Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 234, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Players’ Club Members to Be Entertained at Dinner Party on Friday Affair to Be Held Before Performance at Civic Theater; Two Presentations to Be Given by Casts. Members of the cast for the Players’ club presentations at the Civic theater Friday night will be entertained with members of the committee in charge at a dinner party in the Knickerbocker club before the performances. Mr and Mrs. Joseph A. Miner, chairman, will be host and hostess.
Dr. John Ray Newcomb will coach the plays, which will include “What a Woman’’ by Waller Matthews and “Latch keys’’ by Alice Gernstenberg. In the first play will be Albert Deluse, also a member of the committee in charge; Warren K. Mannon and Walter A. Stuhldreher. Roles in the second play will be taken by Mrs. Robert C. Winslow', Mrs. Stuhldreher. Mrs. Charles M. Wells, Mr. and. Mrs. Marshall Dale, Miss Mary Sinclair and Percy H. Weer, Louise Haerle, Thomas Sinclair, Robert Wild and Dean Brossman. Members of the committee besides Mr. and Mrs. Miner. Mrs. Wells and Mr. Deluse who will attend the dinner are Mr. and Mrs. Russell Willson. Mr. and Mrs. Horace McClure and Dr. and Mrs. New'comb. Mrs. Herman Wolff will entertain with a dinner at the Woodstock Club before the performances. Dancing at the club will follow. LOUISE HARTER IS SORORITY LEADER Miss Louise Harter was elected president of the Alpha chapter of the Theta Chi Omega sorority at the annual election meeting held Monday at the home of Mrs. Mary Bender. Other officers named w'ere: Vicepresident, Miss Dorothy Burl; sec-retary-treasurer, Miss Mary Golden; chaplain and social secretary, Miss Louise Rudbeck; sergeant-at-arms, Mrs. Mary Bender. The sorority will meet Monday night at the home of Miss Golden, 1149 West Thirty-fifth street. ST. ROCITS CHOIR TO SPONSOR DANCE Mrs. Merle Egan is chairman of the Valentine dance to be given Friday night, Feb. 17. at the Chatterbox ballroom, Fountain Square, under the auspices of the St. Roch’s choir. Assisting Mrs. Egan will be Mrs. Andrew Fromhold, Mrs. Hurley, Misses Margaret Braun, Roseann Davey, Ellen, Ruth and Sylvia Weber and Joseph Brand. John Braun, George Raefson, Leo Steir and Norval Thompson. VALENTINE BRIDGE PARTY TO BE HELD The annual Valentine bridge party of the Indianapolis chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha alumnae will be held Thursday night at the home of Mrs. Herbert Riser, 302 South Audubon road. Committee members assisting Mrs. Riser will be Mesdames T. R. Lyde, Leonard Swartz, Bert Nelson and Misses Jean Vestal and Elizabeth Ann Miller. ENTERTAIN WITH BIRTHDAY DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher, 200 North New Jersey street, entertained with a birthday dinner Tuesday night at their home in honor of Mrs. Fisher's mother. Mrs. Harriett Keefauver. A white birthday cake centered the table lighted with red tapers in crystal candelabra. Appointments were in keeping with Valentine’s day. MAKE PLANS FOR CHILDREN'S PLAY Arrangements for the spring production of the Children's theater will be formulated at the meeting of the board of directors and committee chairmen at the home of Miss Rosamond Van Camp, 4801 Michigan road, at 2 30 Friday afternoon. The presentation is scheduled for April 22 and 29.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. John Bertermann 11, 6221 College avenue, will return today from a trip to Cincinnati. Mrs. Harry R. Wilson, Wellington drive, is visiting at the New Weston in New York City. Officers Arc Elected New officers of the Butler Teachers College Alumnae Association are Miss Hazel Harman, president; Mrs. Genevieve Stech Lich, vicepresident; Mrs. Betty Wynn Rice, secretary, and Miss Josephine McDowell, treasurer. Meeting Is Postponed Meeting of the Parent-Teachers Association at School 15, Beville avenue and Michigan street, has been postponed from tonight until Friday, Feb. 17, when the same program will bo given. Plan Skating Partg Miss Mildred Southwick is chairman of a skating party to be given Friday night by the Otterbein Guild Society of the Belmont. United Brethren church at the Y. W. C. A.
