Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1933 — Page 7
JULY 5, 1933.
Federation to Meet at South Bencl City Woman to Present Resolutions at Convention. Mrs. Adah O. Frost, president of the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women’s clubs will present, resolutions, indorsed by the board, at the annual state convention Friday, Saturday and Sunday at South Bend. The resolutions include: that the federation give more attention to the purposes of the organization and promote the interest of business and professional women: that state headquarters be continued; that the expenses of the state president to the state convention be paid: and that affiliated clubs adopt a unified time for their fiscal year, preferably May 1 to April 3. Mrs. Frost was elected Indiana member of the nominating committee for the national federation convention to be held in Chicago following the state conclave. Miss Harriet Bass Jenner of Evansville, state publicity chairman, has announced an award of $5 will be Riven at South Bend to the club with the most attractive scrap book. Bloomington will ask for the 1934 convention which will be scheduled for May. Those attending the state sessions will be Misses Louise Ford, Pearl Cook. Marjorie Ford. Sally Butler, Sue Stuart, Fannie Paine, and Mrs. Florence French and Lulu Harvey. RECENT BRIDE IS FETED AT SHOWER Miss Beulah Paetz, 3507 North street, entertained Monday night, at her home with a miscellaneous shower for Mrs. George Stinger, who was Miss Dorothy Stevens before her recent marriage. Bridal colors, yellow and white, were carried out in table appointments and in the house decorations of roses and sweet peas. Guests were Mesdames Clarence Denny, Edward Gorenflo of New York, George A. Geschke of Chicago, Lowell Stinger, Raymond M. Stevens. O. C. Stinger, August A. Kimmel, Fred Collier, Robert Burns, Albert Paetz, Harry McDonald, Thatcher Massey, Cevel Hamblifi, Wilbur Radcliffe, George Davey, Myron H. Stevens, Francis Duncan, Julius Kimmel. and Misses Louise Woods, Emily Marott, Marcella Elzea. Nina Bell Radcliffe. Nora Lee, Katherine Grider, Ruth Kincaid, Olive Hord, Nora Dell Radcliffe, Frances Stevens and Katherine Kimmel. PRESENT BOOK TO PRESIDENT'S WIFE National Council of Women, with a dedicatory message from Miss Lena Madesin Phillips, president, recently presented the first copy of “Angels and Amazons: One Hundred Years of American Women,” by Inez Haynes Irwin, to Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mrs. Phillips’ message read: “The National Council of Women pre- ! scnts with deep satisfaction this first copy of its history of American j women to Eleanor Roosevelt, who, j by her wisdom, her courage and her I sympathetic understanding, is in j her own right ‘The First Lady of the Land" The author wrote: “For Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, whose varied interests and vivid sympathy will | take her every step of the way with ! these fighting women." a
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Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- e o o o ' tern No. D Z *5 o Size Street City State Name |
"j Viewi T-jL- i it 5233 117
SHOULDERED FROCK So much has been said about the chic of broad shoulders that the latest crop of sub debs have decided not to let this fashion pass them by. Broad-shouldered frocks, they discovered, are particularly young and flattering, with a hint of “we-know-what’s-what” about them. Here’s the perfect broad-shoul-dered frock for girls between the ages of 4 and 12. The ruffles here are decidedly young and pert, but they’re not the “little girl” touch that modern maids flee from with acute horror . . . these particular ruffles have all the eclat of the most sophisticated fashion. Mothers will delight in the simple sewing details of this very smart frock. Note how the deep yoke extends into a panel all the way to the hem in front and in back. That paneled look is important. The little belt may tie in front or in back. Make this of a flowery print with organdie or batiste rufljles The material requirements for each size are given on the patern envelope. Pattern No. 5233 is designed for sizes 4,6, 8. 10, 12 years. New summer fashion book is out! Rend for it—put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern 15 cents. (Copyright, 1933, by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.) There are desert mice that have spines, like a porcupine's, growing
EAST SIDE Mae Marsh •STRANGE JUSTICE” SOUTH SIDE At Fountain Square lidlLlHPyitffln Gary Cooper Helen Hares “FAREWELL TO ARMS” | VI ITI X TTM At Fountain square 1 V MtipS Double Feature •‘ 1 • 1 111 Family Site Lee Tracv. PRIVATE JttNES" Re<is To.'mev, STATE TROOPER" ! Hinmin Bfla Lugosi j WHITE ZOMBIE * HEHESSI Jean Rlondell bad 1 WEST SIDE w, Wash, at Bel. ■ YUaSImU Family Site i in itamita "GOLDIE GETS ALONG” S5* w. Mich. ■HL-LJLLI Vi Family Site AVamer Baxter DANGEROI SLY YOLKS” Frances Dee •KANG OF THE JUNGLE”
Light Little Farce Gets Under Way at the Civic Hale Mac Keen, Horace F. Hill and Elsinore Funk Do Splendidly in ‘She Was in Love With Her Husband.’ BY WALTER D. HICKMAN WHEN George Porto-Riche wrote “She Was In Love With Her Husband,’’ he probably thought he had written a shockingly sophisticated farce. This play is really a burlesque on a wife who loves her husband too much and a husband who brazenly declares in repeated quarrels that he has never love<s her. At times this play falls into the gutter instead of being a glowing example of sophisticated wit.
