Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 167, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1933 — Page 8
PAGE 8
City Couple Thrilled by Radio City Buford Cadies Inspect Many Luxurious Studios. BY BEATRICE BURG AN Time* Woman'* Pap FdHr Mr AND MRS BUFORD CADLE have returned from New York where they attended the opening week of activities of Radio City In Rockefeller Center. When Mrs. Cadle tunes in on programs issuing from the New York studios of the National Broadcasting Company, she has more pleasure than mere appreciation of the entertam-
ment. In her mind are pictures of the luxurious studios w'here the programs are presented. Mrs. Cadle knows many radio secrets, because her husband is an announcer at a local station But when the Cadies visited the seven-ty-seven story R C. A. building, they found broadcasting facilities conceived by mas-
Miss Burgan
ter minds aiming for perfection of performances and beauty. The R C A. building alone is a place for adventure. But it is only one unit of Radio City, which covers three blocks. Roxie Music hall and Roxy theater are architectural wonders of modern design The little shops built in another block form Radio City's sunken plaza. Steps lead down to the shops, devoted to a variety of purposes. Some are foreign gift, shops, others dress establishments; one houses Dunhills popular tobacco shop where wealthy customers place orders for more than SI,OOO each. Celebrities Attend Opening Most of the guests on the first night were celebrities in the radio, social and Industrial world. However, programs during the remainder of the week were similar to that of the first night. Mrs. Cadle was most impressed by the broadcasting program of a 400-piece orchestra, directed in turn by Walter Damrosch and other famous leaders. Looking down on the auditorium seating 1.400 persons were glass inclosed observation rooms, furnished in leather lounging chairs. This studio is decorated in black, red and chromium. The Cadies viewed one two-story studio, from a double glass inclosed balcony. The silk brocaded walls arp paneled, and acoustics are governed by the panels which are moved back and forth. "It was like watching a mysterious room with serret doors,” Mrs. Cadle said. The Cadies witnessed Jack Benny's broadcast. He assures himself of the proper atmosphere during the broadcast by getting his audience in a hilarious mood before the program. Mrs. Cadle explained. Studios Like Living Rooms For performers such as Amos and Andy who never have an audience during a broadcast, studios have been furnished as attractive living rooms. Mrs. Cadle visited two of thpse, decorated in Colonial and early American styles. Radio City is the popular place to go for entertainment in New York. Every one dresses formally. "It seems like a fashion parade as visitors walk through the luxuriously furnished bidding,” Mrs. Cadle explained. “Occasionally, as you go through the building, you will pass radio stars you recognize." While in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Cadle visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ouy Bolte. formerly of Indianapolis. Mr. Bolte, an announcer for the Columbia Broadcasting System, conducted them through its studios. The Cadies also dined with Lum and Abner. Tbdio stars, and their WIVPS.
Card Parties
Indianapolis Cirri? 8 of Druids "ill hold a card party at 618 South Fast street at 8:30 tonight with Mrs. John O'Key. hostess, to be assisted by Mesdames Fred Kinnan. Edward Fender. Louis Schwartz and John Neubatier. Women of St Philip Neri church will sponsor a cartl party at 8:30 tojnight in the school hall, with Mrs E O. O'Donnell in charge. Count!/ Fair Stated Betsy Ross Federation will hold an old-fashioned county fair tonight at 2728 North Sherman drive with Mrs Orov°r D. Slider in charge of the supper. Entertainment is scheduled for 8. Members will be in costume
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Debutante Bureau Staff in Action
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Club Dinner Arranged to Mark Holiday Thanksgiving day at the Indianapolis Athletic Club will be celebrated with a special turicey dinner to be served from noon until 9. December events include a “Sweet and Smooth" party Friday night, Dec. 1. Don Irwin's NBC orchestra will provide music during the evening. Dancing will begin at 10 in the fourth floor ballroom and will last until 2 with ala carte supper to be served guests during the evening. Invitations have been extended by the entertainment committee to members, their guests and young people home for the holiday season.
