Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 150, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1930 — Page 9
PTJOV.' 1, 1930'
Paris Likes ' Velvet Hat for Winter BY FRANCES PAGET •Coovrleht. 1930. bv BtTle Source*.) NEW YORK, Nov. I.—According to recent reports from buyers returning from Europe, Paris milliners are taking to velvet in a wholehearted manner. The favoritism shown this fabric in fall costumes and coats undoubtedly is responsible for their approval of it as well as the unquestioned predominanace of formality, a theme to which velvet is particularly adapted and suggestive of. In these newer collections the position of black is rivaled closely by the appearance of bright colors, and this tendency coupled with the detail which is characteristic of velvet, makes the idea most attractive. It also is important to mention that velvet also is appearin in combination with a contrasting ibric, both satin and panne occu r /ing interesting places. Marcelle Lely is one of the folio ers of vividly colored velvets, and is showing a draped turban in bright wine tone, worn high at the left side and back from the ears. Mme. Buzy is working with gera-nium-colored velvet, a soft red rose and shirring it all over and arranged in a close fitting cap with chou treatment at the nape of the neck She also is presenting several models combining velvet with panne one draped brim type of the velvet in turquoise, while the other is in black panne. The back of the crown is shirred into a baby cap effect, t Jane Blanchoe is handling velvet in beret silhouettes with cushionlike edges often showing the velvet in a bright color such as blue with a bandeau of grosgrain ribbon ir. a second tone.
CLUB MEETINGS
MONDAY Mrs. C. S. Dearborn, 2022 North Alabama street, will be hostess for the Monday Conversation Club. Mrs. S. S. Craig and Mrs. Robert Gilliland will discuss “The Testament of Beauty.” Mt A. H. Ervin, 308 Northern a venue, will entertain in the Sesame Club. Mrs. Ervin will review “The Six Mrs. Greens.” (Rae.> Mrs. Ralph Boozer, 3090 Broadway, will be hostess for the Review Club. Mrs. Clarence Merrell will have a paper on “Mahatma Gandhi’s Ideas” and Mrs. Elvan Tarkington will discuss Saki. Mrs. Helen Brown will talk on Emily Dickinson. Monday Afternoon Reading Club will meet at the home of Mrs W F. Espey, 147 West Pratt street. Mrs. Lee Welker and Mrs. J. M. Elliott will lead discussions. New Era Club will be entertained by Mrs. William Tillson, 4425 Guilford avenue. Mrs. Minnie Duncan is assistant hostess. Mrs. C. R. Miles, Mrs. J. C. Reed and Mrs. Everett A. Hunt will have topics. Mrs. O. L. Huey and Mrs J. D. Ely will conduct the program at the meeting of Vincent C. S. L. C. William Dudley Foulke will speak on “Lucius B. Swift.” at the Ladies bright meeting of the Indianapolis Literary Club. Art department of the Woman's Department Club will entertain wiui a pioneer luncheon at 1 at the clubhouse. Mrs. Phoebe Elliott, New Harmony, will talk on “Old Samplers.” and Walter Montgomery wiH have as his subject, “Old Coverlets'” Mrs. William R. Griffith, 625 Middle drhtf. Woodruff Place, will be hostess for a meeting of the Fortnightly Study Club. Mrs. Edwin Hill, discussion leader, will [have a paper on “Japan of Today.” Mrs. George L. Davis will talk on “Awakening of the East” and Mrs. G. B. Gannon will have an art topic. TUESDAY Mrs. W. W. Southard. 64 North Irvington avenue, will be hostess for the Irvington Chautauqua Clufc meeting in the afternoon. Mrs. D. S. Adams and Mrs. K. C. Payne will talk. Indianapolis Council of Women will meet at 11 at the Third Christian church. Luther L. Dickinson will talk on “A Community Intelligence Center.” A musical program will be given by Mrs. Louis D. Belden, pianist; Miss Emma Doeppers, vocalist, and Miss Lois Le Saulnier violinist. Fortnightly Literary Club will hear Helen Eaton Jacoby on “Why Art?” at the meeting at the Propylaeum. Mrs. Ronald R. Scott, 938 East Fifty-eighth street, will be hostess for the Irvington Home Study Club Mrs. John R. Carr will have a paper. Alpha Eta Altreian Club will hold Guest day at the home of Mrs. Norman Green, 2650 Sutherland avenue. Mrs. Loran Hickman and Miss Berenice Reagan will be assistant hostesses. Mrs. George Philip Meier will discuss “Palmistry.” Members of the Writers’ Club will meet at 8 p. m. in the Green room of the Y. W. C. A. Theme of the meeting will be “The Long Short Story.” Walter Carnahan Is chairman in charge. Mrs. Ruth Bowlus Gregory will give the magazine review and market report will be given by Miss Vivian Bennett. Mrs. Robert Allen. 