Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 257, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1934 — Page 5
MARCH 7, 1957.
Blase Myth and Today’s Youth Part Worship of Movie Idols Shows Old Lack of Sophistication. BY GRETTA PALMER Tim** -iX'rUI Writer TEW YORK, March 7.—A cat IN may look at a king. But we have nrver seen why he should particularly want to. Recently a deep cordon of young women was thrown about the Capitol theater here. A minor mob braved the ice and cold to stand
shivering, in Spartan mood, for several hours while their dishes went unwashed, their shopping undone and their sweeties waited for them. They were there on the ofT-chance that Clark Gable might emerge from the stage door, take three quick steps to his car and disappear forever from their lives.
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Miss Palmer
There could hardly have been in the crowd a girl naive enough to h.rp that her dream prince, sighting h f, r, would say, “Hey, you—you are the woman I have been seeking all my life. I want you for my mate." The improbability of such an intoxicating occurrence is especially remote in view r of the fact that Clark Gablp is already married. What on earth do you suppose they wanted? There may have been a streak of vandalism in the crowd. Indeed. Mr Gable himself admitted that for him to jv rmit his handkerchief to obtrude from his pocket w'as simply asking for trouble; it would be immediately snatched away from him. to form the corner stone of some collection of memorabilia. Perhaps it was the hope of some of the more enterprising girls that they might also snip an inch or so off his coat-tails, to be preserved in the spirit in which their grandfathers kept chips of Grant's Tomb. But these heady hopes could have been only for the few- and nearest of the mob. Most of the fans, undoubtedly. were moved by love of their art for its own sake. They wanted to see Clark Gable in the face and by golly, they tvere willing to get chapped hands and chilblains doing it. That, it seems, is the kind of fix into which too much sex appeal gets a man. For these, mind you. are not girls who live uneventful lives on some inland R. F. D. They air not lonely women on the prairies w r ho can entrance the neighbors for many months, with the story of how they saw a great man close to. They are residents of what is alleg'd to be the most sophisticated city m the western world, and they ran look their fill on celebrities any day by the simple process of strolling through a<certain midtown hotel at lunch time or doing their after theater drinking at a place which, for the sake of anonymity, we will call Tony’s. Not So World Weary Yet they risk pneumonia to see Clark Gable's profile, not a moving picture. There has been much talk of recent years of the world-weary young. We have been given to understand that an adult dose of sophistication was supplied, nowadays, with every cradle, and that life could offer little to the jaded younger generation by the age of 17. Well, we oldsters can sit back and relax. We can reassure ourselves that the young girl of today is very much the same guileless and enthusiastic creature that she was in the day of John Drew or the younger days of Barrymore. If the giris are still naivt enough to mob a helpless matinee idol, we never worry about their pretense of' being blase for the things their' mothers used to do. For their mothers did just that.
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SOME of those pretty little speeches you'll hear at the club will be in praise of this delightful costume. Designed in nine sizes—36, 38. 40, 42, 44. 46, 48, 50 and 52—the number may be made up in crepe, taffeta or spring prints. Size 44 requires 5 1-3 yards of 39-inch material plus one-half yard of 35-inch contrast for the plastron. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart ol this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Time’s, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.
A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
THERE are four major institutions that shape civilized life," writes Olive Roberts Barton in one of her excellent columns. “They are government, church, school and home.” We ali are agreed that the last named is most important in its influence upon the child. It is gratifying also to realize that now, more than in any other period. women are giving thought and study to the home. But do we give enough concern to ine other institutions? I think not. Unquestionably the mast vital of the other three—sometimes it appears to be most important of the four—is government. Mothers sometimes do not think enough about that. Yet governments do truly determine, perhaps more than any other thing, the success or failure, the happiness or misery of human lives. They determine to what extent a citizen may use what talents he possesses and w'hether he shall
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Stewed dried peaches, cereal. cream, baked French toast, maple syrup, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream of onion soup, croutons, hearts ot celery, brown bread and cream cheese sandwiches canned pears, ginger cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — Beef stew with dumplings, baked squash, banana and peanut salad, rhubarb pie. milk, coffee.
