Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 56, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1936 — Page 17

MAY 15, 1936.

Junior Leaguers Scratch Dinner Engagements From Calendar on Show Dates 'Number Please’ Players Scheduled to Appear at Theater Early for Make-up; Actors Arrange Final-Night Parties. BY BEATRICE BL'RGAN Society Editor DTRKY,R parties aren't for Junior League members tonight and tomorrow night before their musical revue, “Number Please.” Most of them are in the show and, like regular troopers, must report early to make up and don costumes. Their celebration Is to come after the show closes tomorrow night when they join the theatergoers at the leagup cabaret party at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. Perry Lesh, president, who dances in the chorus, is to go to the club with a party to include Mr. Lesh. Mr. and Mrs. Munk, Dr. and

Mrs. Dudley Pfaff and Mr. and Mrs. Norman Metzger. Mrs. Munk and Mrs. PfafT also are chorus members and Mrs. Metzger Is to appear in a “fashion parade” number. Others Enjoy Festivities Mrs. Samuel Runnels Harrell, Mrs. Charles R. Weiss and Mrs. Clyde Wands, after their dancing performances, are to go to the club with their husbands, and Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Stout and Mr. and Mrs. Vance Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf Haerle, Mr. and Mrs. Harland Wilson, Miss Helen Shepard and Joseph Wallace are to be at the cabaret together. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Roberts Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Jim Roberts are to be at the club to greet the entertainers. After appearing in a senorita number, Mrs. Paul Lee Hargitt and Mr. lfargitt are to join a Dutch treat

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Miss Burgan

party including Messrs, and Mesdames J. J. Cole, (iavlord Wood, Kenneth Adair, Sherwood Blue and Henry Marsh. Dinner Party Arranged

Mrs. Samuel Lewis Shank and 1 entertain with a dinner party at the. tomorrow night’s performance. They guests, including Mr. and Mrs. George Riley, Goshen, and their daughter, Mrs. Richard Kozart, and Mr. Kozart, Wilson, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jewett, Colonel and Mrs. William Guy Wall, John C. Ruckelshaus and James Rogan. Mrs. Samuel Cornell Carey is to have in her box tonight Dr. and Mrs. Jean S. Milner, Mr. and Mrs. James Nelson, Mrs. Julia Jean Rudd and Mrs. Carolyn S. Atherton. Mr. and Mrs. Kirby Whyte, with Mrs. Whyte's mother, Mrs. Henry Fitton, are to have a table at the cabaret with Mrs. Neal Tomy, Detroit. Mrs. Tomy is to be here to visit her son, Wallace C. Tomy, and Mrs. Tomy is to cance in the show. Coming From Seymour Mr. and Mrs John Blish are to come from Seymour for the weekend and are to be at a table at the club with a group of friends. Mr. and Mrs. Austin Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Donald McLeod are to be together, and Mr. and Mrs. William Higgins, Mrs. Jesse Fletcher and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz are to end the evening at the club. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Kackley, William H. Stafford Jr. and a group of out-of-town visitors are to celebrate the show’s closing at the cabaret. Others who have reservations for tables include Messrs, and Mesdames Irving M. Fauvre, Henry Frenzel, Jeremiah Cadick, Fisk Landers, William H. Wemmer, Kurt Pantzer, William Hogan, Raymond D. Brown, Elias C. Atkins, Earl Barnes, Mrs. Elsa Brant, Dan McDuffee and Miss Madelaine Speers.

William H. Remiy Speaks to Club William H. Remy chosp "Our Changing Attitude Toward Government” as the topic for his talk before Culture Club members today at Mrs. Clyde E. Titus’ home. Mrs. Titus’ assistants were Mesdames G. B. Taylor, Norman L. Schneider and Rank S. Chiles. Musical entertainment was provided by Mrs. Sidney Blair Harry, soprano; Mrs. James' Costin, soprano; Mrs. Volney Hull, contralto, and Mrs. Harriet Burtch, accompanist. Good to Eat IF you’re tired and can't think and care less about, what you're going to have for dinner tonight—plan on canned fruit with these marvelous oatmeal wafers. They actually take two minutes to mix and four minutes to bake. They're so beautiful, paper thin, lacy, crunchy, buttery and altogether the best oatmeal cookie you ever ale. As someone said who ate six at one sitting, they taste more like a confection than a cookie. They disappear so fast. I found in spite of using a quarter pound of butter, two dozen large wafers cost only 19 cents. 2 DOZEN OATMEAL WAFERS % pound butter Little less than cup oatmeal ’i teaspoon vanilla '? cup sugar 1 egg, beaten ** teaspoon baking powder Melt the butter, mix all the oth n r ingredients together and add the butter last, blending well. The batter will be fairly thin. Now take a very large cookie sheet, grease it well and then flour it lightly. Drop the batter in rounds about two inches across and at least four inches apart, as they spread terrifically. Have the oven moderate (350) and allow about four to five minutes for the baking. They will be done when they are a light brown and the entire wafer looks lacy. Now remove the pan and let in stand about one minute before trying to remove the wafers. Take a spatula and carefully remove each wafer to a board, let it cool. It ’anil be crisp when cool. This is the only trick—that you will have to watch —do not try to remove them from the pan while they’re hot; do not let them get too cool before removal or they'll harden. TbMoaaow^ I rff„. *<*>•• 69c

