Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1937 — Page 17

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THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1937

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

: PAGE

CONVENTION IS MAPPED FOR PROFESSIONAL WOMEN

a — ent @

Expect 500 | Will Attend | © ©

|

Parley Here

Mrs. Nellie Niedstadt to e in Charge of An-

nual Election.

| - Executive board members of the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs are arranging the federation's 20th annual convention to be held in Indianapolis May 14 to 16 in the Severin Hotel. = Mrs. Marie Ferguson Thompson, Clinton, state president, and general chairman, is expecting 500 delegates |and visitors from 83 state clubs. | Indianapolis Club members |. are as§isting the state officers and directors. Mrs. Eva Boyer Shook, Ft. Wayne, district | director, and Mrs. Esther Nolan, Clinton, corresponding secretary, are credentials chairmen. A “fun fest” on May 14 is being arranged by Miss Sally Butler, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Anita Oldham, Greenfield, district | director. A breakfast on the following morning is in charge of Mrs. Ethel Hendricks, Muncie, second vice president, and Mrs. Goldie Kessler, Newcastle, fourth district director. Mrs. Lucille Buchanan Oliver, national field representative, is to be the breakfast| speaker. | Election of officers is to take place {from 12 to 2 p. m. on May 15 on the hotel mezzanine floor. Mrs. Nellie Niedstadt, Crawfordsville, will be in charge. Mrs. Elva Unger, Wabash, is in charge of seating arrange-

Richmond, state treasurer, will direct finances. The committee in charge of a | banquet on May 15 in the Columbia

Thompson, Mrs. Susan Baldwin, Ko- | komo; Mrs. Jeanette Bunnell, Plym-' outh, and Miss Clementine Mat-" thews, Bedford. The clgsing event of the meeting oe i ed will be a breakfast on May 16 at : hotel. The committee includes = Miss Ruth Calpha, Newcastle, re-| iring vi~e president, chairman; | Miss Ruth Sutton, Whiting, and | Miss Elizabeth Hert, Washington. |

Scholarship fund of St.

Mary's-of-the-Woods Alumnae Club is to he increased with proceeds from a bridge party and style show Saturday in Ayres’

| Auditorium.

ar

Windser Honeymoon Castle

een New Link to Americans

By HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer : WI YORK, May 6.—It looks as if it is Edward Windsor's fate to | r involved with Americans. . | Wasse1leonburg Castle, in which it is said he and Wallis Simpson | will spend their honeymoon, is under lease to Count Hans Clemens Her- i man Friederich Wilhelm Heinrich Kasper Alexander Maria von Francken | Sierstotps , whose mother came from Brooklyn. i { It was through Count Hans—not Count von Meunster Derneberg— that Edward subleased the Austrian schloss. Hans sailed a week ago on the Roma to put Wasserleonburg in order for the Duke of Windsor and | his bride, According to friends, he expects to return to the "United | States in| June. : 0 ee mee Count Hans has relatives as well in/| or near New York.

i —

| His mother, who died in 1929, was | Mae Knowlton. His grandfather, the late 'Edwin | Knowlton, manufactured hats and jmust have made money doing it. He left his daughter a million dol‘lars when he died.

Today’s Pattern

Married Prussian Officer

Newport was the scene of Maisie's coming-out party, a social event of i the ‘90s. It was then she attracted the attention of se young Count Johannes von Francken Sierstorpff, a lieutenant in the Prussian Army. They were marriea mn April, 1892, and went to Austria to live. In 1915 her elder son, Edwin, an officer in the Royal Hussars, was killed in France. In 1917, her husband died, leaving his wife and their younger son, Hans, vast holdings: in Silesia. The Countess died in 1929. They say Count Hans leased romantic Wasserleonburg with the privilege of buying it. It is rumored the Duke of Windsor pays about $1000 a month.

Castle Is Historic Parts of Schloss Wasserleonburg date back to medieval times, but the main wings are definitely 18th Century. The castle, a serles of ‘ow build-

Three club members assisting with the party are (left to right) Mrs. Richard Hennessey, Mrs. Russell Clift and Mrs. John H. Blackwell.

Colleges

Parents Preparing to See Sons and Daughters Get Sheepskins.

By BEATRICE BURGAN Ir between classes, college seniors are crowding in as many talkfests as possible, for only a month remains before the students scatter to homes in all parts of the country. Families here are making preparations to attend their sons’ and daughters’ commencements, and many fathers are arranging vacations so they may attend these events. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tharp have la side trip mapped out when they | 80 East to see their daughter Betty | receive her sheepskin from Smith | College at Northampton, Mass. | Their son Carter. a Wabash Col- | lege sophomore, is to accompany [them when they leave the first of ‘June. They will drive to Washington and New York, where Miss | Tharp will join them for a few days | before the commencement on June s (21. + : Miss Katharine Myers’ and Joseph | Myers’ graduations will take Mr. : land Mrs. Walter Myers to the East. : | Miss Myers is to be graduated in : | Miss Tharp’s class and Joseph will : | receive a degree from Yale Univer- | sity, at New Haven. Conn. on the | following day. Walter Myers Jr, i who is finishing his second year in the Yale Law School will witness {his sister’s and brother's commence- | ments, Mr. and Mrs. James Gipe have {planned a 10-day trip after they see | their daughter, Miss Florence" Gipe, I receive her degree at Mount Holyoke | College at South Hadley, Mass. | In New York City they will see. { Miss Mary Alberta Gates, Mr. and : Mrs. William Byram Gates’ niece. ‘Miss Gates, formerly of Indianapoi lis, and a high school classmate of | Florence's, is to return to Indian- | apolis.