beman or slave in his social order. We pride ourselves because vre train our boys to trust in the home virtues. But do we not cast them forth afterward into an economic system that gives the lie to them all? Into a political order which bases its success upon those qualities that are called vices at heme? Only confusion and spiritual turmoil ever can be the result of such an anti-climax. In the home, unselfishness is a code for living. Our children are taught to divide what they have with others, and then they enter a world in which he who has grabbed the most tor himself is the most admired, the most honored citizen, and where acquisitiveness and greed are regarded as excellent business qualifications. “Thou shalt not kill,” say home and church to little boys, but some day they become citizens of a state w'hich condones and encourages wholesale murder in the form of war. It is true that woman's first responsibility is to make good hemes. But unless we also try to make a better world we shall not have done our duty by our children.
MRS. BURROUGHS TO PRESENT PROGRAM Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs, soprano, will appear in a song recital at the John Herron Art institute at 8:30 Friday. She will be accompanied by Walter Whitworth. The program will be as follows: "With Verdure Clad"—Creation . .Heydn "Oh My Dear Heart” Van Denman Thompson "Christ Went Up Into the Hills” Hageman "Bois Epais” Lully L’Heure Exquise” Hahn "Sais-Tu?” Fontenailles Mon Desir” Nevin "Endymion”—Vocal Scena Longfellow-Lehman "Zueienung” Strauss "Du bist wie eine Blume” Alice Menniger Stempel Ich hab' im Traum geweinet Alice Menniger Stempel "Die Lotusblume” Schumann "Verborgenheit” Wolf "The Salutation of the Dawn" Mary Turner Salter "Silver” C. Armstrong Gibbs "•lov” Charles Wakefield Cadman "Revery” A. Arenskv "Winds” Margaret Lawrence Test
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Dinner Set by League Glee Club Husbands to Be Among Guests; Program Will Follow. Glee Club of the Indianapolis Junior League will entertain with a dinner party for their husbands, past arts and interests committee chairman and the present arts and interest board Tuesday night at the University Club. Following dinner a program will be presented by the club. Mrs. Irving Fauvre and Miss Jane Roemier will appear in solo numbers, accompanied by Mrs. John K. Ruckelshaus. Groups of songs will be presented by two trios. Mrs. Paul Fisher is chairman of the club: Edward La Schelle, director, and Mrs. Herman C. Wolff, accompan.st. Mrs. Charles R. Weiss is arranging the party and is being assisted by Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr and Mrs. Frederick T. Holliday. Members of the club are Mesdames August Bohlen. Theodore B. Griffith, Frank Hoke, Charles Latham, Kiefer A. Mayer. Robert Millikeri, Conrad Ruckelshaus, Russell Ryan, Grier Shotwell, Ralph Vonnegut, Stewart Wilson. Evans Woollen Jr. and Mrs. Holliday, first sopranos; Misses Julia Brink, Ruth Hodges, Miss Roemier, Mesdames Hugh J. Carpenter, J. N. Collins, John D. Gould, Perry Lesh, Mrs. Fauvre, Mrs. Fisher, altos; Miss Rosamond Van Vamp. Mesdames Egbert Driscoll. William C. Griffith, Elijah B. Martindale, Mrs. Ruckelshaus. Mrs. Weiss and Mrs. Johnson, ! second sopranos.
Miss Friedman and Roger Popp to Wed Tonight Miss Marijane Friedman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Friedman, 2119 Prospect street, will be married to Roger Popp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Popp, at 9 this evening by Rabbis Morris M.Feuerlicht and Abraham Lazar in the United Hebrew congregation temple. Mrs. Earl Tolin, accompanied by Miss Rose Tuchman, will sing bridal airs. Leo Friedman, the bride's brother, will give his sister in marriage. She will wear a white suede lace gown W’ith slight train and a floor length veil. She will carry a bouquet of white roses. Mrs. Thomas Gray, sister of the bridegroom, will be matron of honor, wearing a black lace gown and carrying Jonathan roses. Charles Popp, the bridegroom’s brother, will be best man. Mrs. Friedman will wear a black velvet gown and corsage of gardenias and sweet heart roses, Mrs. Popp will wear a blue gown and a similar corsage. Following a dinner for the families, an informal reception will be held at 9:30. The couple will be at home after March 10 at 2525 Shelby street.