3466 Carrollton avenue, will be hostess for the bridge section of Delta Zeta, Alumnae Club. * Heyl Study Club will meet at the Rauh Memorial library. Mrs. Nettie Littleton Kane will lead discussion n “Ideals.” WEDNESDAY State Woman’s Assembly Club will Ineet Nov. 12 instead of Nov. 5. at the home of Mrs. Harry G. Leslie. Mrs. Lloyd Claycombe will be chairman of hostesses assisted by Mesdames r —H. Batchelor. John L. Benedict, Charles Bicderwolf, Sumner Clancy, Otto Fifleld. Ella V. Gardner, J. Fred Masters. W. C McMahan. Julia D. Nelson and Frank F. Noll. Minerva Club will meet at the home of Mrs. W. H. Biddlecombe, 520 w-st Fifty-fourth street. Mrs. Emil Ebner will have a paper, “The History and Antiquities of St. Augustine.” Arnica Club will be at th home of Mrs. Paul Ameter, 1617 Sharon avenue. Mrs. W. R Burcham and * f rs. R. E. Spiegel will arrange the program Literature * -~irtment will meet Bt the Woman’s Department Club at 2:30. Raymond H. Coon will talk on
BRIDES IN THREE RECENT WEDDINGS
Scientist Will Lecture Here on Astronomy Tudor Hail school for girls will present Professor B. R. Baumgardt, English scientist, in a lecture, “An Evening With the Stars,” at 8 Monday, Nov. 10, in the school auditorium. Professor Baumgardt is a graduate of Strengnas college, Sweden, and has studied in the leading observatories in Europe and America, and in his ow'n private observatory. He comes to this country from Egypt, having made seventeen trips around the world. Tickets for the lecture may be procured at the school. MOTHERS' CLUB TO ATTEND LUNCHEON Phi Delta Theta Mothers' Club will entertain with a 1 o’clock luncheon at the fraternity house, 705 Hampton drive, Wednesday. Pledge mothers will be honor guests. Mrs. Edna M. Christian, university social director, will be guest speakc". Mrs. John F. Boesinger, presiden will preside. Hostesses will be h.. John G. Keller, chairman; Mrs. IJ. J. Raffensperger, Mrs. Helen Green. Mrs. Arthur Baxter and Mrs. John L. Yeazcl. BARN DANCE WILL BE HELD SUNDAY Several hundred couple will attend the old-fashioned barn dance Sunday night at Kirshbaum community center under the auspices of the Jewish Community Center Association. Chick Myers and his orchestra v. T ill play the program of dances. Novelty stunts will be featured, Adrian Reitrer is chairman of the program committee. Mrs. Jacob Weiss is in charge of decorations. Miss Evelyn Hahn is chairman of the enterainment committee. Poceeds for the dance will go to the Kirshbaum center and Communal building, both of which are operated by the association. VOTING MACHINES USE IS EXPLAINED Members of the League of Women Voters have been stationed in the Y. W. C. A. lobby, 329 North Pennsylvania street, to instruct women voters in operation of voting machines. Mrs. James Baird, Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin and Mrs. George S. Finfrock are instructors. i “Literature’s Debt to Greek and | Roman Mythology.” 1 Members of the Mothers’ Club of i Phi Delta Theta fraternity will have ' a luncheon meeting at 1 at the chapter house, 705 Hampton drive. “Ten O’clock,” a class in art appreciation sponsored by the art department of the Woman’s Department Club, will meet with Mrs. Burnet, 4417 North Pennsylvania street, at 10. The .class will meet the first and third Wednesdays in each month. THURSDAY Inter Oit-r meeting of the IndianaDolis Business and Professional Women’s Club will be held at the Woman’s Department Club. Mrs. H. E. Lister, 2608 Broadw r ay, will be hostess for the North Side Study Club. Mrs. J. R. Ward and Mrs. J. H. Lyman will talk. Miss Elizabeth Cooper, 2516 North Alabama street, will entertain the Aftermath Club. Mrs. Otto N. Moore will give a book review. Thursday Lyceum Club will hold its regular meeting at the home of Mrs. T. D. Campbell, 