Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 172, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1927 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Bridge and Shower for Bride-Elect MISS MARY WHITE entained with an afternoon bridge party and personal shower this afternoon at the home of Miss Dorothy Lou Thomas, 4935 Park Ave., in honor of Miss Eugenia Brooks, whose marriage to George Herbert Smith, Marion, will take place in December. Appointments were in the bridal colors of pink and green and bouquets of roses were used in the rooms. At serving time the tables were lighted with rose colored tapers in green holders. Each guest was given a rose as a favor. The guests with Miss Brooks and her mother, Mrs. H. H. Brooks, were: Mesdames Harry Thomas John C. Turpin Noble Ropkev Louis Ott Ward Frank W. Ball. Jr. Bert Dinaley Wm. A. Strawmeyer Misses Dorothy Lou Thomas Dorothy Spooner Janet Barnard Frances Walters Mary Frances Ogle Mary Ann Huggins Beatrice Moore Julia Patton Susanna Herdrich, Brownsburg. Dr. Hatton to Give Practical Manager Talk “Making the City Manager Plan Effective in Indianapolis” is the subject of the address to be given by Dr. Augustus R. Hatton, professor of political science at Northwestern University, Evanston, 111., at the lecture luncheon meeting of the Indianapolis League of Women* Voters Tuesday. The luncheon will be held at the Columbia Club at 12:30 p. m., with Miss Sara Lauter, league president, presiding. Knows Practical Side Dr. Hatton, a nationally famous municipal charter expert, is a student of the theory of municipal government. His most unique contribution to the problem, however, has been his practical application of his theories to the government of an actual city. As councilman under the city manager act in Cleveland, Ohio, from 1923 until his •resignation to become identified with Northwestern University, Dr. Hatton was able to test, in the light of experience, the theories he was teaching at Western Reserve University. At the request of James P. Goodrich, then Governor, and others in Indiana, Dr. Hatton redrafted the Indiana city manager bill 1 after its first introduction in the Indiana Legislature. Native of Indiana Dr. Hatton was born and reared in Switzerland County, Indiana. After graduation at Franklin College, he became professor of history and political science at Franklin for two years. He was associated with the University of Chicago for seven years as graduate student, instructor and associate professor. He became professor of political sciense at Western Reserve in 1907. and has been identified with it until his recent resignation to go to Northwestern. Tri-State Club Session Opens at Ft. Wayne The Ft. Wayne Business and Professional .Women’s Club is hostess today and Sunday for the Tri-State conferences of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs from Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, at the Catholic Community Center there. Miss Marian Ingham, president of the State Federation of Business Women’s Clubs, will preside at the banquet this evening at which Mrs. LenaVladesin Phillips, president of the National Federation, will speak. IThe Ohio federation will have harge of the breakfast and proram Sunday morning and the lichlgan federation has arranged I program for the luncheon. Mrs. bttie M. Kirby, Bloomington, will flk on “The 1928 National Conention.”

CLUB MEETINGS NEXT WEEK

MONDAY The Monday Club will meet in the rr. A. n. Chapter house at 2 :30. Mrs. William A. Shullenberger will read a paper “The First Thanksgiving." Mrs. Edwin D. Donnell, 5372 E. Washington St., will be the hostess for the Irvington Coterie Club. Mrs. B. C. Morgan will talk on the German opera, “Lohengrin,” by Wagner. Mrs. A. Rucker and Mrs. C. E; Teeters will lead the discussion of “Current Foreign Affairs,” before the Present Day Club at the home of Mrs. H. J. Smith, 3963 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. smith will be assisted by Mrs. J. C. Travis. The Vincent C. L. S. C. Club will meet in the assembly room at the Fletcher American Bank at 2. p. m. Mrs. C. W. Craig will read a paper on “The Painted Desert.” Mrs. J. L. Cahow and Mrs. E. H. Jenne will discuss “How the Earth Was Made.” Harry E. Jorden will address the Indianapolis Literary Club on ’’Chemistry Building Commerce” at the D. A. R. Chapter house Monday evening. tt tt tt TUESDAY Members of the Heyl Study* Club will meet at 2 p. m. at the Y. W. O. A. Mrs. James Beatty will talk OB “The Life of General Nathaniel Green;’’ Mrs. C. R. Miller on “The Southern Campaign;” Mrs. T. N. Shixner on “Warfare on the Sea,”

