Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 139, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1932 — Page 9

OCT. 20, 1932_

Art Club to Open Season With Supper “Character Sketches" will feature the program of the Portfolio Club which will open its season’s activities tonight with a supper meeting at. the Propylaeum. The new officers will present the entertainment at the meeting. They are Miss Anna Hasselman, president; Mrs. Hilah Wheeler, vicepresident; Miss Charlotte Dunn, secretary, and Mrs. Mary M. Kautz, treasurer. The club s purpose is to bring together various art interests of the community and to promote a spirit ©f art interest and appreciation. Among the subjects of programs during the year are; ' Then find Now' by Brandt and Helen Steele '"A Very Ancient Custom.” bv George Calvert; ‘ Speaking of Psychology, ’’ by Eiva R. Elrod; ‘ Three Oerman Town*,” by Anton Scherer; “Pictures of Places,” by Lee Burns; "From Book to Book,” by J Kemper McComb; ‘Fallen Arches,” by Herbert Foltz; "Benjamin Disraeli,” by Rollln Kautz; “Some Notions,” by Clifton Wheeler; “That Inward Eye,” by Katherine Layman, and ‘ Picnics Then and Now,” bv Charlotte Dunn. Miss Meta Lieber will have charge of a music night program. The final meeting of the year will be in honor of new officers who will be elected May 11. A Christmas party will be given Dec. 15. There are sixty-eight active and two honorary members. Bridge Tea Will Honor Bride-Elect A bridge tea at the Meridian Hills Country Club will honor Miss Mary Louise Minnick, daughter of Mr., and Mrs. Ira A. Minnick, whose marriage to John Bertermann II will take place Nov. 9 a£ All Saints Episcopal church. The hostess will be Miss Lally Margaret Carr, who will be maid of honor. Mrs. Minnick will pour at the tea table to be decorated with pink and white flowers. Appointments will be in the same colors. Guests will include: Mosdames Irwin Bertermann. Ernest R Baltzell, William H Wemmer Robert Ferrlday. William Garstane, Obie J. Smith Jr.. Paul Cullom, Robert C. Winslow and the Misses Betty Bertermann, Josephine Reed, Elizabeth Carter Carolyn Sweeney, Helen Shepard. Alice Fulton and Mary Adelaide Rhodes.

Card Parties

Ladies society, B. L. F. & E., will give a card party at 8:30 tonight in McClean hall, State and Hoyt avenues. Get Together Clu will have a supper and card party tonight at 210 East Ohio street, second, floor. Kingan’s Athletic Association will give a card party and masquerade dance Saturday night at the K. E. A. hall, West Maryland and Blackford streets. Hill’s Indiana Collegians will furnish the music. A. J. B. Club will give a euchre party tonight at the Modern Woodman hall, 1025 Prospect street. Mrs. Ada Baron will be chairman. Social Club of St. Patrick’s church will give card parties at 2:30 Friday and 8:30 Sunday at the school hall, 946 Prospect street. Mrs. Hugh Fisher is chairman. TREASURE HUNT IS FEATURE OF PARTY A treasure hunt featured the rush party given Wednesday night by the Alpha chapter of Sigma Delta sorority. The committee included Mrs. Carl Wilking, chairman. and Misses Lucille Hayes, Mary Sullivan, Mary McMahon, Ruth Urmston, Ruth Burke and Mrs. J. L. Montgomery. Guests were Misses Mary Huber, Ruth Fitzpatrick, Betty Phillips, Isabel Gillespie, Mary Hussey, Naomi McDonald, Mary Roach and Maxine Simmons. MRS. SCOVILLE IS ALUMNAE HOSTESS Miss Genevieve Scoville entertained the Wilson college Alumnae Club of Indiana at a luncheon Thursday at her home, 2050 North Delaware street. Out-of-town guests were Miss Mary Shultz. Logansport : Mrs. Robert Miller, Rochester; Mrs. Frank M. Simison, Romney; Mrs. Edna Wallace Warren, Union City; Mrs. Oral S. Barnett. Franklin; Miss Orill Van Buskirk, Roann; Mrs. William Jenkins, Richmond. Affairs of the college, located at Chambersburg, Pa., were discussed at a business meeting following the luncheon. The Indiana club makes a yearly contribution to the college library.

