Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 308, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1927 — Page 8
PAGE 8
FORMER LOCAL WOMAN TO TALK ON HOME FURNISHINGS
Mrs, Jay A. Egbert to Talk on New England Before Woman's Department Club Monday—Once Director of Association Here. The art department of the Woman’s Department Club will have as its special guest and speaker Monday afternoon at the clubhouse, Mrs. Jay A. Egbert of Cleveland, formerly of this city. Her subject is “Homes and Furnishings of Early New England,” and the talk will be illustrated by slides.
While a resident here, Mrs. Egbert was one of the directors of the art association of Indianapolis and made the first classification of textiles owned by the art institute. While chairman of the art department of the Woman’s Department Club she conducted a class in “Historic Furniture.’’ Since moving to Cleveland she is chairman of the art committee of Sorosis Club, one of the oldest clubs in Cleveland. Mrs. A. S. Ayres is chairman sot the tea hour which will follow the lecture and will be assisted by Mesdames William Kerschner, J. M. Lail, R. C. Ferguson, Robert Elliott, Edward Hall and Nannie Shirk. Guest day will be observed by the literature department of the club Wednesday afternoon when Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown will talk on “Dante.” The hospitality committee for the day is in charge of Mrs. Tilden Greer, assisted by Mesdames Ronald Foster, Ralph Goldrick, Charles Gerr.mer, Frank Wampler. Harry O. Chamberlin, Albert Sterne,
Drama Department Will Hear Logansport Girl
Miss Dorothy D. Wilson, dramatic reader and Instructor of Logansport, Ind., will give the program at the last meeting of the year for the. drama department of the Woman's Department Club, Monday April 11, at 2:30 p. m., at the club house. Miss Wilson, who will read “Daisy Mayme” by George Kelly, began her career giving recitals of musicale monologues, dialect readings and character sketches over the State. She has conducted drama reading courses in several cities and has appeared before the Woman's Department Club a number of times. All members of the club are invited and guests will be admitted at the usual fee. There will be musicale numbers
PRIZE RECIPES BY READERS
EGOLESS, MILKLESS CORN MUFFINS. Thrct fourths can corn meal, one and one-fourth cups flour, four teaspoons baking powder, one tablespoons sugar, half teaspoon salt, two tablespoons bacon grease or lard, one cup water. Sift dry ingredients together, add water and melted shortening, mix well. Half fill greased muffin tins or bake in skillet in moderate oven. Mrs, Albert Armstrong, 1437 W. Thirty-Fifth St., city.
Have you a recipe for “fruit eocktails?” If you have, why not try for a prize, offered by The Times. Next Friday twenty prize recipes for fruit cocktail will be printed. For each one accepted and printed, the Times will pay sl. The Times also prints one prize rcc*pe each day. Any recipe will be considered for the daily $1 prize. Recipes for Friday’s paper must be received by the Recipe Editor of The Times by Tuesday. Mail it today.
Pen Women to Hear Publisher League of American Pen Women, Indiana branch, will meet for luncheon at 12:15 April 13 at the SpinkArms, Charles D. LaFollette of the Bobbs Merrill Company will talk on "The Inside of the Publishing Business'* with hints to writers. Members are permitted to bring guests, and reservations should be made by April 11 with Miss Deldora DeLoney, 1002 N. Bevlle Ave. The luncheon will be preceded by a business meeting at 11 a. m. when officers will be elected, and reports be given by outgoing officers. Nominations will be made from the floorSPRING PARTY A color scheme of orchid and yellow was carried out in the appointments for the luncheon bridge party, given Friday at the Marot Hotel, by Mrs. W. Frank Jones, 338 Ritter Ave. Small corsages of orchids, sweet peas and yellow pansies were given as favors. Covers were laid for Mesdames W. B. Gates. H. G. Clark. C. E. Irish, W. L. Leonard, J. H. Holtman, Harvey Ferguson. J. B. W r iles, J. K. Kingsbury, O. M. Moore, J. E. Milford,, A. P. Vestal, W. J. Pray, Chester Albright, E. D. Donnell and F. E. Dukes. EASTER PARTY The home of Mrs. Edward C. Wacker, 4118 N. Pennsylvania St., was arranged with Easter appointments and decorated with spring flowers for the luncheon bridge party, which she gave Friday. Sne was assisted by her mother, Mrs. John Wacker, and Mrs. O. H. Bradway. Covers were laid for Mesdames T. E. Stenzel, A. E. Chambers, O. E. Fauchler, Charles R. Amraerman, J. T. Godfrey, B. M. Forbes, Norman H. Gilman, Frank E. Cramer, Robert Turnbull, E. W r . Gantz, Frank D. Kissel, Evere*t F. Agnew, Rollin E. Jackson, L. S. Fall. Gothe Link, George M. Weaver, H. H. Petty, Russell H. Goodrich, Gus C. Wege, W. J. Hoag and H. K. Bachelder. MEDICS NAME SPEAKERS The Indiannpolis Medical Society, at its meeting Tuesday, 8:15 p. m.. at Central State Hospital for the Insane, will hear talks by Dr. Max A. Bahr on “Some Problems of Industrial Psychiatry,” and by Dr. W. L. ÜBruetsch on “Arteriosclerosis of the ■Central Nervous System.” Dr. VirFgil H. Moon and Dr. Albert E. Sterne will lead the discussions.
