Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 224, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1932 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Boards Are Appointed in G.O.P. Group Mrs. Prank J. Lahr, state president of the newly organized Indiana Council of Republican Women, announced appointments of board members for the twelfth district and Marion county at a council meeting Tuesday afternoon, at the Severin. Members of the board of the Twelfth district council of Republican women, as announced by Mrs. Lahr, are: Mcsdanm Frank D. Hatfield, chairman. Mae Marcum Jacobs, John Engelke, BeVt Fuller, Thomas C. Whalon. John McCardle, Fred D Robinson, H. B. Pike. W. W. Atkinson, Dan Brown, George Ong, and L. P. Hlghley. The board of the Marion County Council of Republican Women is composed of: Aids Arc Named Mttsdames Charles Dawson, chairman. Lewis R. Markum, Chester A. James, Don Brannlgin, William Mendenhall, Ray Thompson, Byron L. Daugherty, Fred Kcpner. Hubert Jordan. Eloise Atkinson, Miss Mary Peacock, and Miss Margaret McFarland. Mrs. J. M. Benefiel is chairman of the board of the Wayne Township council. Other members of the board have not yet been chosen. Announcement was made of three state officers, who will assist Mrs. Lahr. They are Mrs. Elizabeth Boucher, Valparaiso: Mrs. T. J. Louden, Bloomington; and Mrs. Robert Dennis, Indianapolis, first, second, and third vice-presidents, respectively. Other members of the state board, who have not yet been assigned to office are: Meet Semi-Annually Mrs. J. Munroe Fitch. Muncle; Mrs. John Hornung, Greensburg: Mrs. Lawrence Orr, Indianapolis; Mrs. Bertha Zimmerman, Terre Haute: Mrs. Zeola Harsev Misener. Michigan City; Mrs. Noel Neal, Noblesville; Miss Elizabeth Paul, Cambridge City. Mrs. Frank Donner, Grcencastle; and Mrs. W. P. Hodges, Gary. In outlining the plans of the organization, Mrs. Lahr said that when organization is completed in the state, there will be 1,122 councils, subordinate to the state council. The state council will hold twoday conventions twice ypirly, the first week in April and in October. The district councils will hold two one-day conventions the fourth week in March and in September. County and township councils will meet monthly. A central program committee, appointed by the state council, will prepare programs Mrs. Lahr announced that a reception and meeting of the organization will be held Feb. 16, when prominent Republicans from over the state will be guests. Approximately eighty women were present at the meeting. Mrs. Bloomfield H. Moore, county vicechairman, greeted the group. Mrs. J. E. P. Holland, Bloomington, state vice chairman, was introduced to the members. Mrs. Dennis presented Mrs. Lahr with a basket of flowers from the organization, in appreciation of. her efforts as organizer.
MANNERS e°MORALS Byj ° rda n
WHENEVER you see something in this column that interests you, jump in the discussion! Make your letter, short, to the point and if it’s interesting it will be printed. Again we return to the controversy between the boys and girls as to whether they are good or bad, and what kind of girl is most popular with the boys. Here is X. Y. Z.’s reply to Boiling Beauty, who accused him of being an old crab because he did not want a girl who smoked, drank and danced. Dear Jane Jordan—l wish to say to Mtss Bolling Beauty that I am not a crab, but a real honest-to-goodness man, who knows how to treat a lady. I admire the lady who likes to sit by the radio and embroider, or to go to a show once a week. The reason I do not like girls who dance is because I can not dance myself, and if they dance with someone else, there generally is trouble. It is not healthy for girls to smoke. They look like boys in women’s dresses. 1 also want to say to Wondering that lots of girls do not care to do these naughty little things. They like to go to Sundav school. X. Y. Z. Dear X. Y. Z.—You’re just begging for trouble! I almost can hear Miss Boiling Beauty say “Oh, yeah?” n a Dear Jane Jordan—l am 31 years old and have been married three times. My first wive died from continued drunkenness. Mv second wife ran off with my best friend. The last was a dance hall maniac. She wound up with a nice, curlv-haired bov. and this finished me for a brief period. I have two sisters who drink, smoke, and are crazy about dances. (I hope for an immediate reply from Just Nineteen. Miss Twenty and Boiling Beauty.l I've had. oh, so many romances, but failed to find the good girls who listen to the radio and embroider. I have a big long nose. It’s terrible. It's an absolute fact that if I was married, no other girl would want to take me away from my wife. My worst habit is smoking. I enjoy dancing about two nights a week, but that is not sufficient for the ladies of my experience. I like all the girls, but am hunting the one who stays at home. Regards to X. Y. Z. and Bad Bov. SLIM PICKIN’S. Dear Slim Pickin’s—l trust that you will receive some letters of consolation from your readers.
