Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1936 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Block’s Tearoom Striking Neo-Classic Plan Carried Out in Furnishing New Feature. BY BEATRICE BIJRGAN Editor SOFT patter of conversations, tinkling of china, crystal and silver are the muted accompaniment to luncheon and, tea in the new Wm. H. Block Cos. tearoom. Thick carpets, indirect lighting in a neoclassic scheme, leather cushioned chairs and crisp frocked waitresses form the setting. . Since the open-
Ing this week, many feminine shoppers have paused there for luncheon. Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, sitting in one of the eggshell leather seats around the curved wall at one end, chatted with Miss Elizabeth Watson, just back from a West In-
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dies cruise. Miss Watson was joined by Mrs. Roemler-Kinnaird. Their table like all the larger ones in the center of the room was fin- j ished in natural curly maple, and covered with a cream luncheon set. Glassware appointing the tables is varied—some as blue, some lavendar, and others red or crystal. To create a home-like atmosphere, stereotyped banded china was omitted in favor of a flower wreathed design. The room, described as the Terrace, has an out-of-door effect achieved by a burnished silver leaf ceiling. Steps leading from the terrace into the tearoom are bordered by laurel trees. As background for the curved wall are photographic murals of outdoor scenes, to be tinted in natural colors. Large green pillars separating the pictures are bordered with gold stars. it a a Rose quartz windows separate the room from the men’s dining room, where they can exchange business conversations without the distraction of Feminine chatter, models, or dressy furnishings. The decorative scheme appeals to men because of its solidity and simplicity. The walls are covered with copper-hued panels in squares, bordered with silver reproductions of transportation facilities, against a burgundy background. The progress of steamships, trains and airplanes is depicted. A large mural at one end is a reproduction of a Speedway scene. The furniture also has a masculine air. The chairs are cushioned in copper leather instead of eggshell, and have arms. The linen is ecru and green and the china is heavier and without floral patterns. tt n tt Mesdames Arch Grossman, Herbert Duckwall, I. C. DeHaven, Thomas Kaufman, R. D. Brown and Ray Mulvihill enjoyed a luncheon party in the tearoom following one of the private style shows this week. Mrs. Pearce Calton and daughter, Miss Frances Calton, Terre Haute, came with Mrs. Charles Stone. Mrs. Willis Kuhn, working on the Indiana Saddle Horse Association's “Wild Oats” ball Saturday, and Mrs. Donald Carter, concerned with preparations for the Civic Theater’s “Front Page” ball, dined and compared their committee activities. Mrs. Virginia Moorehead Mannon, who has been busy with legislative activities of the Indiana League of Women Voters, also turned from the rush for a quiet luncheon hour. Mrs. Geneva Nelson, former Highland Golf and Country Club hostess, Is responsible for the tempting dainties which appeal to women, and the more substantial dishes which satisfy the men. SORORITY IS TO HOLD INITIATION Formal initiation services are to be held tonight at a dinner dance in the Columbia Club by Beta Chapter, Omega Kappa Sorority, under direction of Miss Emma Wolfanger. Initiates are to include Misses Doris Deal. Ellen Lepear. Mildred Johnson and June Waters.