Allen Fisher, Henry Dollman, W. S. Craig, J. D. Hobs, Frederick C. Balz, W. C. Smith, W. D. Long, Albert J. Hueber and J. D. Barr us. Following the program there will be a reception for the incoming and outgoing officers of the literature department. The incoming officers aro Mrs. Blanche G. Williams, chairman: Mrs. Arthur Thomas, vice-chairman; Mrs. J. 11. Hamlet, secretary; Mrs. James C. Carter, treasurer, and the outgoing officers arc Mrs. Walter Zirpel, chairman; Mrs. J. D. Ernston, vice-chairman; Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge, secretary, and Mrs. George M. Weaver, treasurer. The regular meeting of the Mother's Round Table will be held Thursday and Mrs. R. B. Wilson will lead the tour through the art school. The art class will meet Wednesday morning with Mrs. S. E. Perkins, 325.3 X. Pennsylvania St. The Bible class will hear Rev. Frederick E. Taylor Wednesday at 10:30 a m. His subject is “The Bible and Life.”
and refreshments will be served by the hostess committee after the program. CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY Mile Ledova; dancer, headliner at Keith’s for the past week was entertained this evening by Mme. I.eontine Gano. who celebrated her twenty-fifth anniversary as headlinedancer at the same theater, which was then the "Grand.’’ Mme. Gano entertained a group of her pupils at the Metropolitan School of Music to meet Mile Ledova and lo give .a short dancing program, followed by a dinner in the Odeon. Those in the program were Loretta Van Meter. Doris Llewellyn, Clemence Marie Barnett. Johnson,' Dorothy Fitzpatrick. Dorothy Lawrence, Joan Elliott, La Verne Reichle, and Mary Louise Schilling. CLUB PARTY Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Alexander, 938 N. Bosart Ave., will entertain the Ev-O-Sa Club with a card party tonight. APRIL FOOL PARTY The Phi Sigma Delta sorority entertained with an April Fool party Friday evening at the home of Miss Marjorie Burghard, 336 Harvard Pi. Guests were Misses Caroline Schaub and Peggy Farmer. The sorority planned a hike for Sunday morning.
GIRLS, ARE YOU GAME? ASKS MRS. FERGUSON Have You the Courage to Get Married and Stay Married? Her Question.
By Mrs. Walter Ferguson The newer fiction contains marriage proposals done in the ultra modern way. For instance, “Are you game to get married,’ is the question that present day heroes put to their lady loves. And not such a bod way to express it, either, if we are to consider marriage as lasting any time after the ceremony. It may take a certain amount of courage to rush out and marry some boy who is almost a stranger to you, but if you are contemplating such a rash act, remember that it will take a great deal more gameness to stick to your bargain, than to seal it. Are you game to work as hard as he does to get your start in life? Are you game to go without so many silk stockings and dainty frocks? Are you game to cook three meals a day and wash the dishes and sweep and scrub? Are you game to Box Holders for Play Announced Those having boxes for the production of the University of Wisconsin Haresfoot Club play “Meet the Prince” Monday night at the Murat are Messrs, and Mesdames Carl Taylor, Walter Pray, T. Neill Wynne, Edward Raub, Frank Rider, Carl Yonnegut, Harold W. Taylor and Otto Hauseisen: and Messrs. Eugene Whitehill, Frederick Arbecker, Robert McKee and George Halverson.