Dear Jane Jordan— Xam only a member of the supposed-to-be-stronger sex, but Bad Bov and X. Y. Z. have forced me to come to the aid of the weaker sex. Whoever these fellows are, they ought to be ashamed of themselves. They surelv haven't looked very hard for a nice g-rl or thev would have had a whole army of them by now. I wonder If they ever thought it a good idea to check up on themselves to see Just what was lacking, as there sureIv must be something missing in their makeup. I don't suppose these fellows dance, and that is the reason they are opposed to dancing. Mv Idea of a good girl (get out your notebook 1 Is one who does not drink, smoke, chew, or swear. As for petting, well, I'd hate to think that I’d gone with a girl for three years without putting mv arm around her. I do not think, though, that a girl should let everyone net her. Bv the wav. I’d like to meet Just Nineteen. Not if she’s fat. though. HAPPY HOOLIGAN. Dear Happy Hooligan Your breezy letter ought to be reassuring to the girls who think that all the boys are double-dyed villains! a a a Dear Jane Jordan —In your column I react letters from girls who ask what kind of a girl a man wants. This is from a boy who had a wonderful mother. He is human and likes some petting, bat not too much of it. for he remembers his mother. He wants to settle down, but ne is very particular. He wants a woman who will not be afraid of hardships, who will bear him healthy children, who will be as good a mother to them as his own mother was to him. for they have a right to such a mother, and to one who Is clean, neat, loving and faithful. Yours with a CHUCKLE. a a a Dear Bill ’32—l do not think the incident to which you refer is serious. I see # no indications of weak nerves. If*you are absolutely sure that this is the girl you want, and you are financially able to support a wife, the best thing you could do under the circumstances is to marry her. If you want a more explicit reply, you’d better send a stamped envelope.
Here’s Advice to Women Who Go ’Round in Circles When They Buy a Hat
1
Control of Birth , Topic of Session Indiana state conference on birth control will be held Thursday, Feb. 4, at the Lincoln. A luncheon at noon will open the meeting with the Rev. Ferdinand O. Blanchard of the Euclid Avenue Congregational church of Cleveland, as the principal speaker. Miss Elsie Wulkop, Boston, will also speak. The second session, at 2, will follow the luncheon, with a physician’s meeting at 5, which will be addressed by Dr. William E. Brown, professor of preventive medicines, University of Cincinnati. The patroness list includes Mesdames Elias C. Atkins Kin Hubbard Frederic M. Avres William H. Insley Harry E. Barnard Donald Jameson William C. Bobbs Mav G. Jenckes Charles H. Bradley F. Rollins Kautz Demarcus C. Brown John W. Kern, Sr. Allen Bloom S. B. Lindlev George C. Calvert Howard B. Mettel Christopher B. Meredith Coleman Nicholson Jr. Charles B. Clark Lafayette Page Robert B. Failey Henry A. O. Speers Jesse Fletcher e. B. Taggart J. A, Goodman B. J. Terrell Theodore B. Griffith James Todd Homer G. Hamer Oscar N. Torian Benjamin D. Hitz Kurt Vonnegut, Fletcher Hodges Ernest de Wolf W'ales Jaqueline Holliday Thor G. Wessenburg Thomas C. Howe Patrons are The Rev. John B. Ferguson. Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht. Mortimer C. Furscott. Dr. J. H. Gauss. Professor John 5. Harrison. Dr. G. B. Jackson. Dr. Walter F. Kellv. Dr. J. Jerome Littell. Dr. Charles A. McCormick. Dr. A. M. Mendenhall, Professor Talbert F Reavis. Dr. Dudlev A. Pfaff, the Rev. George S. Southworth. Dr. F. C. Walker. Professor R. Clyde White and the Rev. F. S. C. Wicks. Ex-Judge to Speak James Collins, former criminal court judge, will speak on “Probation Versus Cells” at the quarterly meeting of the Indiana Association of Women Lawyers, at 6:30 Saturday night at the Columbia Club. Members from over Indiana are expected to attend.
Panhellenic Patrons Chosen for ‘Green Pastures’ Showing
Indianapolis Panhellenic Association will sponsor the Tuesday night performance of “Green Pastures,” at the English theater, for Mrs. McHugh Hostess Mrs. Robert E. McHugh, 935 Campbell avenue, will entertain members of Alpha chapter, Sigma Delta Zeta sorority, with, a buffet supper and bridge tonight. She will be assisted by Mrs. Patrick Lawley and Miss Sophia Zinkan. Omega Chis to Meet Mrs. R. L. Plorian, 959 Ewing street, will be hostess for a business meeting of the Omega Chi sorority tonight. The members were entertained at a valentine bridge party Monday night at the home of Miss Ada Cecil.
