Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 138, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1930 — Page 8
PAGE 8
State Clubwomen Will f Follow Teachers Here \ as Convention Visitors NO sooner will the throngs of Indiana school teachers who are attending the State Teachers’ convention be gone from Indianapolis than more than 700 delegates and members of the Indiana State Federation of Women’s Clubs will be here for their annual convention. An interesting announcement to Indianapolis club women was made Thursday when Mrs. Frederick G. Balz, general chairman for the conference of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs made it known she would run against Mrs. Robert A. Hicks of Cambridge City forfthe office of first vice-president of the state federation. Up until that time the election was uninteresting. The other two offices to be filled at this convention, state treasurer and one trustee, had only one candidate each. Mrs. Charles S. Hartley, New Albany, is candidate for the office of treasurer and Mrs. James S. Boonshot, Petersburg, 1s running without opponent for the office of trustee. Mrs. Frank J. Sheehan, Gary, who was tc have run against Mrs. Boonshot, withdraw her name last week. The convention, the foicy-flrst, will open Tuesday and continue through Thursday. Bessie* s will be held at the Claypool.
Engagement Party to Be Held Tonight Mrs. John Worley will entertain with a dinner at 6:30 tonight at her home, 625 East Twenty-fifth street, at which time announcement of the engagement of her daughter, Miss Bonita Worley and M. Roland Rapier, Cincinnati, son of Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Rapier, also of Cincinnati, will be made. The wedding will take place at 8 Thanksgiving morning at the Broadway Methodist Episcopal church. Mrs. Veldom Montgomery will be matron of honor and Miss Carol Worley, cousin of the bride, will be bridesmaid. R. Gordon Worley, brother of the bride, will be Mr. Rapier’s best man. Ushers will be Joseph and George Robson, cousins of the bride. The table will be decorated with rose, orchid and yellow/ asters, carrying out the bridal shades, and lighted by rose tapers. Covers will be laid for Mesdames Worley, Montgomery, Ralph Greiggs, Gordon Worley and Misses Carol Worley, Ruth Cook, Eileen Klaiber, Emma HofTmeister, Ruth Burns, Pauline Kink, Mary Morgan, Jeanette Shoemaker of Dayton, O.; Gladys Sims of Muncie. Dinner Dance Arranged for Bridal Couple James Cunning will entertain with a dinner dance tonight at the Woodstock Club in honor of Miss Anna Lou Henry and her fiance, Oscar Jose Jr., who will be married next Saturday at the First Presbyterian church. Miss Henry is the daughter of S. E. Henry, 4814 North Meridian street. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. ajid Mrs. O. A. Jose, 3048 Fall Creek boulevard. Guests will be members of the bridal party, including: Miss Helen Louise Rogers. Miss Anna Richardson. Pasadena. Cal.: Miss Victoria Pyle. Wilmington, Del.: Miss Margaret Henry and Miss Catherine Jose: William D. Brunbaugh Jr.. Greenville. O.: Cannine Childs. Merchantvlile. N. J.: Allen Shimer and Lauren Stokesberry.
SINGER TO ASSIST AT MUSICALE SUNDAY
Frances Johnson, soprano, will be guest artist at the musicale to be given Sunday afternoon from 2:30 to 3:30 by the Marott trio in the main lounge of the Marott. Following Is the program: ‘'Finale" (from D Minor Tri0'........ Mendelssohn Trio. “Blackbird’s Sons" -Cyril .? cott “When I Bring,to YoUr Colourd Toys Carpenter tPhyUia"' (1650) Downs Frances Johnson. ‘■Berceuse" Renard Consuclo Couchman. “With Verdure Clad" (Creation) Haydn Frances Johnson. , •Tambourin’’ Rameau-Kre sler ‘Tempo dl Menuetto” .. .Pugnanl-Krelsler Maud Custer. , “Celle oue Je Prefere”. Fourdrain “Wohin" ‘ClaveUto*” Valverde Frances Johnson. •elections from "Blossom Time”..... Schubert-Romberg Trio. MUSICALE 'JUNIORS WILL OPEN SEASON First meeting of the season of the junior section of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale will be held at the home of Mrs. Charles Maxwell, 401 East Fifty-sixth street, Saturday, Oct. 25. A playlet will be presented by members of the dramatic group of the junior department of Kirshfcaum Community center, under direction of Miss Louise Jaeger. Those who will take part are Misses Barbara Barskin, Doris Jane Goldsmith. Helen Steinberger, Sara Elizabeth Marks. Alvin Cohn and Gordon Jacobs. Following the play Lloyd Stalhuth will give a program of violin numbers. Mrs. Maxwell is sponsor for the section, assisted by , Mrs. Isaac Marks and Mrs. D. E. Gruber.