3690 Central avenue. Mrs. Malloch, 4022 Ruckle street, will discuss “Children Famous in Fiction.” Mrs. B. V. McKenzie, 1414 North Gale street, will entertain the Ladies’ Federal Club. Mrs. H. S. Cudgel and Mrs. Hurley Stonebreaker will give the program. Cornelia Cole Fairbanks chapter, D. A. R„ will meet at the Propylaeum. Mrs. Frederick Krull will talk on “The Lordly Line of High St. Clair.” Hostesses will be Mrs. j John Martindale, Mrs. Frank F ! Powell, Mrs. Henry R. Bliss and , Mrs. J. Ottie Adams. FRIDAY Mrs. Demarchus Brown will talk on “Hcmer and Dr. Schliemann," before members of the applied education department of Woman’s Department Club at a meeting at 2:30 at the club house. Miss Kathleen Bumbaugh will sing, accompanied by Mrs. D. M. Didwav. - man’s Club will meet at the Propylaeum. Anna H Spann. Mathilde Brink Walk and Julia Harrison Moore will speak. Mrs. Fred N. Hooker will be hostess for the luncheon meeting or the Tri Psi sorority at the Delta Delta Delta chapter house, 809 West Hampton drive. SATURDAY Magazine Ciub will meet at the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. Rose Coleman is in charge of the musical program Mrs. Harriett Burtch will give musical readings. Mrs. W. H Link, Mrs. C. T. Austin, Mrs. H. W Diagoo. will give reperts, and Mrs. O. L Huey, program chairman, will the year’s study.
Mrs. Edwin C. Holmes (left), the former Mildred Alberta Disney, was married Sunday at New Bethel Baptist church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Disney, New Bethel. —Photo bv Platt. Marriage of Miss Grace Huggins (center), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Huggins, 4221 Ralston avenue, to Meredith Hunt took place Oct. 24. —Photo bv Dexheimer. Mrs. Lawrence Phillip Schmitt before her marriage Sunday was Miss Margaret Florence Foster, 1622 Orange street. —Photo by Platt.
MARRIED
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Mrs. Conrad Phelps The marriage of Miss Evelyn Wolf, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolf, 627 Parkway avenue, and Conrad Phelps took place last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Phelps will make their home in Pittsburgh.
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Knodel, Mrs. James Steele, Miss Polly Whiteside, Miss Mary Mathers and A. F. Clem will motor to Cincinnati to be the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Steele. Mr. and Mrs. Woods Caperton, 4830 North Meridian street, have motored to Texas. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Goodman, Crows Nest, have returned from a trip to Atlantic City and New York. Miss Mary Margaret Miller, 3933 Washington boulevard, is home from a motor trip to Chicago, Ann Arbor and Charlevoix, Mich. Mrs. A. W. Noling, 350 East Sixtyfirst street, has as her house guest, Mrs. Rodney Shelton, Seattle, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Langwell, 519 North Riley avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schwartz, 116 Spencer avenue, will motor to Champaign, 111., Saturday to attend the PurdueIllinois game. They will spend the week-end. Miss Mabel Leonard, Columbus, 0., national organizer for Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority, came here to inspect Alpha Eta chapter, Indianapolis, Thursday night. She is at the chapter house, 2341 North Delaware street, where she will remain until Sunday. TICKET PRESENTED BY G. 0. P. CLUB Nominating committee of the Indiana Woman's Republican Club presented the following ticket at the luncheon meeting at the Columbia Cluli Thursday: President. Mrs. Spann Waymire; first vice-president. Mrs. Henry Campbell; second vice-president. Mrs. J. Burdette Little: recording secretary. Mrs. Frank Cones; corresponding secretary, Mrs. O. A. Hobbs: treasurer. Miss Minnie Co"/ar>: t’vo-year directors. Mrs. Dortha Bonham. Mrs. Ida Belser and Mrs M. Bun cne-%-ear directors. Mrs. Neil McCallum. Mrs. Florence Thornburg and Mrs. George EdArchibald M. Hall, Republican candidate for congress, addressed the women. . *
RECENT BRIDE
Mrs. Shirley Turner Before her marriage Saturday in Ft. Wayne, Mrs. Turner was Miss Lona B. Gar man. Mr. and Mrs. Turner are at home at 62 North Sherman drive.