ter sister, Miss Clara Gilbert, are to r Golden Hill home before attending are to sit in a box with their dinner

Nurses to Attend Nightingale Rite Annual memorial services honoring the birthday of Florence Nightingale, founder of modern nursing are to be held at 3 Sunday by nurses of Central District, Indiana State Nurses’ Association. The ceremony is to take place at St. John’s Church. Public Health Nurses and graduates of all hospitals in the district, wearing their uniforms and caps, are to enter the church in a processional. Arrangements are in charge of Miss Ann Dugan, St. Vincent’s Hospital, and Miss Bernice Cain, Public Health Nursing Association. The program is to be as follows: Speaker, the Very Rev. Monsinger Raymond R. Noll. {,. and. Florence Nightingale Pledge. Motet.—Choir. Benediction. Recessional. Choir—Bchola Cantorum. SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, directed bv Elmer Andrew Steffen.

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SO smart looking that it hardly seems like an apron frock, here Is a design that will exactly fill the bill for the utility garment you have been seeking. The dart fitted raglan sleeves and side closing with long sash are stylish details. Make of gingham, percale o calico. Patterns are sized 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Size 16 requires 4VI yards of 35-inch material. To secure a PATTERN and STEP-BY-STEP SEWING INSTRUCTIONS, fill out the coupon below. THE SPRING AND SUMMER PATTERN BOOK, with a complete selection of late dress designs, now is ready. It's 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, if you want to order it with the pattern above, send in just an additional 10 cents with the coupon.

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Orchard School Aids Are Named for Baseball Game

Alumni, pupils and Mothers Association members of Orchard School are busy selling tickets to the baseball game which is to be sponsored by the association May 23 for the benefit of the school. Final details have been completed by Dale Miller, Indianapolis Baseball Club business manager; Mrs. Frederick Holliday (center) and Mrs. Perry O'Neal, Mothers’ Association members. The game is to be a rivalry battle between the Indianapolis Indians and Louisville Colonels. Heading the alumni ticket sales committee are Patty and Margaret Jameson, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jameson. General ticket sales are in charge of the following teams: Mrs. Howard Nyhart, captain; Mesdames George S. Dailey, L. L. Goodman, W. J. Guenther, Hillis L. Howie. Pearson Smith, Sydney A. SullLan, Harry V. Wade. H. B. West, Louis C. Wilson and E. G. Hauser. Mrs. Gilbert P. Inman, captain; Mesdames Robert C. Alexander, Luther E. Brooks. Edward M. Gass, Charles F. Kahn, Raymond F. Mead, A. W. Noling, Horace Shonle, Leonard Solomon and L. Dean Causey. Mrs. Egbert G. Driscoll, captain; Mesdames Earl R. Beckner, Paul V. Brown, J. C. Daniel, L. J. Levy, W. I. Longsworth, Perry E. O’Neal, B. W. Shook, Irvin Wesley, and Frauds J. Feeney. Mrs. Henry V. Kobin, captain; Mesdames Royer K. Coats, J. C. Daniel, Jasper P. Scott and Robert D. Robinson. Mrs. Thomas A. Hendricks, captain; Mesdames Charles Aker, Herbert Bloemker, Paul V. Brown, Carl F. Eveleigh, Russell Hippensted, John W. Kern Jr„ J. D. Pusey, Albert, L. Rabb and Malcolm Sewell. Mrs. Smiley N. Chambers, captain;