Formal Dedication Is Set for Kappa Kappa Gamma House
Formal dedication of the new Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house, 821 West Hampton drive, one of the first women's sorority homes to be completed on the Butler campus, will be held at 7 Saturday, Oct. 25, at a special ceremony and banquet. Mrs. Everett M. Schofield, chairman of Mu chapter foundation of the sorority, is* in charge of dedicatory services. Ground was broken on New Year’s day- 1930. which marked the fiftysecond anniversary of the founding of the chaptev on the Butler campus. The house was completed in July. With Mrs. Helen Shimer as house mother, the house was opened this fall. Mrs. Guinevere Ostrander is chairman of the banquet and arrangements committee, which is planinng a banquet for Saturday night with open house and a reception from 4 to 6 and from 7 to 9. Sunday. All Kappas in the city, their friends and families, Butler faculty, students and alumnae are invited to the reception. Members of Mr*. Ostrander's committee are: UMtma Bstta Manus. OBMuntu
Preceding the opening of the convention proper, members of the advisory board will hold a meeting at 9:45 Tuesday morning in the palmroom. Mrs. Edwin F. Miller, Peru, state president, will preside. Mrs. Edwin N. Canine will be in charge of discussions on departments and Mrs. Harry L. Green on districts. Council Meeting Slated A council meeting will be held at 1 in the assembly hail. Informal opening of the convention will be at 3 in the assembly hall, with Mrs. Miller presiding. Reports will be given by Mrs. Canine, first vicepresident; Mrs. Green, second vicepresident; Mrs. Hartley’, recording secretary; Mrs. Edwin I. Poston, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Hicks, treasurer; Mrs. George W. Phillips, chairman of trusteees; Mrs. Sheehan, General Federation director; Mrs. Hamet D. Hinkle and Mrs. Miller. Dinner for department workers will be held in the Florentine room and for district and county chairmen in the Chateau room at 5:45. Mrs. Miller will make her president’s address at 7:45 at the formal opening of the convention, in the assembly room. Homer P. Rainey, Franklin cpllege president, will give the principal address on “Two Demands on One Supply.” Members of the Seventh District Federation will entertain with a reception on the mezzanine floor of the Claypool in honor of state officers following the talk. Reports to Be Given Reports of district chairmen will be made at the Wednesday morning session, which opens at 9 in the assembly hall. At 11:30 Mrs. John T. Wheeler, chairman of the resolutions committee, will give a report. One of the interesting sessions from the club woman’s viewpoint should take place Wednesday morning, when Mrs. E. C. Riimpler, chairman of the revisions committee, gives her report. Heretofore, a trustee elected for three years was eligible to re-election. There are only three state trustees. Oftentimes, one trustee would serve as many as six years, besides being eligible to other state offices. It is expected that among the revisions proposed W’ill be one making the trusteeship an office of three years only, not subject to re-elec-tion. At this same session, nominations will be made and candidates presented. Although it is possible for nominations to be made from the floor, the convention usually accepts the ticket as it is presented. Memorial Service Slated Club extension work and department reports will be given Wednesday afternoon, with annual memorial services in charge of Mrs. Miller at 4:10. American home department of the Woman’s Department Club will entertain with a dinner at the clubhouse, 1702 North Meridian street, Wednesday night at 5:45 for delegates and members attending the convention. Mrs. Curtis A. Hodges, chairman, will preside. Dr. Josephine C. Pierce. Lima, 0., vice-chair-man of the American home department of the General Federation of Clubs will be the speaker. At 8 that night, the delegates will return to the assembly room of the Claypool to hear Mrs. Grace Morrison Poole, first vice-president of the General Federation talk on "What Is It All About?’'
Dr. Butler to Talk Dr. Amos W. Butler, president of the Indiana Society for Mental Hygiene, will talk on “When All the World Came to Washington,” at the mental hygiene breakfast at 7:30 Thursday morning. Reports will continue at the 9 o’clock session Thursday morning in the assembly hall. Polls for election will open at 10:30. Various department luncheons will be held. In the afternoon final report of resolutions committee will be given by Mrs. Wheeler.. Report of elections will be made at 4:20. The federation banquet will be held at 6:30 in the Riley room of the Claypool. Dr. Allen Diehl Albert will talk on “Progress.” Dr. Albert is a member of the 1933 World Fair commission. The convention will close with presentation of state officers, including the ones elected at the convention.