In the first act, the wife makes an awful fuss over her husband who is a doctor. Her love
interferes with him going on an important mission to Italy. He stays at home and starts quarreling with his wife. He even receives a former mistress as a visitor and at the end of the second act orders his wife into the arms and bed of his best friend. In the third act,
■■ *
Elsinore Funk
hubby is horrified to learn that his wife had carried out his orders. Hubby leaves the house only to return. As the curtain falls, he is kissing his wife. The fact is that this light little bit of nothing is being splendidly acted at the Playhouse, where it is being presented this week as the second offering of the summer stock season at the Playhouse at Nineteenth and Alabama streets. Hale Mac Keen not only directed the play and made the adaption, but he is playing the leading role, that of Etienne Feriaud, a doctor, who was made for love (the words of the play, not mine). Mac Keen does a smart job of this role, which requires him to talk and quarrel most of the time. Elsinore Funk as his wife is best in the numerous quarrel scenes. In the first act she exhibited the dangerous habit of not talking loud enough.
Contract Bridge
' BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League VERY often we find when we are in a slam contract that the only way we can make the contract is to squeeze the opponents out of one of their good cards. Are you careful, therefore, in conserving en-
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tries in dummy’s, as well as your own, hand? I will admit that North may be classed as lucky in making his small slam in the following hand, since he must depend upon two finesses and a. squeeze play, but I will say this for him—he was careful to conserve his entries: South bid one club, West passed, and North bid two no trump. He has the spade and diamond tenaces, and felt that his partner must have something in hearts to justify an original first hand bid. East passed, and South made a rather optimistic response of four no trump, and North weht to six. East opened his fourth best spade. While the lead in this particular hand makes no difference. I don’t believe in attacking a slam contract with a suit as weak as this spade suit. Holding a five-card suit, you can rest assured that the opponents have that suit well stopped. Why not attack where you hope to make a trick for yourself? Therefore. I feel that the best opening on the hand is the queen of hearts. u b b EVEN that lead will not stop the slam, because the declarer will win with the ace. lead a spade, finesse the queen of spades, and
U. S. SUES MOVIE STAR Helen Twelvctrees Charged With Owing 51.056 Income Tax. By Vnited Press LOS ANGELES. July s.—Helen Twelve trees, screen actress, is named today in a federal income tax lien which charged she still owed the sessment. Harry N. 'Hhite. a studio executive, likewise was alleged to owe $lB9 for 1932.
MOTION PICTURES fiTiffla Now Showingl Sensational Musical Extravaganza Ask Anybody! No Advance in Prices
LADIES FREE TONIGHT RIVERSIDE Gentlemen 10c Before 8:30 HAL BAILEY’S ORCHESTRA
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES -
People go to the theater to hear what the character has to say. I might be old-fashioned in that, but I can’t help it. Miss Funk gives a spirited performance and she handles the delicate situations skillfully. Horace F. Hill as Delanney, the friend of the doctor and his wife, is giving the best performance I have seen him give at the Playhouse. Minor roles were satisfactorily played by Mary Florence Fletcher, Jayne Hoffman, Maude Margaret Platter and C'Mari de Schipper. Lights and scenery—all just right. “She Was in Love With Her Husband” will be played nightly for the balance of the week at the Playhouse. Other theaters today offer: “Best of Enemies,” at the Apollo; “Gold Diggers of 1933,” at the Circle; “Arizona to Broadway,” at -the Lyric; “Hold Your Man,” at the Palace; burlesque and movies at the Colonial; “Goldie Gets Along,” at the Belmont; “King Kong,” at the Irving; “Strange Justice,” at the Tacoma; “Broadway Bad,” at the Garfield; “Soldiers of the Storm,” at the Tuxedo; “Out All Night,” at the Rivoli; “White Zombie,” at the Granada ; “Laughter in Hell,” at the Talbot; “Dangerously Yours,” at the Daisy; “Men of America” and “Igloo,” at the Mecca; “King of the Jungle,” at the Princess; “Private Jones” and “State Trooper,” at the Sanders; “Blame the Woman,” at the Stratford, and “Cavalcade,’ at the Hamilton.
