Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 7, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1934 — Page 4
PAGE 4
Sunday Weddings Show Gain of May Over June as Month of Marriages Brides Will Be Helen Brooks, Edythe Eaton and Rosemary Kleifgren; All Choose Church Rites. MAV i- rivaling the pver popular Jun* of wpdding dates. Three have been bridp'-'-to-be chosen tomorrow to take their nuptial vows. Dr. W. W Wiant will read the service for Miss Hdpn Brooks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Brooks, and Dr. C Basil Fausset, son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Fauvet. Fortville. at noon at the North Methodist church. Members of the Mu Phi Epsilon, national musical sorority, of which Miss Brooks is a member, will sine the sorority sweetheart son and “Violets.” Mrs. Frank Edenharter will play the organ, and Mrs. Helen Warrum Chappell will sine. A Mu Phi trio, includme Alberta Gaunt, harpist; Virginia Leyenberger, cellist, and Lorinda Cottingham Howell, violinist, will play. Mr c George Poole. Newcastle, matron-of honor, will wear a eown of green mouseline de sose and carry an arm bouquet of pink roses. Betty Stevents. flower girl, will wear pink organdy. Mr Poole will be best man and George Wier and Joseph Shaub will be ushers. The bride has chosen traditional white for her wedding ensemble. She will wear a satin gown fashioned on princess lines, and her elbow length veil with pleated edging will fall from a cap of tiny petals. She will carry an arm bouquet of gardenias.
A dinner at the Marott for immediate families will follow the | ceremony. Dr. Fausset and his brirt** will leave for a trip south. After j June 1 thev will be at home at 333 Hampton drive. Dr Fausset is a | graduate of the Indiana university school of medicine and a memb r of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Phi Rho Sigma. The bride attended the Conservatory of Music in Cincinnati. Miss Edvthe Kathryn Eaton has chosen 3:30 as the hour for her marriage to Clifton A. Rousch. The Rev. C. R. Rousch, father of the bridegroom. will iPad the service at the Brookside United Brethren church, before a greenery banked altar. Mrs. Mabel Cradick will play bridal airs and accompany Mrs. | Jane Johnson Burroughs, who will sing “At Dawning" and “Oh, Prom- j ise Me.” Miss Grace L. Eaton, sister of the bride, will be maid of honor. Her 1 gown will be peach net and her flowers Talisman roses. The net j dresses of the bridesmaids will be fashioned alike, with Miss Phyllis j Rousch wearing pink; Miss Ruth Jackson. Blue; Miss Lillins Kpone. i yellow, and Miss Florence McFowen, | green. They will carry arm bouquets j of roses. Jacqueline Rousch in pink organdy and Doris Joan Roberts in ! green organdy, will be flower girls Joseph Rousch will be his brother's best man. and ushers will i be Wallace Wilson, Merrill Goodwin. Charles Johnson and Harley j Littoral. Richard Broch. ring bearer.; will carry the ring in a calla lily. The bride, to be given in mar- j ’riage by hrr father, will wear a white satin gown with lace medal- i lion trim and a tulle veil. Her bouquet will be of white roses. Mrs. Rousch will wear navy blue chiffon j with white accessories, and Mrs. I Eaton will wear rose creep with j blonde accessories. Both will have corsages. A rerention will follow at the i Eaton will wear rose errpo with Hoffman. Ruth Eakin. Betty White. Charlotte Thompson. Eileen Stevenson and Irma Jones assisting in the dining room. St. Patricks rreforv. Prospect and Hunter streets, will be the scene of the marriage of Miss Rosemary Kleifgen. daughter of Mrs. Nora Kleifgen. and Alexander Tennnat, Seymour. The Rev. John OConnell will officiate and the couple will be attended bv Miss Nora Rush and Norman Kleifgen. Miss Rush will wear a pink ensemble and carry pink roses and the bride will be gowned in powder blue with white j accessories and carry brides roses. A reeeption and supper for immediate families will follow. The couple will leave on a short wedding trip. Mr. and Mrs. Tennant will make their home in Seymour. Tiro EVENTS WILL BE HELD BY NURSES A dinner dance for seniors and the annual home-coming for alumnae are scheduled by the Methodist Hospital Nurses' Alumnae Association for commencement week. The dance will be held Monday night. June 4. at the Hillcrest Country Club with Misses Harriet Poa. Stella Baker, Orpha Nuzum. Elizabeth Courh and Louise Wimmer in charge. Home-coming will be held at a tea Tuesday afternoon. June 5, and and a bridge party will follow. Hostesses will be members of the board of directors. Mrs. Ethel Teal Carter, president of the association: j Misses Margaret Torr. Pearl Emery, J Marguerite Benbow. Mabel Teal, Florence Stcffcy. Helen White, Gladys,Aldrich and Rcasa Snyder. Mrs. Geraldine Walker is general I chairman and is assisted by Misses Dortha Hayes. Inez Jeffries. Mabel Teal and Fannie Forth. All graduate nurses of the Methodist hos- \ pital school are invited. Enter Horse Show Misses Frances Courtney. Berenice ! Brennan. Anna Bargaret Durkin and Marguerite Blackwell are entered in a horse show to be held at St. Mary-of-the-Woods college. Wednesday.