EVENTS LODGES Gertrude Bretney Jr. Club 7, Woman's Relief Corps 10. 2 Sat. 512 N. Illinois-st. Miss Grace Ricketts, president. A. T. A. O. Club. Queen Esther Chapter, O. E. S. 3. 8 Mon. Mrs. Katherine Richardson, 1254 Congress-av. Mrs. Jean Stewart, assistant hostess. Olive Branch Rebekah Lodge 10. 8 Sat. 1336 N. Delaware-;st. Bridge, euchre and bunco. Mrs. Harry Stout, chairman. Prospect Chapter, 452, O. E. S. 7:45 Mon. Prospect Masonic Hall, State and Prospect-sts. Mothers’ program. Dedication of babies. Mrs. Vera Ginn, worthy matrfen. All-American Townsend Club. 7:30 tonight. Odd Fellows’ Hall, 1336 N. Delaware-st. SORORITIES Phi Kappa Alpha. Mon. Frank West, 1526 Hoyt-av, hostess. Fa-Lo-Sis Club. Tonight. Mrs. Erma Worth, hostess. Discussion of dance to be given Sat. with Alpha Eta Pi Fraternity. Janet Ada Club. 8:15 tonight. Mrs. Claude Deal, 1320 W. 25th-st, hostess. CARD PARTIES Queen Margherita Society. Sun. night. Castle Hall. Bingo. Miss Catharine Ferraro, chairman. Big Sisters Maternity Branch, Catholic Wpmen’s Union. 8:30 tonight. St. Roch’s Hall. Cards, lotto and bunco. Lauter Mothers’ Club. 8 Sat. 1309 W. Market-st.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

jjjj K ' fH Slip# iM f w*. HnHßp jjjy ****** HhHVi Bp ’ **B |lp ■ W %: flHpp.: H Pfgpß H; j 1 | jgjfp|t Ii WMmm i JMnHHHHrVr v . M r : & —Photo by W. Hurley Ashby. F. R. D. S.

Mesdames E. C. Atkins, Thomas Harvey Cox. Jesse Fletcher, Frederick T. Holliday, Perry W. Lesh, J. T.

It Is Impossible to Please Every One, Jane Jordan Says

Tell .your perplexities to Jane Jordan, who will answer your letters in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—What is personality and how can one. develop it? I thought I knew, but the other night a very good friend of mine told me I had personality, but the wrong kind. I am considered good-looking and almost everybody else says I have a nice personality. I make friends and keep them easily, but this friend’s remark troubles me and I want to develop the right kind of personality. If you could give me some do’s and don'ts on this subject I would appreciate it. GAIL. Answer—The very first don’t to learn is "don’t be disturbed by what other people say about you.” It is impossible to please everybody. Such a colossal feat would re- SBBSK quire such con- . Gy sta n t re-ar- ||g|L rangement o f ideas and attiturtes that it ■ ~ would make you isl into a sort „r J 0 human ehr.mel- * eon. In tne end ||l you would he regarded as in- ■BSS|y|||jjL "1 sincere and untrustworthy, a Jane Jordan disappointment to yourself and a friend to no one. A worth-while person builds on his own center while maintaining respect for the rights of others and reasonable consideration of their feelings. There always will be people who do not like you. This is particularly true of those who feel inferior to you. It is the insecure ego which suffers most from envy and jealousy and is tempted to gain its own prestige by tearing

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McDermott. Cleon A. Hafe, Arnett H. Owen, Malcolm Sewett and G. A. Wainwright.

Elinor Frantz, Tudor Graduate, to Become Bride The Rev. and Mrs. George Arthur Franz today announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Elinor Frantz, to Dr. Henry G. Clarke, Northampton, Mass. Dr. Clarke is the son of Dr. and Mrs. William P. Clarke. Miss Frantz, who is to be graduated next month from Smith College, is to return here before the wedding date, which has not been announced. Miss Frantz attended Tudor Hall. Dr. Clarke is a Harvard. University Medical School graduate. Engagement Announced Mrs. Flora King announces the engagement of her daughter, Miss Hazel Vivian King, to Edward A. Kehling. son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Kehling. The wedding Is to take place May 23 at the King home.

