Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1937 — Page 5

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SATURDAY, OCT. 30,

Fall Gaiety

Climax Here Due Tonight

Clubs Are Prepared for Gala Halloween Celebrations.

Fall gaiety in Indianapolis is to reach a new peak tonight. Finishing touches to autumn decorations in town and country clubs are being made as local socialites prepare to attend various Halloween events.

The mask supper-dance at the Indianapolis Athletic Club is to be one of the city's outstanding events. Members who have arranged for parties include Messrs. Clarence Anrys, Ralph Knode, E. S. Retter, Carl Fechtman, J. E. Carroll, Gilbert W. Butler, Martinsville, Also Messrs. A. T. Post, C. B. Brownson, Norman Kevers, Harold Jaffe, J. N. Segerson, Hugh Q. Stevens, Vincennes; R. W. Sharpless, Warren Winter, Harry A. Weaver, Harry Beebe, J. A. Sturdyvin, S. F. Lewis, George Bardwell, Robert S. Daily, E. A. Claffey, Earl E. Marple, Tea Marbaugh, J. E. Curtis, George Ross, F. W. Meyers, J. R. Hiner, George Ziegler, Eugene C. Hibbs, J. M. Jewell, Columbus; Edward F. Lynch and Misses Elizabeth Nieberding, Jeane Stucker, Dr. R. V. Myers and Capt. D. S. Babhcock. ‘Punkin Party’ Set

Another event that promises to be enjoyable is the “Punkin Party” at the Columbia Club. Junior Columbians entertained last night with a Halloween party. Preparations have been going on

for the past two weeks at the Indianapolis Country Club for elaborate rustic decorations at their masquerade dinner-dance tonight. Meanwhile, the and Country Clubhouse has transformed into a “Haunted House” that would provide atmosphere for Fu Manchu. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dowling are arrangements cochairmen. A novelty party is to be Woodstock Club's “Big Apple Halloween Dance” with a buffet supper served at 8 p. m. Sherry Walton and his band is to provide music at the Hillcrest Country Club dance to be held from 10 p. m. to 2 a. m. tonight. Robert Allison is arrangements chairman for the masquerade ball at the Hoosier Athletic Club. A grand march is to open the evening’s entertainment and dancing is to continue with Jack Berry and his orchestra.

Riviera Festivities Tonight

Gavlen Goodwin and his orchestra are to play for the annual allclub Halloween dance at the Riviera Club tonight. Another club highlight took place last night when more than 800 juvenile members and their guests frolicked at the annual masked party and dance. A masquerade party, including a cocktail hour, an old-fashioned turkey dinner and a dance is to be held tonight at the Athenaeum from 7" p. m. 10 1 a. m. Prizes are to be awarded for the most elaborate and comical costumes. Among those who have made reservations for parties of four to 10 are Leo M. Rappaport. I. W. Reid, Howard Stout, Carl Prinzler, Dr. L. A. Ensminger, P. M. Fifer, Louis S. Hensley, Eugene York, Dr. C. B. Sputh, Ernest Pflumm, Carl Steinbach, Richard Kurtz, C. Otto Janus, Herman Kothe and Dr. Glenn Pell.

Today’s Pattern

8074

OLLEGE GIRLS to whom the tea dansant is an important occasion, and young business women who like to wear something less tailored at dinner, will delight in a new version of the Princess dress. Pattern 8074 accents its young charm with short puffed sleeves, a sash tie at back and a demure roll collar high at the neck. Among the fabrics you will enjoy using are taffeta, silk crepe, velveteen and thin wool. Rayon print, too, would be good. Pattern 8074 is designed for Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 4% yards of 39-inch material and 1% yards ribbon to trim as pictured. To obtain pattern and Step-by-Step Sewing Instructions inclose 15 cents in cin together with the gbove pattirn number and your size, your name and address and mail to Pattern Editor, the Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis.

1937

RS SE en Son hn

Travels in East After Nuptial

Mrs. James Joseph Lamb was Miss Bette Clare Mumford, daughter of Mrs. Marguerite Lewis Mumford, before her marriage Oct. 16 in the Meridian Heights Presbyterian

i w : i | to provide some degree of economic t | security to Y. W. C. A. workers when

| members of the House and Food

Highland Golf | been |

Church. The couple, on a wedding trip to § Waghington, D.C, is to be at home after Nov. 1 at the Chateau Apartments, 1501 E. Maple Road. Mrs. Lamb attended St. Mary's-of-the-Woods College, Florida Women's College and Butler University. ‘Mr. Lamb attended Purdue University. ha

Bretzman Photo.

