Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 288, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 April 1925 — Page 6

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WOMEN GO TO CONVENTION OF VOTERS’ LEAGUE Indiana Delegates Off for Richmond Va. —Several Go. Mrs. Walter S. Greenough, first vice-president of the Indiana League of Women Voters, and Mrs. Wilrner Christian, president of the Indianapolis League have left for Richmond, Va., to attend the sixth annual convention of the National League starting Thursday. Others Expected Others from Indiana expected to attend are Mrs. Elizabeth Clay pool Ean, Muncle; Mrs. R. IT. Mlsener, Michigan City; Mrs, Horner McCray, Kendall’Mlle; Mrs. Walter E. Ely, Terre Haute, and Mrs. Thomas A. Stuart, Lafayette. Among' distinguished men who will address the convention are: Herbert M. Lord, director of the budget, who will talk on “The Nation’s Business”; Huston Thompson, chairman of the Federal trade commission, “Questions of the Day;" Prof. James T. Shotwelt, of Columbia University, speaking on “The Geneva Protocol;’’ Prof. John M. Gaus of the University of Minnesota., a.nd Glenn Frank, editor In chief of Century magazine. Women Speakers Women of outstanding public achievement who will speak are: Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, honorary president of the National League of Women Voters; Miss Florence E. Allen, Supreme Court justice of Ohio; Mrs. Florence E. S. Knapp, secretary of State for New York: Mrs. Mabel G. Reinpcke. collector of Interna! Revenue of Chicago; Mrs. Gifford Pinchot of Pennsylvania; Dr. Louise Ovoracker, Instructor of political science In Wiison College; MisS Julia Latin <>p, first vice president of the league and former chief of the United States Child n's Bureau Mrs. Corbett Ashby of Londan. and Miss Gertha Lutz of Rio de Janeiro, P.razil.

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Milton Sills

ilHton Sills, prominent motion picture actor was the guest of honor and speaker at the annual convention luncheon Wednesday of the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays. Sills came from New York Wednesday morning, whore he Is making a picture, and returned Wednesday afternoon. Insurance Hitt of New York, art director of the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, wa.s also a guest. ,

SOCIAL WORKERS FROLIC Club to Give Annual Affair at Church Monday. Miss Alma Sickler is general chairman of the program committee for the annual frolic of the Social Workers Club, which will be held at 6:30 p. m. Monday at the First Congregational Church, Sixteenth and Delaware Sts. Vaudeville acts and song numbers will be given by social workers. Reservations are being made through Miss Florence Shearer at the Red Cross home service.

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QOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