LIFE’S NICETIES Hints on Etiquet
1. At a dinner or luncheon when both men and women are guests, should all the women be served first, or should guests be served in order around the table? 2. Where are napkins placed at a table if service plates are not used? 3. Where is the oyster fork placed? The Answers 1. Guests should be served in order. 2. To the left of the forks. 3. At extreme right, beyond the soup spoon. HONORED WITH PARTY Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Giles, 1214 Laurel St., entertained with four tables of cards Thursday evening in honor of Capt. and Mrs. A. M. Rounder, who will leave Sunday for residence in California. Captain Rounder is retiring after twenty-six years in the service of the Indianapolis fire department. Mrs. Wilbur Lovlnger assisted the hostess. The guests were Messrs, and Mesdames Fred Fancher, William Howell. C. Edgar West, William Hughes, Wilbur Lovlnger. Mesdames Betty Seymour, Alma Nelson, Bertha Goff and Miss Dorothy Hughes. Jack Stump and c. Edgar West, Jr.
IN INDIANAPOLIS SOCIETY CIRCLES
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Above, (left to right) Miss Pauline Holmes (photo by Photocraft); Mrs. Beryl Showers Holland. Below, Miss Ruth Stone (photo by C. F. Bretzinan.) Inset, Mrs. Luke W. Duffy (photo by Bachraeh.)
Announcement of the engagement of Miss Pauline Holmes to Donald D. Hoover, has been made by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Holmes, 3046 N. Delaware St. The wedding will take place May 28 in the parlors of tho Central Avenue Methodist
smile while your rich friends ride by in their big cars? Are you game to bring a baby or two into the world? Are you game to stay married? For that is the big question, and that is the thing that counts. It is easy to run around the corner and swear to be a good wife and it is easier still to start off joyfully on a honeymoon, but it is not easy to stick out the difficulties when the honeymoon has waned. These men and women whom you ' see around you, who have been married for a quarter of a century or more, are not just lucky, as you may imagine. They are dead game sports and don't you forget it. They were not only game to start something but they have been game to see it through. And theirs is the reward that comes sooner or later to such brave hearts. What is life worth, after all, if you can't face a hard struggle or two? Are you such a weakling that you want to dodge all- the splendid battles that have made noble women out of foolish maids? Do you expect to go through life without any troubles? The girl who is not willing to shouder some of the responsibility and some of the hardship and some of the pain of marriage is not worthy to be any man's wife. Therefore, if you succumb to that plea of, “Are *ou game to get married?” for the sake of your soul and your future, stick by the bargain you have made if possible, and remember that the honors of the conflict are worthless to the soldier who has not been brave enough to fight. Junior League Will Hold Supper Dance The annual Junior League Easter ball will be in the form of a supper dance April 18 at 10 p. ni. at the Columbia Club. It has been made a supper dance in order that lnembers may attend the concert of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra at the Murat Theater the same evening. Mrs. John D. Gould, chairman, is planning a number of entertainment features to include cabaret numbers. Tickets may be had from Mrs. W. Richardson Sinclair. No tables will be reserved. SOLOIST HERE Miss Margaret Pearson of the Do Pauw Music School Faculty at Greencastle, is the week-end guest of Miss Louise Swan. Miss Pearson attended the party given Friday night by Mu Phi Epsilon at the Odeon for Sigma Alpha lota. She is soprano soloist with the De Pauw choir, and will sing Sunday morning at St. Paul M. E. Chuicli. PLAN BACHELORS’ BALL Henry Severin and John Kinghan are in charge of arrangements for the annual masquerade ball of the Bachelors of the University Club to be given this evening. Three hundred invitations have been issued.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Church. Mrs. Harold Graham Walton and Judge John Rabb Emison will be the attendants. Mr. Hoover Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hoover, 3010 Macl’herson St. Mrs. Beryl Showers Holland of •Bloomington, is the founder of Tri
Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, Ind. O Q C Q Inclosed find 15 cents for which send Pattern No. O O Site Name Street 1 City
TYPICALLY PARISIAN One glance at this unusual model reveals why it is so popular. It employs plain and printed crepe silk. The front in panel style has circular insets at either side, providing graceful fulness to hemline. The cuffs are attractive. The sash caught in at side seams of panel, a style detail. Other smart combinations for design No. 2859 are Vivo tones of blue silk crepe, crepe back satin in reverse treatment and plain and plaid woolen. Pattern for this stunning dress can be had in sizes 16. 18 years, 36, 3S. 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. The 36-inch size requires 3% yards of 40-inclt material with 2 t 4 yards of ribbon and (A yard of 54-inch contrasting. Our patterns are made by the leading fashion designers of New York City and are guaranteed to fit perfectly. You'll be delighted with our spring and summer fashion magazine. Send 10 cents for your copy. Every day The Times prints on this page pictures of the latest fashions, a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. Obtain this pattern by filling out the above coupon, inclosing 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week.
