Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 55, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1936 — Page 12

PAGE 12

Many Visitors Expected for League’s Revue Friends and Relatives of Players Coming: from Out of Town. -rrruj;. and relatives of Junior • ■r.’p’iie members. e/mcaring in the fTMical revue, "Number Please," tomorrow and Saturday at English's, are to come from out of town to witness the show. Mrs. Irvine Fauvre, who is to appear in dance numbers and singing Fkits, has invited her parents, Mr nd Mrs. Floyd Odell Clizbe, Chicago. to spend the week-end. Others coming particularly to see Mrs. Fauvre's performance include Miss Elizabt Ih Van Hagpn, Barrington. III.; James Cook. Lake Forest, 111.: Miss Barbara Vonnegut and Bailey Carroll, both of Chicago. Mrs. David Stone has received word that Gen. and Mrs. David L. Stone are to come from Fort Snelling, Minn. Col. and Mrs. Allison Williams, Columbus, Ga., who are to attend the show, are to look for Mr,, William Munk In the chorus. Guest from California Mrs. Charles Weiss’ sister, Mrs Fred W. Pennoyer, Corando, Cal., is to be in the audience as well as Mrs. Neal Tomy, Detroit. Mrs. Wallace C. Tomy's mother-in-law. Guests of Mrs. John K. Ruckelshaus are to include Paul and Ray Kunkel, both of Cincinnati. Mrs. Hugh Carpenter and Mrs. John Bertermann 11, chairman and assistant chairman respectively of the ushers committee, have announced their assistants. Misses Julia Brink and Julia Fletcher, Mrs. Anna Marie Gallfiayles and Mrs. Paul Lee Wright are to be stationed in the lobby. Others Who Will Usher Other members who are to ushe% the patrons and patronesses include Mesdames Thomas Mahaffey Jr., Horace Nordyke, Morris Lanville Brown. Herbert Call, John Hollett Jr., John Roberts •' 1 , Fisk Landers. Paul E. Fisher, B injamin Turner Jr., Woods A. Caperton Jr., Addison Parry, Harland Wilson and Rudolph Haerle. Mrs. Edward J. Fleming. Chicago, formerly of Indianapolis, who is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Brown, also is to assist, as are Misses Betty Bertermann, Evelyn Chambers, Ernestine Bradford, Elia- I abeth Haerle, Eunice Dissette, Hilda i Hibben and Sally Reahard, Dress rehearsal Is to be conducted tonight by Arthur Seelig and Wesley Totten, directors.

Pastor, Hospital Head to Speak to Local Group The Rev. John Joseph. Sacred Heart Church pastor, and Dr. W. E. Pennington. St. Francis Hospital staff president, are to speak at the Hospital Guild guest luncheon Tuesday. Mrs. Harry Cook is arrangements chairman, assisted by Mesdames John Dransfleld. Arthur Heidenrelch, Bernard Weimcr, J P. Mugivan, Peter James, Edward Dwyer. E. H. Schmutte, Edward Trimpe. Gus Gatto. Richard Tubbs and Carl Pfleger. Cards are to be played in the afternoon.

Today s Pattern S7J4 ill .' ; ' ©

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Indianapolis Brides Choose May as Month for Matrimony

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1. Mrs. Constant W. Southworth was Miss Ruth Buehler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Buehler, before her marriage to Mr. Southworth. son of the Rev. and Mrs. George Southworth. 2. Mrs. John W. Thompson, formerly Miss Lois Seriam, and Mr. Thompson are on a wadding trip

Solve Problem of Economics First, Jane Tells Questioner

Talk your problem* over with Jane Jordan, who will answer your questions in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—Seven years ago I divorced my husband. I had three children, one a baby of 2, and no way to support them. I met a vaudeville performer who said his wife was insane. He broke me into

his act and trained my little girl in trapeze work. She is one of the smallest trapeze performers today and a real drawing card. Lately. I’ve had to quit work because of a nervous breakdown. We have lived together as man and wife from one end of the