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BEGIN HERE TODAY Toby Ryan, 19, works behind the jewelry eounter of a large Manhattan department store. On her wav to work during the crowded morning rush hour, Toby collides with a good-looking young man. She murmurs apologies and hurries on. Later that morning she poses for some photographs to ho used in a store advertisement, Marty Hiatt, the photographer, tells Toby she has a “camera face.’’ He selected her instead of Maurine Ball to pose for the pictures and Maurine, - u o .npioyed at the Jewelry counte Tim Jamieson, the an with whom Toby collided or. the street, tells a friend about the encounter. Tim docs not know Toby's name, but he makes a bet with a friend that within 24 hours he will have a date with her. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER THREE IT was a side street down which Toby Ryan made her way—a street brightly enough lighted, but away from the noise and glare of the avenue. She walked quickly. Half way down the block there was a drug store; Toby turned and went inside. The boy behind the soda counter looked up at her, but Toby passed him without a glance, ohe went to the rear of the store and entered a telephone botoh. There was a thick directory, with battered pages, open on the shelf. Toby turned the pages until she found the one she was looking for. At the top, in small black letters, was the name. “Finklewitz, L.” Apparently it was not Mr. Finklewitz, his telephone number or street address that interested the girl. She glanced at neither. But there was something else on that page—a half cheet of paper on which, scrawled with a heavy pencil. were these words: “Same time and same place. And please wear a pink geranium pinned to your left shoulder. My memory is failing—Bill.” There was nothing cryptic about the message to Toby Ryan. “Same time” meant 6 o'clock. “Same place” was a cafeteria a few blocks distant. And “Bill” could be nobody else in the world but William R. Brandt. That nonsense about wearing a ping geranium! Toby grinned, reading the message once more. There was always some foolishness in notes from Bill. It was one of the reasons she liked him. He was different from any one she had ever known.
THEIR system of exchanging messages. for instance, was one of Bil’s ideas. It had come about because Toby wasn’t allowed to receive telephone calls at the store. She and Bill had been walking past the little drug store one night, talking over this problem, when suddenly Bill halted. “Look!” he said, “in there. Here's how we’ll do it—” He had drawn her inside the drug store, pointing to the telephone booths. Then and there the scheme was born. There were two booths and they picked the one at the right. It was agreed that when Bill had a message for Toby he was to write it and slip it between the pages of the directory. Opening the book, Toby's eye had lighted on a name at the top of the page. “Finklewitz,” she said. “Let’s use | this page. It will be easy to rej member.” a tt tt \ THE plan had worked well, too. Both Toby and Bill passed the 1 drug store on their way to and from work each day. Wednesday evenings Toby always stopped to see if there was a message, because Wednesday was the night she and Bill ate dinner together. They had been doing this for six or seven weeks now. Toby had known Bill longer than that years, actually. He had lived in the same block in Jackson Heights as Toby's aunt. Bill roomed with the Gilmores in those days, two houses down the block, and the Gilmores were friends of Aunt Gen. Toby had been introduced to him. Occasionally after that they met on the street and one or the other would say, “Pleasant day,” or “Nice weather we're having,” or something of the sort. Never anything more than that. Toby had inought Bill was rather good looking. He had crisp, crinkly blue eyes, and she like the way he wore his hat, the least bit back from his forehead as though he had jammed it on in a hurry. He was tall—an inch or so under six feet—so that his square shoulders were not too broad. He was a young man who might have played football (he had), but looked as though he would be better at basketball or tennis. tt tt tt THE acquaintance between the two hadn’t progressed beyond this point—in fact, it hadn’t j progressed at all. Toby left Jack- 1 son Heights after her aunt’s death, j She had tried a number of room- ! ing places before she found the ' small third-floor rear that was ! such a bargain. Toby had so many things to j think about after that—looking for work, trying to save nickels and dimes, remembering that, no matter how disagreeable, “the customer is always right"—she hadn't given a thought to Bill Brandt. And then one day as she was leaving Bergman's for a breath of air at her lunch hour, she suddenly saw a familiar pair of broad shoulders. The next moment she recognized them. It was the young man from Jackson Heights! Bill saw Toby, too, and hesitated. She had smiled and he had halted and presently they were talking. It was almost like a meeting of old friends. Toby told him where she was living and a few nights later he had telephoned. Toby enjoyed mat evening. They went to a movie and she learned considerable about Bill Brandt. He was 