PERSONAL ITEMS
Mrs. Nicholas Ensley. 1622 N. Meridiin St., and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Ensley, 2203 Broadway, have gone for a ten-day trip to Florence, Ala., and Muscle shoals and will visit the Shiloh National Military Park before returning home. Mrs. May Ryan and mother. Mrs. John Arson, of 2101 N. Pennsylvania St., have gone to California to join Mrs. Ryan's son, John, and make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Homer W. Borst, 5032 Park Ave.. are spending the week-end in Louisville. Mrs. Bransford Clarke. 5108 Broadway. is visiting her daughter in Little Rock, Ark. LUNCHEON BRIDGE Mrs. Dwight E. Aultman, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, will entertain with a luncheon-bridge Wesdnesday. HOSTESS AT BRIDGE Miss Katharine Lennox. 2413 N. Delaware St., will entertain with a b-idge party Saturday afternoon, April 23. at the Marott Hotel.
Kappa sorority and grand marshall of the State convention to be held at the Clay pool Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The annual State luncheon of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority to be held at the Claypool April 16, is in
it f 2859
To Attend Son's Wedding in East Dr. and Mrs. William Niles Wishard and Miss Genevieve Scoville, 2050 N. Delaware St., will leave the first of the week for Pottsville, Pa., where they will attend the wedding of Dr. and Mrs. Wishard’s son, Scoville, to Miss Helen Ricketts of Pottsville. Scoville Wishard is now studying in the Princeton Theological School, but immediately following the ceremony the couple will sail for Oxford, England, where he will continue Ills theological studies. TO HOLD LUNCHEON The Indiana Woman's Auxiliary to the 38th Division will hold a covered dish luncheon following by a business meeting Wednesday at the home of Mrs. William Burns, 3033 Boulevard place. Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames Riley Chilton and Mary Hubbard. Election of officers will be held.
charge of a committee of which Miss Ruth Stone, 91L West Dr., Woodruff Place, is chairman. Mrs. Luke W. Duffy, 2929 Washington Blvd., is president of the Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and will preside at the State luncheon.
HOSTESS TO SORORITY Luncheon of Alumnae Club Will Be Held Wednesday. The April meeting of the Indianapolis Alumnae Club of the Mu Phi Epsilon National Honorary Musical Sorority will be held Wednesday, at the home of Mrs. Rhoda Porterfield Barnes, 3319 N. New Jersey St. Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. Henry Hess, Mrs. Nell Kemper, Miss Edna Gent, and Mrs. David Porterfield. Luncheon will be served promptly at 12:30, followed by a Debussy program. which has been arranged by Miss Grace Hutchings. Miss Hutchings will give a talk on the composer and his works, and Mrs. Walter H. Hiatt will have charge of the musical current events. The program follows: 'Romanxc.” "Mandoline." Mrs. Sam W Hooke, soprano. ‘ Oradm ad Parr.assnm." “PolltwoFe s Cake Walk.” Miss Jane Duekwall, pianist. Group of Debussy Sonsrs Selected Mrs. Jans Johnson Burroughs, soprano. “Danse” Miss Grace Hutchings, pianist. Miss Lulu Brown will be, (he accompanist.
