Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 224, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1929 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Program by Students Set for Friday The student section of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale will present a program "Friday afternoon at 3 at the Little Theatre Playhouse, Nineteenth and Alabama streets. The program, being given for members of the active section, will be as follows: “Hejre-Katr Hubay Chant—("Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen”i White Marion Chaplin, violinist; Dorothy Chaplin, pianist. •‘Via So rtf Rla” (“Julius Caesare”) .Handel “The Brightest Day" Martin Louisa Ste-g, vocalist; Mrs. James Wynn, pianist. •‘Dance Oriental” Cady “The Angel us” Reni “Mazurka” Schuelker Fannie Kiser, harpist. “L’Alonette" Balakeriff Prelude B Flat Op. 23 Rachmaninoff Gertrude Whalen, pianist. “Slumber Song” Meyerbeer “The Little Damozelle” Novello “Cara Mlo Ben” Glordani Helen Brooks, vocalist; Mrs. E. E. Voyles. pianist. “Concerto G Minor" Saint-Baena Ruth Oant. pianist; orchestral parts on second piano, Fannetta Hitz. Members of both sections are invited to attend the recital. Miss Lucille Stewart is in charge of the program.
CLUB MEETINGS THURSDAY
Cornelia Cole Fairbanks chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will be held at the Propylaeum. Mesdames Alfred P. Conklin, Charles H. Wood, Horace F. Wood and George H. Gay will be hostesses. Delegates and alternates to the continental congress of the national society of D. A. R., to be held in Washington in April, will be elected. n tt tt Mrs. William H. Foreman, 5445 North Pennsylvania street, will entertain members of the Aftermath Club. tt tt tt Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will meet at the chapter house to elect delegates to the thirtyeighth continental congress. Mrs. Edson T. Wood and Mrs, Herbert S. Wood will be hostesses. u tt a Beta chapter, Delphian Society, will meet at 9:45 a. m. at the Fletcher American Bank building. Mrs. Otto Moore will lead a discussion of “Modern France and the Career of Bonaparte.’’ n tt a Pierian Study Club will have a luncheon meeting at the home of Mrs. P. A. Randall, 3204 Bellefontaine street. Mrs. T. D. Hoover will be assisting hostess. Ladies Society of the Maennerchor will entertian with a luncheon and card party at the Academy of Music. Mrs. Amelia Fish will be hostess. Miss Pauline Schellschmidt will give a talk. tt tt tt Me.mbers of the 1908 Club will be tertained at the home of Mrs. Raymond Wagner, 468 West Thirtieth street. tt tt o The Indiana University Medic Dames will hold a meeting at the Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. Le Roy Shanks and Mrs. B. K. Wiseman will be hostesses. tt a u A Valentine party for members of Zeta Tau Alpha Mothers’ Club will be held at the chapter house. Members will meet for a covered dish luncheon at 11:45 a. m. Members of the active chapter will give a program. Mrs. Margaret Bonke and H. M. Stuckmeyer will be in charge. Guest Bridge Party Alpha chapter, Phf Alpha Pi sorority, will entertain guests with four tables of bridge this evening at the Columbia Club. Guests will include Miss Thelma Hackler, Helen Lesher and Jennie Scheffer. Miss Dorothy Rosebrock. chairman in charge of arrangements, will be assisted by Mrs Jocie Hart.
Are lfou Ready ■ When your Children Ciy for It Baby has little upsets at times. All your care cannot prevent them. But you can be prepared. Then you can do what any experienced nurse would do— what most physicians would tell you to do—give a few drops of plain Castoria. No sooner done than baby is soothed; relief is just a matter of moments. Yet you have eased your child without use of a single doubtful drug; Castcria is vegetable. So if’s safe to use as often as an infant has any little pain you cannot pat away. And it’s always ready for the crueler pa ties of colic, or constipation, or diarrhea; effective, too. for older children. Twenty-five million bottles were bought last year.
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—Howard Studio. Mis 6 Helen Uphaus (above) and William Riley
. St. Catherine’s Dramatic Club will present “Those Terrible Twins,” at St. Catherine’s hall, Sunday afternoon and evening. Miss Helen Uphaus and William Riley carry two of the leading roles. Others in the cart are Misses Pauline Mullen, Anna and Inez Custard and Marie Braun; Messrs. Allen Dacon, Anthony Kennington, Lawrence McGrath and William Wolsiffer. Charles Braun Sr., is director. Performances will be held at 2:15 and 8:15. Monday evening the club will entertain with a dance in the hall, Shelby and Tabor streets.
