Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1951 — Page 27
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Adele Astaire and Eve Symington Give Fine Performances at Drawing Room Fete By ELISE MORROW
WASHINGTON, Mar, 17—There are almost no night clubs of any distinction in Washington, but a musical
performance that would have dazzled any Broadway producer was given privately in a Georgetown drawing room one
even this week.
i
Astaire,
the first of the society chanteuses Jang in New York City. during the 30s.
ington chairman of ‘the National Security purges Board. She no longer sings proally, but her throaty voice is still lovely. n’s brother, Jerry Wadsa very good piano and another
vs in, pia linked at a guitar.
on 3 fledged evening's entertainment. dels Astaire is quite gray-haired now, but vivid as she was 20 years ago.
“all her old num
ptovisations of her own that fit no category.
and airy as a soap bubble, ahd sings In the same sort of cracked, funny voice as her brother, Fred. ‘Other guests, non-creative but with great decorative value, _ were former Presidential As_sistant.and Mrs, Clark M..Clifford. “The glamour endeth not here: Madame Bonnet, wife of the French Ambassador, shared Charles Boyer, the French actor and matinee idol, with a select group from resident and official society. Not only Boyer but the pink, bloated British actor, Charles Laughton, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Lady Hardwicke, and Actress Agnes Moorhead were honor guests at 8 French embassy reception.
hostess had collected an array of talent that included now divorced from Lord dish and married to Kingman
sad ving, a. Vite, and Eve Symington, and
The four put
Elise Morrow
She t through the Black Bottom, the Can Can, bumps and grinds, the Charleston, and several im-
She is still light
., with an aerial,
: best
Madame Bonnet's entertaining is as careful, economical, and almost as stylized as her
wardrobe. The sound-little-'
black-dress philosophy of
clothes, the well worked out,
efficlent, unextravagant party routine, No dress which does not have a clear function, no guest whose purpose is not also clear, This policy is entirely sensible, and has made Madame Bonnet without a doubt - the diplomatic hostess ° in Washington as well as one of the best dressed women.
o o ” S80, WEARING one of her black Dior dresses, Madame
The Mature Parent—
Parents’ Battles Create
Confusion for Youngsters
Here is another of Muriel Langlences 2 52;-axticlesé—one of her columns that go to heart of American life, the family. Fhey are about the everyday problems of“
parents with their children.
The author writes from long cxpericics'as a.
eounselor on child guldance.
=
By MURIEL LAWRENCE
the
7
Mrs. Lawrence
IKE MOST FATHERS, Jack's father meant well. When Jack disobeyed, his father docked his allowance. “You have to pay for doing wrong,” he would say. Jack's mother meant well, too. But she resented the fact she had to run the home on a small household budget. So when Jack's allowance was cut, she sympathized with him, and would slip him
some change on the side.
“Your father is a stingy man,” she would say. .,“Why wouldn't I help you? We're both in the same boat ...” When Jack Was 13, he was picked up for stealing money from
his schoolmates’ lockers.
His father and mother couldn’t believe it. They were shocked
and bewildered. If they had been told that they were responsible |
for Jack's trouble, they wouldn't have believed that either. Neither of them had any idea that they had used their child as a weapon ~-t0 hurt and defy each other. 5 An occasional disagreement between a father and mother ‘over discipline of their youngster is to be expected. But when these disagreements occur too often, they can indicate that ether "and deeper conflicts exist within the parents’ marriage itself.
" 2 “" Ld
WHEN OUR MARRIAGE suffers from such serious splits it »-i8 better to acknowledge that they exist, than to pretend they aren't there. If we are not ready to try and solve the cleavages, .. we should know that, too. It is by facing these two facts that we can protect our child from hurts he is bound to suffer when his parents are involved in a secret battle. Such secret battles encourage just the kind of secret alliance Jack's mother made with him against his father. . ro It was the secrecy of the battle and the alliance that gave
. Jack his training in deceit.
8 '® 8
None of us can always agree with the decisions made by our
marriage partner for our child. But we can try to avoid involving our youngster in our feelings of resentment about that de- «~ cision. He will be only too quick to turn a carelessly critical or disparaging remark into a split of parental authority that he can
use to his own advantage.
Failure to present a united front of authority can create
.- confusions in children that follow them into life. You'd be surprised what an honest desire to present such a united front can do toward making it a fact.
For that desire,
genuinely felt, is the spur we may need to encourage us to win "a better and happier understanding between our marriage part-
mers and ourselves.
In winning it, we may regain a husband or wife as well as
: our child's security.
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Bonnet greeted such varied important ones as Betty Fulbright, the pretty wife of the RFC-investigating Senator from Arkansas and one of Madame Bonnet's ington; the former investment broker, now ambassador to Ireland, ‘George Angus Garrett
and Mrs. Garrett; former Sena-
tor from Florida Claude Pepper (now in private law practice) with his fun-loving wife, Mildred. Mrs. Pepper was wearing one of the great threats to mankind, the Washington cocktail party hat. This was an object a foot-long feather which almost decapitated Mr. Laughton.
Madame Bonnet served !
champagne, pour La Belle Patrie, Bcotch and soda, pour Le Sport, hot cheese hors d'oeuvres and small pastries. Boyer was successful, though middle-aged and hardly as romantic as most women imagined he would be. “I suppose it was ‘worth it to see him,” said one dowager, "but I still feel disillusioned.”
“a 8»
best friends in Wash-
OTHER LUCKY guests. were |
Patsy Webb, wife of the Under ‘Secretary of State James FE. Webb; Mrs. Hume Wrong, wife of the Canadian ambassador: Vice Admiral - Emory Land:
Maj. Gen. Anthony McAuliffe: |
Mrs. Stanley Reed, wife of the Supreme Court associate justice; Associate Justice Tom Clark. ;
Black - browed, intense Sen.
Robert Nixon of California with his pretty blonde wife; and the Godey ladies, Mrs. Millard Tydings and Mrs. Rahel Fitch, daughters of former ambassador to Moscow Joseph E. Davies,
| Mrs. Tydings and Mrs. Fitch have a quality not quite of the world; they look like a John i Singer Sargent painting, with | an elaborate, classic, dying | swan, old-fashioned beauty. _ Madame Perle Mesta, our
SOR TTR
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Private Parfy Includes Talent For Own Floor Show
minister to Luxembourg, will be back in town in 10 days or so for a visit—her first since last fall. Undoubtedly official, but will probably start a social stir nevertheless. It is to be hoped she does not cross the path of Lady Astor, currently wearing out her welwith whom Mrs.
come here,
Photographed at
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Mesta tangled several years ago. Lady Astor's latest contributions: “More nice people speak English than anything ~ elge,"” and “Don't give your
money to the government. Anyone can do better with your money than the government can.”
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PAGE 27 Club to Meet Tomorrow
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