Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 291, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Ladder to Be Jack’s Beanstalk Firemen Make Loan for Children’s Theater Presentation. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN Time* Woman’s Pate Editor beanstalk -for Jack to climb in “Jack and the Beanstalk,” next Children's theater production on Saturday and April 28 will be disguised so completely that the audience will never guess that it is a fireman's scaling ladder. Miss Marion Barnard was assigned to de-

sign the sets after she had completed adaptation of Eugenia Shep--1 e r and Wolfe’s story to dramatic form. Miss Barnard called in the fire department for help when she began sketching the set designs. She had visions of a scaling ladder all dressed up as a beanstalk. She could

Miss Burgan

see Jack on it talking to the moon. The firemen solved Miss Barnard’s problem by loaning her the ladder she selected. Richard McDufTee will be the man in the moon, which Miss Barnard designed with blinking eyes. A blue curtain will represent the sky, and onlj a “spot" will light the scene as Jack talks to the moon. Miss Barnard with Mrs. Thomas Sinclair and Miss Anne Torian have been working at the Civic theater almost daily painting the scenes in preparation for the final presentation of the season by the Children’s theater. Miss Barnard has created a colorful country side carnival scene for the opening of the play. Booths will be striped in red and white. Besides the beanstalk climbing setting, the giant’s kitchen will be depicted. Animals Will Parade Miss Barnard has included several scenes of riotous fun in her version of Jack's adventures. The carnival animals will parade through the audience with the giant, as he is led away a captive after Jack has restored his mother’s stolen treasure. Lawrence Hill will be the animal trainer and will lead the performances of the camel, Carter Tharp and Robert Jackson; the monkey, Donald King, and the lion, Anis Sprin. Jack, Billy Shirley, will bring Brownie, the cow, Paul H. Krauss 111 and Warren Atkinson, to the carnival to sell. New Members in Cast Several new performers wall appear in the cast. Betty Soehner will be Jack's mother; Mary Church Allen, Jack's aunt; William Ramey, the giant, and Martha Hill. Mrs. Giant. Others will be Paul H. Krauss 111 and William Wright. Goopy and Wuxey, the giant's cooks; Mary Furscott, gypsy; George Gaston, ticket taker; John Wildhack. clown; David McDufTee, Hans; Dorothy Ann Yates, Gretchen; Richard McDufTee. popcorn man; Emily Mac Nab, Titania, the fairy queen; Barbara Bowm and Jane Carter, fairies; Suzanne Ramey, Caroline Lieber. Betty Carter and Carl Lieber, the children.

ALUMNAE HEADED BY MISS KERZ

Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority elected Miss Virginia Kerz president at the annual election meeting Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. John Brayton, 3128 Fall Creek boulevard. Mrs. Harry G. Jones will serve as vice-president: Mrs. Orville N. Newton, corresponding secretary: Miss Mary Estelle Sluss, recording secretary, and Mrs. Joseph C. Matthews, treasurer. Mrs. G. B. Taylor. retiring president, and Mrs. Mark Reasoner are members-at-large. Miss Kerz is delegate to the biennial convention of the sorority to be held in July in Yellowstone National Park. Alternates elected were Mrs. Taylor. Miss Elizabeth Hisey, Miss Ruth Stone, Mrs. Matthews and Mrs. Charles A. Harris. Mrs. Newton reviewed "Bonfire,” by Dorothy Canfield Fisher. Assistant hostesses were Miss Kerz, Mrs. John Moriarty. Mrs. James Jobes and Mrs. Louis Lowe. Dr. Brown to Speak Dr. Frances Brown will talk~n ‘"Meeting the Sex Problem With Sense" at a meeting of the Fairview Mothers Club of Indianapolis Free Kindergarten at 2 Thursday. Hostesses will be Mesdames Douglas T. Sherow. Harold Yount, Charles Berriman and C. A. Hannah.

I Daily Recipe HAM LOAF | 1 pound ground beef | 1-2 pound smoked ham j 1-2 pound fresh pork 1 cup bread or cracker crumbs 1 cup milk 1 small onion, grated } 2 tablespoons pimentos, j diced j 2 tablespoons green pepj per, diced I Salt I Pepper I Have the beef, smoked ham | and fresh pork ground to- = gether Combine with the f bre*d crumbs, season with | onion, pimento, green pepper, | salt and pepper, moisten with ! milk. Form into a loaf and j bak* in a moderate oven j <3BO degrees) for about forty- ! five minutes.