y. W. C. A. Activities
Members of the Industrial Department have planned a hike and camp dinner at 11 a. m. Sunday, starting from the Central Y. W. C. A. building. Miss Violet Van Note, is in charge. The Wisconsin Summer School for Industrial workers, the May banquet of the Industrial department, summer camp and representation at summer conference will be discussed at the dinner meeting of the Industrial Council Monday at 6:15 p. m. Miss Opal Boston, president, will preside. Camp Night will be celebrated by the Industrial Department Wednesday night. Miss Elsie Kinerk and Miss Dorothy Bennett will talk. BUSINESS GIRLS’ DEPT. The Business Girls' Clubs will attend the Educational banquet in Social Hall Tuesday at 6:15 p. m. Reports from the State Business Girls’ Conference recently held here will be made at the monthly meeting of the Business Woman's Committee in Social Hall Monday at 12:15. Mrs. Minnie Lewis Crum and Miss Jeanette Shaeffer will present the report; Miss Louise Ross, presiding. EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT NOTES The Tuesday night class in Self Expression will be dismissed so members may attend the annual educational dinner. Program for the Tuesday morning Matrons’ Self Expression Class at 11:30 includes a scene from Paola and Francesca, by Mrs. Charles A. Gemmer and a bird talk by Mrs. Edwin E. Thompson. Miss Margaret Bennett announces the Student Council meeting has been postponed until the second Friday in April, when it will be held I with Mrs. Aulta White. 1432 Olney Street.
ANNOUNCE PATRON LIST FOR NOVELIST’S TALK Members of Writers Club Will Hear Zona Gale Noted Hoosier Authors to Attend. The list of patrons and patronesses lor the lecture to ho given by Zona Gale, novelist, at the playhouse of the Little Theatre Monday evening under the auspices of the Writers’ Club
has been announced. • Th® committee on ushers is: Miss Margaret Scott, chairman, and Mesdames E. L. Lennox. John Dyer, Maude Cooper Wilson, Misses Lucille Rogers, Jean Davis, Louise Graham Cox, Rosalie Dyer and Masters Jack Dyer and Charles McNaull, Jr. Miss Betty Williams, violinist, and Mrs. W. A. Overholser. harpist, will give a musical program. The patrons and patronesses are: Mewirs. and McpdrmicQ Meredith Nicholson, Kin Hubbard. Archibald Nall, A. W. Gregory. F. 8 Wicks, W. S Wilson. A. 1,. Thurston. John S. Armstrong. G. O. Rogers. John L. Prentioe. C. E. Rush. Genre P Steinmelr.. J M. T.ochhead. Joseph A Miner. J n K M<-Conib. J. H. Oliver. Edwin L Lennox. H. A Henderson, Robert Gilliland Edward E. Kilos. M. F. Connor, E. M. Bundy, Courtney, A. B. Cronk. _ _ Mesdames G. B Alie. I-<* Bums, Dwight E. Aultman, W. K. Barton, Frances Baker. Isaac Born. Dan Brown, John B. Currv. C. A. Bennett. Ira Campbell Jessie Chalifour. W. A. Craig. Kate G. Dyer. Franklin Dickey. Wliliam Cox. Charles Camnbcli. Esther Noble Carter. Mildred Dugan. Wilson Doan. Ernest De Wolf Wales. J. F Edwards. Edcar Eekew. I/C Roy Ford, Alice French. M. J. Ford. O V' Fevrier. Elmer Goddard. Boyd Gurley. Miller Hamilton. F.dwin Hunt. John T. Kerlin. Owen L. Miller. John N. Newton. Charles Pollitt, 8. E. Perkins. Kato Milner Rabb. Edna Denttam Raymond, James R Sutherland. Margaret Segur. M. F. Smith. R. F Tu<-ker, Joseph Waite. J. S Marshall Albert McLeod. Charles Over, Herman Rinnr. Morris Rommlnger, James Steep. Edwin Shrdd. J. R. Thrasher, D ,J. Massa. Edward L. Pedlow. J. S. Weir, Blanche G. Williams, Minnie Olcott Williams. Charles B. Welliver. Edward Wuensch. Josephine Duke Motley, Maudo Duke. O M. Pittingrr. Grames. C. A. Pfafflln T J. Taflinger. L D. Owens. Mary Cain. Harold Walton. Cora Young Wiles. Grace