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Dinner Dancing Is Bad Taste, French Declare
Loud booms the trombone. Shrill cries the saxaphone. “Let’s dance,” urges the Girt Friend, getting up from the table .... And that, friends, is another of the “Plagues of the Table” described in three articles, of which this is the last, that Minott Saunders has written for The Times and NEA Service. BY MINOTT SAUNDERS NEA Service Writer PARIS, Jan. 27.—Jazz music and dancing between courses can disrupt and degenerate the best dinner ever served. This is listed as one of the most effective plagues of the table by gourmets here who would like to see food and drink given the dignity, even nobility, that they are convinced it deserves. “Getting up and dancing during dinner is as absurd as it is impolite,” according to Madame Blanche Dussane, popular actress of the Opera Comique, who is a connoisseur. “When six or eight friends gather for dinner it is obviously for the purpose of passing a little time together and the evasion of one or two couples to the dance floor is really too brutal a way of showing that both the conversation and the dinner have nothing to keep them there.” Madame Gabrielle Reval, writer and one of the leaders of feminine gastronomy, goes so far as to warn society against what she calls the decadence that is approaching debauchery. She says: “Promiscuous beautifying by women in the dining room, the snobbish cigarette which has become as much of a habit as the permanent wave, and the dancing during meals are leading to distressing indulgence. It doesn’t seem to matter whether the filet de sole has just arrived or the carefully prepared partridge is cooling in its dish, the refinements of the cuisine are forgotten when
the benefit of its scholarship fund. Patrons and patronesses have been announced. They are: Messrs, and Mesdames Harry G. Leslie Fred I. Barrows Frank Woolling William S. King Peter P. Triller O. C. Ross Orville S. Hixon Clinton H. Glascock Robert Hueslin. L. A. Turnock E. J. Kowalke C. C. Crumbaker „ D. O. Kearbv Leo M. Gardner Norman Green Frances Sinex R. S. Gill Calvin Hamilton J. C. Carter Donald O’Neil James H. RuddeU J. P. Lahr Roy Peterson J. H. Dunn A. D. Hitz Albert Feasler John Paul Ragsdale Harold Bovd Charles Binkley John Breunig J. W. Esterline J. Howard Alton C. H. Beckett Paul Mvers Joe Rand Beckett Leßov Breunig George Witt Edson T. Wood, Sr. Everett M. Schofield Mabel Renich Gavle B. Wolfe Jesse Cameron J. B. Taylor J. Neil Campbell Jasper P. Scott Misses Margaret Kluger Edith Allen Sara Ewing Ruby Hamilton Helen Murray Lillian Martin Harriet Kistner Martha Crawford Marie Sangernebo
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES '
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IF you are suffering from that let-down after - the - holidays feeling, maybe all you need is anew hat. If you have gone in heavily for these wee bits of hats that sit pertly on part of your head, it will be a relief to get a hat with a brim. Moreover, nothing on earth makes a woman look younger than the right brimmed hat. A dark brown felt (left) has a rakish brim that dips over one eye and lifts over the other and a neatly fitted crown that has a nice cut with fine seaming at the front.
the orchestra strikes up and dance music beats loud on the air. “We dance in the dining room, and the dining room is also the dressing room for women. Soon we shall thin’: nothing of falling asleep in the dining room, overcome by cocktails and exhausted by dancing, as revellers did in the epoch of the decline of the Roman Empire, the atmosphere saturated with perfumes and garlands of flowers crowning every dizzy head. As for love, in this setting it has long since lost its refinement.” Dancing during dinner is also condemned by Austin de Croze, director of the Office Francais de la Gastronomie, who characterizes it as the worst of bad taste and an insult to a good dinner. M. de Croze says that the first duty of a hostess is to make her guests comfortable, and he warns her against a room too cold or too warm, rigid chairs instead of semicircular backed chairs, and a modernistic table that hits the eye but cramps the movements of guests. “Other aggravating little tortures,” he says, “are napkins starched too stiffly so that they slip off your lap almost every instant; too sumptuous a tablecloth with embroiedries or laces that catch knives and forks and make glases top-heavy; violently colored linen that challenges the lights and gives disastrous reflections to the wines and harmonize neither with the food, the fruit nor the flowers, such as blues, ochres, violets and offreds.” M. de Croze has no patience with guests who arrive late and think themselves exceedingly smart. He says the late Edward VII of England regarded this as the greatest of all table plagues. The guest arriving with one or two unexpected friends is completely out of order.