FOtJR CHOOSE NOVEMBER AS MONTH FOR WEDDING

/3/K /Zcgkb, fix nt £ roou / fPeirerletj Cffp- YPoLovclPo ffoco. |** *Pfcs>S‘ f?lore-n.ee /Proofs, Sd. fjotexs, .-//[o, P/at/ter/ite feft 6o /ZcyAtj 6<xcf rout, &ss cjh- n e fjz. u/, DovolAc/ axet' ft % ■iH 1 |"■ W,MHi'li n L.ivt 1 ~ If .. h* 0 it marriage Tuesday evening at the Tabernacle Presbyterian 1 I uUKr/ff % JrP Church. Mr. and Mrs. Warrcnder are 6n a wedding trip and i A 'jPPr v > dl make their home in Indianapolis. The young women in the Ip ' group were Mrs Warren der’s attendants. j "V/i h ||l| Before her marriage Monday Mrs. David Bixler was Miss ----- * ' ■Kwi Mary Wall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Wall, 335.1 Ken- [YAYftfvli r wood Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Bixler will be at home in Chicago. , * " ~7 %a > 'X ■/, % * Miss Joan Wall was her sister’s only attendant. \//f / ' / JJ * /£v * . . - Mrs. Edward Eckstein was Miss Dolores Lammers before her \ <. /// C/OGCJO y/o-tC r T7 ~J? "X* j " r marrla *e last Saturday. ( T PHOTC' //(fs (S’gLlUCI’ iroi Ct) o The marriage of Miss Alberta Lucile Durler and Charles ’ / j PLATT STUDIO Raymond Carson took place Nov. 12. .. g

and Mrs. Charles F. Neu on “Arnold, the Traitor.” Mrs. Charles T. Paul will give a lecture on “China—A Nation in Evolution” before the Irvington Chautauqua Club .which will meet at the heme of Mrs. D. S. Adams, 59 Irvington Ave. The Independent Social Club will meet with Mrs. Urla F. Ellis, 2448 CW ge Ave. The quotation for the day is “.’Tis something to be willing to commend. But my best praise is, that I am your friend.” Guest evening will be observed by the Century Club at the D. A. R. Chapter house. Murray A. Delman will address the club on “The Blue Rose.” “Magazines,” will be' discussed by Lucia Cole Miner before the Fortnightly Literary Club at the Propy-' laeum at 2:30 p. m. a an WEDNESDAY Mrs. M. E. Burkhart, 4455 Central Ave., will be the hostess for the Minerva Club. “Three Tiny Nations” will be the subject before the club, with “Their Noted Women,” for the response. Mrs. C. H. Becker will talk on “Holland,” Mrs. N. S. Lloyd on “Belguim,” and Mrs. W. H. Biddlecombe on “Switzerland.” tt tt THURSDAY The North Side Study Club will meet with Mrs. O. J. Holaday, 643 E. Thirty-First St. Mrs. William A. Meacham will read a paper on

“Cathedrals,” and Mrs. Dan Brown, Jr., will talk on “Ancient Literature.” Mrs. P. A. Randall, 3204 Bellefontaine St., will be the hostess for the Pierian Study Club. Mrs. E. E. Files will read a paper on “The Christmas Story;” Mrs. W. D. Carey will discuss “Samuel Johnson, His Personality and Work;” and Mrs. W. A. Clabaugh, “Oliver Goldsmith.” Mrs. V. W. Woodward, 2889 Sutherland Ave., will entertain members of the Aftermath Club. The program will be in charge of Mrs. Frank T. Day and Mrs. George M. Cornelius, who will speak on “Mural Decoration” and “Landscape Gardening,” respectively. “The City of the Sacred Well,” by Willard, will be discussed by Mrs. R. B. Malloch before the‘members of the Lyceum Club. Mrs. F* M. Smith, 536 Sutherland Ave., will be hostess for the meeting. t The regular meeting of the Beta Delphian Chapter will be held in the parlors of the Fletcher American Bank Bldg, at 6:45 a. m. Thursday. The subject for the day will be “Romanesque and Gothic Architecture and Early Italian Art.” The meeting will be in charge of Mrs. E. D. Bonnell and her assistants, Mrs, Dahl, who will talk on “Cimabue and Giotto;”'Mrs. J. M. Rinker on “Fra Angelico and Fra Lippi,” and Mrs. O. N. Moore on “A Critique on Church Paintings.” nun FRIDAY The Culture Club will meet with Mrs. F. L. Warner, 5355 N. Delaware St. “Nanking, New and Old,”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