TOE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Association to Hear Talk by David Edwards dr. David Edwards, former president of Earlham college, who returned recently from Europe, will speak at a meeting of the international relations study group of the American Association of University Women at 2:30 Monday at Rauh Memorial library. Plans for the year call for study of activities of university women in various countries belonging to the International Federation of Uni-, versity Women. First meeting will be in the nature of a general background of the year’s w r ork. Dr. Edwards will talk on the work of the commission on intellectual co-operation of the League of Nations. All members Os the A. A. U.W and their friends are invited to attend. NAME SCHOOL AT RITES WEDNESDAY School 10, Ashland avenue and Thirteenth street, will be given the name Henrietta Colgan school at dedication program to be held at 3 Wednesday afternoon at the school, under the auspices of the Parent-Teacher Association. Meeting will open with a talk by Miss Geraldine Eppert, principal. Department Glee Club will sing. Miss Elizabeth Sterns will give the biography of Miss Colgan. Miss Mary E. Colgan, cousin, will give a she: t talk and present the school with a clock in memory of Miss Colgan. Former, pupils are invited to attend.
SORORITY HONORS FRANKLIN CHAPTER Beta Tau Sigma sorority entertained with a banquet and bridge Wednesday night at the Antlers in honor of Beta chapter, Franklin. The tables were decorated with Aaron Ward roses, the sorority flower. Guests from Franklin were: Mesdames Georgia Spears, Fayne Vaught. Marie Moore, Bernice Perrv. Katherine Carpepter, Marie Nash. Misses May Beeson. Hester Nash. Ruth Brannigan. Dorothy Rueff, Margaret Beck. Kathleen Adams. Thelma Bridges. Ruth Beeman. Emma J. Lemasters. Mary K. Peggs. Jean Beck. Local chapter members who attended were: ' Mesdames Janet Becker. Charles Vaser. Charles Brockman, Muriel German. Harry Mayer. Rosalie Meixner, Harry Parsons, Clarence Wampner. Mildred W 7 aters. Paul Metcalfe, Misses Lucile Buis. Hester Cole. Golda Heldrich. Esther Hagan, Pauline Staley. Bea Vickery and Margaret Hughes. MOTHERSADVI3ED tIY PARENT EXPERT “A mother w r ho does not answer her children’s questions regarding sex education fcientifically and honestly is laying a foundation of distrust and lack of confidence that will eventually bring postive harm into her future relationship with her own children,” Mrs. Garry C. Myers, specialist in parent education at Cleveland college, Cleveland, told 500 women gathered in Ayres auditorium Thursday afternoon. The women, representing twentyseven Mothers’ Club of the Indianapolis Free Kindergartens, heard the talk, given under the auspices of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarter Society. Mrs. Paul H. White, president of the society, gave greetings and Mrs. Myers was introduced by Miss Grace L. Brown, superintendent. ALTAR SOCIETY TO GIVE CARD PARTY Altar Society of St. Roch’s church wijl entertain Sunday afternoon and night with its regular monthly card party at the hall. Mrs. Roy Mayer, hostess, will be assisted by the following committee: Mesdames J. E. Lleland, Mary Risch, Albert Kempe. C. W r . Wes:, Katherine Zimmerman, Roman Sauer, George Oeftering, George Mock, J. F. Goebel, John Murt, 'William Schott and Miss Anna Kempe. Supper will be served from 5 to 7. Mrs. Helen Costello is chairman of a benefit card party Wednesdaynight at the Columbia Club for the Catholic Woman’s Association. Reservations already have been made for 100 tables. Art Society to Meet Miss Marbiel Wininger, 5022 College avenue, will be hostess for a meeting or the Philocean Art society of Indiana Central college at her home tonight.