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Jane Jordan

country to the other, and even his folks think we re married. My little girl thinks he is her father and we have another little girl of our own, now 5 years old. The man is very hateful and has a high temper. I was on the level with him until a year ago when I fell hard for another who knows my past and wants to marry me and take the two little girls (the other two children are grown*. The trouble is that he is broke and has no job. He is slow and easy going whereas the performer is just the

—Photo by Dexheimer-Carlon. following their marriage Saturday. Miss Sedam is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Sedam. 3. After May 18 Mrs. William Mount, formerly Miss Muriel Millett, and Dr. Mount are to be at home at Rochester, Minn. Mrs. Mount is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Grover A. Millett.

opposite. In June my lover will get his soldier’s bonus and wants us to go to housekeeping on it. The performer, who is used to making big money quick and, easy, now says he'll mari*y me, although neither of us knows how he'll get free, and besides, I don't love him or want him. He says if I marry the one I love and deprive the little girl of h r living, he’ll kill us all. When I hear church programs on the radio I feel pretty blue. I'd love to do right for the children's sake, but I can't take care of them alone. My heart will always be with the one I love, and I realize what it is to be without a job. I am at my wit’s end. Please advise me straight. A TROOPER. Answer When an individual winds his life up into such an impossible tangle, the only thing to do is to take a coldly practical, unromantic view of the situation and act on it. Happiness already has been forfeited by the irrevocable mistakes of the past, and the question narrows down to where you and your children shall eat. Os course it would be an advantage to you to live in a legal union, but not with a jobless husband. When the bonus is gone, what then? Wouldn’t it be wiser to wait until the man proves his ability to assume the responsibilities of a family which he is now so blithely willing to assume? Wearied with haggling and quarreling and the insecurity of living in a precarious situation, aren’t you putting too much value on the phrase, “I love you”? The slow and easy-going nature which makes your lover willing to take a woman with two children without knowing exactly how he can support them is the thing which prevents him from wresting hi§ living from the world. His passivity may be a virtue when it comes to getting along peacefully | with a family, but it is a fault when it comes to feeding that family. How long would love last under the stress of hunger, want and debt? No doubt the man believes that he can locate a job by the time the bonus is gone, but how do you know that he will? I do not say that you should cling to the more aggressive and disagreeable father of your youngest girl. I do not know what you should do. The best solution would be for you and the little trapeze performer to contrive somehow to support the family by yourselves until such time as you can find an adequate partner. Settle the economic problem first. The love problem can wait.

Sponsors Named for Operetta of Junior C. D. A. A group of patrons and patronesses is to contribute to the Junior, Catholic Daughters or America operetta, to be given Saturday afternoon and evening at the Civic Theater playhouse. Pupils from the local academies and high schools are to appear in "Lantern Land,” a Japanese musicale. The patrons include Bishop Joseph E. Ritter and the Revs. Charles T. Shoettekotte, August Fussenegger, James A. Hickey, Henry' Herman. Mieheal Lyons and George Dunn. Others are Messrs, and Mesdames William J. Goory, Harold Hayes, William H. Parks. P. C. Reilly, Thomas Sheerin; Dr. and Mrs. Robert Barber, Mesdames G. S. Foerderer. Mary O. James. Thomas A. Wynne and Lucy McGee Buckley, Misses Elizabeth O’Hara. Mary Isadora O'Hara, Agatha C. Bender, Bess Bigane. Helen Carr, Mary Crowley, Eleanor Ferris, Winifred Galvin. Betty Hindel, Mary Madden, Loretta McManamon, Hanna Noone, Marie L. Parks, Edith Parks, Mary Ryves and Gertrude Tripp.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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—Photo by Photocraft.