down the importance of others. To be su it occasionally pays to listen to what one’s friends have to say. The strong personality can weigh personal criticism with a view to determining whether or not it has its basis in fact or in jealousy. The wise thing to do is to pleasantly pin your friends down to more specific’ criticism than the rather vague announcement that you have the wrong kind of personality. If you thoughtlessly wound the feelings of others or cause them unnecessary pain, you are wrong. If you defeat your own ends by a bad approach to a problem, you are wrong. Consider criticism with an open mind, and if it is not instructive, let it roll off your back like water off a duck. n n n Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl in the teens. There is a young fellow about my age whom I’ve known several years, but I have been puzzled as to how I might win him. He doesn’t have a particular girl friend and is rather backward. Please try to help me. PUZZLED MTLLY. Answer—Perhaps he has no real interest in girls. In that case you don't want him. But if his only trouble is shyness, he will welcome encouragement from you. Allow him to see your interest in him and see how he responds. Mrs. Robert White Blake and Mrs. Delmar McWorkman are attending the University of Michigan May festival. Mrs. Fred Hetherington and Mr. and Mrs. Scott Doming are visiting in Miami Beach, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Haymann were recent arrivals at the Wal-dorf-Astoria in New York.

City Camp Fire Girls Drill for Dance Festival

Fete to Be Given in ' Tomlinson Hall on May 28. Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls havj arranged a May folk-dancing festival to be given at Tomlinson Hall at 7 May 28, under direction of Miss Lois Chesterfield. The festival is the first to be presented by the organization in Indianapolis, and is to be open to the public without charge. Instruction in the dances has beer given through co-operation of the Marion County Recreation Bureau. Miss Chesterfield has been assisted by group guardians. These include Mesdames A. L. Jenkins, W. D. Little, Albert Mueller. Eleanor Jeffers, George Hummel, J. F. Bowne. Arthur Specker, Verna Mclntyre, Pauline Davis, Ruth Rankin, V. B. Cain, Heley Beyer, Verna Greenlee, Ruth Phillips and Richard Clark. Other assistants are Misses Martha Ryan, Mary Crites, Nell Alley, Irma Biedenmeister, Marjorie Kaiser, Mary Louise Allen, Kathleen Klaiber, Marjorie Condon and Pauline Mohler. Dances are to be presented in costume. Groups from Schools 76, 60 and the North Methodist Church are to give the Scotch dance; Schools 38. 32, 54 and 29, Norwegian; School 78 and Technical High School, Irish; Schools 85. 58 and 70 and the Irvington Methodist Church, Spanish; Schools 31, 21. 18 and 55. Swedish; Schools 33, 41 and 36, Dutch; Schools 66, 57 and 75 and Shortridge High School, Russian, and Schools 22, 14, 34 and 49, Hungarian. Camp Five Bluebirds will give the Maypole dance. All groups are to join in the finale and the Virginia Reel. The organization expects to make the festival an annual affair. Final rehearsal is to be held tomorrow from 9:15 to 2:30 in Tomlinson Hall.

Leg? on Dance Guests Named Honor guests at the Bruce P. Robison American Legion Past and Auxiliary dance Saturday night are to include A. R. Killian, department commander, and Mrs. Killian. Lafayette; Mrs. Louis J. Lemstra. department president, and Mr. Lemstra, Lafayette: Ralph Gregg, district commander, and Mrs. Gregg, and Mrs. Grover W. Workman, district president, and Mr. Workman. Charles B. Lines is to be master of ceremonies and is to introduce Phil Parsons and Betty Jane Mitchell. dancers. Pasquale Montani is to plav harp numbers during dinner. William Middlesworth and Mrs. Harold C. Pursel are co-chairman. Decorations are in charge of Paul Gary, William S. Mayer, Frank Collman, Dr. William H. Long and Mesdames Fred M. Wolf, C. K. McDowell and P. J. Sertell. Other committees are: Favors, Mr. Sertell, Cecil Stalnaker, Dr. Frank E. Long; Mesdames Richard Thomas and Willard S. Boyle, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Beam; entertainment, Mr. Pursel, Rudolph H. Kyler, Everett Saxton and Mesdames Fred Hasselbring, James J. Jordan and William S. Mayer; tickets. Roland Daley, Mrs. William H. Long and Mr. and Mrs. John Paul Ragsdale. CLUB TO OBSERVE • ITS ANNIVERSARY The Rose Coleman Study Club is to celebrate its 15th anniversary at a luncheon tomorrow at the Lincoln. Miss Ethel Morrison, retiring president, is to install new officers. They are Mrs. Fred Fate president; Mrs. Henry Strohm, vice president; Mrs. Charles McFarland, secretary; Mrs. Audrel Apple, assistant secretary, and Miss Morrison, treasurer. Programs and decorations are to be in keeping with the year’s study of Sweden. A ship is to be the table centerpiece. .