F 9 00-9:15 wowo Pittsfcrd Distributing Cc. U 2 N. Senate HI-1505
Geraldine Shaw Become Bride in Church Rite Only immediate families attended the marriage of Miss Geraldine Frances Shaw and Cortland V. Carrington at the Third Chrisian church today. Dr. W. W. Wiant read the cere-! mony for Miss Shaw, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Shaw, and Mr., Carrington, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. : C. Carrington, before a fireplace: banked with palms and flowers and lighted with cathedral candles. The bride wore pink mousseline de soie with powder blue accessories and carried Madame Butterfly roses and blue babys breath. Mrs. Shaw wore rose crepe with white accessories and a corsage of roses and sweet peas, and Mrs. Carrington wore a printed silk dress with beige accessories and a corsage of gardenias. Both Mr. and Mrs. Carrington are graduates of Butler university, where the bridp was a member of Delta Zeta sorority and Mr. Carrington a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. After Sept. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Carrington will be at home in South Bend.
A Woman s Viewpoint
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON NEW YORK. May 19.—Today marks the beginning of what may prove the most daring exploring feat of the age. Armed with his typewriter, accompanied by a solitary chauffeur, and supplied only with ten days’ drinking rations, Heywood Broun, intrepid urbanite, set forth upon a dangerous discovery into the recesses of the continent. His objective is California, which is said to be located on the other side of the hinterlands. Mr. Broun has often attracted attention by his short sallies into the wilds, having at one time skirted the eastern Atlantic coast as far south as Miami, Fla. But this venture, if successful, will make him the Marco Polo of his time, because he plans to penetrate into the deepest interior. Mr. Broun expects to reach Albany by nightfall, when he will bid good-by to civilization and begin camping out. NEW YORK - May 15.—Radio messages report Broun has passed Pittsburgh without mishap. NEW YORK. May 25.—Rumors which can not be verified say the dauntless Mr. Broun is now in the jungle of Illinois, having executed a masterly flank movement around Chicago. NEW YORK, May 30.—A person said to resemble Broun was found today wandering in a dazed condition on the main street of Dps Moines. la. Rescue was made by two natives unable to understand the New Yorker. He was resuscitated—with two jiggers of corn. NEW YORK, June 5. (Flash* —Hevwood Broun today barely escaped capture by the Wichitas, who plotted to put him to death with hard labor in the wheat harvest. NEW YORK. July 4.—Days have passed with no word from Broun. It is feared he may have wandered as far south as Amarillo and fallen victim to Gene Howe, whose cruel treatment of Mary Garden and Colonel Lindbergh is remembered here. NEW YORK. July 15.—A rescue party, headed by Upton Sinclair, has set forth from Los Angeles in a desperate search for Broun, for whom grave fears are felt. The safari left at dawn. NEW YORK, July 15— <Flash! —Broun safe! The news has set the whole city mad with joy. With the same courage that distinguished John C. Fremont, Zebulon Pike, Meriwether Lewis, and Dr. Frederick Cook. Heywood Broun has emerged from the interior with flying banners. Broun was found this afternoon, almost exhausted, his supply of caviar having been consumed more than a week ago. With a gallantry which never has been exceeded in exploring annals, Broun, although practically perishing from lack of cocktails when found, was feebly composing onp of his incomparable accounts of this last and. most magnificent adventure. Sorority Will Meet Mrs. Paul Huddleston. 5745 Guilford avenue, will be hostess Monday afternoon for a meeting df Tri Kappa. Mrs. Rase Ewert and Mrs. H. Ford Smith will assist.
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Inclosed find 15 cents, for which send me Pattern No. 253. Size Name Street * City State
USING printed linen or chambray for your material, you'll find this house frock not only easy to make, but a delight to wear. The designs come in sizes 32 to 42. Size 38 requires five and three eighths yards of 32-inch fabric, or five yards plus three-eighths-yard contrast. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tpar out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.
