Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 290, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 April 1931 — Page 6
PAGE 6
MRS. FROST SEEKS PRESIDENCY OF STATE FEDERATION
Miss Ford Running for Secretary It has been announced that Mrs. Adah O. Frost, president of the local Business and Professional Women’s Club, will be a candidate for the office of president of the state federation in the election to be held at the convention in Ft. Wayne. May 16, 17 and 18. Miss Marjorie Ford, also of the local group, will be a candidate for the office of corresponding secretary. The nominees were named Tuesday by Miss Telia C. Haines, Sullivan, chairman of the nominating committee. Miss Frost will oppose Miss Marguerite Lannert, Evansville, and Miss Ford, Miss Grace Walker, Evansville. Others on the ticket are Mrs. Elma C. Walter, Bedford, and Mrs. Nellie Niestadt, ■Crawfordsville, first vice-president; Mrs. Maude Hollenbach, Lebanon, and Miss Elma Irey, KendallviUe, second vice-president; Mrs. Gladys Heaton, Clinton, and Miss Ruth Sutton, Whiting, recording secretary; Miss Pearl Boyd, Vincennes, and Miss Elizabeth S. Lensestey, Marlon, treasurer. Members of Miss Haines’ committee are Mrs. Marvel O. Plasterer, Hammond; Mrs. Lottie Kirby, Bloomington; Miss Jennie Rae Hirsch, Portland, and Miss Lillian Marsh. Ft. Wayne. Miss McDermott Is Honored at Bridge Party Miss Lorena McComb entertained with a luncheon bridge party today at Meridian Hills Country Club in honor of Miss Cecelia McDermott, whose marriage to Russell McDermott will take place April 25. The luncheon table was decorated with spring flowers and lighted tapers in the bride’s colors, peach and blue. Guests included: Mesdames Lcuis Wilson. V/Uliam A. Johnson. Paul Moffett. .John Marshall, Ben Tamer Jr.. Ralph Whitehlil. William Mooney Jr . Charles Kruse; Misses Mary Louise Shiel and Elizabeth Hurd. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. E. H K. McComb. TWO TO REPRESENT OLD GLORY GROUP Old Glory Society, Children of the American Revolution, will be represented by Misses Mary Ellen Voyles and Ann Tennant at the annual convention to be held next ' week in Washington. Both will act as pages during the session. Other delegates are Dan Taylor and Richard Fowler, Milikan, Patricia Gilliland, Ted Wohlgemuth and Richard Voyles as alternates. The society will hold its next regular meeting May 9 a.t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Winslow, with Peggy and Barbara Winslow as hostesses. MRS . CARR NAMED SPONSOR OF GUILD Mrs. J. W Carr was named sponsor to the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild Tuesday at a meeting of the Irvington Friendship Circle at the home of Mrs. George C. Bender. 5603 Lowell avenue. Mrs. R. F. Stilz w-as elected historian of the organization. Mrs. Bender was assisted by Mrs. J. E. Louden Amicitia Club Meets Amicitia Club met Tuesday at the home of Mrs. V/. H. Boettcher, 4823 East New York street. Mrs. Frank Smith was assistant hostess. Mrs. Enda Sharp gave a report on the photo Indorsers and Mrs. Jeanette Todd on the Indianapolis Council of Women.
