Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 186, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 December 1931 — Page 7

DEC. 14, 1031

‘Drama Eve ’ Is Ladywood Yule Event Dujarie Dramatic Club of Ladyhood school will hold its annual Christmas drama eve at 7:30 Tuesday in the drawing room at Ladywood hall. Two one-act sketches, characters, and cuttings from longer plays of literary worth will be given. Miss Vivian Graham, granddaughter of Mayor Cermak of Chicago, will give the character impersonations, and Misses Catherine Vorder Bruegge, Memphis, Tenn., and Marian Molan, advanced pupils, will give dramatic interpretations. Mrs. George S. Foerderer is in charge of the dramatic department at Ladywood. Characters in the first sketch, “Alligator Pears,” will be Misses Betty Vanderbilt, Emily Serhant, Vivian Graham and Marian Nolan. The second sketch, “Christmas at the St. Cyr Mansion,” will be depicted by Misses Marian Schultz, Mary Sheerin Kuhn, Clara J. Hildebrand, Martha Freeman, Celeste Mochan and Catherine Vorder Bruegge. Accompanying music will be provided by the Ladywood Glee Club, which will sing carols. A series of dramatic readings will be given by Misses Marian Vodicka, Clara Hildebrand, Catherine Vorder Bruegge, Emily Serhant, Vivian Graham and Mariam Nolan.

MANNERS e’MORALS By>^j QßP4/ y

DON’T let your first letter be your last! It is much easier for Jane Jordan to help you after she has acquired a thorough knowledge of your problems. Write today! Dear Jane Jordan—l am a hißh school sirl, rather above average on looks, and popular, especially with boys. 1 make (trades without effort. I’ve never had a date in my life. I’ve never been out at nißht, even with a group of boys and girls my own age. I've never had friends at mv house. I have to flßht hard for my few privileges I've, never had the good times other girls have had. A nice home; yes, and lovely clothes, but I live a lonely secluded life with my elders. Because I am attractive and popular at school, niy classmates take it for granted that my social life also is one to he envied. I've stopped trying to explain. But when I hear the gay chatter about, parties and dances and dates with hov friends. I am an outsider, and It is I who envy those about me. LONESOME AND BLUE. DEAR Lonesome and Blue —But why? Can It be true that your parents refuse you natural normal association with young people your own age? If so, why? Have you talked to them frankly, reasonably. Have you kicked and screamed and demanded your rights? Not once in a blue moon do I advise children to defy their parents. Parents usually are right in their objectives, though often wrong in their methods. But parents who would isolate a young girl from her own kind and force her to spend her spare time sitting around the house with old foggies are so dead wrong that they are in need of severe discipline. If I were in your place, I would stage a rebellion that shook the house of its rafters, A young girl’s emotional health is far more imEmotion's poytant to her development than Vital in her intellectual training. Her ad- ) oil)' Life justment to society is more necessary than a knowledge of the classics. There is not now, and never will be, anything to take the place of contact between human beings. You have as much to learn from association with your fellows as books can ever teach you! You should be allowed to mingle with your contemporaries in and out of school. Far be it from me to cast aspersions on the training of the intellect. It. aids the intelligent ordering of existence. But an active eurious mind will educate itself regardless of skimpy schooling. Emotions present a far more difficult problem. If you get off on the wrong foot emotionally, you are in for trouble. Parents who deliberately cut off every healthy emotional outlet for their children can look for dangerous curves ahead! Emotions which are not permitted to flflow out through natural channels promptly seek morbid escapes. In this opinion, I am backed by every psychologist, educator and intelligent layman in the country! Confide in your family doctor, your priest, preacher, or any other kindly person with sufficient influence f n to shake some ?ense into your Doctor, parents. But don’t submit to the stif- Pastor ling of your youth without a struggle! Won't you write me once more and tell me what is the matter with your parents from your viewpoint? Help me to understand how they ever came to adopt such an unhealthy. unnatural, and unhappy attitude! It will be much easier for me to advise you how to deal with them.

MRS. GROVE TO BE HOSTESS FOR CLUB Mrs. L. E. Grove, 1135 Oakland avenue, will entertain members of the Priscilla Club with a Christmas dinner at noon Tuesday at her home. The club has set aside all social meetings this winter, and is devoting its time to the making of clothing and bedding for the needy. Mrs. C. C. Funkhauser is the president and Mrs. Oscar Archer the secretary. Other members are: Mesdames Clydp Hunt. Ora Shough. R. A. Shannon. O. P. Shannon, B. O. McCaupy. L. W. Schupp. E C. E. Umbanhower. Mvrtl* Stanley and Maude Dawson.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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