GUESTS OF M'NUTTS TO ATTEND GAME
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Nelson. Chicago, will be week-end guests of Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt. They will be entertained at a breakfast which Mrs. McNutt has planned for guests at 11 Saturday morning before the Indiana-Purdue football game at Bloomington. Other guests will be Messrs, and Mesdames Herbert M. Woollen. Russell Fortune. John Wheeler and Mrs. Lemcke Enos of Nice, France. MRS. THORNBURG ENTERTAINS CLUB Mrs. John W. Thornburg entertained members and guests of the Wy-Mo-Dau Literary club at her home. 1567 Guilford avenue, yesterday. Mrs. EfTie Rogers and Mrs. Burt. Kimmel assisted the hostess. Program was presented by Mrs. Laura Poland. Mrs. Emma J. Wischmeier and Mrs. Russell P. Hatt. Mrs. Leon Ebert talked on the history of colleges and universities in England. Mrs. Charles Barclay was named historian. Miss Marion Reid of Edinburgh. Scotland, house guest of Mrs. Poland, talked on Scotland. Club to Hear Oetet String octet will present a musical program at the regular Thursday night dinner at the University Club Several dinner parties have been planned.
always * READY With several ran* of DOLE Pine- 1 -J ° 1 *PI* juice chilling in your refrig- _ erator you're always ready for any- gj K 0 g thing. DOLE Pineapple Juice is a purr, natural juice without added sweetening or preservatives of anv kind. Try it straight or mixed with other beverages. Equally de- y-dlfl^gg lieious. Just punch two holes in the vacuum. I sealed ran and serve when you want a refresh- HlI £ to 1 ing. field-fresh fruit jttiee. No trouble. No waste of time. More economical because you buy all juice. Order DOLE Pineapple Juice
DANCE WILL ADD TO HOLIDAY GAYETY
Thanksgiving social whirl will be speeded up by a subscription dance, which Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr„ Mrs. Frederick T. Holliday and Mrs. John Gould will sponsor Thanksgiving eve at the University club. The dance, planned to raise funds for the Junior League occupational therapy department of James Whitcomb Riley hospital for children, will attract the school set at home for vacation. Dinner will be served at the club for parties preceding, the dance. Reservations may be made with the hostesses. SORORITIES WILL PRESENT STUNTS Five sororities will take part in the fall semester series of Geneva stunts to be held tonight at Tabernacle Presbyterian church under the auspices of the Y. W. C. A. of Butler university. Sponsored semi-annually by the Y. W. C. A. cabinet, the proceeds from the stunts will send delegates to the summer conference at Lake Geneva, Wi.s. Zeta Tau Alpha, Kappa Alpha Theta, Delta Delta Delta, Pi Beta Phi and Delta Zeta sororities will take part, and the remaining organizations will present stunts at the spring series in April. Judges will be A. E. Bailey, Miss Corinne Welling, and Miss Frances Beik. A cup will be presented for the winning stunt. SCHOOL WILL HOLD FOLK DANCE PARTY First folk dancing party of Orchard school will be held tonight at the school for students of the upper grades, graduates and parents. Dances will be old English folk dances, and figure dances taught by Miss Mary Chase and Miss Frances Allen of the school faculty. PROPYLAEUM CLUB SCHEDULES DINNER November contract bridge dinner of the Propylaeum club will be held at 7 Friday night at the club house with Mrs. Frederick E. Matson in charge. Assisting Mrs. Matson will be Mrs. Walter C. Marmon. Mrs. William Perry Hahn and Mrs. Clyde A. Wands.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Below, left to right, Miss Betty Wallerieh, Miss Mary Virginia Feeney, Miss Elinor Stickney and Mrs. Francis Feeney; above, left to right, Miss Betty Collier, Miss Courtney Whitaker and Miss Ruth Tyndall. Harper’s Bazar debutante bureau has its city headquarters at the Marott with Mrs. Carl Vonnegut and Miss Jeanette Craft, “key girls,” in charge. Miss Maud Corrigan, Kansas City, Mo„ member of the national staff, who has been directing the bureau, was to leave today. Below are showm groups of the “office staff" as they call lists for magazine subscriptions and renewals in their city-wide canvass.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. John McAlarney will come from Tulsa, Okla., to be weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Morton L. Gould, 4150 North Illinois street. Major and Mrs. J. K. Boles of Ft. Benjamin Harrison have as their guest Mrs. J. K. Boles of San Diego, Cal. Coleman Atkins, son of W. A. Atkins of Golden Hill, has come from Yale university for the Thanksgiving holiday. Miss Elsie Ha cock has returned from a visit in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Sutphin are visiting at the Barclay in New Yprk. MOTHERS WILL BE LUNCHEON GUESTS Mothers’ luncheon will be held at Tudor hall at 1:15 Friday at the residence hall, sponsored by the ! alumnae advisory board, headed by j Mrs. J. K. Lilly, Jr. The luncheon is an annual affair. Faculty members will act as hostesses. Miss I. Hilda Stew-art will speak. *
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America and League Will Form Topic City Cause and Cure of War Group Will Meet. “The United States and Its Relationship to the League of Nations” will be the topic for the round table discussion to be held at 12; 30 tomorrow at the central Y. W. C. A. The meeting will be the sixth held by the Indianapolis group of the national committee on the cause and of war. Findings of earlier sessions relating to Manchuria will be approved and a delegate appointed to take part in the state round table to be held here in December. Mrs. Robert Sinclair is convener for the Indianapolis committee and Miss Mary C. Kennedy, Lafayette, state chairman. Active members in the local | branch are Mesdames Paul E. Tom--1 baugh, Robert S. Sinclair. T. S. I Sinclair, E. T. Forsyth. R. H. Mueli ler, Merwyn Brindenstine, C. T. Coy. L. B. Smith and Misses Sue j Stevens, Dorothy Schleisinger. Jenna Birks, and Ruth S. Milligan. Associate membership includes Mesdames H E. Barnard, Ruth Hilkene, A. H. Hinkle and Bloomfield Moore. City women's organizations, affiliated with the national committ include American Association of University Women, League of Women Voters. Council of Federated Church Women, Young Women’s Christian Association, Council of : Jewish Women. Women’s Christian ; Temperance Union, Business and • Professional Women’s Club and i Federation of Women’s Clubs.