Contract Bridge
Today’s Contract Problem West plays the contract at three no trump. North opens the five of hearts, which South wins with the king. Should South return a heart —and if not. what play would most likely lead the clarer to make a mistake? A 10 8 6 3 VQ 8 5 ♦KJ 6 3 4 0 7 4 AKJ4 w AQS2 V J 10 gVA62 ♦ AQ92 5 ♦ 10 8 + KlO3 Dpa | es j AJS 4 2 A 7 5 VK9 7 4 3 A7 6 4 *QS 6 Solution in next isstia. 1*
Solution to Previous Contract Problems BY W. E. MKENNEY Secretary American Bridge League IN the old days of auction bridge. the opening leads were more or less standardized, but a table oi leads is not of much assistance to us at contract. You must listen to the bidding. Have you ever tried during the course of the bidding to picture the outstanding cards in the closed hands? Before making your openning lead, just close your eyes and try to visualize the play that is going to follow your lead. I believe East’s overcall of one
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spade is rather optimistic. He should better pass and then show that suit on the next round. Os course, if he had, his partner would have bid spades. nett NOW let us look at it from South's angle. He must make an opening lead. His partner has bid diamonds. South holds the king and queen of diamonds; therefore, the chances are that his partner holds the ace of diamonds. Now, as South holds four diamonds and his partner has made an overcall, showing probably five diamonds, this does not leave many diamonds for the opponents, and undoubtedly West's jump to four spades is based on the fact that he is short in diamonds. South has control of the trump situation. West has bid clubs; therefore, his king of clubs is probably not worth much. So South should say to himself.
KAPPA CHAPTER MARKS FOUNDING
Fourth birthday of Kappa chapter. Pi Omicron national sorority, was observed last night at the home of Miss Margaret Waggoner. 1131 Colorado avenue. Sorority colors of gold and blue were used. Assisting the hostess w-ere Mrs. Ward Mont ford and Miss Gladys Young Guests include Mesdames John Dillon. Herbert Massie. Thomas Selmier and C. I. MacKenzie: Misses Flora Drake. Nelda Gray, Grace Hyland. Evelyn Mann. Martha Olsen. Marjorie Shirley, Bertha Staub and Betty Zimmerman.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
“If I open the king of clubs. West will win with the the ace. The declarer will then lead trump. I can win with the ace and underlead my diamond. “My partner will win with the ace and lead a club, which I will ruff. Now, if we can make a heart trick and another diamond or even a club trick, we will defeat the contract.” And that is exactly what happens with the club opening. West wins with the ace and now the declarer must lose a trump, a diamond, a club, and the club ruff, and the contract is set one trick, (Copyright, 1934. by NEA Service)
In the Realm of Clubs
MONDAY Guest day is slated by the Monday Conversation Club with Mrs. John S. Wright, hostess. Mrs. Hilton U. Brown, 5087 East Washington street, will be hostess for a meeting of the Irvington Woman’s Club. Prefessor John Smith Harrison of Butler university will be guest speaker. Mrs. David Ross will be hostess for a program of the Woman's Research Club which will include “A Trip to India." by Mrs. W. J. Rothenburger. Mrs. D. S. Menasco is luncheon chairman. Mrs. J. W. Jacobs and Mrs. Glen Rhoades will be hastesses for a meeting of the New Era Club. Mrs. Payne Clark will talk on ‘‘Green Pastures.” and Mrs. May Miller will discuss “Women in Social Service.” Carnelian Club will hold a lunffi-; eon at 12:30 at the Marott with 1 Mesdames W. F. Kuhn. J. R. Hunt and A. N. Shidler, hostesses. Members of the Parliamentary ; Club will meet with Mrs. C. P. i Clark. 3606 North Euclid avenue. Cervus Club will hold its semi- ! annual business meeting at 2 at the Antlers. Officers will be elected. TUESDAY Mrs. W. L. Carey will review “I Sit and Look Out,” at a meeting of j ! the Anagnous chapter, Epsilon Sig- j mo Omicron. with Mrs. Jerauld McDermott, 6115 Ralston avenue. Stunts will be presented at a meet ing of the Spencer Club with Mrs. j . Will Hammond, 766 North Bancroft! street, hostess, assisted by Mrs. H. B. Perkins. “Understanding Woman” will be reviewed by Mrs. August Boehm before members of the Epsilon Sigma Omicron student group. Mrs. Tom | Smith will be hostess. “Landscape Gardening.” by Mrs. William J. Kopp. and piano selections by Miss Marian Laut. guest, will feature a meeting of the ToKalon Club with Mrs. Vaughn Cornish. V Associate members day will be ; held by the Amicitia Club with Mrs. E. I. Shingler. chairman. Meridian Heights Inter-se club will close its year’s activities with a picnic with Mrs. J. J. Schoen in charge. Mrs. Mahlon D. Bash. 5255 Pleasant Run parkway, will entertain members of the Irvington Tuesday Club and their guests. President's day luncheon will ba held by the Alpha Kappa Latreian Club. I The Social Study Club will meet with Mrs. Horace W. Sefton. 4725 Broadway. Mrs. Walter R. George will discuss “Beveridge and the Progressive Era." Mrs. O. L. Cunning. 3428 Carrollton avenue will be hostess for the I concluding meeting of the season of the Inter Alia Club. Mrs. Lillian Jones and Mrs. James W. Taylor will present the program. Mrs. I. P. McFeeters will be hostess of the Independent Social Club at her home, 2623 Jackson street. WEDNESDAY sh Annual guest day will be observed by the Home Economics Club with Mesdames M. C. Lewis. Elbert Storer, J. F. Barnhill. Lawrence Earl and Hugh Carpenter, hostesses. Mrs. Wilbur Grose will