‘TANNHAUSER’ TO BE FINE ARTS SUBJECT Mrs. Dorothy Knight Greene will speak on Wagner’s opera, “Tannhauser,” at the meeting of the music section, Fine Arts Study group of the American Association of University Women, at 10 Friday morning at the home of Mrs. T. Victor Keene, 3209 North New Jersey street. The talk will be illustrated with a program of music from the opera played on a recording machine. GIVE CARD PARTY FOR MILK BENEFIT Daughters of Isabella will sponsor a card party for the benefit of the milk fund of St. Elizabeth’s home, Thursday night, at the Catholic community center, 1004 North Pennsylvania street. The committee in charge is Misses Katherine Gallagher, Mary Barton and Marie O’Connor.
By 'Joan Savoy
Music Group Will Study MacDowell Life and works of 'the composer, i Edward MacDowell, will be the ; theme for the program to be pre- | sented at a meeting of Kappa chap--1 ter, Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary musical sorority at 8 tonight at, the home of Miss Jeanette Harris. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Elizabeth Cochran, Misses Ramona Wilson, Beulah Beckwith, j Marcena Campbell, Lorinda Cotj tingham, and Alice Clark. The pro--1 gram has been arranged by Miss | Adah' Hill. j Miss Helen Hollingsworth will be | the guest speaker. Her .subject will
|®\ ; r^l \jive your 7 husband-
A RAISE in PAY
There’s real economy in serving Shredded Wheat—and that means more buying power for the family income. There’s good health in such a nourishing, wholesome food—and that helps toward greater earnings for the family provider. Shredded Wheat offers lots of food for the money. It is a complete meal when served with milk, giving you all the essential food elements in balanced
SHREDDED WHEAT
A LITTLE tailored bow is anchored there, the only trimming the hat needs. A dark blue felt (center) has a feeling of Peter Pan youthfulness in its cut. A turned-back bit of brim has a couple of feathers sticking up in it at one side. Another hat (right) is black, a modified beret, with a manipulated fullness to it that swings to one side where it is held with fancy organ pleated grosgrain ribbon. It dips over your right eyebrow, lifts over the left, and it has a jaunty bow atop the organ pleat- ' ing.
be “The National Music Camp at Interlochen.” Miss Rae Bauer will speak on “The Life of Edward MacDowell”; and Miss Marcia Clapp will talk on "The MacDowell Colony at Peterboro.” The following program of music by MacDowell will be presented: Voice—“To A Wild Rose.” “A Maid Sings Light and Low.” Miss Virginia Aeppli, soprano. Piano — “Scotch Poem.” “To a Water Lily.” “Os a Tailor and a Bear.*’ Miss Frances Wishard. Voice—- “ The Sea.” “Thy Beaming Eyes.” Miss Ruth Beals. VoilinSelected. Miss Harriet Payne. Accompanists will be Mrs. Lucille Wagner, Miss Frances Benner, and Miss Ruth Wagener Entertains Sorority Sigma Sigma Kappa sorority, will meet Wednesday night at the home of Miss Peggy Beckwith, 3310 Central avenue.
—From Bonwlt Teller. New York,
Seek Funds for , Aid to Maternity !>>/ Scripps-Tfowaril Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.—The annual attempt to secure federal funds for infancy and maternity hygiene and for promoting rural health will get under way in congress Feb. 4 when hearings will begin before the senate commerce committee on the Jones-Bankhead bill. The house interstate and foreign commerce committee already has reported the bill favorably, without hearings, but in the senate, members of the American Medical Asso-
form. It is rich in vitamins too, and also provides plenty of bran in a healthful way. Shredded Wheat is just pure whole wheat, steam cooked, shredded and baked, to make it easily digestible and delightfully tasty. No wonder it is so popular these days when you want all you can get for your money! Serve it tomorrow with hot milk—-the whole family will enjoy it.
JAN. 27, 1932
ciation who oppose it have asked to be heard: The bill is a compromise drawn after the children's bureau and the public health service each had sought to take-over the work. It creates a federal health co-ordinat-ing board with the U. S. susgeon general as chairman and the chief of the children's bureau and the commissioner of education as additional members. The bill proposes to divide a million dollars of federal money among the states for infancy and maternity work; and in addition sums ranging from $750,000 in the present fiscal year to $3,000,000 in every year after 1936, to be divided among the states for development of local health units or organizations for the prevention of disease and promotion of health among the rural population. All appropriations are to be matched by equal amounts from the states.