lead the ten of clubs, which West will win with the king. West returns a heart, dummy winning with the king. Four club tricks now are run off by the declarer, West discarding a diamond and two hearts. North lets go a spade, and East drops two spades and a diamond. r Declarer now leads a small diamond from dummy so as to conserve an entry in dummy and finesse the jack, which wins. The ace is cashed and then a small diamond is led, which squeezes East. He can not drop the jack of hearts or dummy’s nine will be good, so he must let go the seven of spades. . Declarer then leads the four of spades from dummy and wins with the ace in his own hand, dropping East’s jack, w’hich makes the ten of spades good for the last trick. (Copyright. 1933, bv NEA Service. Inc.)
COMFORTABLY COOI NOT COLO I APOSAOS WHERE BIG PICTURES PI.AY Hurry! Last 2 Days! BIDDY MARIAN ROGERS NIXON . IN “BEST OF ENEMIES" with FRANK MORGAN —STARTS FRIDAY—DOWN TO EARTH! In a heart wrenching drama—greater than “Common Clay” Ik- As the girl who took a short cut down the primrose path IF' ... to make herself a I “BED of ROSES” I II With an All-Star Cast I® Including JOELMeCREA ! JOHN HALLIDAY PERT KELTON SAMUEL HINDS 8 Tou nwe it it r| yourself to .see !. x , the glamorous Const anee in yL '4® one of the best performances of her entire ffiv, . J carer:
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LAST RITES TO BE HELD FOR JAMES P, BARER Services for Oldest Indiana University Alumnus Are Scheduled. Funeral services for James P. Baker, 88, oldest alumnus of Indiana university, will be held at 2:30 Thursday in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, 25 West Fall Creek boulevard. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Baker, who' was the oldest member of the Sigmi Chi fraternity in Indiana, and former president of the Indianapolis Bar Association, died Tuesday at his home, 4421 North Illinois street, after a long illness. Railroad Employe Dies Last rites for Edward R. Heater, 61, resident of Indianapolis thirtyfive years, were to be held at 2 today at his home, 403 North Grant avenue. Burial was to be in Washington Park cemetery. Mr. Heater died Sunday at the United States Veterans’ hospital after an illness of six months. He had been employed by the Pennsylvania railroad twenty-two years. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Catherine Heater, and four sisters, Mrs. Minnie Black and Mrs. Ella Hinsley of Indianapolis, Mrs. Mary Stuckey, California, and Mrs. Nina Heater, Ohio. Ex-City Clerk Dead Following an illness of six months, Charles H, Stuckmeyer, 82, former city clerk for two terms, about forty-two years ago, ancf prominent in Indianapolis Democratic politics many years, died Tuesday in his home, 941 English avenue. Mr. Stuckmeyer was a butcher for thirty-five years, and since 1902 was associated with his son-in-law, Fred A. Behrent, in the 'Stuckmeyer & Cos., coal business at 2134 Lexington avenue. He retired from business in 1926. Funeral services will be held at 2 Thursday in the home, and at 2:30 in the St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran church. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Survivors are- a daughter, Mrs. Behrent; a son, Arthur C. Stuckmeyer, and four grandchildren, Richard Stuckmeyer, Miss Alberta Stuckmeyer, Miss Mary Stuckmeyer and William E. Stuckmeyer, all of Indianapolis. Passes After Heat Attacks Funeral services for Thomas E. Zimmerman, 63, baker and grocer in south Indianapolis thirty years, were to be held at 2 today in the Laurel Street Apostolic church. Burial was to be in Memorial Park cemetery. Mr. Zimmerman, who had been a resident of Indianapolis virtually all his life, fell dead in his bakery, at the rear of his home. 540 Buchanan street, Monday. Death was believed caused by two heat prostrations he had suffered while at work last week.