High School Graduation Hop Is Set Meridian Hills Club Will Be Host on June 6. Meridian Hills Country Club will add to the activities of high school graduation when the social committee sponsors a junior graduation hop Wednesday. June 8. Sporting programs at the club are getting under way. On Wednesday morning women golfers will entertain guests with Mrs. Dan W. Flickinger and Mrs. R. W. Showalter in charge. E. E. Martin is chairman of a two-ball mixed foursome round, set for Sunday afternoon. May 27. Henry W. Holt, swimming committee chairman, has announced the pool's opening date for Memorial day. Kenneth Walker, graduate of Normal college of the American Gymnastic Union and June graduate of Indiana university, will be instructor. The stables committee has announced Sunday morning breakfast rides. Riders leave the stables at 6 and return at 9:30. Anew tennis court has been opened, the tennis committee announces. Members and guests will attend the women's luncheon bridge party at 1 Tuesday when contract and auction bridge will be played. Mrs. W. L. Braht is chairman, assisted by Mrs. W. A. Doeppers and Mrs. Harry L. Foreman. Mrs. Robertson Will Speak for Business Club Mrs. Bonnie K. Robertson will address the annual meeting of the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women's Club at 6:30 Thursday night at the Woman’s Department Club. Dinner music will be provided by an ensemble composed of Miss Violet Albers, violin; Miss Ramona Wilson. piano, and Miss Mary Lohrmann, cello. The club chorus under the direction of Mrs. Camille B. Fleig. will sing. Mrs. Myra Majors Wirenius and Miss Myrtle Munson will be in charge. Reservations are to be made with Miss Lenna Harvey by Wednesday night. Miss Louise R. Ford will preside. ART MAN COUNCIL ELECTS OFFICERS New officers of the Artman council of the International TravelStudy Club Ire. have been announced. They are Miss Nellie Gwin. president; Mrs. E. P. Messick. vice-president; Mrs. Fred Fate, recording secretary; Mrs. George Ruth, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. George Dyer, treasurer. The council will sponsor a musicale June 20. The committee is composed of Mesdames William Hitz. John W. Thornburgh, L. E. Schultz and Jules G. Zinter.
present a program of vocal numbers. “Immigrant Citizens” will be the program theme for a meeting of the Inter Nos Club with Mrs Herbert Luckey, The program will be presented by Mrs. Anton Schaekel and Mrs. Harold Gossett. Wednesday Afternoon Club will meet with Mrs. F. M. McKinstray and Mrs. William Sclireiber, hostesses. Mrs. Homer Trotter will lead devotions. Reports of the year will be given at a meeting of the Irvington Catholic Women’s Study Club with Mrs. Thomas Murphy, 5322 Lowell avenue. Mrs. E. H. Zeigner and Mrs. Charles Smith will be luncheon hostesses for a meeting of the Minerva Club at the Silver Cup tearoom. Program at the Zetathea Club will include readings by Mrs. J. E. Andrews; songs by Miss Florence McGregor, and piano selections by Mrs. Herbert Finn. Mrs. J. E. Martin, 510 West Forty-fourth street, will be hostess. Ephamar Club will hold a luncheon at 12:30 at the Barbara Frietchie tearoom with Mrs. George Kamphouse and Mrs. R. E. Coleman in charge. Mrs. Kamphouse will read a paper and a round table discusson will be held on "Modern Music” by Jean Sullivan. THURSDAY Mrs. L. C. Messick will re view “Lark Ascending" at a meeting of the Thursday Lyceum Club with Mrs. H. T. Brown. Carmel, hostess. Miss Ruby Hardin, Wall street pike, will be hostess for a meeting of the North Side Study Club with Mrs. J. Blaine Hoffman and Mrs. William T. Cochran presenting the program. FRIDAY Members of the Woman's Advance Club will meet with Mrs. A. L. Kessler. 3415 Broadway. Mrs. Elizabeth Unger will review “The Inside Passage to Alaska.” “Only Yesterday” and “American Fisheries” will be discussed by Mrs. G. H. Healey and Mrs. E. J. Unruh, respectively, at a meeting of the Friday Afternoon Reading Club. Mrs. G. H. Healey and Mrs. C. M. Fillmore will be hostesses. Club day will beature a program at a meeting of the Clio Club with Mrs. Isaac E. Woodward, hostess. SATURDAY “Fifteen Minute Biographies of Interesting Personalities” will be given by members of the Butler Alumnae Literary Club with Mrs. James C. Morrison, 3966 Winthrop avenue, hostess. ALT EX HEIM WILL .. MARK FOUNDING A program will be presented at the Alterheim, home for the aged, at 4 tomorrow in celebration of its silver anniversary. Dr. F. S. C. Wicks will give an address. Musical entertainment will include piano accordian numbers byHarold Holtz; soprano solo. Miss Charlitte Lieber, accompanied by Mrs. Frank Edenharter; cornet solo by John Schumacher, and soprano solo by Mrs. Emo Hopkins.