N Informal bridge tea was given Wednesday afternoon - Airs. John L. Eaglestield, 232 E. Fifteenth St., in honor of Miss Elizabeth Greer, whose marriage to Edward Norvell will take place April 25. Other guests: Mesjames Abbott Dickson. Frank Fishback. Henry C. Thornton, Jr., Julian Robbs. Dudley Pfaff, Otto Frenzel, and Misses Anna Barbara Coburn. Anna Louise Griffith, Katherine Greer, and Amelia Henderson. Mrs. Elizabeth Watterson Hughes, entertained The Literary Sixteen Club at luncheon Wednesday at the Spink Arms. Jonquils and tulips were used as decorations, Mrs. Dick Richards, and her mother and Miss Rellavere Shuterly were guests. Mr. and Mrs. Charles "Watterson of Chicago will return home Thursday after a visit with Airs. Hughes. • • • Miss Evelyn Butler wa.s elected president of the Woman's Faculty Club Tuesday afternoon at a meeting at home of Mrs. Robert Aley, F9 N, Hawthorne Lane. Other new officers; Mrs. J. W. Putnam, first vice president; Mrs. Henry Gelston, second vice president; Miss Margaret B -liner, recording secretary; Miss Mary Alcßride, corresponding secretary. and Miss Gladys Banes, treas urer. Mrs. Louis Burkhart gave n talk on bees. Plans were discussed for a faculty picnic to he held at the May meeting at home of Professor and Mrs. Paul Haworth at West Newton, Ind. • • The Indianapolis Alumnae of Delta Zeta will entertain with a buffet sup per at tlie chapter house. 5815 E, Washington St., Saturday evening. The supper will be followed by election of officers. Hostesses: Mrs. Walter Srnuck and Misses Ilazel Funk, Efflo Abraham. Hwter Renard, Pauline Allen and Mary Lane. # • • Young people of St. Anne's Church, Mars Hill, will give a dance Thursday at 9 p. m. Lunch will be served. • • • Tom Elrod of the Indianapolis News gave a talk on his experiences in newspaper work at the regular monthly luncheon meeting of the Woman's Press Club of Indiana Tuesday at the Claypool. Elected to membership were Mrs. Adolph Gagg, and Mrs. Grace Dwyer' Riehrri of Terre Haute, Ind.: Mrs. Estelle C. Martin of Martinsville. Ind.; Mrs. Lulu Neal of Noblesville, Ind.; Alias Ivy Chamness of Bloomington, Ind., and Mrs. O. B. Harris of Sullivan, Ind. Mrs. Julian D. Hogate, president, presided. • • • More than four hundred persons were expected to attend the annual charity ball of the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyslde Wednesday evening in the Travertine room of the Lincoln. The room was decorated with spring flowers. A special number was to be a group of songs by Miss Janet Workman. • • • The Independent Social Club elected Mrs. C. L. Dearmin, president, Tuesday afternoon at the home of Airs. Allan T. Fleming. 1509 V . Twenty-Sixth St. Airs. L. W. Ellis was elected first vice-president; Mrs. Howard Galey, second vicepresident; Mrs. A. M. Carr, recording secretary; Mrs. AI. B. Spellman, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Hattie Ryder, treasurer. Mrs. Frank Shellhouse was appointed delegate to the general Federation of Woman’s Clubs Mrs. Frank E. Peters, alternate; Mrs. Allan T. Fleming, State Federation of Clubs; Mrs. W. R. Ratcliffe, alternate; Airs. W. E. Kyle, Seventh District Federation of Clubs; Mrs. J. D. Davy, alternate; Mrs. H. K. Pruitt, Local Council of Women; Mrs. Charlee Wilson, alternate: Mrs. Howard Stitt, clubwoman chairman, and Mrs. Walter S. More, publicity chairman. • • • Miss Anneka McCray, 1823 N. Meridian St., will entertain Saturday with a luncheon bridge for Miss Lueile Winders, whose marriage to James Wolverton Stockton will take place May 1. Miss McCray will be maid of honor at the wedding, • • • Yellow and green decorations were used In appointing the roof garden of the Indianapolis Athletic Club for the hrideg tea given Wednesday afternoon by local women In the interest of the national amateur golf invitational tournament to be held on the Coffin and Riverside courses, June 19 and 20. More than two hundred tables were leserved for the affoir. Gav balloons were tied to the tables. During the tea hour, Mrs. Anita Cochrane Scott, sang. Airs. H. L. Richardt, was general chairman, assisted by Alesdames Wallace Lee, E. B. Rinker. Pratt Searle, Donald Rose, Ralph Edgerton, Kenneth Mosiman, Walter G. Olin, Robert Lewis, Ted Byrne, Wilbur Shook, Winston Rambo, Thomas N. Wynne, John Brant, Carleton Best, Gilbert Hawkins, and Lowell Wilson. • • * The Wednesday Afternoon Reading Club met with Mrs. C. W. Shaf fer, 1143 King St. A report of the local council meeting was given by Mrs. H. I. Bailey, and Miss Joy Taylor gave the Bible lesson. Mrs. C. C. Munday read a paper on "Benevolent Institutions of Indiana.” Miss Mildred Grayson gave readings. • • The Mothers’ Alliance of the Alpha Delta, Theta Sorority of Butler University held an all-day meeting Wednesday at the chapter house. 5526 University Ave A spring luncheon was served, followed by a business meeting. • • • Mrs. Alta DeLaney, 970 Middle Dr., Woodruff Place, is visiting friends in Dayton, Ohio. * • * The Altar Society of St. Philip Neri Church was to entertain with cards Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. In the school hall. 528 Eastern Ave. Euchre, five hundred, lotto and bridge were to be played. * • • The En-Av-Ant Club will give a skating party Monday night at the Riverside Skating Rink. Committee in charge: William Eich, Kenneth Schilling, William Sohantz and .fan-win Olinlanil ■; (■ IHSII t - ▼ - -

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Wins District in Marble Play

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Fred Brant

District championship In The Times city marble tournament at School No. 6, was won by Fred Brant, 10, of 642 S. Aleridian St., Tuesday.