24 years old. and he worked for an advertising firm. He'd done a lot of other things —been a newspaper reporter, traveled for a magazine agency, spent a summer on a construction crew, even written short stories—which nobody bought. Toby thought it was fascinating,! hearing about the things Bill had done. Some day. he told her, he was going to have an advertising agency of his own. Toby believed it. a tt a AND so, for six or seven weeks now, they had been dining together on Wednesday nights, going to movies, riding on busses, walking along streets of the great city where the language spoken all about them was foreign and it was easy to imagine oneself in a far-off country. Grand times, they had been. Riding, walking, talking—but mostly talking. This particular Wednesday, Toby and Bill met at the cafeteria and , presently .were seated at a table j
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
BY LAURA LOU BROOKMAN 0 1936 NEA Service, lc
with a red and white checked cover. Toby told him about posing for the “Beauty Bar” advertisement. Bill, breaking a roll, said, “So you're a photographic model now. That's swell! Some of those girls make a lot of dough, you know.” “But I told you,” Toby objected, “it was only because the other gir* sprained her ankle. I’m not at all sure they’ll use the picture.” “Why not? Sure they will!” The young man paused, studying her. Then he said, “You're a cute little trick, Toby. Did you know that?” “Thank you, kind sir.” “But I mean it, you are! It's a good thing I’m not in love with you.” “You —in love with me?” Bill Brandt grinned, shook his head. “Didn’t I just say it’s a good thing that I’m not?” a a a ” There was silence for a Then the girl asked, “Why did you say that?” “That I’m not in love with you?” Bill helped himself to the corned beef before continuing. “Lots of reasons,” he said. “For one thing, if I were in love with you we wouldn’t be here. Instead, I’d be taking you some place I can’t afford, trying to make an impression. Or else I’d be trying to figure out a way to take you such places. And we wouldn’t be having fun, either. People who are in love never do. They’re always mooning around or else having fights.” “You seem to know a lot about it, Mister.” “Sure, I do.” He paused, then went on. grinning. “'From observation—and maybe, well, maybe a little from experience. But none of that stuff for me! I'm no sap, swallowing the old hokum about ‘two can live as cheaply as one.’ Not on A guy who gets married these days is licked before he starts.” TOBY grinned. “So saying, the man spurned the poor girl’s affections.” Bill nodded. “Right you are, Toby Ryan. Always. Always right.” His smile widened, approvingly. “What a. girl! You know, there aren’t many like you—girls a fellow can have a swell time with, just talking things over, the way we do. They’re darned few—” “Oh, Mr. Brandt,” Toby murmured. “This is so sudden—” “Mug!” , They both laughed—gay infectious laughter that caused heads, here and there, to turn to look at them. Toby said. “Oh, Bill, we do have fun, don't we? Let’s never change things. Let’s keep them just the way they are. Always. We won't either of us fall in love; we’ll just go on—having a good time—” "Oke!" Bill reached across the table, took her band in his companiably. “It’s a deal!” Afterward they went to a wrestling match (Bill happened to have passes) and at 11:45 they said good night before Toby's rooming house. “How about Saturday?” Bill asked. "Like to see a movie or something?” “Far as I know. Good night, Bill. I’ll be seeing you—in the phone book.” He grinned. “G’night, kid.” A moment later he was on his way down the street. Upstairs, in the littl' third-floor : room, Toby undressed quickly and 1 slipped into bed. She smiled as she turned out the light, smiled later, with her head on the pillow, drowsily reviewing the evening. It j was a pleasant sort of world, after ! all. Not much she’d change— Toby Ryan drifted to sleep, unaware (how could she be?) that 24 hours were to bring, for her, extraordinary changes. (To Be Continued)
Daily Menu BREAKFAST— Baked apples, cereal cooked with dates, cream, fried cornmeal mush, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON— Fish roll sandwiches, cabbage and carrot salad, rolled oats cookies, canned cherries, milk, tea. DINNER— Planked hamburg steak, asparagus salad, Spanish cream, sponge cake, milk, coffee.
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Mrs. Paul Lee Hargitt is serving on the patroness committee for the Alpha Latreian’s eighth annual skating carnival Friday night at Riverside rink. Miss Shirley Cudlipp is to sail today with her parents, Maj. and Mrs. Ralph Cudlipp, Fort Benjamin Harrison, for the Philippines. Miss Nancy Schwenk Kalleen’s engagement to Robert E. Russell, son of Mrs. Elmo P. Fisher, has been announced by her father, James L. Kalleen. The wedding is to take place April 11. Miss Kalleen is a Butler University graduate, and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. Mr. Russell attended Indiana and Butler Universities and is a member of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Myron McKee have been vacationing in Florida with their children, Carol, Rosalie, Myron Jr. and William.