Tonight’s Radio Tour NETWORK OFFERINGS
SATURDAY P M. 4:00—A1 Pearce and gang 'NBC! WEAK. Van Steeden's orchestra iNBC) WJZ Raginskv Ensemble 'CBS' W ABC 4:ls—Hav s orchestra CBS 1 WABC 4 30—Frederick William Wile CBS' WABC Jack Armstrong CBS' WBBM Coaklevs orchestra (NBCi WEAF 4:45 —John Herrick, baritone (NBC) WJZ. Charles Carlisle, tenor (CBSi WABC 5 00—Baseball resume 'NBC' WEAF Captain A1 Williams 'NBC' WJZ Isham Jones' orchestra 'CBS) 5 15—Religion in the News 'NBC' WEAF. Pickins Sisters 'NBC' WJZ. 5.30 Serenades ‘CBS' WABC. Eddie PeabOdv. banjoist. DeMarco Sisters; Himber's Ensemble (NBCi W EAF Bestor's orchestra <NBC‘ WJZ American quartet (CBS' KFAB s.4s—Barnett's orchestra (CBS' WABC. 6 00—Morton Downey's studio party ‘CBSi WABC. Art in America 'NBC' WJZ. Teddv Bergeman; soloists. Stern s orchestra 'NBC' WEAF 6:2o—Bavarian Peasant band NBC WJZ. 6:30 —Hands Across the Border (NBC) WJZ. Flovd Gibbons 'NBC' WEAF. 6:4s—Fat's Waller 'CBSi WABC 7:oo—Grete Stueckeold and Kostelanetz orchestra tCB3> WABC Donald Novis. Brad Browne, Vorhees' orchestra iNBC WEAF. Jamboree ‘NBCi WJZ. 7:3o—Beatrice Fairfax iNBC WEAF "i-ooking at Life’’ (CBS' WABC. Duchin's orchestra (NBC WJZ. 7;4s_Piano Team (CBSi WABC. 8:00 —Travelcade (NBC WEAF. Byrd Expedition broadcost (CBSi WABC. “The Other Americas'’ 'NBC' WJZ. 8 30—Elder Michaux and congregation (CBS) WABC. Barn Dance 'NBC' WJZ 8 45—Mischa Levitski, pianist (NBC WEAF. 9:oo—Sylvia Froos (CBS' WABC. Madrigueras orchestra (NBC! WEAF' 9 : 15—News: ’ Little s orchestra (CBSi 9:3o—News; Biltmore orchestra (NBC) 'one' Man's Family (NBC) WEAF 9:4s—Johnny Johnson's orchestra (CBS' 10:00—Russo's orchestra iNBC) WEAF. Denny's orchestra (NBC) WJZ. Fiorito's orchestra 'CBS' WABC_ 10:15—-Carefree Carnival (NBC Wfc.Al10:30—Arnheim's orchestra ‘CBS' WABC. Lopez orchestra ‘NBCi WJ£. WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Power and Light Company) SATURDAY P. M. s:3o—Marimba band. s:4s—Pirate Club. 6:oo—Cowboys. 6:ls—Bohemians. 7; 00—Grete Steuckgold and orchestra 8:00—Bynf Antarctic Expedition (CBS). 8 30—Elder Michaux congregation (CBto. 9:oo—Atop the Indiana roof. 9:3o—Little Jack Little orchestra 'CBS). 9:4s—Johnny Johnson orchestra (CBS). 10:00—Ted Fiorito orchestra (CBS . 10-30—Gus Arnheim orchestra (CBS). 11:00—Harry Sosnik orchestra (CBS'. 11:30 —Earl Hoffman orchestra (LBS). 12:00 Midnight—Sign off. SUNDAY A. M. 8:00 —Church of the Air (CBS). B:3o—Melody Parade (CBS'. B:4s—Alex Semmler (CBS). 9:oo—Jake entertainers. 9:3o—Christian Men Builders. 9:30 to 12:00—Silent. 12:00 —Dessa Byrd. P. M. 12:15—Bible School. 1:30 Symphonic hour 'CBS'. 1:45 —Ripon, Cathedral (CBS'. 2 02—LaFayette Birthday iCBS). 2.30 st. Oiaf choir (CBS'. 3:oo—Chicago Knights iCBS). 3:ls—Tony Wons (CBS). 3:3o—Bakers (CBS). 4 00 —Wheeler Mission program. 4 30—Jordan Conservatory program. 4:4s._Christian Laymen's League. s:oo—Hampton choir (CBS) s:ls—second Presbyterian church. s:4s—Rin-Tin-Tin (CBS). 6:oo—Freddie Rich Entertains (CBS). 6 30 —California melodies (CBS). 7:oo—Family Theater (CBSi. 7 30—Waring's Pennsylvanians (CBS). B:oo—Ladv Esther Serenade (CBS). B:3o—Salon orchestra. „ 9 00—Message from Governor McNutt. 9:ls—Little Jack Little orchestra (CBS). 9 45—Johnnv Johnson orchestra (CBS). 