Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 217, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Wives of Three Former Governors at Assembly Women’s Club Luncheon Mrs. Paul V. McNutt Is Seated at Table; Affair Is Traditional Event of Legislature Openings. Wives of three former Indiana Governors were present Wednesday at the luncheon of the State Assembly Woman's Club, held in the onateau room of the Claypool They were Mrs, Ed Jackson, Mrs. Emmett Branch, and Mrs. Samuel Ralston. McNutt, wife of the recently elected Governor, was e ted at the speaker's table. She w-as dressed in a smart black and orchids PnSCmble ’ V ma^ ar *d wore a shoulder corsage of
Seated at the table with Mrs. McNutt were Mrs. I. N. Trent, first vice-president of the club; Mrs. Fred Schortemier, corresponding secretary; Mrs. c. J. Buchanan, president emeritus; Mrs. Fred Byers, president of 'he Indianapolis branch; Mrs. J. C. Travis, chairman of the program committee, and Mrs. A. F. WaLsman, chairman of the ticket committee. Event Is Traditional The speakers’ table had as centerpiece a lighted replica of the statehouse, which has been used at the opening luncheons of the club for several years. At each side of this were vases of Aaron Ward roses. candles, were used at both ends of the table. The candles were tied with purple tulle. Individual tables in the dining room were decorated with crystal with dull gold candles which were tied with purple tulle. Program placecards in the shape of the state were in the club colors, ' purple and gold. The luncheon is a traditional event,! and marks the opening of the social season for members of the club. The j members are wives of present ,nd ; former state elective officers and senators. Musical Program Given During the assembly no regular club meetings are held. The members of the club are entertained during this period by the different state institutions, where they make tours in inspection and by social events : among th<- membership. Invitations are. being received now' for these events. One which will be attended during this assem- j bly session will be a visit to the i Indiana school for the deaf, with ; Mrs. O. M. Pittinger as hostess. A musical program was presented, following the luncheon. It included numbers by a trio, composed of Mr. and Mrs. Saul Bernat and Mrs. Lucille Wagner; violin solos by Mr. Bernat and readings by Mrs. Glen Shoptaugh. PROGRAM WILL BE j GIVEN AT PRISON The Social Adventure club of Third Christian church will present a program at the Woman's Prison Sunday, when leaders will be Miss Cynthia Pearl Maus and Miss Elaine Elliott. The program will include a brief talk by the Rev. William E. Rothenberger. Entertainment will be provided by Jesse Had, whistler; Merle Calvert, pianist; Harry Limpus, guitar player, and Miss Thelma and! Mabel Krentler, Paul Shaw and Byron Stroll, quartet. Miss Irene Bishop is chairman of arrangements. Robert Pogue, president. will preside. DANCE TO BE HELD AT HOOSIER A. C. Hosts and hostesses for the Saturday night dance of the Hoosier Athletic club will be Dr. and Mrs. K. R. Brooks, Dr. and Mrs. John F. Kelly, Messrs, aid Mesdames Marshall Raber, Walter E. Jackson and Alfred S. Cantwell. Music will be provided by Bill Eckstein and his orchestra. LUNHIEON HELD BY TRI-O-DICE CLUB Mrs. Fred B. Hite, 2133 English! avenue, entertained the Tri-O-Dice | club with a luncheon Wednesday.! At a business meeting, Mrs. Hite was elected president; Mrs. Roy D. Clore j secretary, and Mrs. Gladys Wheat,! treasurer. The next meeting will be held at ihe home of Mrs. Austin Nutt. 4937 Young avenue. Mrs. Brewer Hostess Mrs. Don Brewer. 3361 Park avenue, entertained members of the Wilson college alumnae club at a I luncheon today.
