Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 123, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 October 1931 — Page 11
OCT. 1, 1931
Mrs. Ward Hostess for Social Club Oct-Dahl Club has opened Its sixth season of club work in Indianapolis. The first meeting was the President's day lunch Sept. 16 at the Lumley tearoom. Organized as a social club, meetings will be held the third Wednesday of each month, each opening with a luncheon. Many feature programs are being nned for the winter. The next Mng will be the anniversary pai kJ Oct. 21, with Mrs. J. F. Ward as hostess. Others include the holiday party and exchange of gifts, Dec. 16; address before members and guests, March 16; election and reciprocity day. May 18. The club was founded in 1926, and now has thirty active and one honorary members. It is affiliated with the Seventh district federation, the local council of women, and the Indianapolis branch, Needleworkers’ Guild of America. Officers are: Mesdamea H. A Wlnterrowd. president; Fred Pox. vice-president: B F. Watson, recording secretary: Charles M. Stephens, corresponding secretary; Sara Bundv. treasurer; O. Morton Richardson, publicity chairman; Don W. Warren, historian: Fred Schlecel. flower chairman; Don Warren and Amy Mowrer. delegates to Indianapolis council; Harold O. Warren and Harry McMillln. delegates to seventh district; Chris J. Rarle. chairman wavs and means, and Albert Maguire, chairman membership. ‘ Members of the year book committee are Mesdames Charles M. Stephens, John Ward, and Samuel B. Taylor, and of the sub-commit-tee, Mesdames Warren Herrell, Peter C. Reilly, and Charles W. Hogate. Reports from the affiliated organizations will be made often during the year. Chapter Meeting Set Epsilon chapter. Epsilon Sigma Alpha' sorority, will meet at 7 tonight at the Spink-Arms.
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World’s Series Baseball J * 1 I ail Scores Announced Here by H v ML pal Innings. |gS B A l2sc,e!t. J Starts SATURDAY ! Last TWO Davs I another super show on ! y I STAGE AND SCREEN! ! Don’t Ml* Tills Show! f I ♦ It’s tho Tnlk of the Town! * k T /.l II . -L T A ■ 1 A e SUNKIST L iLhaJLJL A . i"A 4 i■! t EDDIE NELSON j BILLY KELLY I g ♦ TW, o “^^ A ane • PAIGE ’SISTERS \ OKLAHOMA 4 and olheP RKO starg I ACTS * 808 ALBRIGHT t us—First Run Columbia Picture T j Ttint Brrriy Western Boy J #JR ratiTbros. (fm3ona. Wonder Athletes 4 . * with I t OTHER ACTS RKO . . AllfcA I A < VAUDEVILLE | ■ “QlfVI BNC M * WAYNE * THOMAS MEIGHAN ! * ♦ KootbaJl \ ♦ Extrn. "CI.OWN NIGHT” ♦ Fields 4 Tomorrow Nixht Added ♦ LjJaJVJWS t l augh.—Special Features. t■♦ • ■ e to s'iii u 1 m-iiH MOTION PICTURES ■a, “Mi ■ A i flj TALLULAH Ca, BflllKHCflD 9 I FMtMC One thrill after another in j the amazing regeneration of two human derelicts! |||iF
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- rec tern No. DDO Size Street City State Name
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FROCK WITH JABOT EFFECT
So many women like a jabat effect because of its slimming quality. Today’s model, so new and smart, would please the most fastidious in taste. It’s deep pointed effect combines with the pointed skirt treatment to minimize width. For the original dress, a rust brown sheer worsted print was ser lected. The beige sheer woolen collar and jabot presented quite a smart contrast. Style No. 556 comes in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. A black crepe satin is stunning with eggshell crepe contrast. Size 36 requires 3V a yards 39-inch, with % yard 35-inch contrasting. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.