m, ;: - : IMl^:^BM|mß^-3 Cl PPOSE your stomach could it fosters secretion of juices that Bjt, /'''■*■ 'TO' hHV U talk- Imagine it is talking to help digest your food. And it is j§l n ' j „ inff you now. Listen... the richest food substance now s A' 5 :t ’" ' Iw WKm "When eating gives you indi- known in three vitamins essengestion— gas—that leaden feeling tial to good health-vitamins B f discomfort—don't blame an d D- ••" ; W The cause of your trouble is ..; Get back appetite-energy g|pPr unclean intestines!” health ... know what it means to |pr , A large percentage of cast have in A-No. 1 digestion! Add m -mSSm so-called "stomach trouble,” Fleischmanns Yeast to your diet tors say, is due to poisons that now—three cakes every day. And result when the body fails to eLim- eat ;t regularly. B|§b x ' v " ' inate its wastes regularly. You can get it at grocers, resNow to correct this trouble, taurants and soda fountains and gjfeipy... physicians have discovered an direaions are on the label. ■ -V ; a'-" simple Fa- —— mending fresh yeast. “Fresh yeast is the most rational WHEN ELIMINATION LAGS, poisons form that lead to v JS. A food, Fleischmann’s Yeast means ... for combating indiindigestion, "sour stomach," etc. To "tone" and purify the stimulates the intestines to gestion and for assuring a gendigestive tract doctors recommend eating Fleischmann s Yeast. work naturally. In addition, eral healthy bodily conditioo.” Fleischmann’s Yeast is a Health Food thousands eat—3 Cakes a Day

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- Cfi A £ tern No. O U U D Size Street City State Name

* | || 5006 JW V I

NECKLINES REACH NEW HIGH Fashionable moderns are literally “up to their neck” in chic, now that the smartest frocks are cut to hug the throat. This charming model boasts the new high neckline, softened with a scarf which slips through a loop in front. Another typically French feature that makes this frock so becoming and wearable is the vertical panel that terminates in pleats. For semi-tailored frocks of this type Paris suggests sheer wool crepe romaine in beige, with ruby red pebble crepe for the scarf. Size 16 requires 2Ms yards 54-inch material, % yard’ 39-inch contrasting. Width about yard. Pattern No. 5006 is designed for sizes 14 to 40. Price, 15 cents. Our Paris Fashion Magazine is out! Price, 10 cents.

DANCE TO BE HELD BY NURSES SCHOOL An informal dance will be given at 9 Saturday by the Indiana university training school for nurses. Bob McKittrick’s orchestra will play for the affair to be given in the gymansium of Ball residence. Chairmen of committees are Miss Ruth Zike, finance; Miss Ruth Hoaglin, reception; Miss Betty Bone, refreshments; Miss Mary Elizabeth Gardner, decorations, and Miss Ethel Tucker, elevator. Hostesses Are Chosen Hostesses for the monthly card party given by the ladies auxiliary to the Altenheim at 2 Friday at the home will be Mesdames Gustav G. Mack, Joseph S. Griggs, William Krieger and Miss Katie Kerz, Chicken Dinner Planned Crooked Creek Baptist church at Kessler boulevard and Michigan road will hold its monthly chicken dinner Friday instead of Oct. 28. Mrs. Maria Isenhour is chairman.

BUDGET CUTS SEEN AS PERIL TO EDUCATION Many Sectional Meetings Held by Teachers, Here for Convention. Advancement of the national public school system has been retarded seriously by the present trend of reduction of schol budgets, Thomas Alexander of Columbia university declared in an address today before the intermediate grade section of the Indiana State Teachers' Association convention. “Under the existing trend of tax economy, tendency of government is to return to the three Rs—reading, writing and arithmetic—instead of stressing advanced subjects,” he said. “Unless we want to lose all educational progress of recent years, it will be necessary for us to think seriously on the subject of providing advanced education.” George # B. Cutten, president of Colgate university, also spoke. Sex Education Urged Asserting that “complete education in sex is the most important of the science studies,” Walter H. Woodrow, member of the science department of Indiana State Teachers college, Terre Haute, speaking before the biology section of the state teachers’ convention today, said that “there is a crying need for sex education in the high schools and the homes.” Outlines of a battle to forestall efforts of the next legislature to abolish office of attendance officer in schools were drawn at a meeting of the attendance officer section in Central Christian church. Mrs. J. W. Moore and Miss Florence Kirby, read reports of the committee which, during the special session of the legislature, successfully fought attempts to enact the abolishing law. Committee will be named to serve in the same capacity at next year’s session. Not Given Fair Chance “The school graduates of today are not getting a fair chance to meet the world,” Miss Alice Barrows of the National Education Association, said today, speaking before the grammar grade section at L. S. Ayres & Cos. “The* depression has the same effect as the World war,” she said. “It has cheated boys and girls of a deserved chance to come to grips with the world.” Hdr subject was “What Price Depression?” Increasing number of graduate teachers failing to secure jobs was the subject of an address by Robert K. Devricks of the Indiana State Teachers college at a session of the psychology and educational division in I. O. O. F. hall. Fewer Given Positions Devricks cited figures showing that in spite of increasing numbers of aspirants to teachers’ jobs, fewer are being given positions yearly. Forty per cent of the graduates last year failed to obtain positions, he declared. Fashion review of Roman costumes was the outstanding point of a meeting of the classical section were members of the Latin Study Club at Ball State Teachers’ college. Loring Eilar, Spiceland, speaking on “The Challenge of Latin,” asserted that the language is one of the

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Tangible Gain in Business Noted in State Survey