will be discussed by Mrs. G. Rudolph Miller;, “Through Old Canton” by'Mrs. S. M. Dyer, and “Soochow, the Athens of China,” by Mrs. W. N. Carpenter. “Shanghai” will be discussed by Mrs. W. A. Rowland, and “Tientsin” by Mrs. Henrietta Dillen. The Indianapolis Woman’s Club will meet at the Propylaeum at 3 p. m. Katherine Daniels will read a paper on “Thro the Looking Glass,” and Muriel Hitt Brandon on “Sun-burned All Over Like an Ethiop.” Mrs. C. L. Stubbs, 30 N. Bolton Ave., assisted by Mrs. Elmer Williams, will entertain members of the Irvington Fortnightly Club. “Early American Glass” will be the subject cf a talk by Mrs. Henry H. Prescott, and “Stained Glass and Its Modern Uses” by Mrs. C. H. Winders. nun SATURDAY Guest day will be observed by the Review Club at the home of Mrs. Pierre Goodrich, 4470 Central Ave. Mrs. Herman C. Wolff will read a paper entitled “About This Modern Music.” Chapter Luncheon The annual luncheon of Chapter G.t)f P. E. O. was held today at the home of Mrs. H. E. Voggy. The program, on "Contemporary Drama,” was in charge of Mrs. M. L. Payne, chairman; Mrs. T. T. Schaeffer, Mrs. W. L. Stamper and Mrs. May Bowen. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. J. H. Westbay and Mrs. W. E. Brown. ...

Council Will . Hear Judges at Luncheon The Indianapolis Council of Women will have its first discussion luncheon of the year Tuesday at 12 o’clock at the First United Brethren Church, Walnut St. and Park Ave. Mrs. Wolf Sussman, chairman of the court committee, is in charge of the program. Miss Mary Alice McCarty, accompanied by her sister, Miss Marguerite, will‘Sing. The speakers will be Judges James A. Collins and Judge Thomas Gavin. Mrs. W. H. Lewis, president, will preside. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Walter Geisel, Washington 1877, or Mrs. George Wiliam, Drexel 2924. WRITERS’ CLUB WILL HEAR POETRY TALK Dr. 6larence E. Flynn, pastor of the First M. E. church in Bloomington, will speak on “Writing and Marketing Poems,” at the guest meeting of the Writers’ Club of Indiana Wednesday evening at the Columbia Club. Miss Margaret Scotty president, will preside. Art Exhibit Mrs. J. F. Regester, Bloomington artist, will exhibit her paintings at her home each afternoon next week. Many of the paintings are autumn scenes near old Unionville and in Morgan County.

WASHINGTON SOCIETY NEWS

BY FLORA G. ORR Cr.ited Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 26.- -How would you like to be kept waiting at the church, and in a foreign land at that—and furthermore, in the very country of all ethers where they love a good joke? That is what happened to young Lieut. John B. Jeffernan of the United States Navy this week. The lieutenant’s home is in Washington, Ind. Lieut. Heffernan went with the U. S. S. Pittsburgh last year on a trip to Ireland. The officers were entertained quite extensively in Dublin, and the young American officer fell in love with a pretty little, Irish girl named Patricia Alison Esmonde. This year, on his two months’ leave, Lieutenant Heffernan went to Dublin to marry Miss Esmonde. She got a bad case of influenza a week before tjie date set for the ceremony, but she was game. She wasn’t going to delay things on that account. But getting to the church proved to be a bigger ordeal than she thought for, and she\was just forty minutes late. Miss Esmonde’s step-mother wasn’t feeling very wOll either. In fact, she collapsed at the reception after the ceremony. But Mrs. Heffernan saw it all through like a major. The Heffernans are now on their way back' to Washington. n * * That’s the story of one wedding. Here’s another quite different tale. .Washington, Philadelphia, and

other cities in the East are nowadays regarded as good winter quarters by many of the roaming gypsy bands. But that they are strict in their customs within ’ the tribe can be judged by the way they all turned against Princess Julia Mitchell last week. , Julia was betrothed to a young gypsy in the tribe. This didn’t suit her. She had met a Gorgio whom she liked in Washington by the name of William Osborn. She left Philadelphia and came to Washington, where she and ,the outsider, the non-gypsy, were married. nun The Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Wilbur are having a family house party over the Thanksgiving holidays. Their nephew, Dr. Blake Wilbur, and his wife from New York are with them; also the secretary’s two sisters and their husbands, from San Jose, Cal., and Wayne, Pa. nun The Canadian prime minister has arrived in Washington—met at the station by a United States State department assistant secretary, all dressed up in a frock coat and topper, and the counselor of the British embassy, who strangely enough refused to dress up at all, but wore a soft hat, a business suit, and a raincoat, and carried an umbrella. The Right Hon. William Lyon Mackenzie King had to be interviewed by the press. To newspaper men who asked about the population of Canada, Mr. Mackenzie King

