Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1938 — Page 9
- Johnson, study director.
H Vi (
ook Reviews Highlight
‘Women’s Club Meetings: Card Party Is Scheduled
Frantz to Discuss ‘A New Shakespeare Candidate’ For Indianapolis Literary Group; Two ~~ P.E. O. Events Are Set.
Literary meetings and book reviews predominate in the meetings
y and tomorrow of Indianapolis women’s clubs.
One men’s or-
ganization will hear a paper and a number of luncheon and dinner meetings have been planned for women’s groups. A card party has been
‘scheduled for one meeting at another local gathering.
“A New Shakespeare Candidate”
will be the subject of a paper by George A. Frantz at the meeting tonight of the Indianapolis Literary Club at the clubrooms, D. A. R. chapter house, .824 N. Pennsylvania St. Robert A. Adams, president, will ‘preside at the meeting.
Mrs. Harry Miesse entertained members of the Indianapolis Parliamentary Law Club at a 12:30 o'clock luncheon today at her home, 3219 N: Meridian St.
A study group on bylaws will be conducted by Mrs. John Downing Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames Cecil P. Clark, E. F. Cline, Herman D. Davis and Miss Frances Darracott. Mrs. Francis A. Rugg, Boston, Mass, will present an illustrated lecture on “East Meets West” at the guest day meeting of the Woman's Research Club at Ayres’ auditorium today. : Members of the social and program committees will have charge
of the meeting. Mrs. Gino A. Ratti
heads the programm committee, assisted by Mesdames George A. VanDyke, Charles Compton, Walter E. ‘Jenny and Stephen J. Corey. Mrs. Warren D. Oakes is chairman of ‘the social committee. Her assistants include Mesdames Arthur P. Thomas, John G. Benson, D. A. Grove, R. W. Mercer, Richard M. Millard and Theodore E. Rogt.
.” Miss Elizabeth A. Gallagher will present an educational program at the meeting at 7 o'clock tonight of Chapter G, P, E. O. Sisterhood, at the home of Mrs. R. L. McKay, 353 N. Bolton Ave. Assistant hostesses
and a Thanksgiving program will be featured
business meeting of Alpha Beta Latreian Club tomorrow. Mrs. Wilbur Smith will assist the hostess,
Mrs. A. L. Ballinger will conduct “The Spencer Quiz” at the meeting at 2 p. m. tomorrow of the Spencer Club. Mrs. C. A, Cassady will be hostess to the group at her home, 5936 | University Ave. Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. J. E. Joslin and Mrs. Harry Joslin,
Members of the Late Book Club
meeting tomorrow. Mrs. S. C. Wasson and Mrs. C. J. Renard will be hostesses. :
Mrs. Demarchus Brown, study leader of the Indianapolis Alpha Delphian Club, will lecture on “Eleanore of Aquitaine—A Vamp of the 12th Century” at the meeting tomorrow evening at the Hotel Lincoln. Dinner will be served at 6:45
p.m. .
Mrs. Nicolas J. Connor will review “Katherine Tegawitha” at the meeting tomorrow of the Proctor Club at the home of Mrs, William Freaney, 4811 Central Ave.
Alpha Kappa Latreian Club members will hear a book reviewed by Mrs. O. M. Newton at their meeting tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Royer Knode Brown, 5868 Carrollton Ave.
A book review of “Pedlar’s Progress” (Edell Shepard) will be presented by Mrs. E. L. Pedlow at the meeting tomorrow of the Anagnous Group, Epsilon Sigma Omicron. Mrs. W. D. Keenan will entertain
will hold a card party at their]
3
Called World's ‘Best-Dressed’
Hailed in the smart capitals of Europe as “the world’s best-dressed woman,” Madame Antenor Patino is pictured on a recent visit to Paris. She wears a Paquin coat of broadtail, cut on redingote lines with a restrained flare. Under it is a simple black wool Mainbother frock with touches of embroidery outlining the high neckline, >
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Envoy's Wife a Vivid Behuty;
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
Art Patrons
| Plan Affair| For Dec. 7|,
Herron Tea Is Set for Tomorrow; Display Landscapes.