Moderate Eating, Proper Diet Best Way to Avoid Overweight

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX The safest way to prevent overweight is to cultivate sufficient will power to avoid eating too much. The best exercise for reducing is the turning of the head from left to right, signifying ‘no thank you” when you are offered a second helping of fattening food. And be very careful of fantastic reducing diets.

They are often dangerous, usually interfere with the normal functioning |

of the body, get fat again. . These are a few of the sound ideas expressed by Morris Fishbein, M. D, in “Your Diet and Your Health.” Dr. Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, whose column appears in The Times daily, is a valiant crusader against whatever seems to him “bunk in medicine and diet.” A Typical, Safe Diet

A few quotations from his carefully written guide are pertinent: “The earliest reduction diets failed to take into account the vitamins and mineral salts. They involved only a count of calories. Many popular reducing diets, like the Hollywood 18-day diet, the milk menus, and similar performances, offer from 500 to 800 calories a day instead of the 1100 or 1200, which may, in most instances, be the absolute minimum compatible with health. Would you like to lose from 2 to 21; pounds a week and yet not lose your health and disposition at the same time? Dr. Fishbein has a so-

lution for your problem. “Here is a menu developed by a medical authority,” he says. “It contains just over 1000 calories and if you eat just these things and no others and carry on your normal work, you will lose from 2 to 2'2 pounds per week. If you do extra work or take more exercise, you will lose more,” he adds. Breakfast

Two small oranges or 1 large orange, sliced, 1 egg, 1 slice toasted bread (thin), 1 small square butter, 1 glass skim milk, 1 cup tea or coffee, clear.

Luncheon or Dinner

One cup consomme, 1 medium slice roast beef, 3 heaping tablespoons spinach, 1 salad containing 8 stalks asparagus on 2 lettuce leaves with vinegar, 6 heaping tablespoons sliced peaches, 1 glass skim milk, 1 cup clear tea.

Supper

Three heaping tablespoons cottage cheese, 3 heaping tablespoons

and almost always make you thin so that you can quickly |

Y.W.C. A. Aids To Hear Plan Of Retirement

Miss Marie L'Hommedieu, na- | tional executive of the Y. W. C. A. retirement fund, is to be the guest of the local organization Monday. | She is to outline features of a plan

| they reach an age of 60 years. A meeting with the guest for

| Service of the Central, Blue Tri- | angle and Phyllis Wheatley { branches is to be held at 10:30 |a. m. Monday. Directors are to | consider Miss L'Hommedieu's plan | further at a luncheon. About 5000 Y.-W. C. A. employees | { throughout the country at present | {have no opportunities for gptering | | any plan for social security, accord- | [ing to Miss L'Hommedieu, since the | | Federal act excludes philanthropic | | organization employees. | The plan includes a disability | | benefit, provides for the return of | | money paid by employees on with- | | drawal, and payment to a bene- | | ficiary in event of death. If the] | plan is adopted at the coming Y. | W. C. A. convention April 22-28, it | would go into operation during the | early fall of 1938. |

Sorority Aid Guest at Dinner

Mrs. Russell Wildasin, Dayton, O., Delta Gamma Sorority privince secretary was guest of the Indianapolis alumnae chapter last night at a dinner in the Butler University

chapter house. Mrs. Wildasin is making an annual inspecition visit to active chapters. She is to spend today and Sunday as a guest of the Butler group. Mrs. Karl Hardy headed the hostess list. She was assisted by Mesdames Robert Zaiser, John G. Williams, Edward P. Fillion, Herman H. Lauter, Misses Dorothy Dauner, Mary Jeanette Sellers, Martha Cook, Betty Ann Nichols, Louise Dauner, Mary Eleanor Cook, Elizabeth Cook, Mary Louise Dennis, Dorothy Helmer and Jean Ale.

Hospital Children To Receive Favors

Crepe paper black cats, witches, pumpkins, and candy favors in Hal- | loween colors are to adorn trays of patients on the Thomas Taggart Memorial Children’s floor of the | Methodist Hospital tomorrow. The Beacon White Cross Guild, a junior group, made the favors at a meeting in the home of Mrs. John S. Harvey. The White Cross Children's Cheer Guild is giving the candy. The guilds are planning favors for Thanksgiving also. The Beacon Guild recently elected Miss Mary Ann Ulrich president; Carolyn Harvey vice president, and Beity Jean Barnhill secretarytreasurer.

caulifiower, 1 baked tomato, 15 head lettuce with lemon juice or vinegar, 6 heaping tablespoons red raspberries, 1 glass skim milk, 1 cup clear tea. You probably are ready to say that such is not a reducing diet, that it contains a lot more food than you normally eat. Listen to Dr. Fishbein: “The observation is false. The list contains a variety of ingredients, but all are chosen

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

with exact knowledge of what they | provide in the way of calories and | the essential food substances.”

