Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 242, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1933 — Page 17
EF.B. 17, 1033.
TEN LEISURE HOUR UNITS TO MEET TONIGHT Varied Programs Will Be Given: Many Plays to Be Presented. TONIGHT I hrWtian park community hou* M Warn* anrl Walnut flub. Hctrher Plar* community center. Municipal Garden* community housr. Michigan and Noble Chib, School 9, *t 740 F.aat > ermont street. Oak Hill Club. School 3*. at 2930 Winter avenue. Nebraska f’ropaey Club. School 22. at 12M South Illinois street. School |#, at 1102 West Market street. School 20. at I .'lOl Cast Sixteenth street. School 07, at 30IS West Walnut street. * “Dross Suits," a play which has boon presented at a number of the Leisure Hour clubs by Melvin Berryman's play acting class, will be presented tonight at the Christian Park community house. The cast includes Max Engle, Mildred Arbuckle. Ruth Hugh and Everett Jones. Others on the program will be the Hoosier Land Silver String band, composed of Edward Wolfley, Roy Gibson, Charles and Guy Padget, and Arvin Teter, Betty Paton, a pupil ot Helen Thomas Martin, giving readings; popular music by Helen Ealand. and August Fraui, blackface comedian. Pupils of Short ridge high school will have charge of a program given at the Ft. Wayne and Walnut club tonight. The Shortridge dramatic club will present a three-act comedy, “All On Account of Polly.” Between acts of the play other students will give readings. Members of the cast arc Alfred Brandt, Harry Till, Marjorie Newman, Anna Firth, Howard Jewell, Samuel Martinez, Dorothy Wilson, Harriet Rosenzweiz, Florence Slutzky, Esther Rteup, Carl Scheidker, Rosemary Gladden, Dorothy May Carey, Lewis Luckey, and Frank StrcightofT. Mrs. E. H. Hughes will direct I lie program of the Women's Auxiliary to the Railway Mail Association, tonight at the Fletcher Place Community Center. Mrs. W. H. Vanzant, president of the organization. will be mistress of ceremonies. The program will include a group of songs by Albert Breden; the Girl Scout trio, Patty Lou Pluess, ceilo; Jeanne Ann Pluess, violin, and Betty Zigner, piano; vocal and violin solos by Mrs. John Allen and Galo Grabei; a group of numbers by the Little German band, which us composed of pupils from the Washington high school, and directed by Mrs. W. H. Shepherd: readings by Mildred Beard, and chorus numbers. The chorus will include Mesdames Noble Reed, John Allen, Floyd Doddridge, Noble Shute, John Ladd. S S. Sutton, Leroy Lawrence, Eugene Thompson and W. H. Vinzant. A dance will be given at Municipal Gardens following the program tonight. The program will feature Charles Fagin, magician; music by the Kentucky Cardinals, Earl Troutman, Donald McGown, Mitchell and Jewett Linder, and Emmet Gaddis; harmonica music by Urban Vcltz; motion pictures of the 1932 expedition of the Children’s museum to the southwest shown by Hillis Howie, and a trumpet quartet, members of which are Theodore Bluemel. Herbert Mascher, John Click and Robert Davis. The Federation of Civic Clubs young people's orchestra, under direction of Leslie C. Troutman, wall give the program at the Michigan and Noble Club tonight. "Kidnaping Betty." a one-act play by the Central Players, under the direction of Charles Smith and Mrs. John D. Davy, will be given tonight nt the Oak Hill Club at School 38. Members of the cast arc Sam Roney, Ralph Hamill, John Robbins. Vera Davy, Louise Jackson. Marian Sperry and Marjorie Lewis. Music will be furnished by the Hoosier Melody Boys. A dance revue will be given by pupils of Miss Ina Houser, 1408 King avenue. Pupils in the revue are Vivian Sheets, Jimmy Piles, Jimmy Dixon, Buddy Romeril, Patty Owens, Junior Myers, Margaret Ellen Wilson. Betty Unser, Doris Smith, Betty Inman, Maxine Johnson, Dorothy Keller. Bobby Sarchett. Suzanne Lewis and Kathryn Judd. The drama club of St. Paul M. E. church will present a one-act play. •'The Fatal Pill" at the NebraskaCropsey club tonight. The play will
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Let’s Explore Your Mind BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM, D. Sc.
1 fi !& A W'PE VOCE LIKELY TC BE j MASPV IP ©ME I© CWOfeEN BY A MAN 6UPEC!OO. TO MECSELF 7> / . LAI WWO*AgE &
1. Yes, because nothing in men fascinates women like success and achievement. One reason for the pursuit jf titles is that it is a symbol—not always a good one—of achievement. After marriage, women will stick to husbands through failure and even disgrace. But they enjoy the thrill of being loved by a good producer, a superior person. one they can be proud of.
HOW TO MAKE PEOPLE LIKE YOU A distinguished tsvehologlst has created a method by which you can analyze yourself. It will indicate desirable changes in your social habits which should be very helpful in increasing your popularity with others. This information Is yours upon request accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Write Dr. Albert E. Wiggam in care of this newspaper. Just ask for “Popularity.”