Couple to Wed Tonight Attend Bridal Dinner Mr. and Mrs. John A. Harvey entertained Tuesday evening at their home, 1032 Churchman avenue, with a bridal dinner in honor of their daughter, Miss Evelyn Harvey, and her fiance, Cedric Rau, whose marriage will take place this evening at the Seventh Presbyterian church. A table was centered with a plateau of white sweet peas and lighted with tall white tapers in green crystal holders. Miniature brides marked the places. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Harvey, Miss Harvey, Mr. Rau, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Stubbs, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hoy, Miss Martha Jean Hoy, Mr. and Mrs. John Lohss, Miss Laurine Harvey and Lawrence O’Toole. Following the dinner the bride presented her attendants with gifts. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. John E. Steeg. EXECUTIVE BOARD HEARS MISS HOWELL Miss Maude Howell, stage manager for George Arliss, was the guest of honor at a tea given Tuesday afterhoon at the home of Mrs. J. A. Goodman, Kessler boulevard. Miss Howell, who is the only woman stage manager in the country, spoke briefly about her work. The tea was given for the executive board of the children's hour committee of the Indianapolis Little Theatre. Those taking part in the February hour were also guests. Fraternity Dance The annual fraternity dance by Phi Kappa Rho will be held Saturday at the Knights of Columbus auditorium, Thirteenth and Delaware streets. Two orchestras, those of Russ Holler and Leroy Hunter, will provide music. Surprise numbers will be among features of the evening. Theta Mu Rho Meeting Miss Yvonne Patterson, 1132 North Tacoma avenue, will be hostess this evening for a Meeting of Theta Mu Rho sorority. Plans for a theater party will be completed. All members are urged to be present. Card Party and Dance Members of the Whoppie Club of St. John’s academy will entertain with a bunco and euchre party Thursday evening at St. Anthony's hall, 379 North Warman avenue. Dancing will follow the card party. Mooseheart Party Mooseheart Legion women will entertain with a capi party at Moose temple, 134 North Delaware street, at 2:30 Thursday afternoon. _________________________ i Card Party Tonight Kappa Phi Delta sorority will entertain with a card party this evening from 8 to 11 at the SpinkArms hotel. White Ink When you need a little white ink and have none, try a solution of bicarbonate of soda.
Boys Advice on Happiness ! in Marriage BY MARTHA LEE There is nothing like a good perspective to get a clear, full view of anything. Sometimes when the object or the situation (we in this column are usually talking about situations, too) is too close, only one side is clearly visible. Only the out- | standing features of the thing are seen. In order to see the thing as a whole, it is best to stand off a bitr. When a husband and wife have looked at their lives and their relations at close quarters for a number of years, they are apt to become I near sighted. Then when the difficulties, those dissensions that start over some inconsequential thing, come, they are not adjusted to seeing them. o s> v Instead of standing off and giving the whole thing a good onceover, they look at the whole and decide all is wrong, or they refuse to recognize there is anything and go their placid ways, fermenting in the whole situation an impossible poison, the poison that unwise silences can ferment. So it happens that very often someone who is standing off, looking at marriage with no personal knowledge of what is the best thing to do under this or that circumstance, can give some very good advice to pilose who are in the situations, merely because they are seeing it through Impersonal eyes, and especially from a good perspective. a a Every once in a while I get letters from young girls containing firstclass information on “How a Husband Should Treat His Wife.” And once in a great while a letter from a man on the same subject. Here is one of them: Dear Miss Lee—Although I am a boy of only 19. and marriage is farthest from my mind, at the present time, I have, through watching my parents, my married friends and married relatives formed an idea about how to be happy though married, and most especially how to make your wife happy. I have come to the conclusion, after watching my folks, that it is the little things that count, the little attentions that don’t cost a man a thing except a little thought for somebody else once in a while, besides himself. First, when a man comes home in the evening from work, he shouldn't just speak to his wife as if she were the maid or a poor relative. He should take her In his arms and kiss her. tell her how glad he is to be back home. That seems . me to be the one thing in the whole l.us ss that can keep a woman happy, und-r ;t any conditions.* A little attention, a v words of praise. Something to let r know that she is important in the sc! e of things. When she gets anew dress or somr .ing new for the home, don't criticise Tell her how pretty it Is first and then say what might improve it a little, in case It doesn’t quite suit. Notice little things, like when she dresses her hair differently. She will simply beam under the Influence of a little notice. Last, but not least, no matter how tired a man may be after work, ask her if she would like to go any place. If the husband is considerate of his wife’s feelings, she will be correspondingly considerate of his. and nine times out of ten will Inquire whether he feels like going out. A movie, a card party. Just once in a while, without her having to sugest it, will go an infinite way toward keeping her amused and interested. Be fair about the money problem. She Is working for her husband, and deserves the salary any employe would receive. And after she has been "paid” a husband has no riaht to quiz her as to what she has doner with that more than his employer would dare ask him. Do you think that hits at the essentials. Miss Lee? WIN. Win, you are a wise boy. and if you can stick to those ideas, and make them workable after you are married things should go very well for you. This is what I mean by getting a good perspective. I take it you have found these things out by studying the causes for unhappiness among those married couples you know. See and profit.