Mrs. Charles Breece to Sing in Program at Home fqr Aged
Mrs. Charles Breece will sing two groups of songs Thursday at an entertainment given at the Indianapolis Home for Aged Women by the Welfare Club. The first group will include “Songs of Long Ago,” in which Mrs. Breece will appear in costume, and “Spring Melodies.” Mrs. Thomas Woodson will be accompanist, Mrs. Murray Conner will give two groups of musical monologues, “Melodies From the Little Brown Church,”
Woman’s Press Club Hears Talk by Chicago Book Critic
Mrs. Susan Wilbur Jones, associate book critic of the Chicago Evening Post, addressed members of the Woman's Press Club of Indiana at a luncheon meeting Tuesday at the Columbia Club. “Writing seems to be a sort of infection,” she said, in speaking of the number of manuscripts flooding the market. She told of the group of writers that included Hamlin Garland. Henry B, Fulle and Frank Norris, of Sherwood Anderson and Carl Sandburg, of Arthur Meeker. Marion Strobel, Dorothy Aldrich, David Hamilton, David Burnham, and Theo Lucas, the latter, the younger writers. She spoke of newspapers as training schools for writers, and named Margaret Ayer Barnes ana Janet Fairbanks as possibilities for the Pulitzer prize. Mrs. John Hays Bailey introduced Mrs. Jones. Mrs. Kate Milner Rabb, president, presided. Miss Catherine Butler of the Bedford Daily Times was voted a member. Miss Lucille Sullivan, New York, formerly of Indianapolis and a member of the club, was a guest. Among other out-of-town guests were Mrs. Edward C. Toner, presi-dent-elect, and Miss Juliet- Crittenberger, Anderson; Mrs. Blanche Foster Boruff, Bedford; Mrs. E. E. -Neal, Noblesvilie; Mrs. A. A. Kist, Portland; Mrs. Maude Sout Wylie, Columbus; Mrs. H. J. Martin, Martinsville ; Mrs. Gertrude Feltus FMniser, Bloomington, with two
GOING 'OVER THERE’
Mother to Visit Son’s Grave
A ‘ ''pfj' r
Mrs. Addie Winslow, 71, of Fairmount, Ind., who has been informed by the government that she may visit her son’s grave after a year’s wait. Mrs. Winslow is
Granted Permission to Go to France After Being Refused Once, May's near and Indiana’s snowballs will bloom. And a few of those blooms—pressed perhaps—from a well-kept backyard of a home in Fairmount, Ind., will lie this fall at the foot of a bronze scroll in a French cemetery. They will lie with a mother’s heart to honor a son whose grave’s only marker is the blackberry bushes that grow in the fall along the Somme in France. It took the government a year to untangle its red tape, amend its congressional acts, to permit this Indiana mother—Mrs. Addie Winslow, 71—and hundreds of other mothers the nation over to trod for just a few weeks on the ground where their sons walked last. It Is Good News Now One year ago this spring Mrs. Winslow applied for permission to go to the grave of her son, Lee G. Winslow, Second engineers, A. E. F., on one of the many pilgrimages authorized by congress to Gold Star mothers. She was refused. They wrote her long official letters, telling her that her son’s grave could not be found. They said that the graves registration division of the army in France would search for his burial ground in the blackberry bushes near a bridge. But today she has another word, good word, for they’ve told her she can go on Aug. 12, aboard the S. S. America, to her son’s resting place. “They didn’t find his grave, but they’re going to have his name in a bronze scroll, along with others who are missing in a French cemetery,” Mrs. Winslow said today. The Berries Will Be Ripe “And I am glad. You know how glad I am to get to go.” She’ll be going in the fall of the year, and it was in the fall, she‘ll tel you, that “my Lee died.” His last letter to her before a plane “checked” the valley where he was encamped told of the blackberries- nearby, and ended with, “I guess I’ll stop writing now and go out and pick some.” And she’s glad she’s going, too, for it’s in the fall of the year that the blackberries are ripe along the Somme.
r and “Dew Shine Songs.” Mrs. Woodson will give piano selections. The program is arranged by Mrs. i Harry Watson, chairman, and the | following members of the program | committee: Mesdames H. E. Ehrensberger. William Bennett, E, J. Bayer, ! E. H. Ka’oig. Joel Wilmoth and Wil- ! :iam Bartlett. The social hour will be in charge !of Mrs. E. M. Campbell' and the | refreshment committee.