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Patron List of Travelog Announced Additional patrons and patronesses for the travelog, “The Road to Oterammergau,” to be given Tuesday night by Dr. George Arthu Frantz under the auspices of the Woman's Auxiliary of the First Presbyterian church, are: Dr*, and Mesdames James H. Taylor, Louis Burckhardt. W. D. Gatch. Raymond J. McElwee, Joel Whitaker. Judge and Mrs. C. R. Cameron: Messrs, and Mesdames U. S. Lesh, C. N. Williams, Henry M. Dowling. T. C. Day. W. T. Wetsel, Mansur B. Oakes. Clinton D. Lasher. Robert E. Armstrong, Edward Petrie, David T. Praigg. Mesdames James Cunning. J. H. Darlington. Quincy A. Myers. Walter Eastman and Miss Dora Doll. Dr. Frantz will cover various countries he visited, in addition to reviewing the presentation of the Passion Play. The travelogue will be given in the recreation hall of the church. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Evans Woollen, Mrs. David House, Mrs. Clarence Turner and Mrs. Wilbur Johnson.
W. C. T. U.
Marion County W. C. T. U. will hold an executive committee meeting Monday at 1 in Parlor C, Y. W. C. A. Mrs. Robert McKay will preside. Meridian W. C. T. U. will hold its regular meeting Wednesday at the home of Mrs. O. E. Carter, 5801 Central avenue at 10:30. Hostesses for the luncheon will be Mesdames P. H. League, F. E. Lockwood, F. S. Broughton, L. P. Lee, Emma Yarborough and Emma Maby. The Rev. W. A. Shullenberger will be speaker. Mrs. Charles Ealand will report on the state convention and on the convention of the Indiana Federation of Clubs. Mrs. E. A. Williams will conduct a Union Signal question box. Mrs. Frank J. Lahr will discuss the clubhouse features of the new Woman’s Club of Indiana. Mrs. Lewis E. York will preside. North East W. C. T. U. will meet at the home of Mrs. Ed Buckner, 1834 Holloway street, Thursday for an all-day meeting. A covered dish luncheon will be served at noon. Reports of the state convention will be given by Mrs. Lydia Yount, Mrs. Belle Harboldt and Mrs. Flora Mace. Mrs. W. B. Knode, speaker, will have as her topic “Peace.” Vocal selections will be given by Mrs. Susie Hendrixson, Mrs. Iva Wise and Mrs. Florence Dish, accompanied by Mrs. Ed Butler. Mrs. Lillian Heiser will preside. Irvington W. C. T. U. will meet at 2 Wednesday at the home of Miss Sibyl Holbrook, 47 North Irvington avenue. The program will be “Vacation Observations.” Miss Irene Trueblood will preside. Carrie Ross W. C. T. U. will meet Tuesday at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. Mary Owens, 1174 West Twenty-seventh street. Mrs. Catherine Davidson will preside. Brightwood W. C. T. U. will meet Tuesday at 2 at the Brightwood Methodist Episcopal church. The northeast trip, Mrs. Mary Buckner, Mrs. Lillian Heizer and Mrs. F. W. Wise will sing. Dr. Francis Dean will be speaker. Mrs. Velma Birge will i-resdie.
OCTOBER BRIDE
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—Photo by Dexheimer. Mrs. Claude Craig Mrs. Nancy A. Willey, Franklin road, announces the marriage of her daughter. Miss Zeta Mae Willey, to Claude Craig, which took place Oct. 21. Pledge New Members Miss Christine Butt, Miss Doiotha Dodson and Miss Helen Chedron will be pledged at a meeting of Rho Delta sorority at the Y. W. C. A. Friday night. Other new pledges are Misses Ruth Clinton, Ruth Pyle, Dorothy Philips, Rosemary Burkhardt, Melba Schull, Catherine Houppert and Catherine Euslier. Sorority to Entertain Alpha chapter, Sigma Delta Sigma sorority, will give a party with Gamma chapter Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Foster Hudson, 3156 North Illinois street. Mothers to Meet Tau Kappa Tau Mothers’ Club will meet at the chapter house, 507 Buckingham drive, for a luncheon Wednesday. Mrs. Edwin Hunt, hostess, will be in charge of a short musical program.