PAGE 5

Fights Divorce

#

Rocafort.

From Sickbed

Groucho’s Brand of Humor

Fails to Score With Judge

HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 30 (U. P.).—Groucho and Chico Marx sat in court today looking glum as owls towards a jury that will decide whether they must go to jail on criminal copyright infringement charges. They are accused of broadcasting a skit, “The Hollywood Adventures of Mr. Dibble and Mr. Dabble,” without permission of the authors. The maximum penalty is a year in jail and $1000 fine.

: y » It was the first gn i y <i Hs, era. Wayman Adams | 5m oo Cosseave mesic that To Do Portrait For Federation

it was no occasion for levity. Groucho ascertained that when | he turned from the witness stand | toward the judge yesterday and { with hands fluttering in gestures, | began to explain: “Why, judge, we never stole anye

Wayman Adams, internationally- | thing in our lives. Why, we pay | known portrait painter of New | ,nq pay and pay and ...” The York, and a native of Muncie, Ind., | floor-mop mustache of paint was

| will make a portrait-sketch in cele-

missing from his lip, but his actions

Times-Acme Photo. The Count of Covadonga, weak from the ravages of an ailment inherited from his Bourbon ancestors, announced from his sick bed in a Miami, Fla.,, hotel that he will contest the divorce action filed in Havana, Cuba, by “his commoner wife, the lovely, dark-eyed Marta

| bration of American Art Week, for | were familiar. | the benefit of the Indiana Federa- | “That,” the judge snapped, tion of Art Clubs, in Block's Audi- | he enough of that.” torium at 8 o'clock Monday night. | Mr. Adams started his career as | a pupil of William Forsythe, and| Groucho's | subsequently studied with William | hands M. Chase in Italy and | Henri, Spain. | of the important in Indiana, as well as numerous | directed. famous prizes throughout the | country.

Groucho’s Grin Freezes

pauzed in mid-air.

R. Foulke prize; in 1916 the J, I.| just as humbly. Holcomb prize for Indiana artists; | in 1918, the Frank G. Logan prize | the jury today. from the Art Institute of Chicago; | ments remained. 1925, Hoosier Art Salon prize; 1926, |

the Altman Prize of the National | *V° Academy of Design. From 1926 to | 2150 brothers.

“will

grin froze and his

He

Robert | gulped, his eyes widened and he He has received all | resumed his testimony meekly, he art prizes given | faced the jurors to talk as he was

Chico, the sharp-faced member of . | the famous team of comical brothIn 1914, he received the Mary T.| ers, followed to the witness stand

The case was expected to reach Only final argu=

The brothers were accused of ape

“#. | the John C. Schaeffer Prize: 1926. | propriating the skit of authors Care roll and Garrett Graham, who are

1933 he won many of the important | prizes given in the East, and in 1933 | .

Party Given for

Phoebe Cummins Before Wedding

Misses Dorothy Ann Brown and Frances Rita Noll entertained last night in the Columbia Club for Miss Phoebe Ann Cummins. Miss Cummins is to be married to Preston George Woolf Nov. 9 in the Marott Hotel crystal ballroom. Decorations and appointments last night were in the brial colors, red and white. The hostesses were assisted by their mothers, Mrs. Alfred Noll and Mrs. Thad C. Brown. Guests included Mrs. Laurence G. Cummins, mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs, Merrett Woolf, mother of the bride-groom-to-be; Mesdames Paul MecNamara, L. G. Cummins Jr.; Oscar Jose Jr.; Richard Disher, Clyde Bowers, J. Barton Griffin and Victor Hertz. Misses Mary Gertrude Killilea, Dorothy Kenne, Mary Beth King, Catherine Markey, Charlene and Catherine Heard, May Barr and Helen Leppert.

