Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 172, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1934 — Page 7
N'OV. 2?, 1934
Two Varied Types Meet at Luncheon Zona Gale Entertains Mary Pickford at Pnblicity Fete. BY EVELYN SEELEY Itmcs spr,il Wrltfr NEW YORK. Nov. 28—Nobody but a press agent would be able to think of Mary Pickford and Zona Gale m the same breath. They seem to me as far apart as any two women you could mention. But. after all. the oook-sell- ■ :.g Wj. id : entitled to try anything once. It wasn't long ago that William Lyon Phelp6 took Gene Tunney by the hand and presented him to his class as a lecturer on Shakespeare. So "Muss Zona Gale'*—the invitation read— gave a buffet luncheon for Miss Mary Pickford at the Sherry-N'etheriand to congratulate ner on the publication of her first nook. Why Not Try God?”' H#re stood Inez Haynes Irwin, '•miling w.irmly at Zona Gale, saying. ’ She's the sweetest person in the world, and the kindest. I alt|l reSßOHtar Charlotte Perkins Gnman when she said. If I ever go j to heaven 1 expect to see Zona Gale walking down the street, and then I shall feel right at home.'" And back in a shadowy corner sat a white-haired woman, not a celebrity at ail, with tears m her eyes from the momentousness of b* mg in the same room with the angelic Mary Pickford. Hitting Literary' Trail Mary Pickford is going bravely—and perhaps oraztnly—literary. She is leaving no stone unturned on the roau back to the limelight. Literary \ luncheons are anew phase of experience. and she takes them in i.er stride. She marched up to Gertrude Stem the otiv'r day at a tea, chatted a long time, then was ph<> ographed with her. And the literary world receives Mary Pickford as an author. Fcr who hasn't a book to sell? Was Zona Gale sponsoring th? lunch for Muss Pickford because both are interested m God? Their corn * pts of deity are quite different. Miss Gale said to me recently, "We .are on a scientific exploration of life and death and the great unknown areas of consciousness.” Miss Picktord writes, “All the good that there is can be ours right now if we but tune in with God .. . I have had many griefs and many % trials in my life ... I had to learn to stop trying to be Atlas and carrying the world on my shoulders—to stop wearing the captain's cap and let < .od do the navigating .. .** Miss Gale's philosophy is analytical. mystic, abstract. It is an offshoot of intellectuality rather than emotion. M.ss Pick ord's is piatituciinous and practical. Makes Strange 1.-.ole Mates Mi\s Gale iMrs. Br -c?) lives simply m a small Wisconsin town and has a walled-in garden. Miss Pickford's career has kept her in the spotlight of show places and hotels. *1 suppose they are not far apart in age. yet Zona Gale is a middleaged woman and Mary Pickford still looks like America's sweetheart with her curls cut off. Miss Gale’s voice is low and shy; Mary Pickford's rather high and childish. Some guests wondered, ‘‘Are they old friends?” and it was learned that they had met two hours earlier. Mars' Pickford was there as part of a publicity program that is brin|ing her back to the public and showing them that, whatever Douglas Fairbanks does. Mary still has her pert little chin in the air. Zona Gale came. I bejieve, out i kindness and because she holds that in a bewildered world the idea of God—whether in her terms or / those of a movie star—us important. miss Tee will be II ED AT CATHEDRAL Miss Vela Lee. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Lee. will be married to Selmer Anderson, son of Mrs. Mary Anderson, Carpenter. Ia:, at 9 tomorrow morning in SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. The most Rev. Bishop Elmer J. Ritter will perform the marriage ceremony and the Rev. James A. Hickey will say the nuptial mass. The bride, attended by her sister. Mrs. Michael Dugan, will wear an ivory satm gown, designed princess style, and a long tulle veil. She will carry a white prayer book, caught with ribbon streamers and showers of button chrysanthemums. Mrs. Dugan s gown of green crepe will be trimmed in bronze, and her flowers will be Johanna Hill roses ar.d bronze enrysanthemums. Richard Lee. the br.de's brother, will be best man.