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Shower to Be Held in Honor of Mary Hile Miss Mary Alice Hile, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Hile, 415 North Emerson avenue, whose marriage to Sylvester Alhering will take place ; Monday morning at Our Lady of Lourdes church, will be honored tonight at a ;:nen shower given by Miss Margaret Jordan, 2926 North Delaware street. The hostess will be assisted by her aunt, Miss Katherine B. Nolan and I her sister. Miss Sara Jordan. Appointments will be carried out in pink and blue with a plateau of roses and sweet peas centering the table. Other guests will be the brideelect's mother, Mrs. Hile, her sister, Miss Genevieve Hile, and Misses Mary Ann Wade. Charlotte Peele, Mary Frances Boyle, Alice Jane Hessler, Mary Catherine Slattery, Marie Blackwell, Dorothy Boyle, Mary Connor, Julianne Britz, Catherine Roach, Katherine Mulrey, Rosemary Rocap. Mary Jane Calland, Isabel Schrader, Elizabeth Tyner, Ruth Mullins, Esther Ralston of Rushville, and Mrs. Richard Phillips. Miss Mary Lou Connor, 2940 Capitol avenue, entertained in honor of Miss Hile Monday night with a shower and bridge party. Welfare Club Gives Program at Aged Home Residents of the Indianapolis Home for the Aged were entertained today by the Welfare club at the home, 1731 North Capitol avenue. The program was arranged by Mrs. Minnie Schaaf, chairman of the entertainment committee. Assisting the chairman were Mesdames Elsie Brubaker, Charles Roller. D. B. Ray, John Sawyer, Elwood Ramsey. Richard Poole, Hiram Pearce and Edith Pantzer. The program included quartet numbers by Mesdames Louis Traugott, Frank J. Billeter, Richard Fielding and Preston Highley, accompanied by Mrs. George Kold; a violin solo by Miss Mary Ann Kullmer, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. George Kullmer; readings by Miss Helen Marie Billeter and Mrs. Fielding; a piano solo by Glen Carr and a vocal solo by Mrs. Billeter. Milton Dills, boy soprano of Christ church choir, sang, accompanied by Miss Grace Paris. LUNCHEON IsITelD BY LITERARY CLUB Mrs. William Cochran. 1824 Rural street, was hostess for the Brightwood Literary club luncheon Wednesday. At the business session, Mrs. William Tyner, chairman in charge, gave a report of the charity work of the club. The program included the readings, "Today Is Fine” by Mrs. Grover D. Slider. “The Old Conductor” by Mrs. Frances Mayhew Alder, and "Pat Murphy” by Mrs. Francis Artist. Mrs. Herman Withers, 309 East Nineteenth street, will be hostess for the February meeting of the club, which will feature patriotism. mrsVelgan stark WILL RE HOSTESS Mrs. Elgan Stark. 6249 Central avenue, will be hostess for the luncheon meeting of the Alpha Club of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority on Friday. Mrs. Joseph Walker, Miss Ann Burkert and Miss Elizabeth Horner will assist Mrs. Stark.
Red Cross Group Sews for Needy
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Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Jane Jordan is your personal adviser. Come to her when you are caught in a jam and hare no other place to turn. Dear Jane Jordan—My husband and I have been married several years and have two children. He tells me that he doesn’t love me and talks like he wants to divorce me. I love him and have been a true wife to him. He said that he is looking for happiness some place else, as he is strange around Were. He filed suit for a divorce before, but came back on account of the children. I am young, but I would not be happy with someone else, as I love my husband. Would you make over him and tell him that you love him, after knowing that he doesn’t care about you? How can I win him back? I've tried everything, but he just pushes me away from him. How long would you give him a chance to be different? LONELY AND BLUE. Dear Lonely and Blue—Let your husband alone. Nothing is more unwelcome than expressions of affection when they are not returned. If you've tried a vacation from each other and that did not revive your love, there is little else you can do. There is no happiness to be found in holding a man to his post against his will. Unfortunately, love can not be forced, and when it is dead it is the deadest thing in the world. I have no recipe for bringing dead love back to life. Your cue is to fill your life so full of other things that they crowd out your unhappiness. You are wrong when you say that you could not be happy with someone else. Hundreds of women have said this when suffering from unrequited love, only to find memselves gloriously wrong in later life. Don’t center so fiercely on your husband. Let him go. A loveless home is no advantage to your children. If he is willing to support them, divorce is your solution. Then you can make anew start. p tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—l’m 17 years old and have been going with a boy for a year and four months. He cares for me and I care for him. My mother doesn’t want me to go with him. She’s a widow and likes company herself, but doesn't want her daughter to have any. He’s a nice boy. Would you advise me keeping company with him? TROUBLED ONE. Dear Troubled One —How have you managed to go with him for a year and four months without your mother’s consent? In my opinion, she can’t stop you, no matter how hard she tried. A love affair which has withstood parental opposition all this time is not apt to give up all of a sudden. Since I have heard only your side of the case. I do not know whether your mother is right or wrong. It may be that she has sound objections to the young man, and it may
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
