Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 121, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1930 — Page 6

PAGE 6

GIRL SCOUT HEADS PREPARE TO GREET MRS. HOOVER

Inexpensive A rt Can Add Cheeriness By SEA I TAVE you ever noticed, when moving, how bare and forlorn your new home looks until the pictures are put up? This is the real proof of the importance of pictures and other wall decorations in adding “livability” to a home. This season there are many new kinds of pictures you can add to rive your home a touch of individuality. Black and white etchings are tremendously popular at present and are especially good in a room nf high coloring where they present lust the needed contrast. If a picture is intended for a fairly dark pace, the colors should be vivid, perhaps a gay hunting scene, a bright garden or a flower print in lively colors. Often a mirror will enliven such a corner immeasurably, especially if from its corner it catches a view out of a window or reflects a lighted lamp. Often a home-maker, conscious of her scant knowledge of art, is fearful of purchasing an inferior picture. so selects a reproduction of some masterpiece by Raphael, Van Dyke, Reubens, Rembrandt or some other great artist. Simple Pictures Good While the reproductions nowadays are marvelous, such pictures are so commonly used that they are apt to lessen the individuality of a home. An inexpensive water color of some spot the family knows, a sea scene, or an unusual landscape or portrait might add a whole lot more to your home than a reprduction of a master. Pish are in ag£in as dining room decorations. There are all manner of lovely shell or fish pictures that you can purchase reasonably. Fruit pictures also are good for the dining room and come in a stunning assortment of well-known and exotic varieties. For the living room, smoking room, card room and men s rooms, the very latest things are gay hunting scenes. Old Prints Popular Old prints, of course, take precedence over new ones, and nothing is nicer than some oi the red-coat-ed figures riding to hounds portrayed in the stiff manner of olden days. Coaches are colorful and old English tavern prints are good, too. Bedroom decorations now encourage enlargements of family snapshots, perhaps tinted, framed in narrow frames the color of the woodwork. Costume pictures, old Godey’s Ladies Book prints, silhouettes and old-fashioned garden pictures are all bedroom vogues right now 7 . Bedroom pictures are, of course, the most individual and sentimental of all the house’s decorations. They should be hung lower than pictures in other rooms, too, to emphasize the impression of coziness. Though in this connection it should be said that the most common failing in picture hanging is to place them too high. Put Pictures in Kitchen For the nursery, illustrations of famous children's stories are favorites. and other simple, colorful portraits and scenes are good, too. Even the bathroom and kitchen can have pictures this season, with perfect propriety, and there is no denying that pictures add a pleasant decorative note to both. Among the newest wall decorations, tapestries and maps are foremost. Tapestries should be very good before they deserve hanging. Moreover, ceilings should be fairly high and a room fairly formal to carry them. This, however, is not true of the new 7 vogue for maps. Old maps, new maps, maps of your own home town, or far China, of the eastern or western hemisphere, all of these are good. The very newest mantelpiece or over-the-hall table decoration is one of these quaint maps, framed in narrow wood and tone of your table or often in a gay red to set off the room.

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Indiana Boy is Healthiest ‘ k/Y little son. Charles, suffered IVL a lot with his stomach.” says Mrs. L. W. Christy, 2125 W. Walnut Street. Indianapolis. “He kept having sick headaches and couldn't eat right. “Then our doctor recommended California Fig Syrup and I got him some. The first few doses regulated his bowels, brightened him up marvelously, gave him a good appetite and helped his digestion. “I have since used Fig Syrup with Charles during all his upsets. It has 4>een a wonderful help to him: has assisted in making him the strong boy vou see —perhaps the healthiest one in our neighborhood.” - For more than fifty years, mothers have praised California Fig Syrup. Leading physicians advise its use with bilious, headachy, constipated rhildren. or to keen the bowels open during colds or children’s diseases. Children love its rich, fruity flavor. It tones and strengthens weakened bowels; helps make children robust. Look for the name California w hen buying- That marks the genuine. i! A¥ATIV£-TQNIC^^CHILDREN

GROUPING GIVES BEAUTY TO MANTEL

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—Courtesy Old World Shoo. Glmbel Brothers. New York. charming arrangement for a mantel or over a table or desk includes an old map, dated 1623, a rosewood tea caddy, pewter candlestick lamps and a Staffordshire dog.