guests, Mrs. Dale Towey, president of Theta Sigma Chi alumnae, and Mrs. Olive Cox Burkhalter, society editor of the Bloomington Daily Telephone. PLAY IS GIVEN BY ST. AGNES CLASS Members of the freslunan class of St. Agnes academy presented a play "A Study in Black and White” today during assembly hour at school. Proceeds from the play will be used to send school delegates to the C. F* M. C. convention at Buffalo in June. Pupils in the cast: A*nes Roaehe. Dans Wilkine. Emma Lou Bacbe : der. Edith Haeseojo-r. Mery S’.uneskv Iris Boyd. Margaret Sail a day, Winifred Cochran. Dorothy Bechert and Resina La Belle. STATE GROUP TO CONVENE IN JUNE Mrs. Fred Stilz. Indianapolis, president of the Indiana branch International Order of King's Daughters and Sons, has announced that, the twenty-seventh annual convention of th? srata group will 0? held in tha Presbyterian church at Madison, Wednesday to Fridav, June 11-19. Mrs. George I-I. Prior, Jewett City. Conn. branch president and former international president, will be guest speaker at the session. An entertainment feature will be a boat excursion .on the Ohio river from Madison # Louisville
shown reading the last letter she received from her boy, Lee Winslow 7 , before he w 7 as slain in France.
MISS FISHER NEW CLUB PRESIDENT
Miss Elizabeth Fisher was elected president of the Alpha Latreian Club at the meeting Tuesday at the home of Miss Helen Coffey, 3815 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Louis Wilson is outgoing president. Other officers are: Mrs. Frances Sommers, vice-president; Mrs. Charles Walker, recording secretary; Miss Lorena McComb, corresponding secretary, and Miss Ineva Reilly, treasurer. Following the business meeting, Mrs. Wilbur Johnson gave a travel talk. Officers to Be Chosen to Run City Symphony Directorate of the newly formed orchestral association recently named to guide the Indianapolis Symphony orchestra through its next season, will elect officers tonight at a dinner meeting at 6:45 at the Chamber of Commerce dining room. Theodore B. Griffith will preside. Louis Borinstein, president of the Chamber of Commerce, will extend greetings. Ferdinand Schaefer, conductor of the orchestra, also will speak. Preceding the election, the constitution and by-laws will be approved and the organization named. The final concert of the orchestra for the season will be at 3 Sunday at Caleb Mills hall. Art Students Hold Exhibition Until April 30 Students of the art school of the John Herron Art institute are holding an exhibition of their work at the school until April 30. The exhibition opened with a dinner Sunday at the Propyiaeum for parents and relatives of class members. and the faculty. William Forsyth was speaker. Miss Edna Mann Shover presided. More than three hundred pictures and objects of art are on view. A working exhibition, showing students at work in the studios, will be held in the art school building from 7:30 to 9:30 Wednesday night, April 22. Admission will be by ticket only. MRS. RUBUSH NEW GUILD PRESIDENT Officers were elected by Si. Margaret's Hospital Guild at a meeting held Tuesday at the home of Mrs. D. G. Trone. 3333 Broadway. Mrs. Presion Rubuslr was chosen president. Other officers elected were: Mer Sames Frank Severln, first vicepresident; William Van Lar.dingham, second vice-president: F.css Coflin, recording secretary; William Mullen, treasurer, and George Grinsteiner, assistant treasurer. Mrs. Rubush will be hostess for tho next meeting of the guild, which will be held in two weeks. MRS. CAIN HOSTESS .AT GUEST SESSION Members of the Alpha Delta Latreian Club held a guest meeting Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Stanley A. Cain, 450 North Audubon road. Fifty guests were present. Mrs. Herschell E. Miller spoke on ‘‘The New and Smart in Home Furnishings.” Following the program tea was served. The tea table was centered with yellow flowers, and lighted with yellow tapers, with all appointments carried out in the same color. Miss Florence Lupton, president, poured. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Matthew Farson and Mrs. Richmond Eastian. Initiation to Be Held Theta Chi Omega sorority will hold formal initiation tonight at the Antlers for Miss Mary Barnett. The service will be followed by a slumber party.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Formal Ball Will Open Club Season The Columbia Club's annual dinner and formal military ball, which will be held April S3 at the clubhouse, will be one of the most brilliant affairs of the year, and will open the spring social session at the club. Distinguished officers of the Culver military academy, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, the Thirty-eighth division, national guard, and the Eightyfourth division reserve officers will be pfesent, with War Secretary Patrick J. Hurley as guest of honor and speaker at the dinner. All members of the club are invited to attend, ar.d those who are members of any of the above units will appear in uniform. Escort to Be Formed A military escort will be formed for Secretary Hurley upon his arrival in the city Monday by the R. O. T. C. units of the Indianapolis high schools. The procession will move through the downtown streets, and business firms have been requested by the Chamber of Commerce to display flags, in honor of the secretary. While in Indianapolis Secretary Hurley will have as his military aid Colonel Everett F. McCoy of the Thirty-eighth division, and MajorGeneral Denis E. Nolin, commander of the Fifth corps area, United States army, will have as his aid, Lieutenant-Colonel Mark Hamer, also of the Thirty-eighth division staff. The definite time of the arrival of the secretary is not known, and final arrangements will not be made, pending information as to whether he will come by train or plane. Many Reservations Made A number of table reservations for dinner parties have been made for the dinner, during which Miss Ruth Tyndall, daughter of MajorGeneral Robert H. Tyndall, commanding officer of the Thirtyeighth division national guard, will be made a sponsor of the artillery unit of the division, by the cadet officers of Culver Military academy. Among those reserving tables for parties are; Harper J. Ransburg. Norman A. Perry. J. C. Ruckelshsus, Joseph Steifler, Dr. L. A. Ensminger, Frank E. Ball, James Cronin Jr., Ralph C. Miller, Colonel H. P. Hobbs, WiUiam J. Hogan, Lieutenant Richard Sears, Edward Schurman Jr., Major O. A. Manseau. Carroll K. Sheffield, Captain Harvey Morgan, Robert E. Francis, Lieutenant Colonel W.j T. Conway, RusseU C. Rottger, Curtis H. Rottger, J. Hart Laird, John K. Ruckelshaus, Howard A. Koch, Thomas F. Carson, General George H. Jamerson, Felix M. McWhirter and Wallace O. Lee. v Military and patriotic decorations will be used. The committee in charge is composed of: R. C. Rottger, chairman; Harper J. Ransburg and Wallace O. Lee. vice-chairmen; Leßoy Carson. J. J. Cole, Fred Donaldson, R. M. Fuestel, L. G. Gardner, Howard A. Koch. Richard A. Kurtz, Vance Oathout. H. C. Pennicke and Jake Wolf. Lieuten-ant-Co’.onel N. A. Nicolai of the Thirtyeighth division, national guard, and Lieutenant Rirhard Sears of Ft. Harrison, will assist with military matters. Governor Harry G. Leslie, with his military staff, and Mayor Reginald Sullivan will be present. Rear Admiral Walter S. Crosley. commandant of the Great Lakes training station, Ninth naval district, Great Lakes, 111., will be a guest, as a representative of the navy. Hold Dinner at Club First monthly dinner of the Statehouse Woman’s Democratic | Club was held Tuesday night at the Indiana Democratic Club. Miss Anna Hunt, Sullivan, chairman of the entertainment committee, was assisted by Mrs. Gertrude Corwin, Miss Miriam Keller, Winamac, and Jeanne Siefert, Connersville.
WEDDED RECENTLY
'w’ ■ ' '
—Photo by Platt. Mrs. Harold Kleis Miss Kathleen Gats, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Gats, Greenfield, Ind., became the bride of Harold Kleis, in a ceremony celebrated at the home of the bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. ICleis, near Indianapolis.