Hiper. John R. Carr. Mark Reasoner, Russell P. Veit and Miss Dione Kerlin. Reservations for dinner, limited to 150, may be made with Mrs. Morgan the first of next week. Mrs. Schofield has appointed the following committee in charge of the selection and issuance of invitations for the two-day affair: Miss Edith L. Huggins, chairman; Mesdames Prank B. Fowler, Austin V. Clifford, Joseph Castle Matthews, John S. Wright, P. M. pill. Misses Irma Ulrich and Betty Jean Davis. Those who have served on the special building committee, representing the board of directors, ate: Mrs. Schofield, chairman; Mrs. Van Riper and Mrs. Veit. Mrs. Clifford has been chairman of the committee in charge of furnishing the ne whouse. assisted by Mrs. Fowler and Mrs. Ostrander. Lodge Plans Dance Harmony lodge No. 1. United Order of American Workers, will entertain with an old time dance Wedensday night in the P. H. C. hall, East and Michigan streets. Dunning's Hoo6ier Nite Hawks will play tha program of dances... A prize contest will be held. -
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Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Eleanora Tracy Mitchell and Keyes Winter Atkins, Memphis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Atkins, 1321 North Meridian street. Miss Mitchell, who was president of the Memphis Junior League, is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Edward Dana Mitchell.
Miss Sullivan, K. L. Mount to Be Wedded in Church Rites
McKee chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church will be the scene of the wedding at 4:30 this afternoon of Miss Mildred Evelyn Sullivan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P, B. Sullivan, 2235 North .Alabama street, to Kenneth Le Roy Mount, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Mount, Tipton. The ceremony will be read by Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor. The altar W’ill be decorated with baskets of white chrysanthemums and lighted by white cathedral candles. The chancel will have a background of palms and ferns. Pew's for members of the bride’s sorority, Delta Delta Delta, will be marked with bows of gold, silver and blue metal cloth. The pew for Sigma Nu fraternity members will be designated with black and gold. Organist Will Play Members of Chimes, junior honorary association of Butler university, of which the bride was a member, will be seated in pews marked with gold and silver. Mrs. C. H. Eberhardt, organist, will play: ushers will be James Redfield, '< incinnati; Millard Mount, Tipton, and Richard Baker. Noblesville. John Shugert will be best, man. Miss Norma Ryan, maid of honor, will wear a deep apricot chiffon gown, made with a fitted bodice,' with a deep Bertha collar and ankle length skirt, and with a series of ruffles on the left side. The waistline will be marked with a deep apricot velvet girdle. She will wear long white kid gloves, apricot moire slippers and velvet turban to match. She will carry Talisman roses. Gown of White Satin Mrs. Bruce Loughry, Cincinnati; Miss Dorothy Beightol and Miss Katherine Matthews will be bridesmaids. They will wear chiffon gowns made with fitted bodices, long flounced skirts and velvet jackets with -Dolman sleeves. They will weir moire simpers and velvet i m
. THE INDIANAPOLIS 'TIMES
The wedding will take place at the • Mitchell home in Memphis, Nov. 6. Mrs. Edward James Bradley before her marriage was Miss Helen Markey, daughter of Mr. and M rs - Thomas S. Markey, 3133 Ruckle street. The wedding took place Oct. 7 at SS Peter and Paul cathedral.