Daily Recipe CI'RRIED BAKED BEANS Fry one-fourth pound bacon. and remove to dish to keep hot. Add two shredded green peppers to the bacon fat. and saute until a golden brown. Add the cont'" *<= of two No. 2 cans of bea cooked as in the lumber camps, two cups canned tomatoes, one-fourtn teaspoon pepper and one teaspoon curry powder, and simmer fifteen to twenty minutes. or until slightly thickened Serve garnished with the bacon slices and whole wheat gherkins. Serves eight.
Governor Will Be Guest at Hard Luncheon Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt will be guests at the speakers table Friday at the Town Hall luncheon in the Columbia Club, following the lecture by William Hard at English’s. Mrs. John Worth Kern will act as hostess. Other guests will be Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall, Mrs. Samuel Ralston, Mr. and Mrs. Evans Woollen, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coleman, Hugh McK. Landon, Boyd Gurley, Harold C. Feightner and Maurice Early. Hard, a Washington correspondent, broadcasts “Behinds the News in Washington” and “Behind the New's at Geneva.” He is a contributor to magazines. String Quartet and Pianist to Hold Recital The string quartet of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music will be presented in a recital with Miss Frances Wishard, pianist, at 8 Thursday in the Odeon, 106 East North street. The quartet is composed of Edwin Jones, first violin; Miss Georgia Baumann, second violin; Stanley Norris, viola, and Adolph Schellschmidt, violoncello. The program will be as follows; i. "Quartet, G major" Mozart Allegro Vivace assai. Menuetto Allegro. Andante Cantabile. Molto Allegro. IX. Quintet, C minor" Dohnanyi Allegro. Scherzo. Adagio quasi andante. Finale Allegro animato. Tea to Be Given, A Valentine tea will be given by the Cosmopolitan club of Butler university from 3 to 5 Sunday at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Gino A. Ratti, 329 Buckingham drive.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents foi wffiich send Pat- C 1 O tern No. D l O £ Size Street City State Name
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NECKLINE IS SQUARE It s very new, and very charming, to wear a square neckline, especially when it’s framed with a tiny ruffle. The buttons down the front are also a fashionable idea. Embroidered batiste, especially when it’s embroidered in polka dots, is a charming choice for this blouse. Size 10 requires l's yards 36-inch dotted fabric. 2 s * yards pleating. Pattern No. 5132 is designed for -izes 4,6, 8, 10, 12, 14 years. Price, 15 cents, Make your clothes with the help of our Fashion Magazine. Beginners will find its styles easy to make and its sewing hints instructive. Price 10 cents a copy.
Open Work Is Headline Feature in Season s Newest Shoes
PUNCH is being put into women’s shoes for 1933. The Judys of the boulevards and afternoon teas will find their ’’punch,” not in a show of marionettes. but on the toe of their shoes. And with this punch-work in sandals and pumps comes a roll to the leather that resembles the wild sea w ; aves when the tide comes in. At the convention of the Indiana Shoe Travelers’ Association this week at the Claypool, the varied styles of footwear for women were shown on an illuminated runway with living models. The Rich-Vogel Shoe Company
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Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Jane Jordan always is interested in the problems of youth and will give a fair answer. Write your letter now. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a boy of 16, in love with a girl of 15. She has lied about my mother. Her father cheated my father, and therefore there are hard feelings between our families. My family does not like the girl because sne has lied about them and because her father did w’hat he did. Her father is a widow'er and has a lady living in the house w'ho is no good. I believe that , ; s most of the reason the girl has done much of this. My mother knows what the lady is and says the girl will be like her. I can not get this girl off my mind, although my family insists that she is no good. However I have known her more than a year and have been with her most of my time. This is not puppy love, but real stuff. Please advise me w'hat to do. BLUE BILL.