Sororities
Kappa chapter, Pi Omicron sorority, will meet at 7 tonight at the Washington. Meeting of Alpha Pi Sigma sorority w-ill be held tomorrow night at the home of Miss Katherine Combs, 1941 North Dearborn street. Epsilon chapter. Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, will hold a waffle supper tomorrow night at the home of Miss Lillie Rule, 2256 North Talbot. Miss Dorothy Zorniger will be hostess for the meeting of Rho Zeta Tau sorority at 8 tomorrow night at her home, 1361 West Twentyeighth street. Delta Chi sorority will hold a business meeting tonight at the home of Mrs. Margaret Carvel Costin, 1936 Carrollton avenue. Misses Merle and Mabel Garner will entertain members of the Omega Phi Tau sorority at their home. 4035 Ruckle street, at 8:30 tonight. Misses Theluma Bennett, Hildred Burnett. Dorothy Mae Copenhaver and Maxine Van Sant w-ill be pledged at the meeting of Rho Gamma Chi sorority tomorrownight at the Antlers. Dorothy Ellen Chapman and Dick Harold will be entertainers at a dance to be given by Phi Beta Psi sorority Saturday night at the Lincoln. Bob McKittrick’s orchestra w-ill provide music. Beta Tau sorority will meet tonight with Miss Caroline Nickel, 904 North Denny street. Alpha chapter, Theta Kappa Tau sorority, will meet Friday night at the Antlerk. Skating party plans will be formulated. Alpha chapter. Theta Mu Rho sorority, will meet tonight at the home of Miss Doris Owens. Alpha chapter, Phi Rho Tau sorority, w-ill meet at 8 tonight at the Yantis Toastee shop. Miss Ruth Cramer, 1221 North Jefferson avenue, will be hostess for the meeting of Alpha chapter, Delta Tau Omega sorority, tonight. Rushees w-ill be guests at dinner. Sketch to Be Given “At a Tea in the Gay Nineties” will be presented f by pupils of Mrs. Helen Morton, teacher of dramatic art, tonight at the American settlement. Readings will be given.
Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat r o n q tern No. D O t O Size Street City State Name
| 5373 Util
VANITY FROCK
Checked wool is a school classic, and the'simple lines of this frock set it off to good advantage. Any junior can make it herself, even if she’s never had a sewing lesson before. Won’t she be proud of her skill? Her mother will praise her choice of this fashion-wise frock, w'hich is a smart addition to any girl's wardrobe. The big bow is a jaunty touch, and looks even bigger beside the little Peter Pun collar. The sleeves are gathered into wrist-bands. There's no magic to the skirt . . . it goes together very simply, and the pleats are smart stitched down part way. Size 12 requires 1% yards 54inch material, % yards 36-inch for the collar, 1% yards 6-inch ribbon for the bow. The pages of our ’arge fall fashion magazine are brimful of grand ideas for juniors, their brothers and sisters, mothers and aunts. If you w r ant to save pennies and have a smart wardrobe for the whole family, send for our fashion book today. Pattern No. 5373 Is designed for sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Price for pattern 15 cents. Our new r fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and inclose 10 cents extra for book. (Coovrieht. 1933. bv United Features Syndicate. Inc. i
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Rudy Vallee Ranks Below Bridge Expert in Solving Brain Twisters, Book Says Crooner Makes Grade of 80 in Possible 120, While Ely Culbertson Achieves 100, Volume at Stewart’s Reveals. BY HELEN LINDSAY. RUDY VALLEE made a grade of 80. against a possible score of 120 It wasn't a test on radio popularity, but one on brain twisters ’ in one of the latest books on amusements which just has been received at the Thirty-fourth street branch of W K Stewart's. Inc. The book is "Are You a Genius?" It is the second series of intelligence tests, brain twisters and indoor pastimes, prepared by Robert A. Streeter and Robert G. Hoehn, and cleverly illustrated by Dr Suess Celebrities from various walks of life have been selected as examples in answering the questions in the series of tests prepared in the bco’<. Ely Culbertson, captain of the American team which recently won the
Charles M. Schwab trophy for the world's contract bridge championship, recorded a score of 100. against a possible 120. The author of “The Siamese Twin Mystery,” who writes undtrr the pen name of Ellers - Queen, unraveled the puzzles in the questions almost as perfectly as he solves the mysteries in his own books Scores of 100 w - ere turned in by two newspaper columnists. Franklin P Adams, who as “F. P. A." edits “The Conning Tower” for the New York HeraldTribune. and Alma Whitaker, feature writer and columnist for the Los Angeles Times. The perfect score was made by Edward Huntington Williams, one of the most famous alienists of the country, who receives thousands of dollars for expressing an opinion on the sanity of persons tried for crimes. His testimony carried great weight in the Massie and Ruth Judd murder cases. While many readers are interested in this type of
literature, there is one book which continues in popularity among both men and women. “Anthony Adverse,” by Hervey Allen, is still In demand after many months of circulation. Ten copies of the book have been secured for the circulating library of the Stewart branch store, yet there always is a long waiting list. a a a a a a 4 Bonfire ’ Among Popular Volumes OTHER “best sellers” at the store are Dorothy Canfield's latest book. "Bonfire "; “Oil for the Lamps of China." by Alice Tisdale Hobart; “Poor Splendid Wings.” the Atlantic Monthly $5,000 prize book, written by Frances Winwar; "Behind the Doctor," oy Logan Clendennlng, and “Within This Present,” by Margaret Ayer Barnes. “Oil For the Lamps of China’’ is the story of an American employe of one of the large oil companies in China. In addition to being an appealing story of one man's life and thwarted ambitions, It is a splendid picture of China. Progress of medicine through many years, and personalities of the doctors responsible for that progress, is shown in the book by Dr. Clendenning. A picture book for grown-ups is one of the most unusual of the new books. It is “Life Since 1860 in Photographs," assembled by Agnes Rogers, with running comment by Frederick Lewis Allen. The book portrays In graphic style not only the march of Interesting events in the United States and other countries, but the progress history of photography. In the pictures shown is one of P. T. Barnum. with General and Mrs Tom Thumb and Commodore Nutt, the three most famous midgets exhibited by Mr. Barnum. Other pictures of interest are early and exclusive photographs of Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell. Theodore Roosevelt, Kate Claxton, in the part of the blind sister in “The Two Orphans,” which opened in New York in 1874, and an early photograph of Ethel Barrymore. a a a a a a Coles Have Timely Offering ANOTHER book which has a timely interest now is “The Intelligent Man’s Review of Europe Today," written by G. D H. Cole and Margaret Cole. Last year Mr. Cole wrote an outstanding book on the economic situation, “A Guide Through World Chaos." The book on Europe analyzes the makeup of each European country, and comments intelligently on the rise of dictatorships in Italy and Spain; the nature of Fascism and its functioning in Italy; post-war socialism and communism. Mr. Cole is a graduate of Oxford university, and published as his first important book, “The World of Labor." Since 1918 he has been a leader in the British Labor Party, and since 1925 has been reader in economics at Oxford. At present he also is a member of the economy advisory committee of the British government.
Mrs. Harter to Talk Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review “The Unknown Brahms,” by Robert Haven Schauffler, and “Within This Present,” by Margaret Ayres Barnes, Friday as the fourth of the series of book talks sponsored by the More Light Guild of the All
NOV. 22, 1933
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Mrs. Lindsay
Souls Unitarian church. The talk will be given at 7:30 in the Elizabeth Goodnow Wicks chapel at the church. Over a period of twenty-four hours, a navigator uses seven different kinds of time to determine the exact location of his ship at sea