Attend Bethel Meet

nd : i Several Indianapolis residents are attending the inspection meeting of

{ Bethel 6 Chapter, Indiana Order of

Job's Daughters, in Washington, Ind. Among them are Mrs. Eula Griffy, grand secretary; Mesdames Elizabeth Tyre, Ethel Warner, Marie Leonard and Mae Marcum Jacob, past grand guardians; Mesdames Eileen Money and Elizabeth Uhlan and James Lynch.

Fete Bride-to-Be Mesaames Morris Levinsky, Nathan Rice and W. B. Dryan entertained recently at the Antlers Hotel

with a linen shower for Miss Mollye

Does Your

Give your business this

Telephone Efficiency Test

1. Do telephone calls from your customers get prompt answers 2

2. Are buyers turned away from your "telephone doorway” by frequent busy signals?

3. Do some of your telephones "loaf" on the job; are" others overworked ?

4. 1s your organization really trained to obtain the greatest benefit from your telephone service?

5. If you have a switchboard, do calls back up on your operator due to lack of inside telephones?

6. Does your telephone set-up give maximum efficiency to employees, and maximum service to the people who deal with you?

We suggest

FREE. . . this booklet outlining correct telephone habits. Call the Business Office or send us

SP. ing whether or

telephone problem is being handled in the best possible manner.

@® Check up on your telephone setup. Conditions in your business may have changed and telephone facilities that served you so admirably some years ago may not be

suited to your present requirements.

carefully the questions in the “Telephone Efficiency Test.” The manner in which you answer the in-

quiries should aid you in determin-

that you consider

not your particular will be

Telephone Jet-u FIT Your Needs

You probably will be in doubt about some of the questions and you may not be completely satisfied in regard to other points. If such is the case, and you want to be sure that your telephone setup fits your needs, just call our Business Office. A representative, skilled in such matters, will be glad to aid you in analyzing your requirements. Any suggestions made

designed to increase the

value of the service to you. There is

no charge or obligation.

Levinsky. Miss Levinsky

married Nov.

is to be 7 to Ben Mansfield. The table was laid for 50 guests.

he was awarded the Gold Medal for (FLEXRAY

Achievement in Portraiture from the Holland Society of New York. Among his first sitters were Booth | ARCH COMFORT SHOES MOST STYLES $4.95 44 N. Pennsylvania St.

Tarkington, Meredith Nicholson | and James Whitcomb Riley. \

Times

The 28th and

Notice to Contestants

in the Silhouette Contest

final silhouette is published in today’s Times

The contest closes next Saturday, November 6. All entries must be delivered to The Times by 6 P. M. on that date or before.

Read the rules carefully.

When you have completed indentification of each of the 28 silhouettes and have answered all the questions, send them together with your essay, in one envelope to—

The Silhouette Contest Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland Street, Indianapolis, Ind.

photo). in one envelope Times, contest.

of not more than 3. Judging will

pon.

will appear can

1. Identify the silhouette 2. Keep all photos

gether with answers to the Silhouette Contest Editor of The Indianapolis following completion of the Send with them the name of your favorite movie star and an essay

A. Correctness of identification,

B. Correctness and completeness of answers to questions in cou-

C. Most meritorious 100-word es= says, in opinion of local judges. 4. Answers to the question concerning coming pictures in which the stars

list of coming pictures which appeared in the Hollywood Forecast Section of

CONTEST RULES

The Times, Oct. 13. Any coming films not mentioned in this edition will not be considered in the judging. 5. Employees and their families of The Indianapolis Times, Scripps-How= ard Newspapers. American Airlines or any movie concern, branch or local theater are barred from participating, 6. In case of a tie, equal prizes will be awarded, 7. Upon entering this contest and by submission of answers, the contestant accepts these rules as binding and agrees that the decision of The Times in all matters affecting the conduct of the contest and making of awards shall be final and conclusive. The Times will not be responsible for submission or communications unduly delayed or lost in the mail. Each entry and submission becomes the property of The Times and will not be returned.

(not the

and silhouettes and send them to-

100 words telling why. be based on:

be gleaned from the

*15 pairs of tickets from each of the following theaters. Apollo, Lyric, Circle and Loew's.

The Indianapolis Times

101 PRIZES

First Prize—Roundtrip plane trip to Hollywood via American Airlines, with tour of studios.

Second=—$100 in cash. Third=—$50 in cash. Fourth—Vacation trip to Fifth—%$25 in cash. Sixth—%$10 in cash. Next 10 Prizes—$5 each. Next 10 Prizes—%3 each. Next 75—Pair of theater tickets each.*

Chicago via air.

Indiana,

A Scripps-Howard Newspaper