When Mr. and Mrs. W. Richard-

—Times Photo.

25th .annual dinner.

Child for School.” Indianapolis Bahai Assembly. 8 p. “Love.”

program.

hostesses.

851 Indiana Ave., rummage sale.

Floyd, chairman. Party.

i Party.

1

EVENTS

Paul H. Krauss Co. Mutual Aid Association. Tonight. Athenaeum. Election. ¥ Party. Irvington Unit 38, American Legion Auxiliary. 2 p. m. Mon. 5403 E. Washington St. To discuss poppy day. English Avenue, Gailield Free Kindergarten Mothers’ Clubs. 1:45 p. m. Tues. 2621 Shelby St. Miss Rubie Stapp, supervisor, “Preparing Your

St. Mary's Academy Alumnae. 2:30 p. m. Sun. Academy Auditorium. Reception for. seniors. Miss Mary Phale, chairman. Mary O'Hara, Mary Frances Wirth, Katharine Walpole, Beatrice Ryan, Maria. Parks, Florence Kasserly, Alene Betz, Louann Wilson, assistants. S. M. S. Club. 11 a. m. Fri. Mrs. Karl Horn, 2543 E. 18th St., hostess. Annual May breakfast bridge. Georgia Neargarder, William Ellison,

SORORITY Lo Sin Loy. 8 p. m. today. Virginia and June Darrow, 522 E. 51st St.,

LODGES : Golden Rule Chapter, O. E. S. Ways and means committee. Sat. a. m.

Camp 3, P.O. of A. Fri. p. m. 2217 E. Michigan St. Mrs. Kathryn

PARTY

17th Ward Women’s Democratic Club. 8 p. m. Mon. 220915 Shelby St. | Mesdames Hazel Green, Owen ‘Riley, Roy Nevitt, Geraldine Mathews, Mable Fischer, committee, :

m. Fri. 1215 Spink Arms Hotel.

7

‘Women Voters ‘Avoid Stand on Court Proposal

By United Press . WASHINGTON, May 6.—The General Council of the National League of Women Voters today declined to take a stand either for or against President Roosevelt's judi- | ciary reorganization proposals. | .The Council adopted a motion by | Mrs. Marion A. Cheek, Buffalo, | N. Y, that no action be taken on

ings, stands high on a hill and is | the court plan. Mrs. Cheek conreached ‘by a winding drive that |tended that the time for ‘“eflective ends in front of the huge baronial | action” had passed, and said mem-

entrance. The interior is typically Austrian, with much dark carved wood, many hunting trophies and a | vast amount of heavy furniture.

{is also a friend of Edward's. He also jos indirect American ties, his wife's aunt being Lady Jean Ward, a sis(ter of Ogden Reid. Another inter(esting angle as far as the Duke of | Windsor is concerned is the fact | that the Countess von Derneberg is

HIC combined with practicality

is important for house frocks, | the niece of his friend, the Ear] of

so you'll find, No. 8639 fills the bill | Dudley.

exactly. ¥'he yoke is gathered to the | new wife move into Wasserleonburg bodice in front and back. The plain | they will be just 50 miles south of skirt is dart fitted in the back. A Salzburg, which a musician described bzcoming notched collar and button |as “the place where you meet all trim corhplete the dress. Good in the people you try .to avoid .in New gingham,

percale, i Bg cham-| york.” bray. . Patterns are size to 50. | :

Size 36 requires 4 yards of 35-inch | fmmm—m—m—m—————————— material. : I To obtain a pattern and STEP- ji BY-STEP| SEWING, INSTRUC- | TIONS in¢lose 15 cents in coin to- | gether with the above pattern num- | ber and your size, your name and address, and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 - W. Maryland |St., Indianapolis. 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.

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| The real owner of Wasserleoig urg | | —Count von Meunster Derneberg—

When Edward Windsor and his |

| bership of the league was too close-

ly divided for the vote to be effective. $ Earlier the Council voted to advocate a constitutional amendment designed to make the amending process “less difficult and more responsive to the will of the electorate.” J. Warren Madden, National Labor Relations Board chairman, told the Council that there is now “real prospect” that the hopes of sponsors of the Wagner Labor Relations Act will be realized. While the validity of the law was uncertain, hundreds of labor disputes were adjusted under it, he said, and since it was validated by the Supreme Court “the experience has been even more promising.” : He charged that a great amount of past industrial disorder was ‘in fact the result of the refusal by employers to respect the right’ of their employees to organize.”