We Recommend Riley 4591
Fletcher Ave. Savings&Loan to. sSm/hZES. 10 E. Market 6#
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
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Mr. and Mrs. William 3. Krieg, 43 West Fortyeighth street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Dorothy Krieg, tc Edward Johnston Kirkpatrick, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Kirkpatrick, Crawfordsville. The wedding will take place at 4 o’clock Thanksgiving day. Miss Krieg attended Butler and Purdue universities and is a member of Pi Beta Phi. Mr. Kirkpatrick is a graduate of Purdue university and a member of Beta Theta Pi.
NEWS OF INDIANA D. A. R.
Second annual conference of the central Division, of which Indiana is a part, will be held in Des Moines Nov. 11 and 12. Mrs. James E. Fitzgerald, state regent, should be informed by those who will attend the meeting. Headquarters will be Hotel Ft. Des Moines. Two thousand three hundred and thirty-seven new members were admitted, 116 members were reinstated and 450 new records reported verified at the national board meeting
Just Every Day Sense
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
“'T'HE only truly napny and 1 contented women I ever Lave known were the veiled inmates of the harem,” says Mrs. Elizabeth Paul, the former Khamun of Gharagozlou (whatever that may be), and the present wife of a Persian. We are in no position to deny this. Especially when we know that the sloth is content hanging on his particular limb, and that the goldfish appears happy in his bowl. Alas, we have had it from the testimony of any number of people who knew that before 1860 there were many satisfied slaves. That, however, does not make slavery any the more admirable institution. Nor dees the fact that there are happy women in the harem make the rest of us hanker to enter one. “It is refreshing,” adds Mrs. Paul, “to learn that there are in the far corners of the world women w-ho still are living the lives to which they have been adjusted by centuries of the same customs.” t$ u a NOW, I can’t agree with that, Indeed, it strikes me as distinctly wearisome that in the twentieth century there are women anywhere who remain sluggishly content under the same conditions in which their sex has lived for hundreds of years. According to my notion, that is not an enviable state of mind. Looked at from that angle, probably the whole of mankind would be happier in a condition of savagery than they are today, but that’s not admitting that savagery was better for us than our civilization. I doubt very much, also, that these harem dwellers are so happy as they are reputed to be. Because I know very well that the modern discontented woman we hear so much about, and who is said to be so prevalent in America, is not in such a sad way as reports would have her. Her state has been exaggerated greatly. She’s a jolly person, and having, so far as many of us can see. a perfectly splendid time. The harem, a couple of centuries ago and now, is an excellent place to be outside of, looking in.
j CARD PARTIES
Christamore Women’s Club will give a bunco and euchre party at 8:30 tonight at the Christamore settlement house, Tremont and West Michigan streets. St. Patrick’s social club wil entertain with a card party at 8:30 Sunday In the hall on Prospect street. Miss Brown Hostess Beta Beta alumnae chapter. Alpha Chi Omega, will meet with Miss Gertrude Brown, 3838 North Pennsylvania street, for a 6 o’clock supper party next Saturday. Mrs, Cleve Fix is in charge of the program.
in Washington, Oct. 15. The total number of living members in the national D. A. R. society at that time was reported to be 172,776. Fifteen new chapters in the national society were confirmed at the national board meeting. Enough members from Kendallville were admitted to permit the immediate organization of the new chapter there. The name Frances Dingman was approved as the name of the prospective chapter. James Hill chapter, Lebanon, was hostess for the second of the group meetings at luncheon at the Ulen Country Club Wednesday. Frankfort, Lafayette, Tipton, Danville and Crawfordsville chapters attended. Mrs. T. G. Yuncker, Greencastle central district director, has arranged group meetings to be held in Newcastle Dec. 6 and Franklin Dec. 12. Mrs. James B. Crankshaw, Ft. Wayne, retiring state regent, spoke Tuesday at a group meeting at Covington. Chapters from Attica. Veedersburg. Rockville, Clinton and Crawfordsville attended. Preceding luncheon the Veedersburg chapter unveiled a memorial marker at the grave of Rebecca Bodine, daughter of a Revolutionary soldier, in Covington cemetery. Mrs. Wayne H. Cory, St. Louis, Mo., a great-great-granddaughter, unveiled the memorial. Mrs. A. H. Vestal, wife of Congressman Vestal, spoke on “Social Precedence in Our Nation’s Capital,” at a meeting of Kikthawenund chapter, Anderson, at the home of Mrs. A. D. Jones Wednesday. Margaret Bryant Blackstone chapter. Hebron, will hold a joint celebration with Obadiah Taylor chapter, Lowell, upon the second anniversary of the organization of the two chapters Nov. 22. Mrs. James Crankshaw and other state officers will be guests of honor. Mrs. Roscoe C. O’Bymc, Brookville, state regent-elect, was presented with a pen and pencil set by Twin Forks chapter, of which she was organizing regent. Mrs. C. D. Cook, Columbus, will be hostess for the Columbus chapter at her home Nov. 21. Mrs. Lucy Compton and Mrs. Harold Norton will be assisting hostesses. Washburn chapter, Greencastle, will hold dedicatory services for markers at graves of two Revolutionary soldiers, Benjamin Mahonney and Julius Glazebrook, at 2 Nov. 9 in Fillmore Christian church. Dr. H. B. Gough. Greencastle, will give the address.