E VENTS CARD PARTIES Ladies’ Auxiliary. Altenheim. 2 Fri. Home. Hostesses, Mesdames Theodore Schuller, Anna Heiser, Emma Wacker and Franz Einninger. Monitor Temple 244. Pythian Sisters. Tonight. 523 N. Belleview-pl Cards and bunco. Hi-Bidders Bridge Club. Tonight. Mrs. Robert Aust, 3321 Va E. 10th-st. St. Joseph Church Men’s Club. 8:30 Thurs. Hall, 617 E. North-st. Bingo. Busy Bee Club, Grand Circle U. A. O. D. 2 Fri. Sears Roebuck & Cos. social room. Pearl Shaw and Ethel Disbrow, committee. SORORITIES Alpha Chapter, Theta Sigma Delta. Mon. Miss Elinor Herrick, 1415 Olive-st, hostess. Sigma Beta Eta. Sun. Snively tearoom. Miss Iris Williamson, hostess. Luncheon. Rho Sigma. 8 tonight. 6276 ColJege-av. Bridge party. Mrs. Carl Quillen, social chairman. Miss Mary Catherine Brouse. hostess. Delta Theta Chi. Sat. and Sun. Lincoln. State convention. Miss Martha Davis, social chairman. Alpha Gamma. 8 tonight. Miss Virginia Gritt, 4372 Central-av, hostess. Rho Zeta Tau. 8 tonight. Mrs. Clarence Raney, 2347 Central-av, hostess. Party Mon. to be arranged. PROGRAMS St. Philip Neri Altar Society. Tonight. Auditorium. Dance numbers by Marcy Dirnberger’s pupils. Federation of Mothers’ Choruses. Indianapolis Public Schools. Executive board. 9:30 Mon. Sears Roebuck & Cos. social room. Nominating committee report. LODGES Bethel 5, Order of Job’s Daughters, Clinton. 7:30 tonight. Mrs. Guida Runyan, grand guardian, inspector.

MOTHERS TO BE PARTY GUESTS Mothers are to be guests of the Alpha Chapter, Theta Sigma Delta Sorority, at a party Sunday at the Meridian Manor. Miss Bessie Blake is chairman, assisted by Mesdames Kenneth Adler, Henry Seig and Joseph McHugh. Following the games, refreshments are to be served and gifts distributed W the mothers. Enter-

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—Top Photo by Liang Shon,

tainment is to be provided by Miss Ruth Jenkins, soloist, accompanied by Miss Esther Jenkins, and Misses Bettie and Midgie Freeman, singer and dancer. Ladies’ Han d-Embroid- m Mk ‘ ered Philippine ‘Night- AU e jj W^SHINOtOHWy

'Heads of City m I Church Group Confer Today J Federation Leader to Report on Sessions. Mrs. E. A. Piepenbrok, newlyelected Indianapolis P’ederateci Church Women president, is to meet with the board of directors from 10 to 3 Monday, to discuss organization activities. Mrs. Piepenbrok is to return from the national council, now in session in Dayton, 0., Friday night. Committee members also have been invited to attend Monday’s meeting, to be held in the First Baptist Church women’s parlors. Luncheon is to be served by church women. Reservations are to be made with Mrs. S. C. Fullmer, 180S Ruckle-st. Mrs. Henry Ostrom is to be prayer service leader at the meeting held under council auspices at the First Congregational Church next Thursday. Mrs. H. E. Sutherlin and Mrs. A. P, Thomas are to be hostesses. Ascension day is to be observed with an appropriate program. Mrs. R. R. Mitchell, newly-elected state council president, who also is attending the Dayton meeting, is to speak on “When Is Christ the Master?” Music is to be by the church choir. This is to be the last meeting of the year. Following the service, the spiritual life committee, of which Mrs. J. H. Smiley is chairman, is to give a breakfast in honor of Mrs. Mitchell retiring president of the Indianapolis council. Board members, committee members and presidents are to attend. Mrs. C. H. Brackett is to be in charge of reservations.