Huffard, Bernard Korbly. James Ban-ley. _ Messrs. William Chitwood. D. J. Massa, Ernest Pearson. Samuel Weltz. Misses Fay M. Banta. Clara Rom. Re-be-oa Bennett. Ada Crozier. Vivian Bennett Frances Courtney. Dorothy Calderw ood, Rosemary Dyer. Emma Doruoy. Lucille Ballard. T niiic G-aha Cox Sara Ewing Ferby. Beatrice Geddir. Ruth Gorman. Mabel Goodard. Marc Griffith. Fthrl Keeling. Ruth Healing. Elizabeth Hayward. Ida He’phen Stine. Ann Johnston. Anne Kellv. Man - K-n-van. Luc.v Mayo. Elizabeth Mason. Olive Oliver. Irma Ross. Rosemary Zimmer. Grace Warren. Ellen Vickery. Elizabeth Hughes. Olga llig. Marie Rarer. Jean Kirlin, Emma King. Marv Margaret Miller. Martha Oliver, Marie Pollitt. Lola Perkins. Dorothy Seenr. •’nna Bornman. Tillio Mayne. Mary .Dver t.pmon Gertrudo Shields. Grace Hawk. Pari Forsvth Ann Weymouth. Grace Phelps. Reba Hill.
Club Calendar
MONDAY Mrs. Perry Ghere, 4006 Broadway, will entertain the New Era Club. There will be election of officers. The Sesame Club will meet with Mrs. Bert J. Westover, 55 S. Audubon Rd. The meeting will be in the form of a children's party. Mrs. W. W. Gates, 611 E. Thirtysecond St., will be hostess for Governor Oliver P. Morton chapter Daughters of the Union. Mrs. Harry O. Garman will read a paper on “Women of the Civil War.” TUESDAY Mrs. John S. Macey will retd a paper on “The Great Valley,” at the meeting of the Heyl Study Club. The Alpha Delta Latreian Club will take a trip through juvenile court in place of its regular meeting. • The Inter Alia Club will observe guest day. Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown will talk. THURSDAY The Ladies Federal Club will meet with Mrs. Herman S. Gudgel, 118 E. Forty-Sixth St. Mrs. Omer B. Springer, 3251 College Ave., will he hostess for North Side Study Club at an Easter party. “A Century of Fashions,” will be presented. FRIDAY Mrs. E. W. Stockdale and Mrs. Isaac Carter will entertain the Friday Afternoon Reading Club and Mrs. George Healy will read the paper. SATURDAY Miss Mildred Murphy, 80 N. Brookville Ave., will be hostess for Alpha Gamma Latreian Club. Mrs. J. Lester Williams will give the book review.
SOUTH SIDE BRANCH “Y” NOTES “The South Side Branch has an important place to fill in the life of the community and should receive the support of every woman and girl of the South Side,” Mrs. Anna Rubeck told meeting Membership Committee at the South Side building. “We are working to obtain the renewal of all the charter memberships taken out ,a year ago.” Miss Vivian . Cushing will entertain the Phi Omega Psi sorority, Monday evening. The Y. W. C. A. Club, composed of young peoole from the Morris Street M. E. Church, held a social Friday evening, in the parlors. The Dennison Craft classes that were to have begun this week are postponed until a later date on account of the illness of the instructor. Miss Carrie Freemaa. The gymnasium cl.ots for children which has been under the direction of Miss Louise Noble has been dismissed for the season. INDUSTRIAL DEPARTMENT The Alpha Omega Club, the South Side Industrial Club, will be Wednesday at 6:15 p. m., for “Wisconsin Night.” Miss Violet Van Note of the “Central” Industrial Department will sin Summer School for Industrial tell of her experiences at the WisconGirls. Pictures of the campus and university buildings will be shown. The new members in the club are having “haze week." Plans for formal initiation to be held April 13 are being made by the Initiation Committee: Mary Cooley, Mabel Farmer, Esther Hies and Rosemary Cutter. CLUB PARTIES The East End Pleasure Club will entertain with card parties Monday afternoon and evening at 29V6 S. Delaware St.