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Official of Sorority to Visit Here Miss Elizabeth Weintz. Evansville, province.secretary of Delta Gamma shorority, is the guest of the Butler university chapter for the weekend. Mrs. Mark Hamer entertained at luncheon in Ijer honor today at her home. 5342 Central avenue, and in the afternoon Mrs. Clifford H, Parke, president, of the Indianapolis Alumnae Association was hostess at a tea at her home. 4871 Broadway. Mrs. Parke was assisted by Mrs. Tracy Davis, Mrs. P. D. Gayman and Mrs. George Brown. Steak Roast Tonight The Butler chapter will entertain Miss Weintz at a steak roast tonight at Wynndale, and Sunday afternoon from 3 to 5, they will receive in her honor at the chapter house, 269 Buckingham drive. Representatives from each social organization on the campus and faculty members have been invited. In the receiving line with Miss Weintz, will be Mrs. Josephine Fry, hostess; Mrs. Edna Christian, social director of the university, and Miss Ina Lawrence, president of tho active chapter. Musical Program at Tea The tea table will be centered with a large basket of bronze, pink and blue flowers, the sorority colors, and lighted by tall cream colored tapers, tied with bows of bronze, pink and blue tulle. Miss Alice Shirk, chairman of the social committee will pour. Miss Anne Cooper, Anderson, and Miss Mary Virginia Clark will assist her. A musical program will be given during the tea hour by Miss Rachel Crew, Dayton, violinist, and *Miss Aleene Alexander, pianist, EDUCATION GROUP WILL HEAR TALKS Council of Administrative Women in Education will meet at 3:45 Monday afternoon for tea at Tudor hall. Miss Elizabeth Chipman will be hostess. . Topic for the afternoon will be “Summer Travel Impressions.’’ Short talk will be given by Miss Florence Fitch, director of art instruction in the public schools and Miss Edith Hall, principal of School 80. NATURE GROUP TO SPONSOR LECTURE November meeting of the governing board of the Nature Study Club of Indiana will be held at 8 Tuesday night, Nov. 11, in the Chamber of Commerce building. Annual meeting, when officers of the club will be elected has been set for Saturday, Dec. 6. The club is sponsoring a lecture to be given by D. J. Angus in Cropsey hall. CARD PARTY TO BE HELD BY ALUMNAE Student aid committee of the Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will give a card party at 8 Wednesday, Nov. 12 at the Columbia Club. Proceeds will go to the nationaF student aid fund of the sorority. Miss Jean Coval is general chairman, assisted by Mesdames Paul Fifer, D. Reid Dixon, Walter Hubbard Jr., Joseph Ostrander, Albert Fessler, Misses Ineva Reilly and Irma Ulrich. Reservations may be made with any member of the committee. UNIVERSIT Y WOMEN TO HOLD MEETING Second general meeting of the year of the American Association of University Women will be held Tuesday at the Lumley tea room. Dinner will be served at 6. Dr. Marguerite Hall Albjeig, Purdue faculty member, will talk on “Indian Statesmen and the Holy Land. —Mahatma Gandhi.” Miss Rutri Milligan is chairman of hostesses. She will be assisted by members of the international relations study group. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Merwyn G. Bridenstine, Washington 4129.