School Parents to Meet at Shortridge March 25
Parent-Teacher Association members are to attend the annual dinner meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Parents and Teachers March 25 in the Shortridge High School cafeteria. Afternoon and night sessions are to be held in Caleb Mills Hall. The afternoon session is to convene at 2, and is to include a council business meeting and annual reports of local presidents. The reports are on new chairmanships, student aid and attendance. Eighty-seven organizations are to be represented. Dr. Earl E. Harper, president of
‘Y’ Leaders’ Meeting Set Aims, policies and 1935 achievements are to be reported by Young Women’s Christian Association standing committee chairmen at the annual all-day board of directors’ meeting Monday. Invitations have been issued to committee members and persons interested in association work by the president, Mrs. B. S. Goodwin. A delegate is to be named to the national biennial convention to held April 29 to May 5 in Colorado Springs, Colo. Reports are to be given by the following: Finance, Mrs. Walter Krull; Blue Triangle resident, Mrs. Edgar T. Forsyth; interracial committee, Mrs. Dwight Ritter; South Side center. Mrs. Carl J. Manthei; central Y. W. C. A. adult education committee, Mrs. C. Norman Green; Girl Reserves, Mrs. Walter P. Morton; health education, Mrs. Watson Hovis; food and housing, Mrs. John Stuart; membership, Mrs. John W. Atherton. Industrial and business and professional women's departments are to present reports in skit form. The camp report by Mrs. Ellis Hay is to be given in conjunction with a moving picture film of Camp McCormick where the Y. W. C. A. summer camp is to be held again this season. Following luncheon at 12:30 Mrs. F. L. Evans is to report for the public affairs committee, Mrs. John Seybert for the world fellowship and Mrs. Lillian Hall for the Phyllis iVheiiUey branch,
Simpson College, la., formerly of Evansville College, is to be the guest speaker at the evening session. His subject is to be “What is Worthwhile in Life and Education.” Women Invite Speaker Administrative Women, with Miss Flora E. Drake, president, collaborated in inviting Dr. Harper to Indianapolis. Dinner is to be served at 6:30. Reservations are to be made with Mrs. Robert L. Mason, 6190 Wash-ington-blvd, general chairman. Tables will not be reserved. The dining room committee includes Mesdames Austin J. Edwards, Harold E. Wilcox, Chester O. Martin, E. C. McKinney, Frank E. Lentz. Decorations are to be made under direction of Mrs. Charles D. Perrine and Mrs. Frank Rieman. Hospitality committee includes Mesdames Frank A. White, Matthew Winters, Arthur B. Schultz, Clifford Harrod, S. M. Myers and William E. Balch. Conduct Box Office Mrs. Witt W. Hadley and Mrs. Edward V. Mitchell are to be in charge of the box office. Honor guests are to include Messrs, and Mesdames Paul C. Stetson. George W. Buck, D. T. Weir. W. E. Hacker and Carl Wilde, and Mesdames Clayton Ridge, H. M. Goll, John Lewis and Laura Moag and Will Wise, the Rev. O. H. Folger and Miss Christine Houseman. Entertainment for both sessions is to be given by Shortridge High School musical organizations. Music from 7:30 to 8 is to feature an organ recital in the auditorium. MERIDIAN HTLT.S TO HOLD SUPPER Mr. and Mrs. Howard Scot Morse and Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Kemper McComb are to be hosts and hostesses for the Meridian Hills Country Club buffet supper tomorrow night. The final Sunday night supper of the season is to be March 29. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Montgomery, general entertainment committee chairmen, are to preside at a committee meeting following supper, where the season's activities are to be outlined. Dr. and Mrs. J. Kent Leasure are chairmen of the junior dance Friday, April 17. Their assistants are Messrs, and Mesdames Walter L. Brant, Earl W. Kiger and Frank A. jtfontros*