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WBMM JAMES DUNK JOAN BENNETT “ARIZONA TO BROADWAY” Inaugurating a Summer Season of Big Pictures with a 5-Unit BUI MORAN and MACK Comedy LESTER HUFF at the Organ TEXAS GUIXAN Screen Revue BASIL HOBBS. Singing Usher Terry Toon—Fox Movietone News
Sharkey Knocked % Out SEE THE OFFICIAL FIGHT PICTURE CARNERA vs. SHARKEY ALSO BURLESK STARTING TODAY COLONIAL
XTSTDR a Tsar IY BRUC& CAITQN THE third and final volume of “The Journal” of Arnold Bennett now is out, covering the years 1921-1928. Like its predecessors, it is gossipy and informative, filled with anecdotes and chit-chat about the people the novelists saw, the work he did, and the thoughts that went through his mind during the last years of his life. Incidentally, it also gives a picture of a creative artist who was growing more and more interested in material success, as reflected in his sales and his income. It's an entertaining book to dip into at random. Do you care to know what Bennett thought of Dreiser's “An American Tragedy”? He wrote when he started to read it that it was “written in a very slatternly way ... the mere writing is simply bloody-careless, clumsy, terrible.” But when he had finished it, he concluded that it was “fine and impressive," and one of the finest of all American novels. Then he tells of a dinner party with Sinclair Lewis . . . “Lewis soon began to call me ‘Arnold,’ and once begun he called me 'Arnold’ about 100 times. He has things to learn, but I like him.” He writes of a chat, with John Barrymore, actor, and reports that Barrymore told him that-“the U. S. A, was the worst place in which to live in the whole world.” He reads a volume of H. L. Mencken and comments; “This fellow is getting better. He has a general basis of common sense, and really writes very well for a journalist.” You could fill columns with similar quotations ... all very readable. Viking is offering this book at $3. It also is issuing a one-volume edition of the three volumes, priced at $5 and chosen as the June book of the Literary Guild. Firecracker Burns Barn By United Prr*x ROCHESTER. Ind.. July s.—The small son of John Gunther, Rochester farmer, dropped a firecracker in a manger of the barn Tuesday, hoping that it would increase the noise. The explosion was twice as loud, but the bam burned.
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STATE HOLIDAY MISHAPS TAKE LIVES Five Drowned, Five Die in Auto Crashes, One in Plane Smashup. Bv United Freni* Automobiles, drowViings and an airplane crash claimed nine lives in Indiana July 4, while firecrackers sent a score of persons to hospitals with powder burns. ' In addition to the accidental deaths, three suicides were reported in the state. The drowning victims included two fathers and their sons. Will Chappell, 39. Oaklan City, and his son Robert, 14. perished in White river, west of Petersburg. The father died attempting to save the boy’s life. Both were swept into deep water. Mrs. Chappell witnessed the tragedy from shore. Father, Son Drowned Homer Reynolds, principal of Westville (111.) high school, and his son. Homer J., drowned in the Wabash river west of Kingman, Ind., Tuesday afternoon. The father stepped into deep water while wading with his son on his shoulders. Another drowning occurred at Cedar lake, near Gary, when Richard Sanders. 4, Cicero, 111. was thrown from a speed boat. Charles Reguly, 24; Donald Shields. 8, and Thomas Wilburn, 11, all of Chicago, wer& saved. The only airplane fatality reported in the state was southeast of Fairmount where William P. Humphrey, 69, El wood, died in the wreckage of a ship piloted by his son Vernon, 26. Dies in Plane Crash The son escaped with serious injuries, but is expected to recover. The plane crashed while Vernon was making a rorced landing. Charles Wills. 56, Mishawaka, passenger in an automobile which crashed into a tree, was killed instantly. Herman Mygatt, Lewisville, was injured fatally when his automobile skidded and overturned near Brownsville. Arlie McKinley, 30, Detroit
PAGE 7
automobile salesman, was killed near Huntington when a car driven by his financee. Miss Lillian Geisel. 25. Detroit crashed into another machine. Injuries received in an-automobile accident were ratal to Russell Lozier. who died in a hospital at Knightstown. Automobile injuries also claimed the life of Mrs. Mari,- Etta Townsend. 63. Ft. Wavne.
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