Daily Recipe ORANGE BREAD PUDDING 4 cups bread crumbs 1 cup brown sugar s 4 eggs 4 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons butter 2 cups evaporated milk 2 cups raisin 1 cup pecan meats Heat the milk, pour over sugar, butter, bread crumbs —run pecans and raisins through food chopper and add to this mixture, then add teaspoon nutmeg, cinnamon and vanilla. Bake about 40 minutes in moderate oven and serve with the following sauce: Whip 4 egg yolks, add 1 cup sugar and cook in double boiler, add juice of two oranges and grated rind of one and cook till thick. Cool and fold in two cups whipped cream.
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Novels to Be Reviewed
Mrs. Horace Shonle will review two modern novels for the art talk of the Indianapolis branch, ’American. Association of University Women, at 10 Thursday at Rauh Memorial library.
BLUEGILLS SPONSOR SWIMMING EVENT Miss Charlene Heard is president of Bluegills, honorary swimming club at Butler university, which will hold a swimming exhibition as the closing feature of the annual “play day” observance to be held at the university Saturday. Co-ed representatives from twelve Hoosier universities and colleges will take part in the event which will open with registration at 9:30 and close at 5. The Butler chapter of the Woman’s Athletic Association and representatives from the Normal college of the North American Gym-
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Mrs. Horace Shonle —Photo by Bretzman,
nastic Union in Indianapolis will serve as hostesses for the meeting. Ball Group to Meet Committee chairmen for the “circus” ball of the Civic theater on April 17 at the Athenaeum will meet tomorrow night at the Athenaeum. Mrs. Irving Fauvre, general chairman, will preside. Sorority to Give Shower Mrs. Charles Kempthorne, formerly Miss Lillian Isaacs, will be honored at a personal shower, to be given tonight by Delta Gamma chapter, Phi Pi Psi Sorority, Miss Lillian Peterman, 1836 North Harding street, will be hostess.
CHAPTER FOUNDING WILL BE OBSERVED Seventh anniversary of the Australian chapter. International Travel-Study Club. Inc., will be celebrated next Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Ed R. Kealing, 4930 East
If you want safe relief from Constipation Science says Today use a LIQUID Laxative 1. Regulate intestinal action ftentlj —no “purging” A 2. Measure dose to suit your individual needs (SB, bara 3. Avoid Bowel Fatigue and the laxative habit W Here's Why: WHOM HKf
Harsh laxatives often drain the system, weaken the bowel muscles, and in some cases even affect the liver and kidneys. A doctor will tell you that the unwise use of harsh laxatives often does more harm than good. Fortunately, the. public is fast returning to the use of laxatives in liquid form. A properly prepared liquid laxative brings a perfect movement. There is no discomfort at the time and no weakness after. You don’t have to take “a double dose” a day or two later. In buying any laxative, always read the. label. Not the claims, but the contents. If it contains doubtful drugs, don’t take it. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a prescriptional preparation in which there are no mineral drugs. Its in-
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Tenth street, who will be assisted by Mesdames Frank Kinzie and Fred Fate. A 1 o'clock luncheon will be served. Mrs. Otto Bell and Mrs. Amie Brookhou.se will be guests. On the program will be Mrs John F. Ruppert, Mrs. Gordan K. Woodiing, Mrs. Bell and Mrs. Samuel Artman,
gredients are on the label. By using it, you avoid danger of bowel strain. The liquid test: This test has proved to many men and women that their trouble was not “weak bowels.” but strong cathartics: First. Select a good liquid laxative. 2. Take the dose you find is suited to your system. 3. Gradually reduce the dose until bowels are moving regularly without any need of stimulation. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has the highest standing among liquid laxatives, and is the one generally used. It contains senna, a natural laxative which is perfectly safe for the youngest‘child. Your druggist has Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin.