Alumnae to Give Show A minstrel show is to be presented at a dinner-meeting of the Indianapolis Alumnae Association, Alpha Chi Omega Sorority, Wednesday night at the Butler University chapter house, 725 W. Hampton-dr. Both active and alumnae groups are to attend. Mrs. G. W. Gable is to be interlocutor. Those participating are to be Mesdames W. P. Daggy, R. L. Mason, R. H. Oberreich, F. D. Quinn, G. R. Jeffrey and Misses Hannah Keenan, Katherine Smith, Florence Renn, Dorothy Stewart and Mary Helen Karnes. Mrs. W. H. Buckles, Mrs. K. F. Ehlert and Miss Edith Allen arranged the program which also is to include a chorus of chapter songs. Miss Norma Jo Davidson, hostess chairman, is to be assisted by Mesdames E. M. Spence, W. W. McBeth, E. C. Hackleman, J. E. Buck, K. S. Bowman, E. W. Hay, E. F. Trimpe and Walter Hammel, and Misses Helen Johnston, Jean Spickelmier, Maryelen Clark, Martha Clinehens, Marjorie Lytle, Margare* Stayton and Louise Sullivan. Club Meetings MONDAY Cervus Club. Benefit bridge tea. Banner-Whitehill. Mrs. Clara Martin, chairman. Mesdames C. J. Austermiller, W. H. Armitage, Martin Collins, John Soltau and H. W. Wiebke, assistants. Mrs. F. P. Randall, candy committee chairman. Woman’s Rotary Club. 12:30, Columbia Club. Dr. Amy Ling Chen, “Changing China.” New Era Club. Herron Art Institute. Mrs. W. L. Tillson and Mrs. Payne Clark, program chairmen. Parliamentary Club. Mrs. Jasper Scott, 525 Buckingham-dr, hostess. Mesdames Carl Semans, Volney E. Huff and H. P. Willwerth, assistants. Carnelian Club. 12:30. Snively Tearoom, 1030 N. Alabama-st. Mesdames Otis Carmichael, Robert Endsley, L. A. Fleury and Elwood Ramsey, hostesses. Mrs. Herbert Wagner, “Bridgeport Nutrition Camp.” Woman’s Research Club. Mrs. John G. Benson, 3663 N. Delawarest, hostess. Monday Afternoon Reading Club. 1:15. War Memorial. Followed by social meeting at home of Mrs. John C. Teegardner, 409 E. 12th-st. Mesdames Leland Fishback, Sylvester Moore and John Boesinger, assistants. Irvington Woman's Club. Mrs. Victor R. Jose Jr.. 410 N. Auaubonrd, hostess. Election. Mrs. William Insley, program chairman. Mrs. John K. Kingsbury, luncheon chairman. Sesame Club. Miss Laura Reynolds. 931 N. West-st, hostess. “The Jew in Science and Invention," Mrs. Bjoy Gorton, •
-MARCH 14,1936
Attorney to Speak to Clubs Henry M. Dowling to Be Heard Friday at Meeting. Henry M. Dowling, local attorney, is to talk on "Our Department of State, Its Function, Strength and Weakness in International Relations,” before members of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs at 10 Friday at the Claypool. A Jubilee luncheon to celebrate completion of the club's project to raise SBOOO for jjadium for City Hospital is to follow the program. Mrs. H. P. Willwerth is luncheon chairman. Other features of the Friday program include a talk on -Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men.” by Mrs. Ralph j. Huddleston. Indiana Council of Federated Church Women president, and a musical program of songs of other nations by Mrs. Sylvia Lang, accompanied by Mrs. Caroline Ayres Turner. The meeting is in charge of Mrs. Curtis Hodges, international relations department chairman, with Mrs. Louis Wolf, vice chairman and Mesdames J. A. Crain, George Todd, Harry Kraus, Sylvester Moore and Arthur Dewey. Mrs. Dewey is musical program chairman. The following clubs are to report during the business session with Mrs. C. J. Finch, district president, in charge: Friday Afternoon Reading Club, Mrs. E. W. Stockdale; Grolier Art Club. Mrs. C. M. Raber; Heyl Study Club. Mrs. R. F. Daggett; Home Economics Club. Mrs. Bert Denison; Hoosier Tourist Club, Mrs. Roy Peterson; Independent Social club. Mrs. Harry W. Linaburry; Indorsers of Photo Plays, Mrs. David Ross; Indiana Women's Auxiliary to the Thirty-eighth Division, Mrs. Emory Cowley; Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Delta Zeta, Mrs. Guy Harrison Gale; Indianapolis Current Events Club, Mrs. L. L. Lackey.