.turbans to match their gowns, and will carry bouquets of Talisman roses and blue pompons. 1 Mrs. Loughry will wear poudre blue, Miss Beightol deeper poudre blue and Miss Matthews pale apricot. Miss Katherine Mount, Tipton, sister of the bridegrbom, junior bridesmaid, will wear a light apricot chiffon frock, poudre blue moire slippers and will carry a poudre blue velvet muff with a corsage of Talisman foses and blue pompons. The bride, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear a white satin gown made Princess style, with a long fitted bodice with a yoke of Duchess lace and short : puff sleeves. The full skirt will touch the floor. She will wear long white gloves and a pearl brooch belonging to her grandmother. Her slippers will be white moire. Her tulle veil will be edged with lace and will have a shirred cap embroidered with seed pearls. A reception at the church will follow the ceremony. Mrs. Sullivan will wear blue lace and wear a shoulder corsage of Talisman roses. Mrs. Mount will wear black velvet and a corsage of pink roses. ‘ The couple will take a trip east, the bride traveling in a brown tweed ensemble trimmed with brown caracul. She will wear brown slippers and brown felt hat. They will be at home at the Park Central hotel, Nineteenth and F streets, N. W., Washington, D. C. The bride attended Butler university. Mr. Mount also attended Butler and was a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. . Club to Hold Party Mothers’ Club of Holy Cross church wall entertain with its annual Halloween party Monday at the school hall. Committee in charge is composed of Mesdames Joseph Schoellenger , D. M. Reed, Hugh Ryan, James Sullivan. William Snider and Bernard Riley. -
Marriage of Miss Janet Carr, daughter of T)r. and Mrs. Silas J. Carr, 520 North Audubon road, to Egbert Smith Hildreth took place at the Carr home last Saturday night. The couple will be at home in Detroit. Mrs. Charles H. Lay, the former Miss Clarissa Robertson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. How-
Bridal Couple to Be Bridge Party Guests , Mr. and Mrs. George O. Browne, 326 East Thirty-seventh street, will entertain tonight with bridge in honor of Miss Suzanne Kolhoff and Mrs. Browme’s brother, Ralph Bockstahler, whose marriage will take place next Saturday. The hosts will be assisted by Mrs. W. B. Gates. Decorations will carry out the bride’s colors. The bridge tables at serving time will be lighted by yellow tapers tied with bows of blue tulle and clusters of yellow button chrysanthemums. Guests with Miss Kolhoff and Mr. Bockstahler will be: Mr. and Mrs. Fred I. Willis Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Leon Hicks. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schetter, Mr. and Mrs. Glenii Kingham, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nipper, Mr. and Mrs. Max Merritt, Dr. and Mrs. Gates, Miss Dorothy Ryker, Miss Monzelle Skelton, Miss Marifrances Ogle. Miss Katherine Reagan, Russell Stivey, Cranston Muggs, E. W. Pauley, Alfred Mueller and Mrs. Sue Kolhoff. HALLOWEEN PARTY ARRANGED BY CLUB A Halloween. luncheon-bridge party for members and guests of the Children's Sunshine Club of Sunnyside will be held Wednesday at the Cynthia Bell-tea room. Mrs. Claude Hoover, hostess, is being assisted by Mrs. L-. A. Fleury, Mrs. Louis Sayffert, Mrs. Wililam Workman, Mrs. R. C. Griswold, Mrs. Harry Kern and Mrs. Thomas Conner. Arrange Breakfast An autumn breakfast will be given at 11:30 Tuesday at the Lumley tearoom by members of the Major Roberts, W. R. C., No. 44, in honor of Mrs. Ella Almon, district inspector. A regular business meeting at 1:30 at Ft. Friendly will follow. Mrs. M. H. Harmon, president, will vpreside. Covers will be laid for fifttf at the breakfast.
ard E. Robertson, 5050 East New York street, was married last Saturday. The couple will be at home after Dec. 1 at 733 North Bancroft street. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Worley, 625 East Twenty-fifth street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Bonita Worley,
Miss Ruth Barnhill to Become Bride at M. E. Church Tonight
Miss Ruth Jeanette Barnhill, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Barnhill, 676 East Fall Creek boulevard, will become the bride of John A. Albertson, son of E. P. Albertson, Vallonia, at a candlelight service at 8:30 tonight at the Broadway Methodist Episcopal church. Mrs. Mary E. Wilhite, organist, will play a group of songs. The service will be read by Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks, pastor of the All Souls Unitarian church, before the altar, which will be banked with palms and ferns, interspersed with tall standards of yellow chrysanthemums and lighted by cathedral candles. Each pew will be marked with a lighted taper. Mrs. Richard E. Niven Jr., Daytona Beach, Fia., will be matron of honor. She will wear a coral gown of flat crepe, made with a fitted bodice, a deep circular peplum, starting at the long waistline in front and slanting up to the deep V neck in back, and a long circular skirt. She will wear slippers to match her gown and carry Premier roses. The bridesmaids’ gowns will be georgette, fashioned with fitted bodice and long ruffled skirts. They will wear slippers to match their gowns and carry Hoover roses. Miss Mary Ellen Willis will wear Nile green; Miss Frances Aufderheide, violet: Mrs. Manning L. Norland apricot, and Mrs. R. Frank Ballenger blue. All attendants will wear crystal and pearl necklaces, the gift of the'bride. The flower girl, Anabell Stockton, w T ill wear pink georgette and carry a basket of rose petals! Richard Moriece Niven, Daytona Beach, ring bearer, will wear a white satin suit made Russian style and carry the ring in a lily. Frank Albertson, Bloomington, brother of the bridegroom, will be best man. Ushers will be Robert Kinnett, Ft. Wayne; Marion Pfeipps" Frank Cox and James Hirt. The hride, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear
to M. Roland Rapier, Cincinnati. The wedding will take place at 8 Thanksgiving morning. Miss Beulah Mabrey, daughter of Mrs. Mearl Mabrey, 4356 Guilford avenue, became the bride of William Kenneth Shirley, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. N. Shirley, 3168 Fall Creek boulevard, last Sunday,
a gown of ivory satin, made with a fitted bodice, with a deep lace peplum extending from the long waistline in front to the deep V neck in back. The floor length skirt will be circular. A satin bow in back will have streamers extending forming a long train. Her tulle veil will fall from a lace tiara trimmed With pearls and orange blossoms. She will wear lace mitts and carry a Brussels lace handkerchief, an heirloom. Her bouquet will be white roses and lilies of the valley. She will wear a pearl necklace, the gift of the bridegroom. Following the ceremony, a reception will be held at the Barnhill home. Mrs. Barnhill will receive in a black chiffon and lace gown, with a shoulder corsage of pink roses. The bridal table will be centered with a tiered cake on a plateau of Premier roses and ferns. The couple will go on a motor trip to Detroit and New York, the bride traveling in a brown crepe dress, brown travel coat and accessories to match. They will be at home in Indianapolis after Nov. 1. Miss Barnhill attended Tudor hall and Franklin college. Mr. Albertson was graduated from Indiana university. Honors Miss Stephen Miss Ethel Crampton entertained at her home, 1140 North Tremont avenue, Thursday night with a bridge party in honor of Miss Claramae Stephens, who just has returned from aiv extended visit in Waldron, Ind. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Lee Crampton. Guests were Miss Mary Cord, Miss Evelyn Crampton, Francis Long, Herbert Owen and Edward Lockwood. Chapter to Convene Business meeting of Alpha chapter, Sigma Delta Sigma sorority, will be held Wednesday at the Antlers.
_OCT. 18, 1930
Musicale to Be Given at Golf Club Patronesses for the morning musicale to be given at the Woodstock Club Thursday under auspices of the Martha Hawkins Society of the First Baptist church are: Mesdames Wolifc.ni Rav Adams. Roy Elder Adams. Rov Slaughter. J. M. Antrim. 11. H. Bacon. J. B. Carr. F. L. Evans. W. J. Hogan. John Downing Johnson. H. J. Lacey. C. L. Lambert. O. L. Miller. Jesse C Moore. E O. Noggle. W. P. Paul. W. B. Rossetter. Ada Rose. Nellie Shellhouse. C. W. Stevenson. W. O. Anthony. C. J. Jacouart and Miss Pearl Kei’u. Tickets may be obtained from Mrs. Herman E. Ragge and reservations for luncheon following the recital may be made with Mrs. C. A. Wagner. Cars will be stationed at the end of the Illinois street car line to accommodate those who do not drive. The program will be as follows: Aria Vision Fugitive .. Massennet Glen Friermood. baritone; Mrs. James Wynn, accompanist. •Impromptu. G Flat'’ Chopin ! "Scotch Dance" "Etude. E Flat” Chopin ‘ Prelude. B Flat Minor” Chopin Bomar Cramer, pianist. “The Last Hour" „ K . ra P l .ff i "Memory” ...Fairchild "Prayer of a Norwegian Child”... .Kountz i "My Native Land” Kaun Mr. Friermood, Mrs. Wynn. "Prelude. E Flat" Rachmaninoff "The Little White Donkey” Ibert "Bird Song” Palmgren ; "Nachtfalter Vnlse” Strauss-Tausi • Mr. Cramer. Luncheon to Open Season of Hadassah Indianapolis chapter of Hadassah | will open its season with a lunch- | eon at 12:30 Monday on the Sev- ! erin roof garden. A special feature of the program will be a series of tableaux, "Jewish Women of the Bible and Hisj tory.” Characters will be portrayed as follows: Deborah. Mrs. L. W. Sagalowsky; Han- ; nah and Samuel, Mrs. L. Markum gnd I son; Judith. Mrs. L. Needleman; Esther | Mrsr'Milton Steinberg:, Ruth, Mrs. Arthur ; Rose: Rebacca Gratz. Mrs. A. Goodman. Henrietta Szold. founder of Hadassah. Mrs. Hanah Frankfort, and the scribe. Mrs. Fred Fishman. Miss Norma Feltenstein. member of the teaching staff at Irvington ! school of music, will play violin ses lections. Mrs. William Pearlman. j Crawfordsville, will sing, Bccom- : panied by Miss Helen Rosen. Mrs. Manuel Freeman will give the open- | ing prayer. Mrs. D. Rosenberg will give a brief report of the Zionist convention. Mrs. Samuel Frommer, who will preside at the luncheon and meeting, will extend greetings. Mrs. J. A. Goodman and Mrs. A. Goodman, Shelbyville, will be delegates to the sixteenth annual Hadassah convention in Buffalo Oct. 26, 27 and 28.
