Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 258, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1930 — Page 9
Second Section
Miss Boles Married in Noon Rites Miss Wilma Boles and Edwin G. Overmire of Detroit, were united in marriage today at a ceremony per"ormed at 12:30, at the Centra! avenue Methodist Episcopal church, the Rev. Frank Lee Roberts, pastor, officiating. Miss Boles Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Boles, 51 North Temple avenue. Mr. Overmire is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Overmire, 1624 Park avenue. The church was decorated with palms, and the altar banked with palms and ferns. The service was read by the light of tall cathedral candles. While the ushers, W. A. Driver. Wilfred Overmire and C. W. Hutson were seating the guests, Mrs. Delmar McWorkman, organist played a program of bridal airs. She also accompanied J. J. who sang "Until,” "O Promise Me, nd "At Dawning." Mrs. W. A. Driver, the bride o ctister. was her only attendant. She wore orchid chiffon, made along princess lines with a picture hat of horsehair braid and slippers to match. She carried pink roses. William I. Boles was best man. The bnde, who was given in marriage by her father, wore peach chiffon, with fitted bodice and long, tight fitting sleeves. The skirt fashioned of three circular tiers, was made with an uneven hemline, falling Into a short train. Her hat was of peach horsehair braid, and her slippers were of the same shade. She carried a shower bouquet of butterfly roses and lilies of the valley. Mr. and Mrs. Overmire, with their parents, received informally at the church following the ceremony. The couple have gone on a trip to Cuba, the bride travelling in a beige frock, hat, lapin coat, and snakeskin purse and slippers. They will b* at home after April 1, at 4669 Birwood avenue, Detroit, Officers of Musicale to Be Elected Boris Rosenfleld. pianist, will present a group of compositions by the modern composers at the March meeting of the choral section of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale Friday at the Y. W. C. A. Luncheon will be served at 12:30 p. m„ followed by the annual business meeting and election of officers. The program, arranged by Mrs. Dante L. Conner, will bt? given at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Conner will read a paper on "Music Today and Modernism.” "ThrniP Variation. Tartin! • rranyc- • •• Kreisler • Boulanger Tambourln. Grossec arrangement” MifvS Harriet Payne, violinist; Mrs. Anita Wandell. accompanist. Awakening- Oold* ..5?,9? I ’; mark( ’ tln K Weaver H,l ii _ La Forge Mar? Morgan Borman, vocalist- .._ Mrs. Lillian Flickenger. pianist! TYnirth Nocturne Faure •'Cracovienne Fantastlcjue" .’....‘Paderewski 'Nocturne Op. 16. No. 4" Paderewski ... Albeniz ~;\ rabesnue Debussv Humoresque" Rachmaninoff May Night" Pahneren ■ Hut of the Baba Yaga “The Great Gate of Kiev”. .Moussorkskv Boris Rosenfleld. guest artists, pianist. Russia Will Be Subject of Lecture "The Mad Monk of Russia" is the subject of the lecture to be given at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday by Maurice Hindus at the general meeting of the Woman's Department Club to be held at the clubhouse, 1702 North Meridian street. Hindus, who spoke before the club last year on “The Soul of Russia,” has spent much of his time for the last several years in Russia as a journalist. His lecture deals with present day Russia under the Communist regime. He was graduated from Harvard university. He was born in Russia and came to America at the age of 14. Preceding the lecture, a business meeting will be held at 2 p. m„ with Mrs. Everett M. Schofield, president, and Mrs. John R. Currrv, third vicepresident. presiding. A special musical program will be given, under the direction of Mrs. C. E. Breece. Tea will be served by members of the hospitality committee, which includes: Mesdames JT rrv L. Orlopp Moses B. Lairv L. A. Mansfield W. D. Long T. E Mvers W. F Milholland C. E Pittman R. Harrv Moore Samuel Ashby L. H. Sturges A. S. Avres G. B. Tavlor E. A. Brown W W. "P’nrrton R. H Brown Martin Wallick Geore Q Bruce J A Warrender Vernon E. Butler Martha E Wilson Charles M. Clayton Albert J Wohlgemuth A. R Uewev Arthur Wolf. C. tv field
PAST PRESIDENTS TO BE HONORED
Annual President’s day luncheon rs the Indianapolis chapter No. 20. Woman’s Organization. National Association of Retail Druegists. will be held at 1 o’clock Tuesday at the Columbia Club. Past presidents will be hostesses. Mrs. Edward Ferger, chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. William F. Freund, honorary president; Mrs. C. B Stoltz. Mrs. James Sproule and Sirs. W F. Holmes. Mrs. Edward H. Niles, president, will preside. The luncheon tables will be decorated with bowls of spring flowers. Following the business meeting, the afternoon will be spent playing cards.