be that she only is selfish. If I ] were you, I would make a sincere effort to understand her viewpoint. Make her give you concrete reasons for her objections. Tell me what they are and I can advise you more wisely. tt tt Dear Jane Jordan—The other evening I was at a party of young people and one of the girls brought up the subject of her old beau. She can’t understand why he has tired of her and why he rarely comes to see her and never calls up. I could have told her then, but, to be more polite, I will take this means of getting my message to her. This girl and fellow' had intimate relations for more than a year. She yielded to his every desire and whim. They would take w'eek-end trips to other cities. She no doubt was in love, but man is a funny sort of human being and soon tires of something easy to get. He exists by his conquests of the opposite sex. Easy marks bore him. He would rather hear a girl say "No” than cater to his every w'him. When a man knows all about a girl, every little intimate secret, how can she expect to hold him unless she is married to him? Even then she runs a risk of his becoming interested in another woman. Man always is interested as long as there is something about a woman he hasn’t explored. If a girl wants to hold her man, she should keep something from him and not tell him everything. Above all, she should not tell him how much she loves him until the proper time comes. This scares more young men than anything else. She should keep an air of mystery and not give in. YOUNG MAN OF TODAY. Dear Young Man of Today—l hope the young lady reads your message in this column. I agree W'ith most of w'hat you say, but I must add that some men are worn to a frazzle with the idea that there is anything mysterious about women. The mystery pose has about, blown up in some circles. Men want straightfonvard comrades, who understand them and whom they can understand. It annoys them to make love to a sphinx. mrs. c. t. Hoover to entertain club Mrs. Claude T. Hoover, 3153 North Illinois street, will be hostess to the Friday Afternoon Bridge club for a luncheon and party. The table will be centered with an Italian blue bowl, arranged with a tree made of pink, green and lavendar gumdrops. Rose candlesticks will hold rose tapers. * The guests will include Mesdames John Murray. George Fish, Guy Hays, Leroy Sanders, Henry Newborn, W. A. Workman and C. F. Stout.
Upper Lett—Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres of Crow's Nest, on duty at the information and telephone desk at the workroom of the Marion county chapter of the American Red Cress, 110 South Meridian street. Mrs. Ayres receives the calls from units sewing for the needy and orders from welfare agencies desiring clothing. Upper Right—The against poverty and need is the new battle front on which Mrs. George F. Kirkhoff (left) ana Mrs. Catherine Benz are serving. Mrs. Kirkhoff and Mrs. Benz, war mothers, sewed for the boys "over theie” during the World war. Low'er Left—lnspecting garments received from the 300 units sewing for the Red Cross is the job of Mrs. Walter H. Geisel, 3734 Ruckle street. Lower Center—Pattern cutting is the aid Mrs. Romney Willson of Golden Hill is giving as a volunteer worker at the Red Cross room. Low’er Right—Will E. Johnson, one of the army of the unemployed keeps busy serving as shipping clerk and packer at the work room. No clothing is given out at the w'ork room. It is assembled and packed ana upon orders sent to welfare agencies and township trustees for distribution to the impoverished. MAGAZINE club to ELECT NEW HEADS The Magazine Club will hold election of officerr at the luncheon meeting Saturday at the home of Mrs. H. W. Dragoo, 4520 North Pennsylvania street. Assisting the hostess and in charge of arrangements will be Mesdames G. W. Titus, L. H. Fisher, S. H. Rosenbrock, A. W. Stockton, Roy Thurman, Rudolph Grofkopf, R. A. Nowlin, John F. Kelly, E. Balch and August Henley.
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Psi lota Xi Sorority to Hold Party Alumnae Chapter to Be Hostess at Annual Session Here. Delta Beta Alumnae chapter of Psi lota Xi sorority will be hostess at the annual state midwinter convention. which will be held Saturday and Sunday in the Marott. Delegates from forty-eight chapters will be present. The council, composed of state officers, will meet preceding the luncheon at 12:30. when a program will be given. The entertainment is being arranged by Mrs. Anne Deumling of Ft. Wayne, state president. Miss Gladys Robb, president of the hostess group, is general chaiiman of the luncheon, assisted by Mrs. Marie Mcßeth, Mrs. Faye McGaw and Miss Florence Gaddis. A bridge party will follow the luncheon. Decorations are in charge of Mrs. Alma Appel and Miss Lois Klepinger. The luncheon tables will be arranged with bowls of the sorority flow'er, Johanna Hill roses, and ‘lighted with turquoise blue tapers. State officers to attend besides Mrs. Deumling will be Mrs. Marguerite Oliver, Muncie, vice-presi-dent; Mrs. Elizabeth Colvin, Princeton, secretary; Miss Margaret Loveless. Thorntow : n. treasurer; Miss Thelma Sines, Logansport, adviser; Miss Margaret Crowe. Petersburg, editor; Mrs. Margaret Rainier, Seymour, conductor; Mrs. Wanita Frederick Hughes, Kokomo, charity chairman; Miss Eloise Lewton, Decatur, north province chairman; Miss Margaret Fields, Lebanon, central -province chairman, and Mrs. Christine Miller, Seymour, southern province chairman. Mrs. Martin Eastburn, in charge of reservations, expects approximately 175 members to attend. The council will meet Sunday to make plans for the year and to hear reports. BRIDE IS HONORED AT SHOWER PARTY Mrs. Frederic Hill Surface, who was Miss Faye Wendling before her recent marriage, w r as a guest at miscellaneous shower, given Tuesday night in her honor by Miss Izola Rogers, 5129 East Washington street. Other guests were the bride's mother, Mrs. Clarence Perkins and Mesdames Russell Adams, Lawrence Scheper, Louis Cochran, Howard Deisher, LawTence Faller, Clarence Quillen, and Misses Edith Barnhill, Betty Burr, Kathleen luppenlatz, Peg Viles, Sally Cannon, Dena McCammick. Dorothy Rogers, Ella Lewis, Helen Crooke. Dorothy Burl, Esther How'e, and Helen Carroll. Club Will Convene The Bonnie Briar club will meet at 2 Friday, at the home of Mrs. Rose Sadler, 133 East Ninth street.