Miss Guio Is Honored at Shower, Tea Miss Jean Guio, whose marriage to William Hockett will take place Saturday, was guest of honor at a candlelight tea and miscellaneous shower from 3 to 5 Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Wal’ace R. Jones, 3504 East Fall Creek boulevard Hostesses w r ith Mrs. Jones were Mrs. Charles L. Gibson, Mrs. Jack Stevenson, Miss Alvina Zimmerman and Miss Ruth Palmer. Guests with the bride-elect were: Mrs. Jay B. McElwaine, Seattle. Wash.. Mrs. Jones* house truest: Mrs. Richard Hennessey. Mrs. Arlo Kilpatrick. Mrs. Robert M. Gr zz. Mrs. A. >V. Morgan, Mrs. Carl Queisser, Mrs. Paul Kernel, Mrs. Joseph Sexton. Mrs. Howard Phillips. Mrs. John Paul Jones, Mrs. L. Park Thornburg and her guest. Miss Ona Caplinger. Waren, Ark.. Mis Maxine Quinn, Mis Mildred Tyler. Miss Hazel Guio. Miss Betty Mackay, Miss Julia Miller. Miss Evelyn De Wese, Miss Helen Marker. Miss Eileen Scanlon and Miss Louis Culkins. Mrs. Scott Is Entertained at Country Club Mr? G. W Butler, Martinsville, and Mrs. W. E. Bennett, Indianapolis, entertained Sunday afternoon with a miscellaneous shower and tea at the Martinsville Country Club in honor of Mrs. Craig Scott, formerly Miss Elizabeth Fisk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Fisk. Mrs. Ferdinand Cox, harpist, and Mrs. Michael Kahn, soloist, accompanied by Mrs. Robert Phelps, all of Martinsville, gave a program during the tea hour. Guests included Mrs. Clyde Huey, Mrs. Ted Simon, Mrs. Vernon L. Clark, Mi’s. Gus Sieloff, Mrs. J. Harold Cost, Mrs. Alberta Carson, Miss Estelle Fiske. Miss Cleo Justice, Miss Ruth Robinson, Miss Irene Robinson, Miss Wilhelmina Oeffler, Miss Winifred Wiley, Miss Mary Morgan, Miss Bea Goodpasture, Miss Virginia Fort of Indianapolis and Mrs. Austin Sweet. Martinsville. MISS BURRIS WEDS .V. CAROLINA MAN Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Pauline Burris, Indianapolis, to Paul Baumgartner, Lenoir, N. C., which took place at 9 Sunday morning at the home of the bridegroom's sister. Mrs. Robert Hollowell, and Mr. Hollowell, 4545 Broadway. The service was read by the Rev. S. B. Hardy of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church. There were no attendants. Mr. and Mrs. Baumgartner have gone to Lenoir to make their home. MISS YOUNG NAMED FOR POETRY AWARD Miss Marguerite Young, 263 West Hampton drive, has been named for first honorable mention in the Witter Bynner undergraduate poetry prize competition for 1930, according to an announcement made Saturday. Miss Young, who was graduated from Butler university in June, won the award with a group. ''Gift,” "Mother," “Proud Lady” and “Transition." She has had her verse printed in Poetry and Gypsy, both magazines of verse. She is a member of the Butler Poetry Club, sponsored by Mrs. T. G. Wesenberg. HOLD SHOWER FOR SISTER, BRIDE-ELECT Mrs. Brommell Quillin entertained Friday with a kitchen shower at her home, 2226 North Dearborn street, in honor of her sister, Mrs. Helen Tarrant, whose marriage to Harold Engelliardt will take place Nov. 1. Guests included Mrs. Audrey Tarrant. Mrs. Earl White, who assisted the hostess. Mrs. Richard Hill, Mrs. Grover D Slider. Mrs. Michael Dorn. Mrs. Floyd Quillan, Mrs. Charles Engelliardt. Mrs. Marceline White. Mrs. Herbert Harris, Mrs. Norma Hall, Mrs. Virginia Joslin. Mrs. William Jelly.-Jvlrs. Orville Tudor and Mrs. Laverne Parker. Initiation Scheduled First meeting of Tri Psi sorority will be held Friday at the home of Mrs. W. C. Katterhenry. 4109 Guilford avenue. Mrs. Katterhenry will be assisted by Masdames William Emrich, Thomas L. Green, Lewis Evans, E. F. Barry. A. C. Franke and Paul Padou. Initiation of new members is scheduled for Nov 7 at the home of Mrs. Fred N. Hooker. 3542 Kenwood avenue. \

