have been going with a man 40 years old, who is divorced, Neither of us has any children. I am quite fond of him and know that with a little encouragement from me he would ask me to marry him. However, the difference in our ages holds me back. I am sure that he does not think-I am as old as he, but of course our ages never have been discussed. I work in an office and dress as neatly as my salary permits, No one thinks I am as old as 45. But back to the man: I think I could be very happy with him and would love to he married again. What abeut our ages? I am quite sure that I could make him happy. PERPLEXED.
Answer—A difference in ages is a menace only when it is great enough to bring about a complete separation of interests. Five years do not constitute an impossible gap. The important thing is that you have congenial tastes and mutual objectives. The time was when women grew old quicker than men. At least they looked older at 45 than they do today. If you have led a busy, active life and kept up with your times, there is no reason why yeu should not retain your feminine charm for years to come. If the man is mature and prefers the companionship of a mature wonien to immature prettiness, you have nothing to fear. The fact that many men have made such a fetish of youth has driven many women to be ashamed of their age after 40. Yet some "men, including Pitkin, believe that “life begins at 40.” Such men put a high value on such qualities as wisdom, poise, ability, expe-
rience, specialized training, and other attributes’ that do not come
. to full flower until a woman’s middle years. What you dread, I think, is what people will say. ference does that make? Since you do not look your age, do not talk Everybody grants a woman the privilege of keeping her age a secret. In fact, women have lied about their age for so long that nobody believes them anyway,
» ® s EAR JANE JORDAN—I am 28 years old and in love with & D man four years younger. He has asked me to marry him. Do
about it,
you think that the difference in our ages will make ference? He says he loves me and that my age doesn t matter. have s lot in common. We both like a home, music and the same sports. We have a lot of fun together and owe, each other,
there a chance of being happy?
Answer—The above reply answers your question, too. man has a responsible attitude toward marriage anc lean on you because you are older, four years difference in ages need not be an impossible handicap.
o Jane Jordan who will answer your questions n this column daily. -
Put your problems in a letter t
Helen Pollock Is Wed To Kenneth Marshall
Miss Helen Elizabeth Pollock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Qmer Pollock, Russiaville, was married to Kenneth Marshall, Russiaville, yesterday at the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Sidney Blair Harry officiated. Dan Carter and Geneva Cuddy were attendants. A luncheon at the Marott followed the service. Mr. ahd Mrs. Marshall - will be at
home in Russiaville Nov. 15. Mrs. Marshall was graduated from Central Normal College, Danville, and is a member of Sigma Phi Kappa Delta. Mr. Marshall attended Central Normal and Indiana State
Teacher’s College at Terre Haute,
A GIFT SHE'LL LOVE
combination arrangement of Roses and Mums will cheer a sick friend or please a week-
ALLIED FLORISTS ASSOOIATION, Inc.
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JANE JORDAN.
Mrs. Rahe to Entertain
Mrs. E. I. Rahe, 1167 W. 35th St., will entertain members of the Indianapolis Edueational Council at a luncheon meeting at 12:30 Dp. gy
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