10:00—Red Nichols orchestra. iCBS). 10:30—Henrv Busse orchestra (CBS). 11:00—Atop the Indiana roof. 11:30—Jack Russell orchestra (CBS). 12:00—Sign off. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting. Inc.) SATURDAY P. M. 4:00—A1 Pearce and his gang (NBC). 4:3o—News flashes. 4:4s—Little Orphan Annie (NBC). s:oo—Three Scamps (NBC). s:ls—Dr. Stanley High (NBC). s:3o—Martha Mears 'NBC' s:4s—The Man on the Street. 6:oo—Happy Long. 6:15—T0 be announced. 6:3o—Hands Across the Border (NBC). 7:oo—Silent. 8:00—To be announced. 8:15—To be announced. 8 30—Coping With Crime (NBC). B:4s—Mischa Levitzki (NBC). 9:oo—Kamrn Sports review. 9:ls—Harry Bason. 9:3o—One Man's family (NBCi. 10:00—Dan Russo orchestra 'NBCi. 10:15—Carefree Carnival (NBCi. 11 00—Seymour Simons orchestra (NBC). 11:30—Clyde Lucas orchestra (NBC). 12:00—Midnight. Sign off. SUNDAY A. M. B:oo—The Radio Pulpit (NBC'. B:3o—Samover Serenade (NBCi 9:00 —Prpss Radio Bulletin (NBC). 9:os—Concert Artists iNBG. 9:30—101 Men's Bible Class. 10:00—Wa tcht owe r. 10:15—Gould and Sheffter (NBC). 10:30—Crystal melodies. 11:30—The Sunday forum iNBC'. 12:00 Noon—Tis of Aucassin and Ntcolette (NBC). P. M. I:oo—American melodies. I:3o—Masonic Order of Washington (NBCi. 2:oo—Hal Kemp orchestra. 2:lo—Musical memories—Harry Bason. 2:3o—Pedro Via orchestra (NBC). 3:oo—Newspaper Adventures. 3:15 —The Sylvan trio (NBCi. 3:30 —LHeur'e Exquise (NBC). 4:oo—Catholic Hour (NBC). 4:3o—Morris H. Coers. s:oo—Negro melody hour. 5:30 —Marshall Players. s:4s—Wendell Hall (NBC. 6:oo—Goin' to Tov.’.i (NBC). 7:oo—The Stevedores. 7:ls—Honolulu duo. 7:4s—Dental Gloom Chasers. B:oo—Victor Young orchestra (NBC). 8:30 —Hall of Fame 'NBC I . 9:oo—Canadian Capers iNBC).
HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle zatloa. 1, 6 Author of ■■■. ■- , n , , ■ —,—_—,—. 4 Cuckoopint. ‘ Three Mu* imUXjmSl 5 Eminent, keteers,’’ in 1 v V ;I \l I 'J ''j 7 You and me. the picture. ,L TjE }F S Soft broom. 11 Brave person. Region. 12 To classify. UMaQ[US^£RiHP SiGJm 10 Stellar. n <inn end |E[PiA 14 Social insects. 15 Almond. TYPFWPfTFP Hfeif 16 Gnief:rirne--17 Tiny vegetable. l '™ llß [l)E 19 talking stick. IS Revenue JHj I IS} 21 Animals’ pens. ’0 Form of the OMS|LiQ|£M IoiNLZ 25 The primroses. “ suffix “ad ” oom , CIE.D Ellimi TjE [ E T 29 Scholarly. Mea * ure o£ [M!E:e!d!&|~ln!elo[PlUAls;tM no Feeling. area ‘ 32 Stated. 25 Male deer. 42 Poem. 63 Neuter 33 Coat of mail. 24 Policeman. 44 Made vprses. pronoun. 35 Paid publicity. 26 Dress fastener. To evade. 64 He was also a37 Stir. 25 Orderly col- 47 Amphibian. world-famous 39 To choose, lection. 49 Gifts of . 41 Decorous. 31 Genus 01 long- charity. 65 He was a 43 To devour, legged bugs. 51 Coaster. native of .45 Sandy tract. 34 Cloth. 52 Pedal digit. 48 Cupola. 36 Mother. 54 To renovate. VERTICAL 50 Slave. 35 12 months 56 Eucharist 1 Edge of a 53 Snaky fish. vessel. molding. 55 Strife. 40 He was a 57 Alleged force. 2 Exclamation of 58 To accomplish, famous writer 59 Encountered. inquiry. 60 Seventh note, of . 61 Tallow trees. 3 Cross-fertill- 62 South Africa. i —T- —S 1 fa '7 “““ TTI j 1 k MM“ ja —j— i7 30 3* ~ 40 ;vs49 j —L ll—LJ— M —l——Li—Lb \ *