A Day's Menu Breakfast — Chilled tomato juice with lemon, cereal, cream, cornmeal waffles, syrup, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Thanksgiving menu, melon balls in grapefruit juice, roast turkey, giblet gravy, chestnut stuffing. cranberry sauce, ripe • olives, creamed cauliflower, buttered beets, stuffed apple salad, pumpkin pie, mik. coffee. Supper — Cranberry cocktail, scalloped oysters and mush- . rooms, avacado and orange salad, hot buttered rolls, turkey nunce pie. coffee.
Loose, Broken Plates Made Like New REPAIRED (■ WHILE TOO WAIT ' V .oom crecta illMB Siting tr.hdt 9 1 - Ml :ki n* 10* • > ' upriiow awn Liponwi Out of 1 B \ H Bfilktau 1 Iy/ •••( etatau IfliilM'lTinD 2ND FLOOR LE.MCKE BLDG C*r. Ptaa. ud Market Sta. LI4UI
Sew Dowcps for the Holidays — So. S
Tango Dance, Classed as Simple, Popular Now
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Above. Maurice and Cordoba illustrate the start of the French tango step, in which the dancers move to the man's left. Diagram show's the simple routine of this tango.
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Tango music is irresistible —and you must know how to do one of the tango versions Arthur Murray, dance-master of celebrities, here. In the third of six articles, explains a simple routine. BY ARTHUR MURRAY NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—1 t s just as simple and certainly a lot more gracious to learn to tango than to stumble around trying to fox trot to tango music. At rather pretentious holiday balls where the music is supplied bv two orchestras, you may be sure that one of them will play practically nothing except slow, rhythmic tango music. At smaller parties, the single orchestra will mix tango tunes with the fox trot and waltz selections. This, after all. is a tango year. And unless you know what to do when a Spanish-tvpe song is being played, you might as well sit down. Actual tango steps are of course, similar to those in the waltz and fox trot. Because of this, even a beginner will find tango steps surprisingly simple. They are done in a deliberate manner, making co-ordination between the mind and ones feet quite easy to acquire. nan WHAT is commonly known as the French version of the tango is extremely , popular this
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Chest Colds D*->n't let them get a strangle bold. Fight them quickly. Creomulaion combine* 7 help* in one. Fowerful, but harmlea* Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Your own druggist is authorised to refund your money on the spot ts your rough or cold la not relieved by Creom uision.—Ad verdsemeat.
year. For that reason, I have diagrammed a step that is done in the half-open position. That is. the feet cross in front of each other, but the shoulders remain parallel and the position of the head should not be changed. In the tango the steps are divided into slow and quick movements. The slow step takes about a second and is given two neats of the music. The quick step is twice as fast as a slow step and is given but one beat of the music. The steps are taken sidewise. The ihan has his back to the center of the room as he progresses to his left. The woman faces the center of the room and her steps are taken sidewise, to her right. First, take a long slow step with left foot to left side; then cross right foot in front of left; weight on right foot; step wuth left foot to left; repeat and draw right foot up to left. When taking the second and fourth steps, the man leads with his heel. NEXT—The Rhumba.
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley WUliston wil have their daughter, Mrs. Boyd Campbell, and Mr. Campbell, Louisville, Ky., and another daughter, Miss Beth Ann Wiiliston, Greencastle, with them during Thanksgiving. Miss Wiiliston is a student at De Pauw university.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Bride-to-Be and Fiance to Be Feted
Mr. and Mrs. Balz Will Honor Daughter and Howard Lacy. Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Balz will entertain tonight at the Woodstock Club with a bridal dinner for thendaughter. Miss Edna Balz. and her fiance, Howard John Lacey 11, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Lacy Sr. The marriage ceremony for Miss Balz and Mr. Lacy will be read at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Robert Mersereau, Dowagiac, Mich., as her sister’s only attendant. George Gruen, Cincinnati, will be best man and Robert Gruen, also of Cincinnati, and Louis Schwitzer wid usher. Covers will be laid tonight for members of the bridal party, for Mr. and Mrs. Balz, Mr. and Mrs. Lacy, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Dunlop, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Glossbrenner and Mrs. William J. Wemmer, all of Indianapolis. From out-of-town w-ill come Robert Mersereau, Dowagic; Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Moore, St. Louis; Mr. and Mrs. Jess McClain and Mr. and Mrs. Geoige Gruen Sr., all of Concinnati; Mr. and Mrs. A. L. McConnell, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gilbert, Detroit. A pleateau of white flowers will center the dinner table to be lighted with white tapers. Sorority Dance Set Beta chapter, Sigma Alpha Chi sorority, will hold its Thanksgiving dance tomorrow night at the Propylaeum. Assisting Miss Helen Klasing, chairman, are Miss Mary Jane Fillingim and Mrs. R. W. Ennis.