APRIL 2, 1927
TRI KAPPA TO OBSERVE FOUNDING Three-Day Biennial Session to Be Held Here Next Week. Delegates from eighty-seven chapters of Tri Kappa sorority in Indiana will meet here Thursday, Friday and Saturday for the biennial convention, and to celebrate the silver anniversary of its founding. Meetings will be held at the Claypool, headquarters for the sorority, / and the convention will be officially/ opened with a reception of grancV council members and province ofly cors Thursday evening. Mrs. J. E. P, Holland, Bloominf ton, founder of the society, is gra/d marshall of the convention, and lip's. Emmitt R. Fertig, Noblesville, Assistant grand marshal. The ville chapter is hostess chapter fiH the convention, with Mrs. Myrtle Dietrick, as grand chairman. Miss Dorothy Donald, Bloomington, is grand president and will preside at ' all sessions. Reservations have already been made for 250 delegates add many more are expected for the annual banquet and dance in honor of the founders, Friday night, Among speakers of the convention will be Mrs. Edward Franklin White, vice president of thu General Fed eration of Clubs; Dean Agnes W. Wells, of Indiana University; Dr Amos W. Butler, president of tho Indiana Society for Mental Hygiene: Mrs. Florence Riddick Boys, of Plymouth, State/probation officer; Dr. Ada E. Schweitzer, director of Indiana bureau of infant and child hygiene, and Charles Brandon Boor.h, of New York, national field secretary for the Big Brother and Big Sister Federation. PLAN DAY NURSERY Progressive Sixteen Club to Present Mrs. Brown. The Progressive Sixteen Club will present Mrs. Demarchus C. Browtw lecturer and traveler in a progrnjM lecture at 3 p. m., April 10, in tl™ ballroom of the Columbia Club for the benefit of the Indianapolis Day Nursery. Mrs. Harold Robinson, ac companied by Mrs. George T. Briggs, will sing. Mrs. Albert Sterne is president of the club, and Mrs. J. D. Hoss, president of the Day Nursery for the last seventeen years and one of the charter members of the Sixteen Club, will preside. The following club members will have tickets for sale: Mesdames Sterne, Henry L. Dollman, W. S. Craig, Hale Barbour, Frederick Buskirk, Sidney Auginbaugh, Frank Wampler, Archibald Thomas, Allan P. Fisher, Horace Hewitt, John Strachan, J. D. Hoss, Ronald Foster. Charles Gemmer, Thomas H. Komstoclc and Tilden F. Greer, the four latter members composing the com* * mittee on arrangements for the benefit lecture. • GUEST PARTY The Bide-A-Wee Club will *ntertain with a guest party Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Antone Johnson, 838 E. Morris St, BOX SOCIAL The box social of the Progressive Spiritualist Church will be held tonight with Mrs. Catherine Robertson, 2251 N. Pennsylvania St., instead of with Mrs. Ruth Bennett as previously announced. Helpless, After 15 g Years of Asthma Cough and Wheeze Were Stopped Two Years Ago. Well Ever Since. Any one who has been tortured by asthma or bronchial trouble will be glad to read how these troubles were ended for Mrs. George Kiefer, Route B, Box 133, Indianapolis. She writes: “I had suffered from nsthnm for fifteen years. I took everything any one told me, such as electric treat monts, serums anil chiropractic treat moots. ! was told I inherited asthma and there was no core for it. “I was so had 1 couldn't do my housework, such sweeping, washing or anything. Could hardly walk across the house on account of my breathing in fact, they could heart me breathe clear out in the yard. 1 began Naeor in September, 1923,,and purchased three bottles of it. It used to be that l would have to sit up in a chair for four or five nights at n Mine. The second night after beginning Naeor T slept in bed all night. I have not no Heed any asthma in over two years, breuthlng line, no wheezing at all nptt sleep fine all night.” You will enjoy reading many other letters from tho people who have re covered after years of suffering from J asthma, bronchitis and severe -hronie coughs, and have had no return of the trouble. These letters, and also an interesting booklet giving information of vital importance about these dis eases, will be sent free by Naeor Medicine Cos.. 413 state Life Ridg., In dianapolls, Ind. No matter how serious your ease, call or write today for this free information. It may point the way back to health for you. ns it has for thousands of others.—Advertisement.
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