9 30—Broadcast to Bvrd expedition j (NBC i. 10:00—Jimmy Lunceford orchestra NBC I . 10 30—Clyde Lucas orchestra NBC 11 00—Seymour Simons orchestra 'NBC I . 11 30—Dan Russo orchestra 'NBCi. 12 00 Midnight—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati SATURDAY P M. 4 00- - At Pearce and hi* Gang (NBC). 4 30—Jack Armstrong, drama 4 45—Palace Hotel orchestra iNBC', 5 90 —Margaret Carlisle, vocalist s:ls—Ovpr the Rhine. German band. 5:30—80b Newhall Sportsman.’' 5:45—18th Century Homgs. G F Ro’h 6.OO—RFD hour, Bos* Johnston with Musical Varieties B:3o—Flovd Gibbons 'NBC'. 7:oo—House Party ißed-NBC'. 7:3o—LaFrance Presents Beatrice Fairfax (NBC). 8 00—Travelcade (NBCi. 8:30 —WLS barn dance NBC' 9 30—The Hotel Gibson orchestra. 9 55—News sashes. 10:00—Dan Russos Oriental Oardens orchestra tNBC> 10:15 —Carefree Carnival (NBC). 11 00—Moon River organ and voice. 11:30—Paul Pendarvis' orchestra 12 oo—Midnight. Castle Farm orchestra. A M 12 30—Hotel Gibson orchestra. I:oo—Sign off. SUNDAY A M. 7:oo—Children's hour. 8:00 —Church Forum. 8:30 —Samovar Serenade <NBC). 9:oo—News flashes 9:os—Morning Musical iNBC'. 9:3o—Poet Prince; Anthony Frome, tenor (NBC). 9 45—Phantom Strings (NBC'. 10:15—Babv Rose Marie—songs (NBC). 10:30—Fadio City concert (NBC' 11:30 Your Garden''—Male quartet and Virginio Marucci orchestra 12.00 —Gene Arnold and the Commodores (NBCi. P. M. 1 30 -To be announced. I:oo—Jacob Tarshish I:3o—Croslev orchestra. 2:00 —Little Church in the Hills. 2:3o—Pedro Vio's orchestra 'NBC'. 3'oo-—The Nations Family Prayer period. 3:3o—The Hoover Sentinels concert Josef Koestners orchestra (NBC). 4.00 'Romance of Science" Jacques Daguerre. 4:15 Ponce Sisters, due. 4:30 —Vox Humana organ and voice. s:oo—Charlie Previn and his orchestra •NBC--5:30 -Joe Penner. Harriet Hilliard and O/.zie Nelson’s orchestra. 1 NBC' 6:00-Jimmie Durante and Rubinon s orchestra. *NBC. 7:oo—lrvine Berlin. The Pickens Sisters. The Revelers quartet and A1 Goodman and his orchestra INBCI. 7:3o—Walter Winchell 8:45 Unbroken Melodies 8 00—victor Young and. orchestra — 'NBC'. .. 9 30—Hall of Fame—Nat Shilkret s orchestra. (NBCi. .... 9:00 hour, orchestra and vocalists. 9:3o—Tea Leaves and Jade. 10:00—Paul Pendarvis' orchestra. 10.30—Castle Farm orchestra. 11:00—Moon River, organ and poems. 11:30—Hotel Gibson dance orchestra. 12:00 Mid.—Paul Pendarvis dance orchestra. A. M. 12:30—Castle Farm orchestra. I:oo—Sign off.
Fishing the Air
Richard Hitnber will direct the Champions in Che second of their new programs over WFBM and the Columbia network Saturday from 7:80 to 8 p. m. The Knights of the Grey Underwear will send a bit of vocal and instrumental entertainment to the folks at home during the weekly broadcast from the Byrd Expedition camp in the Antarctic, to be heard over WFBM and the Columbia network from 8 to 8:30 p. m.. Saturday.
HIGH SPOTS OF SATURDAY NIGHT'S PROGRAMS 6:00 —Columbia—Morton Downey's studio party. 6:20 —NBC (WJZ) —Bavarian Peasant band. 6:3O—NBC (WJZ)—Hands Across the Border. 7:oo—Columbia —Kostelanetz orchestra and chorus. NBC (WEAF)—House party— Donald Novis; Voorhees’ orchestra. 7:3O—NBC i WEAF)—Beatrice Fairfax—" Advice to Lovelorn." B:oo—Columbia—Bvrd Antarctic Expedition program. B:3O—NBC (WJZi —Barn dance. NBC i WEAF)—"Coping With Crime.” 9:3O—NBC (WEAF'—Sketch “One Man's Family." 10:15—NBC (WEAF) —Carefree Carnival.