Hoosier Night Program to Be Given by Club Hoosier night will be the subject of the program of the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women's Club, Thursday. The finance committee of which Miss Marne Calphi is chairman, will be seated at the president’s table for dinner. Mrs. Leonidas F. Smith will talk on “Hoosier Artists,” using William Forsythe as a background. Ruth Sterling Devin, soprano, will sing songs made from poems of James Whitcomb Riley. Miss Louise Swan will be accompanist. Members of the finance committee are Mrs. Stella B. Colman, Misses Mayme E. Alpers, Jessie E. Bryant, Grace R. Flaugher, Eva Jane Lewis. Margaret Jones Muller, Statia O’Connell, Mary Janes Sturgeon. Mrs. Ada O. Frost, president, will j preside. CHAPTER MEMBERS WILL HOLD DINNER Miss Catherine Moore and Miss Margaret Knoke, new members of Alpha chapter, Theta Sigma Delta sorority, will be guests of honor at a dinner to be given Sunday at the Kopper Kettle inn, Morristown. Miss Louise Kares, president, will give the toast. Miss Dona FauceW is in charge of arrangements, assisted by Miss Rosalind Blanchard Decorations will be in the sorority colors, orchid and old rose. Other members who will attend are: Misses Martha Shore, Helen Bulmahn Rosemary Coughill, Bessie Blake, Marie Johnston, Ruth Morrison, Denice Parmeritier, Demerous Pulliam and Virginia Havens. CANDLELIGHT TEA SET FOR SORORITY Miss Mary Agnes Griffin, 1414 Marlowe street, will be hostess for a candlelight tea to be given Sunday at her home by members of Omicron chapter, Chi Sigma sorority. Pupils of Miss Marcy Dimberggr will give readings and dance. They will be accompanied by Miss Nellie O’Brien. Guests will be: • Misses Aurelia Arvin, Marguerite Basch, Catherine Finneran. Margaret Fox, Grace King. Lucille Lindsay. Hortense Mack. Loretta Maloney, Helen Martin. Patricia McGinley. Louise Murphy. Marianne Sturges, May Sullivan, Kathryn Sullivan, Thelma Vail, LiUian Voyles, Marjorie Weiler and Isabelle Wilson. DINNER ARRANGED BY GIRLS’ SOCIETY Christ church branch, Girls Friendly Society of America, will hold the regular dinner meeting at 6 Tuesday at the church. The Rev. Floyd Van Keuren will be speaker. Plans have been started for the annual Christmas bazaar. Dec. 2. Mrs. Mabel Prettyman is chairman. Her committee heads include: Miss Katherine Kidwell. handkerchief booth: Miss Eunice Marshal, candy booth: Miss Mae Stuckmeyer. grivb bag: Miss Augusta Heberlein. art booth, and Miss Margery Brown, decorations. Kitchen Shower Held Miss Clara Pedersen, 348 North Summit street, entertained Thursday night with a kitchen shower in honor of Miss Ann Condron, whose marriage to Elmer Melie will take place Oct. 25. Gues*s included: Misses Eleanor Egan. Marie Roslnger, Julia Dugan. DeUa Dugan. Eileen .Moore Lucille Chuhev. Mane Kepwrlght ami Ethel Melie.