Dinner Bridge Party Series to Begin Thursday The first of a series of dinner bridge parties being sponsored by the women’s luncheon bridge committee of the Indianapolis Athletic Club, for members and their friends, will be held at the club Thursday evening. Mrs. Charles L. Buschmann, general chairman of the committee, and chairman for the party Thursday evening, reports reservations for 150. Assisting Mrs. Buschmann are Mesdames Rollin Buck, A. R. Coffin, James E. Fischer and Lyman Whitaker. The receptipn committee is composed of Roy Elder Adams, president of the club, and Mrs. Adams; Mayor L. Ert Slack and Mrs. Slack; Messrs, and Mesdames Thomas F. Carson, Scott Brewer, C. B. Blakeslee, Roy Bain. Ralph Knode, Frank E. Abbett, Gerald Ely, Briant Sando and W. C. Cooper. Benefit Cards Fraternal Order, Protected Home Circle, will entertain with a benefit card party at Modem Woodmen’s hall, 723 East New York street, at 2:30, Friday afternoon. Social Club Card Party The Social Club of Capital Rebekah Lodge will entertain with a card party at 2, Friday afternoon, at the I. O. O. F. hall, Hamilton avenue and East Market street. Benefit Card Party St. Patrick’s Y. L. S. will entertain with a benefit bridge party at the school Friday evening at 8:15. Euchre, bunco and bridge will be played. Epstein-Y aver Mr. and Mrs. Harry Epstein, 3839 Carrollton avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Sally Epstein, to Joseph Yaver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Yaver, 3414 College avenue. No date has been set for the marriage. Weekly Meeting Sigma Sigma Kappa sorority, will hold its weekly meeting at 8 Wednesday evening, at the Chamber of Commerce building.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
-MAKING HOMES BEAUTIFUL
Light Walls and Dark Floors Safe as General Rule
A corner is a natural and easy center from which to furnish a room. This setting is well worked out to meet the needs of the average small apartment. The small occasional pieces of furniture are largely responsible for the home-like effect.
EDITORS NOTE—This is the sixth of a series of articles written for The Times and NEA Service by William H. Wilson, vice-ptesident of the American Furniture Mart, and an acknowledged authority on interior decoration and period furniture. BY WILLIAM H. WILSON Walls, floors and ceiling should receive first consideration, for without a suitable foundation and background no furnishing scheme can be made attractive. Generally speaking, walls and ceilings should be light and the floors dark. Rarely indeed should a ceiling be as dark as the wall, because the dark ceiling makes the
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents, for which send Pat- 9£ Q Q tern No. Size Street City Name
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Style No. 2699—The new draped silhouette with dipping hem, the chic Parisienne is wearing for afternoons and informal evenings in sheer crepe with lace trim, features the new swathed hipline with youthful bow. It also makes up beautifully in lustrous crepe satin in cocoa brown, using the reverse side of crepe for contrasting texture, and in printed silk crepe with plain harmonizing silk crepe. It can be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. 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, incosing 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week. • Birthday Bridge Miss Anna Hester Milroy was honor guest Tuesday evening at a bridge party given by her sister, Mrs. Philip W. McGrath Jr., 3320 Northwestern avenue, in celebration of her birthday anniversary'. Skating Party Students of St. Mary’s academy will entertain at 8 Thursday evening with a skating party at Riverside rink. Miss Rose Meyer is chairman in charge. Board Meeting Friday The monthly board meeting of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs will be held at 10 Friday morning at the Fletcher-American bank building. Mrs. R. O. McAlexander, chairman, will be in charge. Linen Touches A brown checked tweed frock has starched linen turn-back cuffs, a tiny starched rolled collar and a narrow leather belt.