Plans for the weekly lecture-tea tomorrow and a musical tableaux to be held Wednesday, Dec. 7, today
were occupying the attentions of Indianapolis Art Association mem-
{| bers. Meantime, an exhibit of land-
scapes by Glen Mitchell was on display. Mrs. H. H. -Arnholter will be chairman of hostesses for the lec-ture-tea at 2:15 p. m. tomorrow at the museum. Wilbur D. Peat will speak on “Mediums of Art Expression” . Assisting Mrs. Arnholter will be Mrs. Thomas Scanlon, Mrs. A. R. Scheidenhelm, Miss Constance Forsyth and Miss Isabell Parry. Mrs. Clyde Osborne and Mrs. : Failey will preside at the tea table. Rehearsals have been started for the musical tableaux to be presented at the John Herron Art Museum. Members of the association ‘will pose in a frame to represent 16 famous paintings. The event is sponsored by the membership committee of the organization with Mrs. Frederic H. Sterling, chairman. Wilbur D. Peat is’ directing. Mrs. Newell C. Munson and Mrs, Robert Frost Daggett are cochairmen of the pictures and Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter is music chairman, Ea ay Mesdames William Allen Moore, F. Neal Thurston and Edgar Kiser are in charge of costumes. Miss Anna Hasselman is painting the scenic backgrounds, assisted by Mrs. Noble
Eric Dalton. Dr. John Ray Newcomb and Reginald Garstang are in charge of makeup and John Kautz heads the lighting committee. Membership committee members who will assist include Mesdames Albert J. Beveridge Jr. Lee Burns, Paul Rochford, Frederick G. Appel, E. H. Bingham, Charles Pfafflin and Dan W. Flickinger. Music will be provided by Miss Jean Orloff, vio-
R. Bi
Dean, Mrs. Dagett and Mrs. John] |
so renses
molded shoulders and © a small, Jaunty collar. | If, during ‘National Pur Week this week, you decide to ‘search for a ' coat which ‘will be light ‘as a feather, | smart as a whip and sure to wear well for | Years and ‘years, by all ‘means consider ‘sheared raccoon, It | resembles . nutria or beaver, | comes in a variety of short, chubby ' Jackets as well as longer coats, | and is as flattering to mature figures as it is very youthful ones.
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PAGE | [Bread Dish | A Cinderella Of Puddings
Guests Are Fooled, but Best of All, It Really ~ Tastes Good. Ni
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX Bread pudding can be a Cinderella. From humble origins it often becomes the princess of desserts. . This one wears a crown of jelly. 4
Frosted Jelly Pudding (Serves 4 to 6)
® One cup %-inch bread cubes, 1 egg and 2 egg yolks slightly beaten; | % cup sugar, % teaspoon salt, 1 tea= spoon vanilla, 2 cups milk scalded, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 cup plum jelly or any other red jelly, 2 €Bg whites, 4 tablespoons sugar. #| Place bread cubes in greased bak4/ing dish. Combine egg and egg yolks with sugar, salt and vanilla, Add milk slowly, stirring constantly. |Add butter and pour over bread. ‘Place in pan of hot water and bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 30 minutes. Spread with jelly. Beat egg whites until foamy throughout, Add" sugar, 2 table|spons at a time, beating after each | addition until sugar is blended. | Then continue beating until mix (ture will stand in peaks. Pile lightly on pudding. Return to oven and |bake 15 minutes longer or until i ‘delicately browned. Decorate with = jetted jelly. 1
Kor
‘Winning Candidates Will Be Entertained
| The newly elected candidates for Marion County and City offices will be guests at an informal reception tomorrow evening at the Palm Room of the Claypool Hotel. The meeting is sponsored by the Marion County Women’s DemoNt cratic Club. Mrs. P. C. Kelly will & | preside.
Bridge Series Is Set At Meridian Hills
ANNOUNCEMENT!
Young, Chic, Mother of Two
By ROSETTE HARGROVE Times Special Writer PARIS, Nov. 21.—Observers with a keen eye for chic among the fashionable set of England and the Continent are enthusiastic over their latest candidate for the title of “world’s best-dressed woman.” She is Madame Antenor Patino, the former Dona Christina de Bourbon. Her husband is Bolivan Minister to the Court of St. James. It is agreed that few have worn the title as graciously and unaffectedly as Madame Patino. Not only is she the youngest of all envoys’ wives—she has just celebrated her 25th birthday—but she is also a recognized beauty, a perfect Spanish type. She has the most delicate features in a perfect oval face, large limpid black eyes fringed with long, naturally curly lashes; the comPlexion of ‘a blush rose, pearly teeth and tiny hands and feet. Of medium height, Madame Patino has an 18-inch waist and a slim, per-
fectly ‘proportioned figure. The world’s best-dressed woman ® 3 of the tin king, in 1930, when she W orkers To Hold Meeting
married Antenor Patino, elder son S ® ] Was 17 years old and had just made 0C1a Local social workers will meet at
her debut. ‘They have two -children, girls, one 6 and the other 3. 6 p. m. today at the Y. W, C. A, for, a dinner meeting.
The daughter of the Duc Durcal, Dr. George Stevens, director of
linist; Mrs. Genieve Hughel Lewis, cellist, and Mrs. Clarence Coffin, pianist, members of the Orloff trio.