Knll Leased Wire Service of the United Preaa Association
the guest of Governor and Mrs. AT SORORITY TEA of Cltlb GfOUP M , \ BACHQbCht Harry G. Leslie, will be an honor guest at the ball to be given tonight r . HI n TTIi y ___ , T i MRS. KOBER.T Coleman photo at the Marott by Indiana members of the Lambda Chi fraternity. Mrs. Rlverside drivej ’ will t 4 hostess for Will BC FjIKIcC
School Group Will Meet to Name Officers Indianapolis chapter. St. Mary-of-the-Woods Alumnae Association, will meet Thursday at 1. at Ayres tea room, for a get-together luncheon. Officers will be elected, and plans for re-organization on a permanent basis will be discussed. Mrs. Leßoy Keach is president of the present group. Miss Alice Mullen Is chairman for the luncheon, assisted by Miss Rosamund Solomon. Her committee includes. Mrs. Keach. Mrs. W. J. Stark. Mrs. Raymond Mead, Mrs. William Harding, Mrs. W. J. Freaney, Mrs. F. T. Dowd. Mrs. George T. O'Conner. Mrs. William J. Mooney and Mrs. G. B. Ely. Study Group to Meet Members of the book-a-month study group of the literature department of the Woman's Department Club will meet at 10:30 a. m. Wednesday at the clubhouse. Mrs. W. W. Thornton will review “All Quiet on the Western Front,” by Remarque. Mrs. H. W. Rhodehamel will preside. A plate luncheon will be served for those wishing to remain for the general club meeting in the afternoon. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Nettie New by Tuesday morning.
The Indianapolis Times
ELECTION ARRANGED BY CLUB WOMEN
Annual election of officers for the Woman's Department Club will be | held Wednesday at the clubhouse, j 1702 North Meridian street. Eiec- ! tion is by ballot, and the polls will : be open from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. Every member is asked to vote. Officers to be elected are presi- | dent, vice-president, recording sec- : retary, membership secretary, treasurer and three directors-at-large.
TRIO TO BE HONORED AT LUNCHEON
Mrs. Eugene H. Darrach, 1302 North Meridian street, will be hostJ ess for a luncheon meeting to be given at 1 Monday afternoon at her home for members of the Philip Schoff chapter, National Society Daughters of 1812. Honor guests will be three real daughters, Mrs. Finley Franklin, ! Clayton; Mrs. W. L. Heiskell and Miss Katharine Taffe. They are won-'n j whose fathers were in the war of 1812. Mrs. James Sutherland will read a paper on •‘Antiques.” D. of A. Will Meet Capitol City council, Dos A., will meet Tuesday in their new clubroom at 1002 East Washington street. Trainmen's hall. The club j formerly met at Eleventh street and College avenue.
INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1930
Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, who, with her brother, Charles Curtis, Vice-President of the United States, is the guest of Governor and Mrs. Harry G. Leslie, will be an honor guest at the ball to be given tonight at the Marott by Indiana members of the Lambda Chi fraternity. Mrs. Leslie will serve as hostess for the affair. Mrs. Harvey B. Martin is assistant general chairman in charge of the annual card party to be given by members of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs at the Marott at 2 p. m., Wednesday, March 19. Mrs. Robert Coleman is president of Alpha Latreian. the Junior group of the Indiana Federation of Women’s Clubs. The organization will give its annual skating party at Riverside. Monday, March 31, for the benefit of the children’s nutrition camp at Bridgeport. Mrs. Louis Cooper Wilson is chairman in charge of arrangements for the affair, Mrs. K. Patrick Hogan, before her marriage, March 1, at SS. Peter and Paul cathedral, was Miss Sue Shafer.