Any young man seeking to win a woman better look to his laurels first. 2. No. Abridging a fine passage from Henry Ward Beecher, "Five men come up to the market and the first says, T have a pair of hands.’ He gets the lowest wage. The second says. ‘I also have character.’ He gets higher pay.
Dr. Wlream will be jlad 10 answer questions dealing with problems of conduct, morals, beliefs, husband and wife, parent and child—any question in the field of human relationships. Questions of general Interest wi!l be answered in this department. If personal reply Is desired enclose stamped, (3ci self-addressed envelope. Address Dr. Wiggam In care ot The Indianapolia Times.
be directed by Horald Love. Si Perkins’ Corn Huskers, and the Sering trio, will play. Miss Lola Perkins of the speech department of Manual Training high school will give a reading on Lincoln. Jack Leroy will give a black-face comedy stunt, accompanied by Joe Warner, pianist. The Golden Four Quartet, Walter Pursley, Lewellyn Booker, John Washington and Raymand Hunter, will sing A safety program, under direction of Sergeant Timothy McMahon, will be given tonight at School 26. Members of the North Side Kiddie Revue, under the direction of Mrs. Raymond Alberts, will give a program tonight at School 67. Mrs. George Kass is director of the three-act rural comedy. “Aaron Slick from Pumpkin Crick," which will be given tonight at School 16
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‘‘The third says, ‘I also have skill.’ He is paid more. The fourth says, ‘ln addition, I have imagination.’ He receives a still nigher wage. The fifth says, ‘I have all these, but I have developed them so that they are my own peculiar genius.’ “Genius sweeps the whole market and gets the highest pay of all.” Millions can drive trucks, but only a few can manage. The world pays for margins. Every man has some margin somewhere. Find your margin and develop it. 3. Yes. Dr. Catherine Miles of Yale has studied the childhood cf 301 ol the greatest geniuses and found that many geniuses were discovered by some apparent accident. For example, Sir Isaac Newton was discovered by his brother reading a treatise on higher mathematics while the horses stood idly by in the plow'. The brother gave him a university education and you know the rest. Grant and Lee, Stonewall Jackson and Phil Sheridan were discovered by the Civil war. Professor Terman of Stanford has shown that many children have as fine literary ability as the great writers had as children.
by the dramatic Club from School 85. Old time music for the play will be furnished by the Hoosier Fiddlers Three, Thomas B. Wikoff. Irvin Noblitt and Raleigh Greene. Anew chewing gum formula has a rubber composition base mixed with fat or wax.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MORE MONEY FOR FISH, LESS FOR CHILDREN Senate Liberals Hope to Beat Crippling Slam of Baby Bureau. B’j Brripp-Hoirard Xnrtpaper Allianre WASHINGTON. Feb. 17.—You probably hadn't thought of it as bank holidays are declared and Chinese troops are ordered out, but the black bass situation is becoming acute, and the senate appropriations committee has endeavored to do something about it. The senate committee agreed to appropriate $13,950 to meet the acute black bass situation, and it decreased the appropriation for the children's by $35,000. The annual attempt to cripple the children's bureau will be opposed again when the state, justice, commerce and labor bill comes up in the senate. Last year’s attempt, originating in
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the senate appropriations committee, was defeated on the floor, and liberal senators hope to win the battle again. The bureau, the w'ork of which greatly has been increased by the! depression, has $375,500 in the pres- ■, ent fiscal year. The budget bureau and the house trimmed off $31,500. The senate committe has recommended another $35,450 cut. Miss Belle Sherwin. president cf the National League of Women Voters. charged today that the proposed senate cut "is a definite discrimination against the work done by the bureau on behalf of children. The male black bass is a homeloving creature, who takes a pardonable pride in his progeny. And are they tough babies? Senator Frederic C. Walcott (Rep., Conn.), told the senate appropriations committee so, even indicting the black bass as cannibals. He went further, saying: "They are very cannibalistic. The young fish, if not watched, will eat each other as they grow up.” And that’s where Papa Bass and the government come in. The house gave no appropriation this year for the regulation of interstate transportation of black bass, and the senator, who was introduced to the committee as a fisherman and a conservationist, asked the senate to restore last year’s appropriation. 1
HOOVER SPEAKS i FOR NEWS REEL President's 'Farewell' and Japanese Advance Are Film Highlights. President Hoover’s "farewell" message to the American people and his call upon the nations of the world to unite in preventing an economic W r orld war, exciting scenes of a mil-lion-dollar Chicago grain elevator fire in sub-zero weather, and im-
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pressive views of activities in the Shanhaikwan battle area of China, are among the highlights in the current issue of The Indianapolis Times Universal Newsreel. Graham McNamee, noted radio announcer and the screen's Talking Reporter, vividly describes the events shown in the reel. McNamee reports many other important events in the reel, inelud-
——i ———yi —-.- ■ i 'I pi. mm 5 ° r 'oii r * n ” ,|T " ' M - ‘ St&Sr/ " hiir 19LJ ONLY 45C DOWN!
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ine the increasing activities and demonstrations by Hitler followers as pre-election fever mounts in the German republic; the setting of a new world's bobsled record on the Olympic course at Lake Placid. N. Y.. by Curtis Stevens and his Blue Bird team; the decoration of Black Shirt veterans by Mussolini before 50.000 militiamen in Rome.