HEADS AUXILIARY
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Mrs. Caroline Cook Mrs. Caroline Cook is president of Hoosier Post, Auxiliary to Veterans of Foreign Wars, and other officers for the coming year are Mrs. Carrie Lauffler, senior vicepresident; Mrs. Mildred Lane, junior vice-president; Mrs. Hazel Pflueger, treasurer; Mrs. Margaret Thompson, chaplain; Mrs. Lena Hart, conductor; Mrs. Emma Barret, guard; Miss Ethel Cook, patriotic instructor; Mrs. Elsie M. Steivart, historian; Miss Eloise Cock, trustee; Mrs. Martha Moone, Miss Eloise Cook, Mrs. Hazel Haught and Mrs. Eva Duvelle, color-bearers. Mrs. Lulu Kessler is secretary to the president.
Daily Recipe CHEESE BRAN LOAF 11-2 cup sifted flour 11-2 teaspoon baking poivder 1-li. teaspoon soda 1-2 teaspoon salt J teaspoons butter 1-3 cup sugar 1 egg well beaten 1 cup buttermilk or sour milk 1 cup bran 1 cup grated cheese Sift flour once, measure, sift again with baking powder, soda and salt. Cream butter, add sugar and egg, add flour and milk alternately. Fold in cheese and bran. Pour into well greased loaf tin. Bake in moderate oven one hour and fifteen minutes.
Oariis Stop Hurting Instantly then Lift Right Off! Drop FREEZONE on that aching corn. Instantly it stops hurting; then shortly you lift the com right off with your fingers. You'll laugh, really! It is so easy and doesn't hurt one bit! Works like a charm, every time. A tiny bottle of FREEZONE costs only a few cents at any drug store, and is sufficient to remove every hard com, soft com. and calluses. Try it! FREEZONE
HERE ARE SOME TIPS FOR THOSE YOUNG ARTISTS
Russell Berg Gives Aspiring Cartoonists a Few Good Ideas. BY R. O. BERG Times Staff Cartoonist The contest drawings for the first week are in, and from them I can i get a few ideas which I want to pass on to you, and which may help you to win another week if you are not amorg the winners this time. First, a few of you young artists didn't see the rule which said that j all of the drawings must be at least j seven inches high. Some of you drew only the finished sketch; some . drew the diagrams just as I had them in The Times. You may do either, as you like, but be sure the finished drawing are larger than those in the paper. It seems that a number of the contestants tried to make the drawing fit the page. If the page was wide, they widened the rabbit's head to fit it. Tins, of course, throws the picture out of proportion, and proportion is one of the important things in this contest. Leave a Margin I would suggest that you leave a margin of white paper around each sketch. This is not a rule, but a margin of an inch or two certainly will make your drawings look better. If you have trouble keeping this white margin clean, put a piece of clean white paper under your hand, between your hand and the sketch, as you draw. This, will absorb the moisture from your hand. A number of drawings were rolled. There is no rule against this, but we’d like it better, and you would have a neater package if you can send or bring it in flat, as many of the children have done. Make your first lines of the drawing very light. If you bear down heavily on the pencil and then see that your line is not in the correct place, you have a harder time erasing than if you start by drawing light, sketchy lines and then make them heavier as they develop. You will have more success with your background if you will put that in with a broad flat side of your pencil, rather than the point. An important pait of drawing is •to know when to use a sharp point of a pencil and when to use a broad flat side. - Use a Soft Pencil A number of the youngsters used very hard pencils for their drawings. You will find it best to use a soft pencil because when used for the preliminary sketches,' it erases more easily, and you can get more definite blacks by using it in the finished sketch. Take plenty of time. The drawings will be judged by correctness of proportion, good drawing and neatness and you can not have these things by careless, rapid drawing. One or two of the young artists used color on their drawings. There is no objection to this, and I don’t care how much color is used, but color* will not make up for good drawing. It’s the drawing by which they will be judged. Some of the children did not see clearly enough the connection between the diagrams and the finished sketch. The diagrams are for the purpose of helping you draw the
I j EVERYBODY! Jj3l|l JLJ / Just two days, and I’ll be in Indianapolis! J x 1 / And Ido hope every one of my little® 7A / friends in central Indiana will be able to||JK| j| i&i \ So You Won t Miss Any of the Parade €