Considerable Improvement Seen in Textile Field by I. U. Review. Tangible improvement in economic conditions during September was noted by the Indiana Business Review, issued kxjay by the research bureau of Indiana university. “Most of the basic industries have not yet started upward,” the review pointed out, “but considerable improvement has been noted in manufacture and sale of consumers’ goods.” Marked advancements in the textile field were reported for August and September. Some divisions of the industry reported sales above a year ago. Several shoe manufactures were reported “very active/* “The Indiana general business index gained 1.5 points in

greatest aids to appreciation of English. Overlapping functions of local governmental units were assailed today by DL Simeon E. Leland, University of Chicago economist, in an address at Technical high school. Dr. Leland urged abolition of the township unit wherever feasible, and said the reason this has not been done in Indiana is because the township trustees maintain a strong lobby here in Indianapolis. As an example of local governmental waste. Dr. Leland said there are 14,600 peace officers under 699 law enforcement agencies within a radius of fifty miles of Chicago. WANT FIGHTING CHANCE Farmer Not Asking for Special Favors, Says National Grange Master. Bn United Press PORTLAND, Ind.. Oct. 20.—The American farmer is not asking for special favors, but only for a fighting chance to prove his worth in maintaining his part of the country, Louis J. Tabor, master of the national Grange, told delegates to the state Grange meeting here. He said the present era haa developed a “complexity whiclT will be adjusted within the next few years.”

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September,” the review said. “Most sections of the state reported slightly more than the usual seasonal gain in department store sales. Retailers who stocked merchandise four to eight weeks ago in preparation for enlarged fall buying found that results in most cases substantiated their judgment.” Automobile sales made less than the usual seasonal decline, according to the review. New and used car sales were 57,4 and '2O 3 per cent respectively, under theoretical normal. Mining showed considerable improvement, following settlement of wage controversies. Steel mills in the Calumet district operated at 14 per cent of capacity. Most of the business was the result of small orders from miscellaneous consumers. “Limestone industry remained quiet. Furniture reported more than the usual seasonal gain. "Employment totaled 1.1 per cent over a month previous. Business failures were under a month ago.”

GIVES MEDICAL TALK Group Hospitalization is Described to Indianapolis Officials. Group hospitalization as a means of providing adequate revenues for hospitals as well as equitable costs for medical services was described by Dr. C. Rufus Rorem of the Julius Rosenwald Foundation, in an address Wednesday night at the Methodist hospital before fifty Indianapolis medical men and hospital executives.

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12,000 INDIANA TEACHERS OPEN CONCLAVE HERE Rebellious Spirit Grows as Delegates Await Fight on Parley Site. (Continued From Page One) the presidency since 1910. So far the names of no regular school teachei-s have come to the front. If the Chicago invitation ,is not brought up through committee reports. it is forecast that the northern Indiana delegation will force the issue from the floor. Large sums of money spent in Indianapolis each year by the teachers have brought protests from merchants in other Indiana cities. Many teachers from these cities are sympathetic with their home town merchants’ protests, because of the expense incurred in traveling to Indianapolis. Resolutions to be acted oh Friday morning are concerned largely with problems of taxation and finance affecting the schools. The association is expected to act favorably on a resolution calling on the state legislature to enact laws requiring the state to assume the major cost of its standards and requirements for minimum school terms, meeting the costs largely by a form of taxation other than taxes on real estate. Any school'* corporation would be

allowed to set additional standards or increase the school term beyond the minimum by assuming the additional cost. Another resolution to be submitted to the convention provides for changes in the $1.50 maximum tax levy law removing the political element from the county adjustment boards. The resolutions will oppose excessive salary cutting of teachers and excessive curtailment of school operations to effect tax reduction. Operation of the $1.50 maximum levy law has resulted in school budgets cuts which may mean school terms abbreviated to as little as four months in some cities. Inaugural address of Miss Clara Rathfon. Logansport, association president, will be given tonight at the tabernacle. The meeting will be opened by Milo H. Stuart. Indianapolis, assistant schools superintendent, the retiring president. Dr. Daniel A. Poling of New Yonc, nationally prominent prohibition advocate. will speak on “What Age Owes Youth.” Two general sessions will be held Friday afternoon, one at the tabernacle, addressed by Ray Lyman Wilbur, secretary of the interior, and Senator Arthur R. Robinson, and the other at the Murat theater. Speakers at the second meeting will be Dr. Thomas Alexander, Columbia university, and Francis Kirkham of the National Child Welfare Association, New York City. “What Japan Is Thinking” will be the topic of Allen D. Albert, Chicago world fair executive secretary. at the closing session Friday night. Dr.’ Charles A. Beard, New Milford. Conn., will speak on “Education in Our Technological Age.’’

PAGE 9

HEARST ON FEET AGAIN Publisher to Leave Cleveland Hospital This Week. Doctors Say. Bn l nited Press 'CLEVELAND. Oct. 20.—William Randolph Hearst was “up and walking around today,” his doctors at Cleveland clinic announced. The publisher, they said, would leave the hospital this week.

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