INDORSERS IN SESSION HEAR MILTON SILLS Photoplay Star Tells Indiana Women What Is Wrong With Movies. - “The dearth of good stories, the lack of enough good actors, the present level of public taste In pictures, and too much censorship are paramount things which hamper the growth of the motion picture industry,” Milton Sills, prominent motion picture actor, said at the annual convention luncheon Wednesday of the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays at the Claypool. Sills was guest of honor. "How can ait have half the colors swept off the palet and still give an adequate sense of life? That is what censorship does sometimes. “The motion picture Industry is still in its infancy—its pre-Shakes-peare stage. Just as most of the literature before Shakespeare’s time was leading eventually to the master hand. It Is my hope and belief that this unique medium of expres slon, created and developed here In America, will some day And Its master hand, and we will have morion picture classics. Some day some man will suffuse the commercial with the artistic, with poetry an! art.” At the speakers’ sable with Sills were Mayor and Mrs. Samuel L. Shank, Mrs. David Ross, the Rev. Jesse Bogue, Laurence Hitt of New York. Robert Libber, president of the First National Picturesj Corporation; Mrs. G. G. Derbyshire. Mrs. Charles Alajor, Mrs. T. J. Louden of Bloomington, Ind., and William Fortune. Laurenace Hitt, art director of the Famous Players -Lasky Corporation, spoke on the art settings and the art work of making a motion picture. Covers for 325 were laid at small tables decorated with flowers nncf candles. Music was furnished by Alesdames Louis Traugott, Simon Kiser, Jessamine Barkley Fitch, William Gibbs. At the morning session of the convention. Airs. J. J. Browne talked on salacious literature and Its filming.

COUNCIL OF WOMEN Indiana Delegates to Attend Convention AI ay 4-14. Among the Indiana Women who will attend the meeting of the International Council of Women at Washington May 4 to 14 are Alesdames Volney Huff, J. B. Barcus, IT. R. A. Baughman, O, C. Lukenblll. B. S. Gadd, W. A. Denny, of Anderson: T. .1. Ludep, of Bloomington; R. E. Kennington, Grace Altvater, Ella B. Kehrer, of Anderson; A. 1.. Pauley, S. R. Artman, Emma S. Finch Alice French, Frank Fatout. John Cochran, David Ross, A. J. Clark and Phoebe Link. Meetings are held every five years. ART EXHIBIT OPENS Work of Well Known Artists on IMsplay Here. An exhibition of oil paintings a,nd pastels by Arthur Spear of Boston, Alass., opened at the 11. Lieber galleries this week. Spear was born in Washington, D. C., in 1879. lie was a pupil of Laurens in Paris. Randolph Coates, Indianapolis artist, gave h. gallery talk Wednesday afternoon at Kokomo, Ind., where a number of his paintings are being exhibited. Aid Society to Meet Aid Society of the Progressive Spiritual Church will hold an allmessage meeting at 2 p. m„ Thursday, at the home of Mrs. Minnie Kllng, 2544 Central Ave.

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EACH MUST PLA Y GAME OF LIFE FOR HIMSELF

Life is a game everyone must play for himself. No substitutes are possible. Oftentimes parents, especially mothers, try to act as substitutes for their daughters. They want to protect them from the blows that are certain to be dealt in this game of life.

So they shelter the girls from the world. They wrap around them protections made of love and care. But some day the wrapping is sure to be torn oft’. Then the girts must take their places to go on with the game themselves But they don’t know how. No. a parent cannot substitute for his children in the game of life. But he can teach them the rules cf the game. With the wisdom gained by Ills greater experience, he can show them what prizes are worth winning, and what, although they glitter most, have no real value. In this "game" as in any other, the rules change from time to time. But they remain fundamentally the sa me.