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Reunion to Be Held by Club Group Charter members of the Woman’s Department Club, which was founded in 1912 with a membership of 500, will hold a breakfast and reunion Friday at the clubhouse, 1702 North Meridian street. A program of music and addresses will be given at 2 for all members of the club and their guests. Committees for the breakfast have been appointed by Mrs. Felix T. McWhirter, general chairman. Hostesses—Mesdames Eugene Darrach. Henry D. Burnet. Charles J. Buchanan. R. C McAlexander. O. B. Jamison. John Bosroe Curry, Janes F. Edwards. William Forsythe, Charles B. Sowder and Wynaond J. Beckett Lean Exhibit Committee—Mesdames E. A. Carson. A. J. Hueber. E. L. Pedlow. J. Otis Adams. A. S. Ayres. Stephen Bcgert. RO' er Brown. Jerome E- Holman. M. B. Lairv. Felix McWhirter, W. J. Slate and Miss Bertha Edwards. Tearoom Committee —Mesdames Charles A. Breece. Harry Watson. William Dobson and Will C. Hitz. Breakfast Committee—Robert Shingier and Mrs. R. L. Goneche. Door Committee—Mesdames W. J. Hubbard and M. R. Garver. Auditorium Committee —Mesdames Curtis A. Hodges. W. A. Eshbach. Christian Olsen. William Pickens and M. J. Spencer. The program is in charge of the general committee, headed by Mrs McWhirter, assisted by Mesdames William E. Kershner, vice-chair-man; Alvin T. Coate, M. R. Garver, Walter J. Hubbard and J. Preston Smith. Members who attend the program in the afternoon have been asked to wear oriental garments, and to bring objects of interest from the Orient for the loan exhibit. Miss Tevebaugh Is Wedded in' Church Rites Miss Vivian Ruth Tevebaugh, granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Tevebaugh, 650 East Twentysecond street, celebrated her birthday anniversary Saturday, with her marriage to Reginald Collinson Barber, Ketchikan, Alaska. The Rev. William C. Hardinger of the Broadway Methodist Episcopal church officiated. The bride, who was attended by Miss Peggy Wire, wore a gown of old ivory taffeta and carried shell pink roses and lilies cf the valley. A reception followed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Barber are at home at 319 West Thirty-second street. Joseph Lynch, the bride's father, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Barber and Mrs. E. L. Honey, Ketchikan, Alaska, were wedding guests.
Personals
Miss Eloise Hall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Hall, 3026 North New Jersey street, left Tuesday for Hot Springs, Ark., where she will spend a month. Mrs. Rebecca Deutsch, who lias ben the guest of Dr. and Mrs. D. J. McCarthy, 4440 Centra} avenue, returned Tuesday to her home in Davenport. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus, Miss Martha Taylor, Thomas Madden and Thomas Ruckelshaus spent the week-end in Cincinnati, 0., where they were the guests of Misses Catherine and Elizabeth Sutphin. The Misses Sutphin entertained Saturday night in their honor with a costume ball at the Country Club. Miss Mabelle and Myrtle Mayer, 2030 North Alabama street, who have been spending several days in Boston, Mass., have gone to New York, where they will meet George J. Mayer, who will arrive Friday on the Bcrengaria from a Mediterranean cruise. Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Berkley have returned from a trip to New Orleans, Hollywood, and Miami, Fla., and are at home at the Marott. Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cottingham and daughter. Miss Lorinda Cottingham, 3641 North Pennsylvania street, have returned from a three weeks’ motor trip. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Arnett and Mr. and Mrs. Byron E. Lundblad, J. B. Darlington, Noel Epperson and W. F- Kissel are among the Indianapolis persons at French Lick Springs. MRS. JAMESON TO RECEIVE AT TEA Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson, 1035 North Pennsylvania street, will receive informally at tea from 4 to 6 Thursday afternoon at the John Eerron Art institute. Tea will be served in the room where the exhibition of water colors by Charles R. Knapp. Rockpcrt, Mass., is hung. Mrs. Jameson will speak on the artist and his work and there will be a musical program. There are no invitations. Theater Party Planned • McCray chapter of the Westminster Guild of the Memorial Presbyterian church will hold a theater party at 7:15 tonight at the Indiana theater.
What’s in Fashion?