Miss Collins Is Honored at Shower Party Mrs. Charles L. Fach entertained with a luncheon bridge and crystal shower today at tht Columbia Club in honor of Miss Katherine Mabel Collins, whose engagement to John Person recently was announced. The luncheon table was centered with a plateau of spring flowers in pastel shades. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. George M. Augustus. Guests with the bride-elect and her mother, Mrs. Mabel Collins, were: Mesdame; Reagan Carev Charles Davis William I. Coons Jr. Fritz Morris Sam Sampsell Raich Lilia rd Joseph Brower Robert Jones FTancis McAreo Cullen Espy Misses Alice Hopoe Cornelias Bates Celestlne Donnelly Helen Beck Mary Kelley
SISTERS TO BE WED IN DOUBLE RITES
Philip Roth, 312 Eastern avenue, announces the engagement of his daughter. Miss Helen Mary Roth, to William J. Schafer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schafer, Madison, and Miss Lorene Catherine Roth to John E. Merl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Merl. 312 North Temple avenue. The sisters will be married at a double ceremony, to be performed at 7 Tuesday morning. April 22, at St. Philip Neri church. Baby's Table-Cloth A considerate mother made several little tray cloths of pretty damask and colored linen, lining with backs of sheer muslin, and into this little bag she slipped oblong pieces of rubber sheeting. These are laid over the baby’s end of the table, and are taken along when mother and baby go visiting. They save much washing when baby spills his food.
MRS, BIRD HOSTESS AT SORORITY TEA
Mrs. Cecil D. Bird. 1835 East Riverside drive, will be hostess for a bridge tea at her home from 3 to 6 p. m. Sunday for members of Delta Rho chapter, Phi Psi sorority. Guests will include Miss Margaret Ralston, Miss Ruth Schneider, Miss Lucille Orphey, Miss La Vone Johns and Miss Margaret Crowe. The regular bi-weekly business meeting will be held Monday night. Miss Christine Sigmund will be hostess. Reservations Are Made for Chapter Party Mrs. Frank Dowd, 1507 Park avenue, is in charge of reservations for the monthly card party to be given at 2 Tuesday afternoon at the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter house, 824 North Pennsylvania street, by members of the Seventh District Women’s Democratic Club. Hostesses for the affair are; Mesdames Dowd Webb Beil John W. Kern Lac Welch Isaac Born W. H. Blodgett L. J. Reach 5. P. Brennan L. Ert Biaek H. K. Batcheldor Clarence 'Wheatley Pearl Bunnlng David Newman W. F. Barton Michae! E. Foley Joe! Baker John D. Johnson W’. C. De Miller John W Mullen W. H. Coleman Edgar A. Brown John Mayer J. W. Price James E. Deery J. H. Bingham E. P. Kenney W. H. Bobbitt Charles Grave Frank Flanner Joseph Wood Edward Barry Elmer Short ridge W. O. Gordon _ . _
Second Section
Entered a* Second-Class Matter at Postoffice. Indianapolis
Bridge Tourney of Club Group Will Be Ended Final games of the bridge tournament staged by the Indianapolis Business and Professfllnal Women’s Club will be played at 8 p. m. Thursday at the Woman’s Department Club, 1702 North Meridian street. Four players remain from the 400 who started in the tournament. These four, Mrs. Izona Shirley, Miss Marie Holstein, Miss Pearl La Rue and Miss Gertrude MacArthur. will play for the grand prizes; First will be SSO; second. $25; third, sls, and fourth. $lO. All others who participated in the tournament will play. Mrs. Pearl A. Cook, chairman of the finance committee, was in charge of the tournament, agisted by Mrs. Gavle Baird, Mbs Louise Ross, Mbs Belle Cone, Miss Theta Byrkett, Miss Hazel Street, Miss Mary J. Sturgeon and Miss Louise Mclntyre, who also are arranging for the final play. Twenty extra tables will be arranged for extra gups*s. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Cook, 4065 Bouelvard place. Hold Formal Initia.tion Tri-Arts Club will hold formal initiation tonight % at the home of Miss Thelma Patterson, 1130 North Tacoma avenue. Pledges who will be initiated will be Miss Loraine Eisele, Miss Alberta Douglas, Miss Mary Mitchell, Miss Anna Moore, Miss Louise Moorman, Miss Irma Mae Steele, Miss Margaret Severn and Miss Marjorie Wood.