The ever popular "Indian Love CaH" from Rudolph Friml's operetta. "Rose Marie," will be the featured selection in Grete Stueekgolds program with the Andre Ko.stelanetz orchestra and chorus to be broadcast over WFBM and the Columbia network from 7 to 7:30 p. m., Saturday. Dean Justin Miller of (he Duke University Law School and chairman of the criminal law section of the American bar association, will speak on "A Better Army for the War Against Crime." Saturday at 8 30 p, m.. over WKBF and an NBC network. Wischa Levitzki, internationally famous concert pianist, will be heard in a special recital Saturday at 8:45 p. m., over WKBF and an NBC network. Sylvia Froos will bring a fifteen minute period of song to WABC-Columbia listeners in her program with Freddie Rich's orchestra Saturday, at 9 p. m. Wedding Announced, Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Gordon, Metamora, announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Virginia Jane Gordon, and Howard Jackson, Cincinnati. The ceremony took place May 13. The couple is at home in Cincinnati. The bride is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Murat W. Hopkins, 3251 Park avenue.
MAY 19, 1934
Brooding of Women May Jar Hitler Manifesto of Complaint Shows Way Wind Is Blowing. BV GRETTA FAI.MER Tim**s Special Writer 'VTEVV YORK. May 19.—Confidential aside to dictators: “Yo'l can oppress a croup or a sex or a race. But unless you keep its members too busy to conspire agunst you they will not stay oppressed lor lone." From Miriam Beard comes a let-
ter telling of “a group of owmen (who carefully avoid giving themselves the appearance of an organ iz a tion) who have just issued a symposium appeal to Chancellor Adolf Hitler and ViceChancellor Herr Franz von Papen. “In this these Nazi women announce their disappointment and humiliation under the new re-
Miss Palmer
gime—which they themselves worked to bring on! Willi extraordinary frankness they speak out." Miss Beard sends these quotations from the manifesto: Yella Erdmann: “We shall see our daughters growing up in stupid aimlessness, living only in the vague hope of getting, perhaps, a man and children. If they do not succeed their lives will be thwarted. For the human, personal value of woman is supposed now to be on!? in her function as mother." Dr. Leonore Kuhn: “Apparently there are no wonirn any more in Germany—only men—for women seem to have no opinions any more. Care is taken that they have no opinions! “The son—even the youngest—today laughs in his mother's face. He regards his mother as the natural servant of his life and woman in general as merely the willing fulfiller of his aims and wishes.” Marriage Discouraged Irmgard Reichenau: “Today man is being educated not for but against marriage. Education in voreins, comrade houses, man organizations, J sport, force through strength threaten to tear family life through separation of the sexes. Less and less do the married persons have to share, less and less influence do they have over the children and farther and farther back woman remains in the shadows of loneliness.” Dr. Margaret Adams: “Woman, who is supposed to be drawn out of the ‘filth of political fighting,’ is today dragged into a filthiness of calumny that has never been paralleled at any time in German history.” Miriam Beard, whose article on the Nazi treatment of women appears in the current Today, there points out the ironic truth that more women's votes were cast for Hitler than men’s. But woman’s rebellion, cautious at this moment, is now under way. It is a rebellion whieh is bound to succeed. If Hitler, in his desire to enslave German women, had set them to work at tasks that would drain them of energy and purpose he might have kept them spiritlessly obedient for years. But this he has not done. In forcing leisure on them, in depriving them of their jobs and their outside interests, he has given woman time for such brooding as this manifesto proves. And an outraged group in time does more than brood and protest; it acts. Machado an Apt Example There was a moment during Machado's reign in Cuba when the dictator decided to close the university and high srfiools as a movement to suppress the radical student groups. Asa result the students of Havana spent the next five years perfecting their target practice, investigating the use of dynamite for bombs and plotting the revolution. At the end of that time they struck—so forcefully that Machado is today a fugitive, sought by the police to answer the charges of murder brought against him by the young men to whom he gave that most dangerous of weapons—enough leisure to learn the tactics of revolt. From one dictator to another it is Machado's duty to warn Herr Hitler that a slave, given idle time, will soon devote his leisure to the fingering of a gun. .1/O THERS’ COUNCIL BOARD WILL MEET. Mrs. Arthur L. Gilliom. 3650 North Delaware street, will *be hostess Friday for the concluding meeting of the year of the board of directors of the Mothers’ Council of Butler university. Mrs. Gino A Ratti will talk on "Some Italian Experiences,” and the following officers will be installed: Mrs. Frank L. Reissner, president; Mrs. Gilliom, vice-president; Mrs. L. P. Highley, recording secretary; Mrs. D. B. Shimer, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Waiter Krull, treasurer. Tea will follow the business meeting.
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