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MY DAY By Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt

Thursday.—Amelia Earhart, Mr. Putnam and I had breakfast this morning and I was interested to hear her say that she felt a great many young people were not getting the proper equipment with which to meet life from their education. Shg has enjoyed her contact at Purdue with tho young people there, and I think she must have been a great help to them in pointing out the ways in which education could be more practical and provide a greater variety of leisure time interests. I worked at my desk most of the morning and had two neighbors from C'mpobello Island, Mrs. Prince and her daughter, Miss Mildred Prince, for luncheon with me. After luncheon I saw first a lady interested in a child from Cambridge, Mass., who had asked the President to help her get the child Into Warm Springs. The President made the necessary arrangements. However, the child's doctor, in writing to Dr. Hoke about her case, explained that he did not think she would profit by the treatment and Dr. Hoke agreed with him on the basis of his report. So, of course, it would not be fair to take her down there and keep her in a place which some other child might have. After that I had a visitor, Mrs. C. E. Merrill, who at one time taught in a Federal hospital here, and who later was employed in developing the Children's Museum in Brooklyn, N. Y. She has an idea that one should develop a Pan-American children's museum here, and that it would be helpful in promoting understanding and better relationship on this continent. I entirely agree with this, but think that a move of this kind should be undertaken by Dr. Rowe of the Pan-American Union. After that I received the graduating class of a Masonic orphanage from Oxford, N. C. They were such a nice group of young people and I -was interested to find out that there were funds which enable them to continue their training so that they eventually face the world with a definite equipment. Some of them are to become nurses or teachers and others are trained as printers and mechanics. None have any difficulty in getting jobs. The President snd I are going to he entertained by a group of Indians who are doing some of their dances on the south grounds this afternoon, and then we drive out to Mount Vernon to have tea with the regents. (Copyright. 1936. by Unitfd Feature Syndicate. Inc.l

Bride-to-Be

Miss Mary Louise Schuster (above) is to be married June 17 to Paul J. Kritsch in St. Catherine of Sienna's Church. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Schuster, 904 Troy-av.

Patroness Club Speaker Named Mrs. Norman Schneider, 685 Mid-dle-dr, Woodruff Place, is to entertain the Mu Phi Epsilon Patroness Club at 2 Wednesday. Mrs. Lafayette Page is to be guest speaker and pianist She is to speak on Isidor Philipp, French composer, with whom she studied, and is to play his compositions. Members of alumnae and active chapters are to be guests. Mrs. Clyde E. Titus has been installed president of the honorary musical organization’s alumnae club. Other officers are Mrs. Maxey Wall, vice president; Miss Grace Hutchings, secretary; Mrs. John A. Sink, treasurer; Mrs. Fred Smith, historian: Mrs. Frank Forry, warden. and Miss Lulu Brown, chaplain.

PAGE 17

Business Clubs Start Sessions Bn United Prcsi MUNCIE, Ind., May 15.—Nearly 600 members of the Indiana Business and Professional Women’s Clubs met here today for the opening of their annual two-day convention. Election of officers is to climax the meeting tomorrow. Mrs. Marie Ferguson, Clinton, is unopposed for the presidency. Miss Ruth Calpha, Newcastle, is unopposed for the first vice presidency. Mrs. Ethel Hendricks, Muncie, and Miss Bessie Rhinehart. South Bend, seek the second vice presidency. Mrs. Sally Butler. Indianapolis, for recording secretary, and Miss Esther Nolan, Clinton for corresponding secretary are unopposed. Miss Harriett Dickinson, Richmond, and Miss Marie Ward Yew, Sullivan, seek the treasurer’s office. Outstanding on the social calendar are the annual dinner for the board of directors tonight and the past president’s luncheon tomorrow at the Delaware Country Club. festTvalTto aid GIRLS CAMP FUND Y. W. C. A.’s Girl Reserve committee is to sponsor a dramatic festival at 7:30 tonight and at 2 tomorrow at Hollenbeck Hall for the benefit of the junior high school camp scholarship fund. Pupils of Helen Starr Bringle, Swarthout Studio, are to appear in the entertainment. Mrs. Walter P. Morton is Girl Reserve chairman, and Misses Evelyn Carpenter and Virginia Goodwin are junior high school division cochairmen. Mrs. James Erwin, Mount Vernon, Ind., while attending the Indiana Federation of Clubs’ convention here this week, is to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Q. Biegler. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Goodwin are visiting in Dillsboro, Ind. Mrs. Woods A. Caperton has been visiting in New York.