Help for Large Figures Directed By AMOS PARRISH
YORK, April 15.—“A1l this spring’s fashions are made for slim figures,” somebody complained the other day. We don't agree wtih that. The trouble with this complainant probably is that there are so many fashions designed to make figures look slim, she thinks everybody wearing them is slim. There are no special fashions for the large woman this spring. Nothing to mark a costume obviously “extra size.” The good fashion details that all fashionable women are wearing are the fashion details for the larger woman, too. Because they happen to be the ones that are most becoming to her —and the ones that do a great deal to lessen the appearance of size. There’s the diagonal line you see so often in coats and suits and dresses. One of the most fashionable closings there is, and one of the most becoming to the large figure. The narrow roll collar is & new fashion in coats, suits and dresses. That, toe, is fine for the large figure. It’s neat, inconspicuous, and has nothing to add to her appearance of size. The fashion fact that so many smart coats are un-furred is a welcome idea to the larger woman. It keeps out all suggestion of bulkiness. And the fashion fact that when coats are furred, it’s most often with flat, short-haired furs is another good idea for her. They’re the kind of fur she wears best. The fashionable wide wrapover of coats is becoming to the woman who’s inclined to be stout. And they’re comfortable for her, too. They can be adjusted to wherever they look and feel best. |The vestees of lace or net or lingerie that so many dresses have —they’re a good thing, too. They cut into the width of the bodice section. Help it look not so wide, Front Fullness Helpful The fashionable front fullness in dress skirts makes them easy to walk in, but keeps the width away from the sides of the body. So—in not making it look wider, helps make it look narrower. The slight blousing at the waistline of dresses makes a soft line and helps disguise any differnce between waistline and hipline size. The long scarfs that hang below the waist make a nice vertical line to draw eyes up and down the
SURPLICE DREfeS—Fashionable for large or small women. figure instead of across it. It adds to the illusion of height. And vertical lines of seaming in a skirt do the same thing. Fashions to Avoid Os course there are fashions the large figure would do better to avoid. Short, flaring peplums, for instance. Contrasting belts. Contrasting tops on dresses. Wide bell sleeves and elbow sleeves. The fashionable small prints and indistinct ones are better for her than the fashionable large bold prints. And of course the fact that navy is one of spring's favorite colors is good news for the large woman. We’ve had sketched a coat and a dress that illustrate the points we’ve been making. The coat above is the widely wrapped, diagonal closing line, narrow roll collar silhouette that is in fashion for everybody. And it’s a fine coat for the larger figure. So is the dress. It has a vestee. a surplice bodice line, a one-sided
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Widely wrapped coat with narrow , collar. rever. a skirt with front fullness in flat pleats—all fashionable details. And all becoming to the larger woman. (Copyright. 1931. by Amos Parrish) Next: Amos Parrish writes on well-equipped closets.
Girl Scouts Serving Tea at Realtors’ Home Exposition
Indianapolis Girl Scouts are serving tea in the afternoon at the tenth annual Realtors Home Complete exposition in the manufacturers’ building at the state fairground this week. The Girl Scout booth is furnished with scoutcraft, and contains posters of the “little house,” the aim of the group, and different types of homemaker badges for which the girls are working. Girls who have attended the home making classes maintained by the home service department of the Indianapolis Power and Light Company, and have passed the required tests, are in charge of the booth. They make cookies, waffles, cinnamon toast and tea, and Tuesday night they made biscuits. Following are the girls w r ho will be in the booth during the week: Misses Evelyn