A series of duplicate contract games are to be held on alternate The exhibit, painted in Mexico by Thursday nights beginning Dec. 1 Mr. Mitchell, former Indiana resi- at the Meridian Hills Country Club.
dent, opened yesterday. He has spent several summers as director of | Ine Series will continue through
an art colony in Mexico sponsored 12 evenings of play. Special family, by the Minneapolis School of Art, |dinners will be served on the nights where he has been an instructor lof play since 1929, Mrs. E. A. Peterson is chalima Robert‘ /Tschaegle, assistant cur-| IS. E. A. Pe Srson Js man ator of the museum, gave a gallery [Of arrangements. She is assisted by talk yesterday afternoon on Hob-|MT. Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. George bema’s painting, “Avenue of Trees.” S. Olive and Mr. and Mrs. Marshall This is the second of a series on |C: Knox. “Re-examination of Well-Known| The rules allow players to choose
Stanley and Masterpieces.” their partners. Prizes will be]
The memorial exhibit of portraits|awarded at each meeting and nd Thomas, Ine.
will be-Mrs. W. B. Ward and Miss Marisue Spillman. ]
Mrs. Forrest W. Danner entertained members of the Carnelian Club. at a 12:30 o'clock luncheon -and bridge party today at her home, 402 N. Meridian St. Assistant hosiesses were Mrs. Robert Elliott and Mrs. Louis A. Fleury.
~ Mrs. Victor R. Jose will present. a. paper on “The Boy Shelley” at the meeting today of the Irvington ‘Woman’s Club at the home of Mrs. ~~ Beecher J. Terrell, 509 N. Ritter Ave, Mrs. John S. Harrison, president, will conduct the meeting.
members at her home.
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A program on “Family Spacing,” under the leadership of Mrs, Fay Yakey, will be featured tomorrow at the meeting of the Alpha Latreian Club.
‘A Thanksgiving program will be presented under the direction of Mrs, Thomas Staver at the meeting tomorrow of the Social Study Club at the home of Mrs. Oscar Wadsworth, 911 N. Layman Ave. The Marigold Garden Club will hold a guest day meeting at 2 p. m. today at the home of Mrs. Rollin Spiegel, 128 W. 73d St. Mrs. Spiegel will be assisted by Mrs. David Fox. Miss Margaret March-Mount of the U. S. Department of Forest Research will be guest speaker at the meeting. Her subject will h& “The Spirit of Forestry.”
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Two papers will be presented at the meeting at 2 o’clock| this afternoon of the New Era Club at the ‘home of Mrs. E. E. Padgett, 3648 N. Delaware St. A covered dish luncheon was served. Mrs. Walter J. Mercer's paper will be on “Kidnaped Americans: The Negro,” and Mrs. John W. Jacobs ‘will talk on “Vanquished Americans: ‘The Indians.” A program of Negro and Indian music will be a feature sof the meeting.
Three chapters of P. E, O. Sisterhoed will conduct meetings tomeorrow. Chapter W will meet at 2 ‘o’clock with Mrs. Thomas B. Milli‘kan, 3321 Carrollton Ave, The pro‘gram subject will bel ‘Juvenile ‘Books.”
. A book review of “Nancy Ship‘pen” (Livingstone), by Mrs. J. E. ‘Angell, Galion, O., will be read at ‘the 1 o'clock luncheon meeting tomorrow of Chapter U af the home of Mrs. J. M. Smith, 53 N. Audubon Road. Mrs. J. R. Loomis will ‘present “Gleanings from the Record.” Miss Catherine Smith Will went to Cecil and Dorothy A. assist the hostess. | Spiegel,
| + Other prize winners were Carolyn rt; 1 be d na biindey Lien ty ay G. Bradley, Helen Briggs, Edmund
: Brucker, Ruthven H. Byrum, Ernest Chapter S at the home of Miss Jean) ; LH, Gregg, 619 E. 32d St. “Amateur |S Foster and Hill Sharp.
Photography” | will be discussed by Met Sold Out for
P. Ward Holaday. Mrs. Edward B. Crowell will sing. Miss Donna Alles . y 3 Tonight’s Opening NEW YORK, Nov. 21 (U. P)—
will be assistant hostess. A debate on the “Equal Rights The Metropolitan Opera opens its 54th season tonight in typically
Amendment” will be conducted at the meeting tomorrow of the Meridian Heights Inter-se Club at the grandiose fashion—a sellout from home of Mrs, F. A. Linton, 4819 diamond horseshoe boxes to standGuilford Ave. | go ing room. . Those who will participate in the| Verdi's “Otello” will be the opendebate are Mesdames Oral Bridg-|ing night's -performance with Gioford, F, X. Kern, J. J. Davis and ,S.|vanni Martinelli singing the title ~ M. Ford. Mrs. W. B. McCaw will|role and Lawrence Tibbett as Iago. Marcia Caniglia, Italian soprano, will make her North American
serve as assistant hostess. Mrs. Paul Whittemore, 6120{debut as Desdemona. Ettore Panizze, will conduct.