Dear Blue Bill—First I feel obliged to warn you against believing yourself permanently in love at 16. But that is not the question you want answered. It is easy for me to see what attracts you to this girl. She has been attacked, and this arouses your chivalry. The woman who needs prptection always makes a powerful appeal to a man of any age. The girl's situation arouses my sympathy. It is difficult for a young girl to develop normally under the situation which you describe. She should not be held responsible lor her father's fault in any way. Possibly her loyalty to her father inspired the lie. It is not just to prophesy that the girl will model her conduct after the woman who is. living in her home. She may, in fact, revolt against the situation and go to the opposite extreme of piety. Your family would be wise to judge the girl on her own merits, quite apart from her father. The more they oppose you in your desire to be with her, the more they arouse your protective instincts. Your parents, of course, have your welfare at heart and it is difficult for them to see that if they let the two of you alone the chances are that you will drift apart in the natural course of events. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—What advice can you give a girl of 18, pestered constantly by and teased about a young man whom she actually despises? Such has been my case for two years. My friends even refer to this boy as my shadow, for wherever I am he is sure to be. Perhaps you will tell me to tell him about it, but I have, again and again, and so have his friends, but to no avail. It seems impossible to hurt his feelings, so I suppose I’ll have to remain PESTERED. Dear Pestered: I suppose that as long as he can irritate you, he feels that he is not a total blank in your life, for anything is better than to be ignored. I doubt if his devotion could survive real indifference, the kind of indifference which did not know whether he was alive or dead. a a tt Dear Jane Jordan—l have had the same misfortune as Cleopatra.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — California grapes, cereal, cream, creamed dried beef, popovers, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Oyster bisque, croutons cabbage and carrot salad. Boston brown bread, cranberry pudding, milk, tea. Dinner — Bouillon, stuffed fresh shoulder of pork, potatoes roasted with meat, brown gravy, broiled apple slices creamed turnips, head lettuce with chiffonade dressing, raspberry gelatin with custard sauce, milk, coffee.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
of Milwaukee. Grove's Shoe Company of Chicago, and the St. Louis Shoe Manufacturing Company, were some of the firms displaying advanced modes in the roll and punch shoes and sandals. Open work will be as common, if not more pronounced, in shoes than heretofore. Tan shades predominate for street and sports wear, while many black pumps are shown with the roll effect. The sandal fad of 1932 continues in sports and beach wear. Simplicity in shoes without glaring overtones of color are highlights of interest in the leather shown to state salesmen by shoe manufacturers.
I loved a fellow immensely and simply can’t forget him. I lost him because I w'ould not give in to his immoral idea, and likewise have lost others, who w'ere good prospects, for the same reason. Do ydti think I am wrong in being firm against his will? TOO GOOD. Dear Too Good—No. It never is wise to violate your own inner conviction of what is right or wrong. If something within you condemns you for what you do, your peace is gone. People who hold traditional views about good conduct are wise not to act against such views. Dear Jane Jordan —I am 17 and I met a girl who was 16. For the first few dates I pretended I was serious, but she thought I wasn’t. I got my best boy friend a date with one of her girl friends. The next thing I knew, to my surprise, she was going with my boy friend. I would like to know how I can prove to her that I really am serious and want to go with her. I realize it is rather odd to think I should have waited until now to know that I really love her. ONE WHO WANTS TO KNOW. Dear One Who Wants to Know: Why don’t you drop your pretenses and be just as friendly as you know how? Don’t let her scare you, but try being yourself, without trying to pose.
Valentine Costume Ball to Be Given at Art Institute
A costume ball under the auspices cf the freshman class of the John Herron Art Institute will be given Valentine’s night from 8 to 11 at the school auditorium John Clemens, president of the class, is directing the affair. About 200 are expected to attend the dance, which is open to the entire school. Decorations will be red and white, in keeping with the Valentine motif. Prizes will be awarded for the best costumes by Burling Boaz, freshman class sponsor, who will be a guest. The program for the evening will include a floor show, a dance by Miss Leone Meyers, accordion selections by Henry Hohlt, and piano selections by Charles Mac Laren, a student at the school. Committee chairman in charge of the arrangements are Robert Behr,
Card Parties
Mrs. Lily Hayworth, 861 Bradshaw, will be hostess for a covered dish luncheon and card party to be given at noon Thursday by the relief committee of the Gold Mound Council 445, degree of Pocahontas. Service Post 128, American Legion, will hold a benefit euchre and bridge party at 8 Friday night in legion hall in Oaklandon. The committee is composed of Mrs. Lulu Newhouse and Mrs. Nell Torrence and Jesse S. Combs and John F. Linder. Social Club of Sacred Heart church will give a bunco and lotto party at 2; 15 Thursday. PARENT-TEACHER EVENT POSTPONED Parent-Teacher meeting of School 45. scheduled for 7:45 tonight, has been postponed until March 8, according to an announcement made by Mrs. George Barrett, chairman of the program committee. Harry W. White will talk on “Youth Finding the Trail in Modern Life” at the March meeting. Mrs. William Harrison, president of the group, will preside. Book to Be Reviewed “Forgive Us Our Trespasses.” by Lloyd Douglas, and "The Tinder Box of Asia,” by George Sokolosky will be reviewed by Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten at 7:30 Friday night at the All Souls Unitarian church. The lecture is being sponsored by the More Light Guild of the church.