AMUSEMENTS
Mrs. Balz Names Club Party Aids Mrs. Frederick G. Balz, chairman of the Beventh district Federation of Clubs, has appointed the following w’omen to serve as members of the promotion department of “A Century of Progress,” under the direction of Mrs. M. K. Northam, Chicago, and as speakers for the Federated Clubs on the subject of the coming exposition in Chicago: Mrs. John Downing Johnson, Mrs. George A. Van Dyke, Mrs. Clayton and Mrs. Roy Graves. Hospitality committee for the federations president’s day tea and reception Friday Oct. 9, will be headed by Mrs. Robert Elliott, chairman; Mrs. Ronald A. Foster, vice-chair-man, and include: Mesdames Isaac Woodard, Louis Wolf, Eugene H. Darrach, Samuel Ashby, J. T. Wheeler, George Cornelius, R. Harry Miller, W. H. Hodgson, Raymond Doud. Stephen Badger, Richard Mills, Franklin McCray, Paul E. Tombaugh, R. O. McAlexander, N. C. Lewis. W. H. Link, W. J^. Rlchardson - J - c - Trevis, Felix McWhirter, George Cheney. Jerauld McDermott, Gall Spangler, E. E. Stacy, I. A. Bowers. G. F. Karl, Roy Kennedy, Simon Reisler, Frank T. Brown, Isaac Born Percy Johnson, E. L. Burnett, Walter Carey, Tilden Greer, George Van Dyke, Harry Winterrowd, Frank E. Weimer, S. O. Sharp, W. C. Bartholomew. Pierson Mendenhall and Miss Dorothy Phillips. MRS. PEG CARPENTER WEDS IN KENTUCKY Announcement has been made of the marriage of Mrs. Peg Carpenter, Indianapolis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Higbee, Lebanon, to Robert H. Field, Lebanon, which took place Friday in Covington, Ky. The couple was attended by Mr. and Mrs. Arch Hamilton, Columbus, O. Mr. and Mrs. Field are at home in the Williams apartments, Lebanon, after a brief honeymoon in Cincinnati Mrs Field is a graduate of Butler university and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. Mr. Field attended Ohio State university. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. F Field, Columbus, O. Bridge Chairman Named Mrs. J. Hart Laird, Columbia Club hostess, has announced that Mrs. Chantilla White will be chairman of the first luncheon-bridge of the club to be held Oct. 21. Phi Taus Hold Supper Phi Tau sorority held a buffet Beta sorority, entertained eighteen party Wednesday night at the home of Miss Esther Webb, 1314 Edgeinont street.
City-Wide Sensation! Please Come Early * or Prompt Seating ■■ P&£aduits9 ONLYII Strange story of a girl * W who went through hell to hold the man she loved! H [SAiVATION] LJsT'yNEll j
9 today! GENE DENNIS IN PERSON in “REBOUND” J I Picture All America to the Excitement j H W * and f Ur Kiss! .. Live once more the care- m free days of joyous child- f 9999 r* J hood in this gloom chasing a ‘\7 J fpk ,* H WM 4 story of jubilant youth! I t Tjll sy< production extraordinary IF fHn LEON JANKEY —JUNIOR COGHLAN-ZASU PITTS :|MhB and the Most Amazing Cast of Youngsters You've Ever Seen E fIHS 25c I Pp , t J| ibi
WORK OF ENGLISH ARTIST HUNG HERE Prints and Etchings of Frank Brangwyn, Noted Painter, to Be Exhibited at John Herron Art Institute. MORE than $56,000 worth of paintings, prints and etchings will be hung this week in the upper galleries of the John Herron Art Institute in preparation for the Oct. 4 opening of an exhibit of work of Frank Brangwyn, noted English artist and Augustus Vincent Tack, American painter. The exhibit will remain throughout the month. The masculine virility of Brangwyn's work is well known to art lovers, and some of the most important of his mural paintings have been prepared for American buildings. Chief among these masterpieces, it is thought by many, is his great
decorative panel, “King John Signing the Magna Charta” prepared for the courthouse in Cleveland, 0., some years ago. The original painting for this great panel, which measures fifty by fifteen feet, is included in the collection to be shown at the Herron exhibit throughout October. The painting is valued at more than SB,OOO. Besides this painting, the Brangwyn collection to be shown here includes seven paintings, and twenty etchings and prints. Brangwyn’s etchings are as typical as his other work of the three features which distinguish them: simple grouping, realistic drawing, and truthful lighting. There was a time when they were less known than his other varied work because he makes his etchings, prints them in small numbers, and sells them immediately to eager connoisseurs. Today, however, some critics hold that Brangwyn’s etchings are more noteworthy than his pictures and mural decorations. The meditative paintings of Augustus Vincent