Central Ave, (will be hostess at a
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Gordon B. Mess Wins Art Prizes
Gordon B. Mess, Indiana Artists Club president, carried off prizes for both his entries in the club’s exhibit, whieh opened Saturday in L. Si Ayres’ tearoom foyer. One hundred and fifty-two oils, watercolors and prints by 81 Indiana artists are being exhibited. Mr. Mess won the Wallace O. Lee purchase prize for oil, also one of the Indiana Artists Club purchase prizes. Artists Club purchase prizes for oils also were awarded Louis W. Bonsib and Flora Lauter. Artists Club purchase prizes for watercolor
through Nov. 217. of the series. > i _
% 7 : oi i a Spanish grandee, she was edu- / _ _ % cated partly in Madrid, partly in rr Pn _ the medical care division of the @ State Department of Public Wel- 7
Paris, spending two years at a fin- _ / 7% fare, will discuss the mental hy- _ 7 ; : \ __
ishing school in England. She speaks giene program in Indiana. _ _ , > 4 FR - : a _ _
French, English and of course, Spanish, fluently, the first two withDr, Stevens, who recently has come to Indiana, has done out-
out the slightest trace of accent. She standing work in his treatment of
knows German and Italian besides, patients suffering from dementia
almost as well—a great asset for a diplomat’s wife. praecox in institutions for the insane,
Madame Patino says that she follows no beauty routine; no facials, has no standing appeintments with beauty experts. She uses one sort of cream, a well-known and not particularly expefsive one at that, and very little makeup, Her vivid beauty does not need it. Beyond a daily massage, she never does any setting-up exercises, eats as much as she can and whenever she feels like it. Her trouble is trying to put on weight, not lose it. Madame Patino usually chooses her wardrobe at the time when the collection is shown to private clients. She never buys indiseriminately, but knows exactly what she wants and why. S8he never is interested in hearing what other smart women have selected or whether they, too, have chosen the particular model she has chosen — it wouldn't alter her decision anyway.
Fond of Picturesque
She likes picturesque, colorful clothes, especially for the evening, and wears them perfectly, always with great dignity and poise, Blue is her favorite color, especially the bright shade of royal which is s0 fashionable this winter, and naturally she wears a lot of black. Mainbocher makes all of her clothes,
Jewish Women Plan Party and Bake Sale
The Indianapolis Council of Jewish Women will hold a card party and baking sale at 2 p. m. tomorrow at Block’s auditorium. Mrs. David Lurvey heads the card committee and Mrs. Liebert Mossler is in charge of the food sale. They are assisted by Mrs. Sam Dobrowitz and Mrs. Rudolph Domont. Prizes will be awarded.
Class to Sponsor Party gO Members of the 1938 class at St| _ Mary's Academy will sponsor a card i _ party at 8 p. m. tomorrow, at the TT 4 school auditorium. Members of the 7 committee in charge include Misses Nancy Lavelle, Mary Jonas, Mary Frances Lutz, Helen ‘Marie Healy, Ruth Schmidt, Dorothy Jonas, Mary Wheeler and Marianne Klebes.
EVENTS - LODGES 7 Beech Grove 465, O. E. 8. Tues. Beech Grove Masonic Hall, Entertainment. Mrs. Ethel MeCormick, worthy matron; Earl McCor-
mick, worthy patron,
Ladies of R. 8. E. 8. 8 p.m. Tues, Hotel Lincoln, Mrs. J. A. Cassady, Mrs. Harold Klepfer, hostesses. .
CARD PARTIES
Altar Sodality, Holy Angeles Church. 8:30 p. m, Mrs. Harry Lord and Mrs. Martin Feeney, supper, 5-8 p. m,, Tues, St. George's Episcopal Church. 8:30 Pp. m. Tues. Parish hall, Miss Margaret Eberhardt, chairman.
SORORITY
Lamda Xi Delta. 8 p. m. today. Hotel Riley, Midnight supper and slumber party, Sat. Whispering Winds.
CLUBS
Independent Social. Tues. Mrs. May VanNatta, 3834 Graceland, hostess. Dessert luncheon. Mrs. Allan T. Fleming, assistant ‘hostess. Inter-Alia. 1 p. m. Tues. “Handicraft of Italy,”
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en) a (2 Gl AN INDIANAPOLIS Power 22 2,