Speaks at Luncheon Mrs. Clifford E. Rader, Columbus, 0., was speaker today at the Phi Mu Sorority state luncheon in the Claypool. Miss Helen Clark, Indianapolis Alumnae president, introduced Mrs. Rader, national Panhellenic delegate. Others at the speakers' table were Miss Mary McKinnes, W. Lafayette: Miss Marian Marshall, Hanover College chapter president; Miss Glada Whitlatch, Indiana University chapter president; Miss Jane Pinaire. Kentucky state chairman; Mrs. Charles Beer and Mrs. J. C. Tass. Madison; Mrs. L. L. Clark, Indianapolis; Mrs. M. T. Barnhill, Bloomington; Miss Martha Rady, Louisville, and Miss Rose Gould, Cincinnati. Mrs. Rader discussed the recent Panhellenic convention at Gulfport, Miss. ‘Miss McKinnes spoke on state alumnae activities and Miss Marshall and Miss Whitlatch reported on their respective chapters. Hostesses, including Mesdames Ruskin Bunnell, Charles Dolan, C. H. Glascock, Stanley Hayes. R. G. Reed, Raymond Toler and William Wilcox and Misses Frieda Bach, Florence Day and Velma Schaaf presided at the small tables. Entertainment during the luncheon included group singing led by Miss Alice Sexton, and floor shows by Indiana and Hanover, active members. Miss Leonora Geisler, Indiana chapter member, is to dance in specialty numbers at the dance tonight. Patrons and patronesses are to be Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Ploughe. Elwood; Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Caca, Noblesville; Mr. and Mrs. 'A. I. Wright, Anderson; Dr. and Mrs. Russell Clymer, Andrews; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Clark, Bloomington; Mrs. Etta Roseborough, Bloomington; Mr. and Mrs. Beer. Mrs. Ross Coffin, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gause and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Turnock, all of Indianapolis. PROFESSOR WILL SPEAK TO CLUB Dr. J. L. Rosenstein of the Butler University College of Education is to speak on “The Parent and the Child” at the Fall Creek Kindergarten Mothers’ Club Tuesday night. A musical program is to precede the talk. New officers are Mrs. J. L. Brayton, president; Mrs. Truman Warren, vice president; Mrs. Hugo Wuelfing, recording secretary, and Mrs. Muriel Gibson, treasurer. TRAVEL CLUB TO ELECT OFFICERS Officers are to be elected following the program of the Mayflower Chapter. International Travel-Study Club, Inc., Tuesday. Luncheon is to be at 12 at Mrs. J. C. Ragsdale's home. Mrs. Ragsdale is to be assisted by Mrs. James Butler.
Today’s Recipe PLANKED HAMBUttGER STEAK 1 pound round steak 1 teaspoon salt V\ teaspoon white pepper cup dried apricoats 1 cup stale bread crumbs 1 eg Scrub apricots well and soak several hours in warm water to cover. Put meat and apricots through fine knife of food chopper. Add salt, pepper, bread crumbs and egg and mix thoroughly. Pack into a buttered pie dish and bake in a moderate oven 375 degrees F.) until brown on top and bottom. It will take about 25 minutes. Reduce heat and let stand five minutes. Slide from pie dish to hot platter and surround with a border of mashed potatoes. Add an outside border of buttered diced carrots or finely chopped buttered spinach and serve at once.