Today’s Drawing Lesson
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All you need in materials in The Indianapolis Times drawing lessons is a soft pencil and some paper like typewriter paper, and then a big smooth board like a drawing board or your mother’s bread board, or a large, smooth book. You will need an eraser. The best kind is a kneaaed eraser. With it you will not make such a mess on the floor. Cut out these lessons each day, paste them in a book, and you will have a drawing book to keep and show your friends. Do you have some friends who are interested in drawing? Be sure and tell them about these lessons. They will be running in THE TIMES for several weeks. Now react these rules carefully: 1. GRADE SCHOOL PUPILS ONLY are eligible for prizes in this contest. Any grade school pupil, boy or girl (except children of Times employes) may enter. 2. Your drawings must be made rabbit or the dog, and to help yo; get the proportion right. They show the way to do the finished sketch. If you do not get the diagrams right, if these first measurements are not right, your finished sketch will not be right. Now of course you will want to make these diagrams very light, and the finished drawing heavier, but the sketches will not be right unless these early lines are correct. So if I were trying to win a prize. I should be very careful with these diagrams. And another thing, it will be easier for the judges if you use clips instead of pins to keep your drawings together. I stuck a pin in my hand and Herbert got one in his finger while we were looking over the contest packages. Even so, we’re having a good time looking over the rabbits and Roly Polys that have all sorts of expressions on their faces. And we hope you're having a good time drawing them.
free hanu, without the aid of instruments. 3. They may be made with pencil, crayon, or pen and ink. 4. Drawings must be submitted clipped together in complete sets of six, one for every day beginning with Saturday of each week and ending with Friday of the following week. 5. Drawings must be at least 7 inches in depth on standard size 812x11 inchest white paper. 6. BE SURE to write your name, address, school and grade ON EACH DRAWING. 1. Your set of drawings for the second week (beginning Saturday. Nov. 24, and ending Friday, Nov. 30) must be in The Times office not later than noon, ' Monday, Dec. 3. You may deliver them in person or mail them to the Drawing Contest Editor, The Indianapolis Times. 8. In case of ties, neatness will be a deciding factor. The creatures in the Bronx zoo require 124 different kinds of food from all parts of the world.
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HOPKINS MAPS RELIEF DRIVE FOR MESS Long-Range Program to Be Suggested: Costs Will Be Outlined. By United Drt** WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—Congress. which must write the future policy of relief, will receive from Harry L. Hopkins a series of alternative plans—accompanied by ni own recommendations. The federal relief administrator, it was learned today, is preparing also to submit to congress a complete report on his administration for the last year, and its costs. Mr. Hopkins, along with other White House advisers on relief trends, has come to the conclusion tliqt relief no longer can be treated as an ‘emergency” function. Private industry and business have not reduced the relief rolls appreciably by employment. Despite the current co-operative manifestations of industrial and financial leaders, relief officials feel that the problem still is far from a solution. The relief plan which congress will be asked to adopt will be one | thoroughly co-ordinated with the I expected security legislation. It will , be on a long-range basis, designed I to deal with a period not less than five years. | Cost will be an important factor, j In projecting alternative programs,
Ask Mother - She Knows Mother took this medicine before and after the babies came. It gave her more strength and energy when she w as nervous and rundown . . . kept her on the job all through middle age. No wonder she recommends it. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Eyes Examined Gla**f* Furnishrd Established 33 Year* Jafffe & Sons 13 N. Pennsylvanla •AYMENT PLAN IF DFSIRED I FERTILIZER I I* Use Odorles-s Sheep Manure NOW B| tor green lawns next sprine yra ib° 50c ite.si.6o m VONNEGUT’S * —120 K. \Vnh. St. | Dio A aridWomatT CLOTHING