Social Problems Topic at Church Women’s Parley By United Press DAYTON, 0., May 14.—The topics of Christian fellowship, Christian social relations, finance and international relations have occupied the sessions of the National Council of Federated Church Women’s convention here. Dr. Ivan Lee Holt, St. Louis, was guest speaker last night. Speakers at a luncheon are to be Mrs. Gordon B. Levy, Chicago, recording secretary of the National Council of Jewish Women; Mrs. James F. Looram of New York, chairman of the Motion Picture Bureau of the International Federation of Catholic Alumni, and Mrs. Harper Sibley, Rochester, N. Y., member of the board of directors of the National Council of Federated Church Women.

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MY DAY By Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt

JJALTIMORE, Md., Wednesday.—Last night Mrs. Morgenthau and I went to see St. Joan. I often felt that parts of Bernard Shaw’s play dragged, but this never happens when Katharine Cornell is on the stage. I have always admired her as an actress. Her voice has a wonder-

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Mrs. Roosevelt

It leaves you with the right feeling. Without her, I should feel the play was better ended before the last scene. The entire cast was far beyond the usual stage production. It was a grand evening. I started out early this morning to call on a friend who has been ill for some time, and then went up to Teachers College at Columbia University. I saw just a little of this great graduate school. Dean Russell showed me the murals done by some of their student* for the party given every year by Dean and Mrs. Russell. This year the decorations line the hall and form a history of education. The symbolic panels over the doors are a great stimulus to the imagination which ’J* an attribute we should all strive to develop these days. Mrs. Scheider and I took the 12:30 train and got off at Baltimore to attend a reception at Goucher College. We will drive back to Washington after the reception in time to greet Mr. and Mrs. George Palmer Putnam (Amelia Earhart), and dine with some friends whom we have invited.

(Copyright. 1936. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.)

Hostesses Are Selected for Irvington Union Exhibition

Hostesses for the arts and crafts exhibit sponsored by the Irvington Union of Clubs, to be held in the Irvington Masonic Temple this week-end, have been announced by Mrs. Willard Gates, exhibit chairman. Mrs. Fred Stilz and Mrs. Ed Hirschman are to serve Saturday. Hostesses from 3 to 6 Sunday are to be Mrs. J. S. Bray and Mrs. H. E. Chenoweth. From 8 to 9, Mrs. F. W. Schulmeyer and Miss Martha Cunningham are to serve. School children are to visit the exhibit from 3 to 6 Monday afternoon. Their hostesses are to be Mrs. O. H. Bakemeier and Mrs. C. F. Bechtold. Hostesses from fi to 9 are to be Mrs. O. H. Gripe and Mrs. William T. Rose. Exhibitors include Mrs Floyd Reck. Misses Arvis Danner, Hilah Mary Wheeler, Betty Jane Oiffln. Mary Johnston. Betty White and Helen Parmer and Messrs. Ernest Ropke, Don Carter, Lee Carter,

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ful quality and in St. Joan there is something about her which is best described a3 “a radiance.” The last scene is remarkable. I van struck by the remorse of the priest when he saw. with his own eyes, the suffering he had caused. "I did not know until I saw” is something which every human being should recognize as being as true today as it was when people were being tortured and burned at the stake. Only by seeing can we sav# ourselves the same kind of remorse that haunted the wicked, self-satisfied old priest. Katharine Cornell does the last scene so that

John M. Smith. Francis H. Inslef. Alfred Griffith. J. M. Gorrie. L O. Brown. Arthur B. Long and Ted Greiner. GIRLS’ LEADERS TO NAME CHIEFS Officers are to be elected at tha annual business meeting of the Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls Guardians’ Association at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Indianapolis Power and Light Cos. auditorium. Names are to be presented by the nominating committee, which includes Mrs. V. B. Cain, chairman, and Mesdames Margaret Ameter. Eleanor Jeffers and Florence Barnard. and Miss Mary K. Mitchell. Retiring officers are Miss Kathleen Klaiber. president; Miss Irma Biedenmeister, vice president: Mrs. Gladys Bevis. treasurer, and Mrs. A. L. Jenkins, secretary.

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-MAY 14, 1936