Dad's Old-Fashioned Dear Miss Lee: I am the mother of two daughters, who are Ift and 17 years old. They are pretty and attractive, and the hoy* ak them for date* quite often. But my lniahatid ts one of those men who believe that parents should lust about lire their, daus-hters' lives, until the pirls are old enoupb to marry He was born in the old country, and that was the way things were over there He refuses to let the g-trls tro nut with hoys at all. He says there will tie time enousrh for that when we are ready to think about their man-japes T am not so old fashioned and I am afraid If WO refuse to let the hoys rrimr Ito the house the ptrls will meet them some plane outside and I do not want that to happen. T want tn proteet m.v daurhters. too. hut [ think my husband is overdoinp it. Which of us is riphl ? WORRIED MOTHER You are. of course. Your hus band’s plan Is even less workable In America than in Europe. Your girls are going to see their boy friends, whether you wish them to or not. Or, If they are unusually docile and submit to being kept In seclusion, they will not know enough of men to distinguish between the trite and the false. You and your husband can help your daughters and can teach them what they should know about life, but you cannot live for them. Losing Out Dear Martha I<ee 1 am a wonyan 30 years o'd and am deeply tn U>ve with a 'man who is 34. He seems In like me. We were sm-h pood pa's until he met this other woman. She ts about ten years old The Tangle LETTER FROM SYDNEY CARTON TO LESLIE PRESCOTT Aly Dear Leslie: After reading the enclosed letter which I have just received from Jack, I sat a long while trying to decide if my first impulse—which was to send it to you—was a good one. I have not lived to be over thirty, dear without realizing the terrible risk a man runs when he tries to be the ex machina in the married life of two people. These two people may be his dearest friends, as Jack and you are jnine. His impulse may be as mine is, only to create a better understanding between them—to promote their happiness, and yet his Judgment as to how to go about it may be a mistaken one. However, I am going to trust to my impulse and send you Jack’s letter. I do not think it needs much comment. I fnust. however, give you a few of a man’s reactions to It. Otherwise, I am afraid that after reading it you will be as much in the dark about Jack's personality as you are now. In the first place. Jack's letter was written to a man—a man who had know him intimately all his life—a man who had been his friend through good and evil report, a man who knew him so well that he could not lie to him, a man who loved him so well that It was not necessary for him to He. Consequently you are seeing the real John Alilen Prescott without gloss or polish. When he writes, “I pride myself upon being a regular fellow, I never break my word to any man,” and adds, "I sometimes break my word to a woman, because she asks such impossible things," he only reiterates the whole rule of conduct of the average man. He lives up to his code and that seems to me to be the only thing that counts He does not realize that your code is something so different from his that his rules of conduct can never be understood by you. He is always astonished when he finds jmu do not know the least thing about his motives of action or he reactions to them. That he just as surely misi nderstands yours is quite as latent vhen you read: "Isn't it perfectly astonishing, Syd, how Implacably unforgiving a good woman can be?” Leslie, that Is the cry of a surprised and disappointed man—a man who has been given the hard righteous judgment of a good woman when, because she is a woman, lie has expected only the softness of sentimental mercy. There, I did not Intend to write as much as this. Say a little prayer for my godson when he is asleep. The prayer of a mother to the One who never sleeps is always answered. Your real and true friend, T hope, SYDNEY. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW: letter from Leslie Prescott to the little Marquise, care of the Secret Drawer.

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Martha Lee Says-

er than he ts. She has plenty, but I have to work for my money and cannot look nice as she does. Could you please tell me how to win him back? BROKEN-HEARTED. You have fourteen years’ advantage over this other woman. Use it. < It is not necessary to have a great d*l of money to look “nice.” Dress

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Sell! Attics—clothes closets—cellars, there are many pieces of old furniture, household goods and things of that sort stored away in these paces. Things that have lost their value to you—necessities to someone else! Every day The Times through its Want Ad columns sells many articles which have lost their usefulness in some home. Do as hundreds of others have done—make those used articles bring in cash. Sell them today—now—through a Times Want Ad. Someone wants and needs them! A phone call will connect you with a Want Ad taker who will help you make the sale, for Times Want Ads reach hundreds of buyers every day. cLS The Indianapolis Times itjtrl Your WANT AD DEPARTMENT Days Costs Ad -Mkin 8500 99c

simply, but becomingly. Don’t try to Imitate this other woman, but he as attractive as possible in your own way. And don’t let the man be too sure of you! Sixteen's Problems Dear Miss Lee: 1 ts It injurloua to youn? x>lh to ride honwbaok '■ ‘J. Is t 6 years old too soon to have date-s with fellows? 3. Is It wronp for younx eirls to talk about problems of life that their mothers do not tell them? TOOTS. 1. I think It is healthful. 2. It’s too soon for some girls. The average girl of today Is mature enough at "16 to have occaslona. dates, but should not overdo it. 3. It is an easy way to get wrong, hurtful Ideas. Some times mothers are shy about approaching their daughters. It is better for the girls to ask their mothers, rather than other girls, about things that puzzle them.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15,1925

WOMEN’S WORLD FAIR Fair Sex to Show Why Men Aren’t Indispensable. Rv T'nital Fret* CHICAGO. April 15.—Hundred* of women are arriving here from all parts of the country to prove that no business, profession or Industry is sacred to man. When Mrs. Calvin Coolidge presse? a button in the White Howie Saturday she will throw open the Women's World's Fair here, when women will exhibit their prowess in all pursuits. Radio Offer Accepted I!u Time* Svrrial SOUTH BEND. Ind., April 15. Notre Dame University has accepted the offer of'a SIOO,OOO radio station, made by Boetieus H. Sullivan of Chicago.