Welfare Club Opens Its 18th Season at Luncheon Bridge

Welfare Club opened its eighteenth season with a luncheon bridge and President's day at the Meridian Hills Country Club today. The tables were decorated with lavender and white asters, carrying out the club colors. Mrs. Frank J. Haight, who was

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

re-elected president, presided. Other officers are: First vice-president, Mrs. William Birk; second vicepresident, Mrs. John Sawyer; third vice-president, Mrs. Harry Watson; recording secretary, Mrs. Raleigh Fisher; assistant secretary, Mrs. L. T. Creswell; corresponding secretary, Mrs. George Pugh; treasurer, Mrs. Clifford Miller; directors, Mrs. J. G. Karstedt, Mrs. Leroy Mai’tin, Mrs. Nelle Gryer and Mrs. Louis Kriete. The organization, founded in 1912. provides entertainment at the home for aged women every third Thursday of each month.

Shower to Be Held in Honor of Miss Carr Miss Ruth Landers will entertain tonight with a bridge** party and pewter shower at her home, 341 Poplar road, in honor of Miss Janet Carr, whose marriage to Egbert Smith Hildreth will take place Oct. 11. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. E. H. Landers. Guests with Miss Carr and her mother. Mrs. Silas J. Carr, will be Mrs. Fred Stilz, Mrs. Stanley Cain, Misses Nancy Jane Hall, Ann Hall. Beatrice Burgan, Mary Rose Lowry, Marjorie Goble, June Swett, Elizabeth Moschenross, Frances Kelly, Virginia Seeds, Dorotha Weaver, Mary Elizabeth Davidson and Beatrice Yates. 5 REPRESENT CITY AT OHIO STATE U. Indianapolis is represented by five students in the freshman class at the Ohio State university during the fall semester. They are: William H. Freeman, Alan S. Goldstein, Betty B. Asher, Leo J. Traugott and Robert L. Joyce. Couple Is Wed Miss LaVoiftie Swisher, daughter of Mrs. John A. Swisher, 1234 Cottage avenue, and John Nickel, 29 North Riley avenue, were married Saturday at St. Patrick's rectory, the Rev. John O'Connell officiating. Miss Mary Kahl and Wilbur Blenn attended the coupe. They will be at home after a short wedding trip at 4808 East Washington street.

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Program Is Is Fixed for Convention The program of the state convention of W. C. T. U.. held in Anderson. Oct. 10 to 13, lias been announced. Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley. Liberty, state president, will preside at a meeting of trustees Oct. 9 at Hotel Anderson. Mrs. Ella Wilson, president of the Madison county W. C. T. U., will have charge of convention arrangements. The session will open at 8:30 Friday morning, Oct. 10, in the First Methodist Episcopal church, j Mrs. Stanley will call the meeting to order. Committee reports will be heard and announcement of convention committees named. Mrs. Stanley will make an address j in the afternoon. Friday night a welcome celebration will be held. Officers will be elected Saturday morning. In the afternoon there will be an open forum on the constitutional convention and introduction of visitors and delegates. Saturday night there will be a musical program, an address by Carey Higgins, Andersen, and the diamond medal contest, in charge of Mrs. Julia Overman, Marion. Sunday morning the convention sermon will be preached by Mary Harris Armor of Atlanta, Ga.. the "Billy Sunday" of the W. C. T. U., at the church. There will be a program in the afternoon in the high school gymnasium and one in the evening, at which Mrs. Armor will speak. The convention will close Monday morning. PAN HELLENICS TO INSTALL OFFICERS Members of Indianapolis Panhellenic Association will hold its annual guest day luncheon at the Spink-Arms Saturday. New officers will be installed. They are Miss Marie Sangernebo, president; Mrs. Glenn Heavenridge, vice-president; Mrs. J. P. La hr, treasurer; Miss Isabel Eddy, assistant treasurer; Miss Clara Catherine Meek, corresponding secretary; Miss Mary Gertrude Manley, recording secretary. Mrs. Lahr is in charge of reservations. HOLyVrINITY GROUP TO PRESENT PLAY Young Ladies’ Sodality of Holy Trinity church will entertain at 8 Saturday night with a comedy drama, “Three Sisters.” A dance will follow. Members of the cast are Misses Angela Mary Zakrajsek, Mary Luzar, Josephine Radkovic, Julia Cesnik, Victoria Zore. Mary Banic, Margaret Monfreda and Anna Vertacnik. MISS CARR NAMED HONOR GROUP HEAD Miss Elizabeth Carr lias been elected to head Scarlet Quill, honorary organization for senior women at Butler university. Other officers are: Vice-president, Miss Beatrice Burgan; secretary, Miss Constance Glover, Veedersburg, and treasurer, Miss Marguerite Doriot. SORORITY CLUB TO MEET WEDNESDAY Mrs. William Thompson, 326 East Fifty-eighth street, will be hostess for a lunchen meeting of Delta club of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority at her home Wednesday. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Paul Rhoadarmer and Mrs. Walter Hubbard. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Charles A. Harris. Mrs. Bishop and Mrs. Hubert Arnold. Observe Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Elmer M. Cooper. Knightstown, observed their golden wedding anniversary Sunday at their home with open house.