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Martha Scott Elected Head of Guardians Miss Martha Scott was elected president of the Guardians Association of the Camp Fire Girls at a meeting Tuesday night in the Camp Fire office. Other officers are Miss Louise Reiter, vice-president; Mrs. Florence Barnard, secretary, and Mrs. A. L. Jenkins, treasurer. At the program following, Dr. Ada E. Schweitzer, director of the infant and child hygiene division of the Indiana state board of health, gave a talk on her work. The nominating committee was composed of Mrs. Frank Burns, chairman, and Misses Kathleen Klaiber and Irma Biedenmeiser. MIXED BRIDGE TO BE HELD AT H. A. C. Mrs. G. H. Rossebo is chairman in ! charge of the mixed bridge party Ito be given in the Chinese room of the Hoosier Athletic Club at 8:15 Thursday night. Other hostesses are Mesdames Walter Shirley, Don Page, Elmer Goldsmith and Thomas E. Hanika. A special invitation has been extended to the new members of the club.
decorations; William Ratcliff, entertainment; MacLaren, publicity, and Eldon Begtel, tickets. Other officers of the freshmen class are Miss Vera Griffith, vicepresident; Miss Juenita Wright, secretary, and Howard Cradick, treasurer. CHAPTER PLANS VALENTINE DANCE Kappa chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, will entertain members with a formal Valentine dance and bridge party Friday night at the D. A. R. chapter house, 824 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Russell Spivey is chairman. Her assistants are Mrs. Charles Gaunt and Misses Ruth Hutchins, Jeannette Harris and Margaret Alles.
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Founders of Butler to Be Honored Miss Katherine Merrill Graydon Is Member of Committee. Miss Katharine Merrill Graydon, emeritus professor of English literature at Butler university, is a member of the general committee in charge of the fifty-first founders’ day celebration of. the university, which will be observed Feb. 25. Others on the general committee are Dr. D. W. Layman, president of the Butler Alumni Association, and Dr. Bruce L. Kershner, professor of New Testament. This group is in charge of arrangements for the program which will include academic services in the Butler fieldhouse and a banquet in the Claypool. David Lawrence of Washington D. C., will be the principal speaker for the oc- 1 casion. Committees assisting the general committee in preparation for the event are: Academic program. Dr. L. O. Garber and Dr. S. E. Elliott; banqet, Miss Florence I. Morrison, Miss Corinne Welling and George Schumacher; music, Miss Ida B. Wilhite and Clide Aldrich; and invitations, Miss Graydon, Miss Sarah Sisson and Evan Walker. Final Meeting of Kirshbaum Workers Held Harry S. Wolf, general chairman of the Kirshbaum Co-Operative Carnival, accepted reports of committee chairman at a meeting Tuesday night at the center and submitted them to the advisory board. It is composed of Mrs. J. A. Goodman, Ernest Cohn and Fred New'man. One hundred people form the steering committee, which met for the last time before the carnival all day Sunday. Twenty-three organizations are taking part in the project, which is the largest winter event on the Kirshbaum program. Earlham Club to Meet Here on Saturday An illustrated talk on Mexico will feature the luncheon meeting of the Earlham Woman's Club at the Spink-Arms Saturday. Mrs. Cecil K. Calvert, club president, will preside at the business session. Miss Martha Pick, assistant professor of modern languages at Earlham college will be the principal speaker. She will deal with the educational standards of Mexico, where she attended Hubert Herring's Institute for Cultural Relations with Latin America. Miss Pick is a native of Austria and received the degree of L. R. A. M. from the Royal Academy cf Music in 1908. Before going to Earlham, Miss Pick taught at Wilmington college.