room appear topheavy—about to drop from sheer weight. Whether the wall be papered or textured, filain white shouid be avoided except in the wood trim. A pale tint of one of the primary colors must be introduced into the coloring of the wall, to give it tone, to form a background for the room. This, with matching and contrasting shades in the rugs or carpeting, draperies, pillows lampshades and upholstery, gives the room its color. Such periods as the Spanish almost demand rough textured walls, while smooth plaster stencilled in diaped patterns suit the walls of the Italian renaissance. The Tudor period in English furniture, to blend with the solidity of the oak of the time, should have oak panelled walls. The French period salons varied between creamy tinted walls, scenic paper;* and intricately carved paneling. Solid toned walls in a soft neutral shade are appropriate to the colonial home, but landscape pattern papers are often preferred because of their quaintness. It is seldom that you can go wrong with cream or ivory color in the woodwork, and if it is of about the same tone as the side wall the room in which it is used will seem much larger than when contrasting woodwork is used. The floors should be dark. The glossy yellow floors seem so frequently today do not give a proper foundation for the decorative scheme. Mahogany and walnut •tints in the floor, polished to a soft glow are in excellent taste, and blend pleasantly with modern furnishings.
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. A. Metzger have gone on a trip to California and Honolulu. During their absance Mr. and Mrs. flenry Arps will occupy their home. bub Mr. and Mrs. George A. Gay, 431.0 North Meridian street, are in St. Petersburg, Fla. BUB Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Campbell, 3690 Central avenue, have gone to San Antonio, Tex., for the remainder of the winter. BUB Mrs. Louis H. LeVey, 2902 North Meridian street, is in St. Petersburg, Fla. B B B Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Coburn, 3510 North Pennsylvania street, will go to Miami, Fla., for the remainder of the winter. B B B Miss Helen Riley, 1701 North Capitol avenue and Miss Iris Walker, New Augusta, have left for Miami, Fla., where they will attend Miami university. Golden Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Bakemeyer, 1130 Broadway, entertained today with a family dinner in celebration of their fiftieth wedding anniversary. They were' married in Indianapolis, and with the exception of a few years spent in Rushville, have lived here their entire married life. Announce August Wedding Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Lorena Burton, daughter of Mrs. Douglas Burton, Mitchell, and Henry Newton Goodbar, Chicago, which took place Aug. 12, last, in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Goodbar will be at home at 2361 North Delaware street, after April 1. Valentine Guest Party The Indianapolis Readers’ Club will entertain with a Valentine Guest day party at the Lumley 'Tea room, 1540 North Meridian street, Wednesday, Feb. 13. Mrs. Fred Miller and Mrs. Joseph E. Andrews will be hostesses. Warfleigh Club Meets A covered dish luncheon for members of the Warfleigh Guest Club was held today at the home of Mrs. E. M. Ricketts, 615 Buckingham avenue. Mrs. Margaret Runnells, Washington, was an out-of-town guest. W.B. A. Party Hollister Review, No. 52, Woman’s Benefit Association, will give a card party at 2 Thursday afternoon at Castle hall. Neat Dresses An excellent way to facilitate neatness in the dresser drawers is to fit a few separate boxes in, for handkerchiefs, gloves, trinkets and undies, and tack them all down to the drawer with thumb tacks. Shirred Eggs For Sunday breakfast, break an egg into each of the buttered dishes of a muffin pan. Add a tablespoon of cream, some butter and season. Cook in the oven and then brown slightly under the broiler.