L. S. A YRES & CO.~ 700 HANDBAGS at A NEW LOW $1.49 And Talk About Quality! J Half-Price There Are: With Leathers Turn-locks And we mean real Metal name plates leathers, smooth calf Galalith accents and smart grains. Leather linings Broadcloths, Suedes, Extra compartments Velvets. Zippers Individual Styles and a Full Color Range AYRES' LEATHER GOODS—STREET FLOOR. And no wonder you’re fairly mobbing Vtte r*lace! You were paying almost twice as much a month ago for the same type of Bracelets . . . Earrings . . . Clips ~Scarf pins . . . Collar necklaces . . . Brooches Few Duplicates! ~ vy 4 AYRES' JEWELRY—STREET FLOOR.
Patterns PATTERN ORDF.R BLANK Pattern Department. Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose And 15 cents for which send Pat- C 1 1 Q tern No. D 1 1 17 Size Street City State Name •••••••••••••••••••••••
| \ I (fi 111 H Views
SMART FOR MATURE AND SLENDER FIGURES Tailoring, this season, does not require expert knowledge. Even if you’ve never made a frock before you’ll find this one easy. The flattering deep V-opening is finished with an applied band, and graceful pointed seaming adds interest to the simple skirt. Altogether it’s one of those becoming little frocks that are smart on mature figures as well as on
—JAN. 19, 1933
Dutch Play to Be Given by Children Three Performances to Be Given; Costumes Are Authentic. An exciting ice race and authentic Dutch costumes worn by Nancy Trimble, Bates Johnson, and Mary Jean Ottinger will feature the third presentation of the Children's Theater. "Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates." to be presented at i the Playhouse, 1847 North Alabama street, at 2:30 Saturday and at 10:3o j and 2:30 Jan. 28. Mary Jean Ottinger as Hilda van ! Gleck. w ill wear a costume which her family purchased in Prague: Nancy Trimble as Katrinka, will wear a dress from Bollerdam, Holland, and the costume worn by Bates Johnson was bought in Amsterdam. Mrs. Russell W Johnston, author of several children's stories, has adapted this delightful romance of old Holland for use in children’s productions. She has charge of the presentation which is being staged and supervised by Miss Rosamond Van Camp, chairman of the Children’s Theater. Arthur J. Beriault is directing the play. Others in the cast are Egan Lacy, Dan McDuffie and Edward Green. Miss Helen Shepard designed the stage sets which include the Holland dyke, interior of the Brinker home, the inn at Layden, and the attractive snow and ice carnival scene of the third act. Miss Shepard was assisted by Mrs. Harold Taylor, Mr. Nobel Dean and committee. Properties are in charge of Miss Eunice Dissette, Miss Helen Fleischer, Miss Anna Turian and committee. Other committee chairmen are Mrs. Carl Vonnegut, costumes; Mrs. George T. Parry, box office, and Mrs. Raymond F. Mead, coupon books. slender figures. Try this for the first frock you make. Size 16 requires 2 '4 yards 54-inch fabric, 'i yard 39-inch contrasting. Width about 1% yard. Pattern No. 5119 is designed for sizes 34. 36. 38. 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 bust. Price, 15 cents. Send for our Fashion Magazine. It contains new' easily made styles, helpful dressmaking hints and an authoritative article on wedding etiquet. Price, 10 cents.
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