NEWS OF SOCIETY FOLK

Mrs. Vernon Griffith. Marott hotel, has gone to Detroit. Mich., with her daughter, Mrs. Guy Chester Smith. Bloomfield Hills, who has been visiting her. Mrs. Frederick Joss, 1836 North Pennsylvania street, will leave Wednesday for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Robert B. Parker. Wayland, Mass., before joining Mr. Joss in Tucson, Ariz., later in the month. v Mr. and Mrs. Woodbury Treat Morris 4160 Washington boulevard, will return Friday from their summer home in Harbor Point. Mich. Joseph Norton. Chicago, spent the week-end with A. Bennett Smith, 28 East Sixteenth street. Mrs. John M. Shaw and daughter, Blanche Burkhardt Shaw, 1306 Park avenue, will leave this week for San Francisco. They will sail Oct. 14 on the President Hayes for Hawaii, and a trip around the world. They expect to be gone six months. Mrs. Jacqueline Holliday will have a tea Thursday at her home, 1050 West Forty-second street, for Mrs. George C. Gellhorn, St Louis. Mrs. Gellhwn will speak at the meeting of the League of Women Voters. Guests will be members of the Junior League. Mrs. W. H. Tobin. 1615 Talbott street, has as her house guest Mrs. George Haymond, Muncie. Miss Hazel Henrdicker, Aurora. 111., is the house guest of Mrs. C. A. Crum, 1220 Sturm avenue. Mrs. Frederick Krull. 4732 North Pennsylvania street, will speak at

Miss Schmidt Will Be Bride of Muncie Men Announcement of the engagement of Miss Thelma Ann Schmidt to Alfred L. Hale, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Hale, Muncie, was made at a bridge party given Saturday night at the Lumley tea room by the mother of the bride-elect, Mrs. Fred Schmidt, 2916 East North street. The wedding will take place Oct. 11. Decorations and appointments w*ere in the bridal colors, rose and green. Guests with Miss Schmidt were Mrs. Louis Sells, Mrs. Everett McMurray, Mrs. Otis Vernon, Mrs. Edward R. Madinger, Mrs. Ralph Beeten, Mrs. Henry Horn, Misses Lavonne Taylor, Mary Esther Bowman, Norma Schaefer, Dorothy Schaefer, Gertrude Stahner, Ethel Vogt, Wilma Risdon, Charlotte Niemann, Alma Domroese, Ernestine Krome, Clara Hildebrand, Clementine Hildebrand. Eloise Lenkhardt and Helen Schmidt. MISS HAMILTON TO OPEN STUDIO HERE Miss Medi Hamilton, formerly of Chicago, will have afternoon and night classes, w hich include courses of twevle weeks each, at her round table studio. 37 East Pratt street. The courses will include conversational public speaking, current reading, vocabulary building, letter writing and a study of literature, drama and poetry.