Women Far From Being Sensitive BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON For a long time women have been called the sensitive sex. We are accustomed to expect them to burst into tears at the slightest provocation. One thing that has been pounded into us is that the female is a delicate and super-sensitive creature who must be gently treated. Utter rot, my friends. Compared to men, we women are as hard as nails. Adamant has nothing on us. Marble is soft beside us. The “skin you love to touch” is in truth a veritable rhinorceros hide when it comes to enduring the shafts of masculine criticism. How meek have we been under this long onslaught of vituperation! For how many centuries did we bow our heads under this avalanche of “advice” poured upon us! We endured the insults of the Victorian era like martyrs endured torture. Nobody would listen to us. We learned the ueslessness of protest. Today it is the husky males who shy at criticism. If you speak of men in general as imperfect creatures, some of them will tear out their hair in handfuls defending their brothers. One man who seems extremely thin-skinned to any joking about his sex, says: “No man likes to be told that he is nothing but an earthworm and a sap. That’s like waving a red rag in front of a mad bull.” Well, sir, no woman has ever liked to be told she was an ignoramus and a fool, but she had to listen to it. for a long time. Os course, I don’t wonder the man gets mad at that. Who on earth ha sever charged that these men are earthworms and saps? Don’t we marry them, and we won’t have our husbands talked about like that. The difference between men and women, as seen from “A Woman’s Point of View,” during some pleasant years of razzing the former, is that the women never answer back, no matter what you say about them. The poor things are so used to being told they don’t know anything and to depending upon the public prints to regulate their lives, that they merely submit. But the men —el toro in the arena has nothing on them when it comes to stampeding. If you can’t praise them say nothing, for the poor things can’t stand criticism.
State Photoplay Indorsers to Meet Here April 4, 5 A state meeting of the Indorsers of Photoplays will be held in Indianapolis at the Claypool hotel Apri 4 and 5, it was announced by Mrs. David Ross, president of the Indianapolis indorsers’ board of directors of the organizations, at a meeting held Tuesday in the woman’s parlors of the Fletcher American National bank. Mrs. Ross is general chairman of the convention. A card party to be given Friday afternoon at 896 East Market street by the indorsers was announced by Mrs. E. L. Burnett. A report on “potato and apple matinees ’ conducted by the organization in December and January was given. Mrs. Charles Davidson reported twenty-three pictures out of twentyfour seen last month have been indorsed. Install Officers Omicron chapter, Chi Sigma, national sorority of Washington, D. C., which has just been installed here, entertained with a dinner Tuesday evening at the Marott hotel. New officers were installed as follows: President, Miss Charlotte Grossman; vice-president, Miss Kathryn Reidy; secretary, Miss Helen Kriber; treasurer, Miss Mildred Saffell, and sergeant-at-arms, Miss Mildred Deiyz. Regular Meeting Tau Gamma Sigma sorority will hold its regular business meeting at 8 tonight at the home of Mrs. Mary Williams, 2730 North La Salle street.
SUGAR AID TO ADEQUATE DIET Encourages the Eating of Healthful Fresh Fruits and Vegetables It is high time that the public became aroused about the craze for dieting. Medical authorities warn us that nourishing foods are necessary to everyone, and especially to growing children. Undernourishment is a peril to health. Good feeding is necessary as a protection against tuberculosis and other diseases. Children should be kept overweight for their age and height# “How is sugar a benefit both to the youth and the adult?” we asked an eminent scientist recently. Sugar in the diet is the fuel preferred by the body. Within a few minutes after eating, sugar appears in the muscles, the fire-box of the body. Think how children and all active people need this perfect fuel in their diet. Not only that, but sweetening so improves the taste of the maintenance foods that it makes eating them a pleasure. In addition to milk and milk products, young people and adults should eat a varied diet of cereals and fresh vegetables and fruits. Sugar makes these healthful foods palatable and enjoyable. Modern candy, containing fruits, nuts, milk, chocolate and sugar, is perfect for dessert. Most foods are more delicious and nourishing with sugar. The Sugar Institute. —Advertisement.
DIRECTS PARTY
—National Photo. Miss Irma Lentz
Members of Lambda Phi Sigma sorority will entertain Thursday evening with a bridge party at the Chamber of Commerce building. Miss Irma Lentz is geqpral chairman in charge of the affair.