.TOV. 26, 1927

Two Sections of Club Plan for Meetings TWO meetings are scheduled for sections of the Woman’s Department Club for the coming week, the Mothers’ Round Table and the Monday Guild. The guild, a section of the community welfare department, whose membership is composed of sightless women, wiil meet at 2 p. m., Monday, at the club house. Mrs. Othniel Hitch is chairman. The Rev. Lewis A. Brown will speak on “Yellowstone National Park,” and selections from early American music will be given by Mrs. Delbert O. Wilmeth and Miss Jessie Patterson. Mrs. William R. Klingholtz Is hostess chairman. The round table will meet Thursday at 2 p. m. at the club house Dr. Ada Schweitzer will speak on “The Importance of Preventive) Work in Children’s Diseases.” The round table discussion will be it charge of Mrs. Lawrence Orr, Mrs. C. E. Parks, Mrs. Robert Wilson, Mrs. W. C. Holmes and Mrs. Oscar Bosart. Tea will be served. Mrs. George O. Burton and Mrs. J. A. Healy will be hostesses for the day. Each ber is urged to bring at least one| guest to the meeting. Mrs. Frank J. Lahr, chairman will preside. Reports of tours to the Boys’ School at Plainfield and to the Girls’ School at Clermont, which were taken this month, will be given.

Local A. A. U. W. f Branch to Be State Hostess The Indianapolis branch of the American Association of University Women will be hostess to the officers of the State Federation of Branches at luncheon Dec. 3. The meeting will be held at the Propylaeum, followed by luncheon at 12:30 p. m. at which Mrs. Marvin Curie, president of the local branch will preside. The speaker will be Dr. Francis Norton Maxfleld, professor of psychology at Ohio State University. Dr. Maxfleld is best known for his work in experimental psychology in connection with Dr. Goddard’s clinic at Ohio State. He was for fifteen years professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, and was phychologist of the Pennsylvania board of education. He will speak oh "Modern Tendencies in Education” from the standpoint of experimental psychology. The hostesses for the Indianapolis branch will be alumnae of Wellesley, Mt. Holyoke, Bryn Mawr and Barnard colleges. Reservations may be made with Mrs. John R. Carr, 4324 Broadway, HUmboldt 4379. Mrs. W. R. Davidson, Evansville, is president of the State federation. D.A.R. Program for Christmas to Be Thursday The Christmas program of the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter Daughters of the American Revolution will be given at the meeting Thursday at 2:30 p. m. at the club house. Mrs. Hugh H. Hanna will talk on “The Christmas Tree and Its Symbolism,” and the Whittier choir, under leadership of Mrs. Clyde Titus will sing Christmas carols. The Dauner trio, composed of Miss Louise, violinist; Miss Dorothy, pianist, and Miss Helen, cellist, will give a program. The hostesses will be Mrs. John Paul Ragsdale and Mrs. Walter H. Montgomery, assisted by: Mesdames Arthur B. Schulz James R. Bransen F. E. Glass Henry C. Ketcham Claud H. Best. Ray Fatout Card Party Monday No. 7 division. L. A. A. O. H. will entertain Monday evening in the hall, 116 E. Maryland St., with a euchre, bunco and lotto party. Mrs. Thomas Scanlon is chairnmn, assisted by members of the aivision.'

said Jokingly, “Yes, the population of Canada is increasing, but I’m not responsible for that.” The prime minister is a bachelor. He went to the White House, had luncheon with the President and a number of high government officials and was guest of honor at a dinner given by Secretary of State and Mrs. Kellogg. Among the guests were Senator Borah, chairman of the Senate committe on feoreign relations, the Undersecretary of State and Mrs. Robert Olds, Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Ottis, St. Paul, Minn; Secretary and Mrs. Hoover, Secretary Mellon, Secretary of Labor and Mrs. Davis. nun Everybody, of course, who manage to get tickets went to the Army-Navy game. A bunch of Washington debutantes Is chaperoned by the mother of one of the debbies, and thfs particular crowd is attended by an equal number of midshipmen, who will entertain the girls also at dinner, at the show “Rio Rita,” and then will “drag” them to the midshipmen’s ball. Daugherty-Holderman The marriage of Miss Mary Louise Holderman, daughter of Mrs. Laura J. Holderman, to James Carl Daugherty took place at 3:30 p. m. today at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, with the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor, officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Daugherty left Immediately on a wedding trip. They will be at home at 821 E. ThirtySixth st, '