Smart stitching details on soft white kid $4.95

WHEW, BUT BOBBIES BEEN A ' HANDFUL TODAYIM ALL IN!

Better than a ~ beauty nap — protects daintiness, too

ECAUSE of its ACTIVE lather, Lux Toilet Soap leaves skin really fresh—stale perspiration, every trace of dust and dirt removed from the pores. You'll love the soft, smooth feeling of your skin—the delicate fragrance that clings about you. i- "You'll be sure of daintiness.

9 OUT OF 10 SCREEN STARS USE LUX TOILET SOAP

ITS A GOOD THING | CAN RELYON THIS |: i LUX TOILET Soap BEAUTY BATH | di TO PEP ME UP

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Dance Chairman

Miss Virginia Royer (above) and | Robert Von Staden are cochair-" | men of the Scottie Tort to be held | May 15 in Carr's Hall. The dance | is sponsored by the Verus Cordis Sorority and the Shawnee Athletic

Club.

Club Is to Spoasor Night Baseball Game |

Orchard School Mothers’ Club | completed arrangements today to sponsor a night baseball game May 22 at Perry Stadium when the Indians play the St. Paul team. : Mrs. J. Landon Davis is general chairman and Mrs. Perry W. Lesh, | Mothers’ Club president.

son Sinclair go to Poughkeepsie, N. | Y. to attend Miss Dora Sinclair's graduation from Vassar College, on!

June 7, they. will be joined by their son, Thomas Taggart Sinclair, who |

attends Princeton University. Miss Nina Brown's grandmother, Mrs. Harry C. Gilbert, New York City, will be among the spectators at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, N. Y., when Miss Brown completes her course. Mr. and Mrs. Garvin Brown, the graduate’s parents, will leave here to arrive at the college by June 12.

Junior League Writers’ Club Will Close Season With Meeting on May 17

Fifth Year of Scribblers’ Organization Finds Amateur Authors Breaking Into Print and Seeing Members’ Plays Produced. [=

By Z 3 : N When ‘the Indianapolis Junior League Scribblers’ Club meets May 17 at Mrs. David Andrews’ new home in‘ Traders Point, it will mark the official closing or its fifth season. : This delightful but almost unknown organization has as its meme bers Mesdames Samuel Runnels Harrell, chairman: Clarence Alig, Francis Dunn, Thomas Harvey Cox, George Fotheringham, William R. Higgins, Booth Jameson, Fisk Landers, Perry Meek, Carl Mote, Robert Winslow and Mrs. Andrews and Misses Laura Miller and Ruth Lilly. Originally formed to write arti- ¢

cles, stories and poems for the Junior League Magazine, which seemed lacking in contributions from Indianapolis, the club has develgpeti

into an interesting laboratory. ‘for | writers.

Meet Once A Month

They meet once a month in one |

another's homes where their critic, John Armstrong, reads aloud the anonymous contributions. The game is to pierce the anonymity. Frequently Mr. Armstrong reads from the classics to illustrate his points. He says of Scribblers: “They are an advanced group. While not professional, members already have had the thrill of seeing-their stories and poems in print and their plays pro-

j duced on the amateur stage. Their

experience- in studying the aims, and emulating the effects of the best authors is developing . special talents of each, and at the same time, giving the group a full under-

standing of literary craftmanship.” |

Recognition has come slowly to Scribblers but has been doubly sweet for its delay. Mrs. Landers’ article, “The Saving Grace,” which appeared in the January league magazine, was reprinted in the February New Current Digest. “ Mrs. Winslow and Mrs. Dunn each wrote a play this season: which was produced by The Players’ Club. In the league magazine's current issue an article by Mrs. Cox called

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“Endurance Test or 5000 Miles With the Children” will provide the read= er many genuineschuckles. In the same issue, in the department known as “‘Animal Kingdom,” Mrs. Jameson writes about. the Dalma= tion, : Scribblers is a versatile | group, taking itself seriously enough to make an honest effort to write well and meet its own high standards; frivolous enough to, have ‘fun at | meetings, poke gentle fun at itself i and keep to its real purpose—writ= | ing for the love of the craft,

‘Alumni to Hear.

Coach W aldorf

Lynn Waldorf, Northwestern University football coach, is to address a luncheon meeting of the | Northwestern University Alumni | Assodiation at 12:15 p. m. Monday in the Columbia Club. Reservations are to be made with | mrs, Ralph Nessler, alumni presi= | dent, or the Columbia Club by | tomorrow.

Guild Will Elect ; Election of officers is scheduled for a meeting of the Theodore Pot- | ter Fresh Air Guild to be held at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow in the school.

Ln IA A AA

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