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ART ASSOCIATION TO PRESENT EXHIBIT
The board of directors of the Art Association of Indianapolis has issued invitations to an exhibition of paintings and drawings by Thomas H. Benton at the John Herron Art Institute, from 4 to 6 Saturday. A reception honoring Benton will be held.
Sororities
Miss Martha Hofmcister, 1117 Windsor street, will be hostess tonight for the meeting of the Omega Kappa sorority. Miss Louise Florian will entertain the Omega Chi sorority tonight at 1541 Pleasant street when plans will be made for a Valentine party. Alpha chapter of Theta Phi Tau sorority will hold a business meeting at 8:30 tonight at the Spink-Arms. Beta chapter of Alpha Beta Phi sorority will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Antlers. Sigma Sigma Kappa sorority will meet tonight at the home of Mi>s Mary Hoover. 3010 McPherson avenue, for a business meeting. Sigma Tau sorority will have a called meeting tonight at the home of Miss Katherine Lewis, 5684 College avenue. Phi Rho Tau sorority will meet tonight at the Washington to discuss plans for a Valentine party. Pi Gamma sorority will meet Thursday night at the home of Miss Evelyn Armstrong, 4802 College avenue. BUTLER STUDENTS HEAR I. U. DEAN Dr. J. C. Todd, dean of the Indiana university school of religion, addressed students of the Butler Teachers’ college at its chapel today. C. M. Yccum, secretary of the United Christian Missionary society, who has just returned from a trip around the world, will speak Thursday. G. H. Stewart of Winnepeg, Canada will speak Friday.
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The shoe men divided their time at the convention between mulling over the new styles and hearing Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel. pastor of Tabernacle Presbyterian church, declare that the future of the business man of the United States lies in attractive advertising. He urged at the last session Tuesday that America be not made the "dumping ground for cheap labor of the world." The exhibit of shoe styles closed Tuesday night with a dance. Approximately 500 persons attended. Models of the newest in footgear for formal occasions were shown at the dance.
60 Invited to Grotto Group’s Dinner Tonight The hospitality committee of the women's auxiliary to Sahara Grotto will entertain new and past officers and their husbands at a Valentine dinner tonight in the Grotto home, Thirteenth street and Park avenue. Mrs. Fred Earhart is chairman and Mrs. Oliver Wald, hostess. They will be assisted by Mesdames Othniel Hitch, Ralph Reeder, O. Ray Albertson, John Riddle, William Hamilton, Wilbur Foster, Carl Schey, Walter Beauchamp, Luther Moniey, Delbert Wilmeth, Bruce Eberly, Chester Martin, Arthur Dobbins, Otis Macey and Vern Harrison. Invitations have been issued to sixty guests. ALUMNAE UNIT TO GIVE DINNER FETE Mrs. Charles Binkley is chairman of the hostesses for the din-ner-bl'idgc party to be given at 6 Friday night by the Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority of Butler university at the home of Mrs. Emory Baxter, 5670 North Pennsylvania street. Assisting hostesses will be Mesdames H. Foster Clippinger. A. D. Hits, Frances H. Sinex, Edward Foster Smith and Misses Dorothy Barrett, Jeanne Lee Stewart, Louise Wills and Mildred Morgan. PARTY IS PLANNED BY LEGION WOMEN Mrs. Ralph Hesler is chairman of the junior auxiliary of Indianapolis Post 4, American Legion, which will give a Valentine party from 2 to 4 Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Clarence R. Martin, 2024 North Delaware street.
| CAN HARDLY BELIEVE m MY EYES-MY TEETH LOOK fcl-j BRIGHTER ALREADY. £& j I've never seen { ft ANYONE WITH f*| J Lr'H ? MORE ATTRAC- Tl —f I 5 ***-* I 1 T' VE teeth— >3 mydeap. ihave 7, HEV Gt -E AM KOLYNOS TO LMCE pear lb. thank .OR