Wilsey. Marjorie and Ruth Collins, Helen Hudgins. Martha Pierce. Florence Gipe. Martha Trembly, Helen Collins, Mary Bayer. Bobby J. Vestal, Jeanette Thomas. Mildred Jenkins. Jean St. Piere. Jean Nolton. Jane Held. Genevieve Campbell. Barbara Finch. Miriam Waldo, Mary Louise Merrell. Klttlelou Fitzgerald. Louise Clark. Jean Meek. Jane Crawford, Mlgnon Wagner and girls of Mrs. Henry Hayward’s troop. Hostesses mill be: Mesdames C. Willis Adams. Arthur Krick, C. F. Voyles. Ralph Colby. Paul Moffet. Theodore Vonnegut. R. Harry Miller, Henry Ballman. E. A. Gardner and Joseph Miner. Mrs. Stuart Dean and Mrs. Morris Haines made the appointments. Mrs. Charles E. Cole, chairman of the Indianapolis and Marion county Girl Scout camp, has announced the following dates for the coming camping season of four ten-day pe-
"How do I keepeSl my figure?" f “I eat Shredded Wheat but Pe \ instead of cream I use whole J- |§|j|J|l J milk just as it comes from “ s I the bottle. That kind of meal J- I j gives me pep and strength. It’s delicious and nourishing \i *' '// i and easily digested. Sometimes I• 2i : / l for variety I add sliced bananas |k j ff- f \ or other fruits, but I like it jj/ j any way at all.” ijfo I -,*•. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY f I j "Uneeda Bakers** **£ ‘ SHREDDED @WITH AU THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT
APRIL 15, 1931
New Chiefs Are Named by League Mrs. Charles Harvey Bradley was elected president of the Indianapolis Junior League at the annual meeting held Tuesday afternoon at the Propylaeum. Mrs. Meredith Nicholson was chosen voting delegate with Mrs. Bradley to the national convention of Junior Leagues, May 11 to 13, in Cincinnati. Other officers chosen are: Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith, vice-presi-dent; Mrs. Jeremiah J. Cadick, recording secretary; Mrs. Addison Parry, corresponding secretary; Miss Caroline Sweeney, treasurer (reelected), and Mrs. Nicholson, city editor. Other delegates who will attend the convention are: Mesdames Edward Norvell, William P. Anderson 111 and Robert Adams, shop chairman. Mrs. Benjammin C. Hitz is retiring president of the league. Dramatic Club to Give Play at Carr’s Hall Irvington Dramatic club will present a Chinese play, “Trice Promised Bride,” by Chen Chin Hsiung, Saturday night at Carr’s hall. Mr. and Mrs. William Insley will be hosts. Mrs. Stanley Cain is chairman. The cast includes Mr. and Mrs. George Kingsbury, Mrs. B. J. Terrell, Robert Hall. Walter Ward, Noble Ropkey, Austin Clifford, James Loomis, Francis Inley, Fred Stilz and Park Newton Admission will be by card. Alpha Chapter to Meet Alpha chapter, Phi Theta Delta sorority, will meet at 8 tonight at the Severin,
riods: June 29, July 8; July 13-22; July 27, Aug. 5; Aug. 10-19. Girl Scout gypsy trips w r ill be introduced for the first time for the pioneer girls, who are the oldest in camp This will be a three-day period. Clay work and photography will be introduced this year at camp. Councilors for the coming season are: Mrs. Mabel Fouty. Misses Clara Foxworthy. Betty Bowman. Isabelle Adamson, Florence Stack. Indianapolis. Mildred Ewan. Coralie Hatch. Louise Ewan. Kewanee. 111.; Dorothy Ruth Miller, Champaign. 111.; Ruth Jordan. New Albany. Ind.; Vivain Ruell and Mabel Jelneck. Romeo. Mich The Junior counsellors, all of Indianapolis, are: Mary Alice Burch, Jana Crawford. Frances Stalker. Ella Hansen, Mary Vance Trent, Betty Bell, Anna Margaret Voorhis. Frances Suitor. Agnes Coldwell, S3rah Wills. Florence Gipe. Mignon Wagner. Peggy Jones Mabelle Sherman. Jeanne St. Pierre. Mary Jane Bayer. Jane Calvelage and Evelyn Willsey. PARTY GIVEN BY MRS . B. M. WEBB Mrs. B, M. Webb entertained Tuesday afternoon with a bridge party at her home, 6315 Central avenue, in honor of Mrs. J. E. Fettig. Her guests included: Mesdames Joseph Schlichte. Conner.'vllle; j. H. Beck. RusseU Byers. R. P. Moorman, L. H. Stafford, J. T. Couchman, W 7 arren Skillman, W. E. Robinson. Harry Dickinson, Ralph Clark, R. S. KiefTer. E H. Claman, John Bruner, Edwin White and O. H. Boaz. Sorority to Meet Sigma Phi Delta sorority will meet at 8:30 Wednesday at the Spink-Arms.