Federation Convention Is Arranged Annual convention of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs, to be held at the Lincoln April 9, 10 and 11, will take on the aspect of a choral festival. The festival will take the place of the choral contests of the , past two federation conventions. Choruses and choirs, both junior and senior, affiliated with the federation, will appear at all the convention sessions and will be heard in a massed chorus on the "grand choral festival” program to be given the second night of the convention at the Broadway Methodist Episcopal church. The choir of that church, directed by Willard E. Beck, will sing on the program. Beck is co-operating with Mrs. Frank B. Hunter and Mr-.. Robert Tinsley, Crawfordsvilltf, who are in charge of the festival. The mass chorus will be directed by Percival Owen. More than 500 members of federated groups already have registered for entrance in the festival programs, representing Brazil, Muncie, Crawfordsville, Tipton. Ft. Wayne, Connersville, Greencastle, Ladoga and Indianapolis. Group to Sing The Connersville group includes i thirty women and twenty men under the direction of Miss Flora Rogers, ! one of the largest groups to enter | the festival. The Greencastle group, known as the "Purple Robed Junior j choir.” an undenominational group, was organized and is directed by Kenneth Umfleet, director of public school music at De Pauw university and the Greencastle city schools. The Ladoga group is a chorus of mothers and grandmothers. They will sing on the mothers’ chorus pro. gram on the afternoon of April 10, with three mothers’ choruses from Indianapolis schools. A feature of this program will be a talk ou “Mothers’ Chorus’’ by Walter Aiken of the Cincinnati board of education. the originator of the idea of organizing these groups. Extend Time Limit Spring activities include not only the state convention, but also the first state convention for junior federation members, April 4 and 5. In connection with the annual junior contests: the annual federation card party, March 19. at the Marott, on which day similar card parties will be given in other towns by club members unable to attend the Indianapolis party, and the annual radio music memory contest to be conducted by the federation at 10 a. m. Thursday, March 27. Through the courtesy of the Indianapolis Broadcasting, Incorporated, the contests will be broadcast from the company's stations at Evansville, Ft. Wayne, Terre Haute, Marion and WKBF, Indianapolis, which will enable most of the schools in the state to take part. The time limit for contest registration with Mrs. Fred Bokeloh, 1116 Hamilton avenue, Indianapolis, has been extended to March 26. Rules and registration blanks will be sent by Mrs. Bokeloh upon application. Three radios will be awarded to the schools winning the three highest .scores. Mrs. Hunter is assisting with | the contest. Program Is Arranged by Cltd) Groups Members of the Present Day and I Monday clubs will observe Reciproci ity day Monday. The Monday club meeting will be held at the D. A. R. chapter house, 824 North Pensylvania street, at 2:30 p. m. The Present Day club meeting will take place at 2 at the home of Mrs. Fred L. Pettijohn, 2366 Park avenue, when Mrs. Robert Bruce Malloch will talk on "Famous Children in Fiction." Mrs. C. A. Breece, accompanied by Mrs. Thomas Woodson, will sing a group of children’s song. She also will sing “Over the Hills and Home Again,’ by Speaks; “Spring Fancy,” by Densmore; “In Italy," by Byrd, and “Hark the Lark.” by Schubert. Following the business session at the Monday club meeting, when election of officers will take place, Mrs. B. F. Lieb, member of the Present Day club will give a talk on the “City of Mexico.” Mrs. Inez Samper, accompanied by Miss Rea Bauer, both in Spanish costumes, will sing “Clavelistos,” “La Paloma,” “Estrellita,” and “Voya Partir.” Hostesses for the day will be Mrs. Willis B. Stewart, Mrs. T. William Engle, Mrs. Elmer A. Williams, Mrs. W. C. DeMiller, Mrs. L. L. Fellows, Mrs. J. J. Martin, Mrs. E. E. Mitchell and Mrs. L. H. Millikan. Church Class Will Give Tea at Club House An Irish silver tea will be given from 2 to 4 p. m. Friday by members of the primary mothers’ class of the East Tenth Street Methodist Episcopal church, at the Woodruff Place club house. Proceeds from the affair win go toward the class work for patients at the Flower Mission. A musical program will be given during the receiving hours. Mrs. George Hunt, president of the organization, and Mrs. W. F. Holmes, teacher, will serve as hostesses. Mrs. William Jester is chairman of the refreshments committee; Mrs. William Randall and Mra, Holmes will arrange the program and Mrs. J. L. Wikoff has charge c* decoratgms.