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the opening meeting of the Muncie branuh. American Association of University Women. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Edmund B. Ball. Muncie. Wednesday she will speak at a tea at the Connersville Country Club. Dr. and Mrs. John M. Cunningham have returned from their ; honeymoon and are at home at the Marott. Mrs. Edgar Kiser, 3715 Washington boulevard, is visiting relatives in , the east. She has been in Bror.xville, N. Y., where her daughter. Miss Fannie Kiser, has entered Sarah Lawrence college. Fraulein Lies Fox, head of the Weyman school of dancing and j body training, Munich, Germany, will be the house guest of Mrs. Lafayette Page, Woodstock drive, until December, when she will return to Munich. She will conduct classes in Ruth Page's studio. Mrs, I Page and Fraulein Fox will arrive together Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Hamilton, 2003 North Pennsylvania street, are spending a few days at Chalfonte Haddon Hall, Atlantic City, N. J. Bishop Alphonse Smith, Nashville, Tenn., has been visiting friends in the city. Miss Elinor Stickney, 18 East Thirty-second street, will attend the Katherine Gibbs school in New York City this year. Mr. and Mrs. George Smith, 4007 Park avenue, have returned from Jasper National park, Florida. Mrs. Norman Perry, 3853 Noijth Meridian street, and her mother, Mrs. J. H. Neighbors, 317 East Maple road, have gone to Tucson, Ariz., where Norman Perry Jr. will enter the Ranch school. From there they will go to San Francisco to visit Mrs. Neighbors’ son. Charles Neighbors. They will return to Indianapolis in November. Mrs. Charles T. Ward. 602 North Gray street, is in Burbank, Cal., visiting her daughter, Miss Kyra Ward, formerly of Indianapolis. Mrs. Grace H. Deßruton, 1015 | Fairfield, avenue, has been at the Montclair, New 7 York, for several days. Miss Elizabeth Oglesby. Miss Helen Seibold and Miss Jean Wilson of Indianapolis have been pledged to the Pi Beta Phi sorority | at Franklin college.

CARD PARTIES

New Hope council No. 49, Daughters of America, will give a card | party at 8:30 tonight at the hall, I Morris and Lee streets. ! Queen Esther O. E. S. auxiliary j will have a luncheon and card party ! Wednesday at 12:15 at the Food Craft shop, Century building. Center council, S. B. A., will have a euchre and bunco party Tuesday jat 8:30 at 116 T- East Maryland street. A card party will be given Tuesday at 8:30 in Holy Angels hall for the benefit of the church. All games will be played. Winamac council, order of Pocahontas, will have a card and bunco party Tuesday at 8:30 at the hall, Seventeenth street and Roose ;clt avenue.

SEPT. 29,1930

U. S. Agents to Protect First Lady Entertaining the first lady of the land has its weighty responsibilities. along with its glories, those in charge of the sixteenth national convention of Girl Scouts of America. which will open in Indianapolis Wednesday, have discovered Plans for the entertainment of Mrs. Herbert Hoover, who. as former national president of Girl Scouts, and wife of the President of the United States, now is honorary national president, have to be curtailed and guarded with the utmost care, those in charge of convention arrangements have been informed, by R. C- Wood, secret service man. who arrived this morning from Washington. No person will be admitted to any Girl Scout meeting or social function without infallible credentials and identification, Wood has ordered. Mrs. Hoover will arrive in the city unannounced. Only Governor and Mrs. Harry G. Leslie, witli whom Mrs. Hoover will stay while she is in Indianapolis.' and high executives of the Girl Scout organi-. zation, know 7 the hour of her ar-J rival. |jj Attend Luncheon Meeting E She will attend the luncheon! meeting of the national board oii Girl Scouts at the Lincoln Tuesday noon, at which only national board members will be admitted. She will return to the Governor's mansion for the afternoon. Tuesday night Mrs. E. Blake Francis. Indianapolis, commissioner for Girl Scouts, will entertain with a dinner at the Woodstock Club for national board members only. Mrs. Hoover also will attend this affair. She will stay for the reception to be held following dinner. Members of the Indianapolis council wilt be hostesses for the reception. The convention proper is scheduled to open at 10 Wednesday morning at the Lincoln. Mrs. Hoover will attend this sesssion. Just what part she will take in the opening ceremonies is not known by members of the local council nor those in charge of the convention program There is a luncheon slated for Wednesday noon at the Columbia Club, in charge of Mrs. Morris Haines. Whether Mrs. Hoover wili attend this is problematical. She is leaving Indianapolis for Cleveland some time Wednesday, to join President Hoover, who will speak at the annnal convention of the American Bankers’ Association. 500 Delegates Coming There will be more than five hundred delegates, executive and professional members of the Girl Scout organization in Indianapolis to attend the convention. The announcement that Mrs. Hoover is to be here has increased the number considerably. Registration will be held all day Tuesday. At the formal opening ■Wednesday morning, Mrs. Francis will extend greetings in behalf of the local council and Mrs. William H. Hoffman. Rhode Island, national president, will respond _