Tack are an approach to the modern types of art in that they are abstract in design. Like great compositions in music, Tack’s paintings may be said to have rythym, movements, and themes in color. A modern mystic, Tack has painted a number of decorative panels on such abstract subjects as order, balance, far reaches. These three are part of the collection of seven loaned to the local exhibit by the Phillips Memorial Gallery in Washington, D. C. The other four are “Voices of Many Waters,” “Flight,” “Passecaglia,” and “Yellow and Gold.” Other paintings in the Tack collection to be hung include; “Outer World,” “Aspirations, ,f “ “Morning,” “Spring Night,” “Interspaces,” “Nocturne,” “Magic Journey,” “Christmas Night,” and ‘Red-Violet and Gold.” Tack’s unusual paintings have a technique that is a development
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
through many experimental years in trying to put emotions into terms of color and they must be seen to be understood. They do not have the line and figure developments of other artist's works, they are symphonies in cojor. Two of Tack's paintings were shown last January at the Herron Art Institute in the exhibition of Contemporary American Art. These were “Golden Morning,” and “Nocturne.” It has been some time since a
MOTION PICTURES fupouei 1 THE &C ONES PLAT | j •f) LAST TWO DAYS! it PM.J Funnier Than a LMrensl A I Picture for Adults and Kiddies I Alike: ; v ;; SaaSSfl Wm He was accused of love thief . . and tried in VI vain to shield his temptress! WILLIAM POWELL] In His First Warner Bros. Dramatic Hit The ROAD TO J sincaporel MARIAN MARSH DORIS KENYON Q LOUIS CALHERN Society barred its doors, but gave him a secret key . . . Jpj Starts Saturday ] IMOI
collection of Frank Brangwyn’s work has been shown here. Indianapolis theaters today offer: “My Sin” at the Indiana. “Rebound” at the Circle, “Salvation Nell,” at the Ohio, “Side Show,” at the Apollo, ‘Squaw Man” at the Palace, Bob Albright at the Lyric, and, burlesque at the Mutual. Theaters Split With Union Bv United Pres* KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 1. Twenty-two theaters in Kansas City and Independence were closed today when owners refused to accede to labor union demands that two operators be employed in each house. Only one operator is needed in each theater, instead of two, as there have been in the past, the owners said.
You Are Invited To Inspect 1931 Model Home Now Open 3701 Forest Manor Ave. Follow arrows east on 38th St. Sponsored by Indianapolis Home Builders Association
W “22 Stores Located for Your Convenience” HAAG'S : l CUT PRICE DRUGS \ ► HOME ownep-home OPERATED 4 ► ' “HAAG’S” MEANS DRUGS PLUS 1 4 Ik When you see the name HAAG’S your first thought is DRUGS, then COURTESY and CLEANLINESS combined with REAL SERVICE. Os course you know there is only one W Drug Chain bearing the name HAAG’S. It is purely local and is HOME OW’NED and HOME OPERATEP - , f ( Friday and. Saturday ) Heaters ► f “RITZ” Y Op 7 98c 1 L f II f 1, ri Just the thing for the t Y29c. |~~FR/DAy and SATURDAY ]jj k All 5c Cigars 6 for 25c 1 M HoUSC Coffee J La Palina Super Pals PJj" wtM m sk. Havana Ribbon IP* M ffP> White Owl nr RT <£§§ Lincoln Highway Cigars Straight m CIGARETTES m Jffl 0 Camel, Chesterfield, Old Gold I I * *#. JmSm I|> or Lucky Strike V. A V* qpMk. Limit 6 A t 2 Pkgs., Carton, $1.32 0 —For Your Old Bring in Your Old Iron Regardless of Its Condition Jldy K “HONEY DRIP” 1 Jfijk m chocolate f i , CHERRY rs C I FRIDAY and SATURDAY I CORDIALS —J M | f Palmolive h special m Soap Ii ►IF Tooth Brush ® g ar §M \ 50c aock.' j w f ■■■ I 50c PREP 9C/1 rUr. West’s 1 r 9 Tubes 1 A j D painless shaves Lt*3\e j Tooth Paste UC P \ 2-Quart Nickel Plated (1 Delicious in coffee < prn W l EleCtriC C ° rn P ° PPerS ••• •V I .*W J EAGLE BRAND lIC " E Haag’s Everyday Prices J r 50c Garglette W 35c Sloan’s Liniment m 40c Castoria J "ulds HwMi 75c BelLAns ~43c ► SI.OO Size, 87c 50c Gillette Razor Blades A] A A in
Fayette Club to Celebrate President’s day will be observed by the Fayette Club, with a tea at 2 Friday afternoon at the SpinkArms. Mrs. Ador Krueger, presi-
\ TONIGHT H LADIES FREE I ■ DEKADK / C °ME UP and ENJOY^TT-uTFUN' 5 * (II ItISSS*/ AND ENTERTAINMENT |||| ll ® RTING SATURDAY j|| IK \ / Morrey Brennon II YjUifkl\ The of JAZZ || |\ J COL^rd B ~ and lIIS
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dent, will be assisted by members of the executive board. Women who formerly lived In Fayette county, now residing in Indianapolis, are Invited to attend.