Committee for Community Fund Dinner Chosen Mrs. Peter C. Reilly, chairman of the ..attendance and promotion committee for the ninth annual dinner meeting of the Indianapolis Community Fund, named those who will serve on the committee. The meeting will be held in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel the night of Feb. 20. Mesdames Brandt C. Downey, Hugh McGibeny, William C. Smith, J. A. Goodman, Joseph Ostrander, Walter Montgomery. W. E. Pedlow, H. P. Wlllwerth, John H. Phillips, Lucien King, Charles A, Mueller, Stanley Tlmberlake, E. Blake Francis, John W. Moore, August Buschmann, L. G. Hughes. Royal McLain. Robert Masters. Wolf Sussman and Miss Gertrude Taggart. Messrs. Earl Beck, Ferd Hollweg, Louis Earle, Zeo Leach, Howard T. Griffith. Roy Shields, L. D. Bell. Paul W. Simpson, A. E. Baker and Chester Albright. Mrs. Reilly today mailed invitations to the annual meeting to social and civic organizations in the city. Announcement has been made that reservations will close no later than Feb. 16. A pageant, under direction of Mrs. Eugene Fife, instructor of dramatics at Butler university, will be one of the features of the affair. During the meeting, Homer W. Borst, executive secretary, will make a report, eight members will be elected to the board of directors and this year’s honorary member to the Indianapolis Community Fund will be named. Elects New Officers Mrs. Timothy P. Sexton was elected president of the Mothers’ Club of Cathedral high school at a meeting Tuesday in the school auditorium. Officers who will serve with her are: First vice-president, Mrs. R. H. Kroger; second vicepresident, Mrs. James Clemens; third vice-president, Mrs. M. G. Herald; fourth vice-president, Mrs. Leonard Schmidt; recording secretary, Mrs. George McDonnell; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Addison E. Coddington; financial secretary, Mrs. Vincent Concannon; treasurer, Mrs. Bernard Wulle and auditor, Mrs. Garrett Kirby. Entertain With Dinner Mrs. Alice Corbin Sies, president of Teachers College of Indianapolis, entertained Tuesday evening at her home, 2327 North Alabama street, with a dinner party in honor of the president’s council and students’ council. Mrs. Blanche G. Matthews, registrar, and Miss Emma Colbert, dean, assisted the hostess.
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FEB. 6, 1929
Card Party Patron List Announced Miss Ellen Acker, general chairman in charge of a bridge party to be given by tha Indianapolis chapter. American Association of University Women Thursday evening at the Elks’ Club home, announces the following patrons and patronesses: Drs. and Mesdames T. Victor Keene. W. A. Ocker. H. W. Naeckel; Messrs, and Mo*dames John w. Weddell. Prank Hammttt; Mesdames Edna Christian. R. Bruce Morrison. James Ruddell. J. O. Todd. George Bender. Frances Dobbs, W. W. O'Daniels, W. P. Morton. Eleanor K. Golay, Mary Spiegel. Marvin Curie, W. W. Thornton, Charles Reagan, J. W. Putnam. E. Richard McCoy, H. R. Keeling. Arthur Cline, W. L. Appell, Maude Maudy. Lester Smith, Carl Fletcher and Norman Doane. Misses Elsa Jacobson. Aida Knox, Ada Coleman. Gretchen Mueller, Bertha Ebberi, Anna Schaefer, Vl’.lan Ely, Eleanor King, Marcha Finley. Anna Rcade, Katherine Jouney, Eleanor Hester. Dorothy Begur Dinwiddle, Nona Vander Brook, Helen Margaret Bruner. Ruth Poehner, Jenny Harmeson, Dale Waterbury. Mary imei, Leda Hughes. Josephine Graf and Mary Margaret Miller. Reservations for tables or individual places may be made with Miss Ellen Ocker, 29 Hampton drive, Humboldt 5380. MEMBERS ENTERTAIN HUSBANDS AT DINNER Mr. and Mrs. George D. Thornton, 75 North Audubon road, entertained with the annual dinner party given by members of the Irvington Home Study Club for their husbands. Assisting hostesses were Mesdames Fred D. Stilz, Harry Jordan and R. E. Bishop. I'he house was decorated throughout with red and white flowers. At serving time table was arranged with a centerpiece of red roses and white sweet peas. The rest of the decorations and appointments were carried ou,t in Valentine colors. See George Arliss The entire student body of Teachers College of Indianapolis attended the matinee performance of George Arliss in “The Merchant of Venice,” which will conclude an engagement at the English theater with a performance this evening.
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