Have a Hobby Rare Old Book Displays Silhouette of Harrison

BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON. Times Hobby Editor 'T'HE excitement that an antique collector feels when "making a find” seldom is experienced today because persons who possess really excellent products of pioneer workmanship, almost always know their value and appreciate their worth. An inveterate “junk snooper,’’ however, can rise to heights of enthusiasm over a rare antique even though there is no hope of owning it. In this guise. I received a real “antique thrill” recently by seeing in the catalogue of the Central Library, “Portrait Gallery of Distinguished American Citizens by William Henry Brown.” I scarcely could believe my eyes until I actually held it in my hands. Os course, it was not a true find, as the library staff knew’ about it, but to me it was a discovery since I chanced upon it while searching for something entirely foreign. The “Portrait Gallery” is a book compiled by Brown in 1846 and is illustrated with lithographs of his silhouettes which ironically are rarer than his originals. Many years ago Edwin R. Gilgour, who had obtained a copy of the “Portrait Gallery,” gave me the privilege of examining it —an experience no antique collector could forget. I never expected to see another copy, as Mr. Gilgour said that in his long experience as an antique dealer he had found but two of these rare books, although he had advertised extensively. Alice Van Leer Carrick says that the last one offered in an auction brought SSOO and that she had seen only three copies—two owned privately and one in the vaults of the Boston library. She adds: “I would rather own the shadows of Brown's ’Distinguished American Citizens’ than anything else in the world.” High praise indeed. Miss Dorothy Sipe of the library staff states that Miss Eliza Browning probably purchased this rare volume which was obtained from Mrs. W. H. H. Terrull, a member of an old Indianapolis family, at a cast of $2 on March 24, 1886. A notation on the first page, $4, March 18, 1851, undoubtedly indicates. the price that Mrs. Terrull paid for it originally. a a a $ WILLIAM HENRY BROWN was born in Charleston, S. C., in 1808, and became a silhouette artist at the age of 16, when Lafayette, then in America, 1824, “sat to Brown for a shadow.” Brown was amazingly swift and accurate in his cutting and became very successful, as he states in the preface to the “Portrait Gallery”. During the author’s travels throughout the United States in the exercise of his peculiar talent of taking full length likenesses from the observation of a few moments, he had the extensive patronage of the most prominent and distinguished men of the day. Each portrait exhibits the original with all the peculiarities of place, person, dress, attitude and manner. Brown often mounted his silhouettes on lithographed backgrounds prepared under his direction, and this association may have led to the form in which the "Portrait Gallery” was compiled. The lithographed illustrations were prepared by the Kelloggs w’hile Brown wrote the biographical sketches of the subjects and assembled the facsimiles of the entire autographed letters written by them. According to an editorial comment by Homer Eaton Keyes in the magazine, Antiques, the books are rare because only a few copies had been distributed when practically the whole edition, plates and all, were destroyed by fire. Normally, the book contains twenty-six silhouettes, but in the one owned by the library the Rev. William White is pictured twice, an error which should enhance its value. Each silhouette has its distinctive points of interest. President Tyler is looking toward the Capitol dome from a window of the President’s house. Dr. Thomas Cooper, educator of Charleston, is dressed in a unique costume with trousers ending in a frill. Bishop William White of Philadelphia. alone of the Episcopal clergy to remain in America when the revolution began, is standing in front of his church. He appears cold in his knee breeches as the wind whips his flowing white hair. a a a TALL, silm, fastidious John Randolph of Roanoke, descendant of Pocahontas, is inspecting his thoroughbred horses and ancestral acres. Brown says of him: “Mr. Randolph cultivated his genealogical tree with great care and scrupled not to lop off a

BETROTHED

■—

Miss Thelma Clements

Mr. and Mrs. j. r. Clements, 5501 University avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mjss Thelma Clements, to Martin F. Hogan of Anderson, son of Mrs. Mary Hogan of Surrey, England. The wedding will take place at 9 Monday, May 30 in Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic church.

j # f ....

William Henry Brown’s silhouette of William Henry Harrison.

branch or a shoot that he deemed unworthy of the parent stock. General McComb, commander-in-chief of the American armies from 1828 until “the melancholy event of his death in 1841,” as Brown says, surveys an encampment of soldiers. One of the most distinguished men in congress, the weighty and frank hearted member from Alabama, Dixon Hall Lewis, looks every ounce of his 420 pounds. - Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, Andrew Jackson, always looking romantic; John Calhoun, John Quincy Adams—to select but one to be photographed should have been difficult, but to an Indianan there was but one choice—William Henry Harrison. The interior which forms the background also had its appeal. The carpets, window drapes, wall paper designs, ornaments and furniture in many of the background scenes are as entertaining as the costumes on the figures. Daguerre’s invention, which led to photography, displaced silhouette cutting in public favor. Brown cut the shadow picture of Lincoln as his last distinguished American and went into the railroad business at Kane, Pa. In 1874 an acquaintance described him as being of medium height and sturdy build with personal magnetism ant\ charm of speech. He died in Charleston in 1882 only four years before the library purchased his famous book.

D. A. R. Arrive in Washington for Convention i ■ By United Press WASHINGTON, April 16.—Three thousand American women whose forefathers battled for the freedom of the United States from Britain gathered here today for the annual convention of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Half a dozen other patriotic societies also met in Washington, swelling the throngs of thousands of visitors attracted to the city by the annual spectacle of the blooming of the Japanese cherry trees around the tidal basin. The meeting of the D. A. R., which in past years has provided numerous stormy sessions over the issues of national defense, preparedness and Communism opened with the address of the presidentgeneral, Mrs. Russell William Magna, Holyoke, Mass. Convention fights similar to those of other sessions were expected. It was believed the “Red plot” charges of Dr. William A. Wirt, Gary <lnd.) educator, would receive some attention from delegates. One resolution certain to provoke debate was understood to relate to Communism in the United States. Another suggests affiliation with other patriotic societies. Sponsors of resolutions generally maintaining secrecy regarding their content in an effort to minimize the bitter debate which previously has burst out upon the convention floor.

Announcements

Officers will practice for inspection at the meeting of Auxiliary to Sons of Union Veterans tomorrow at Ft. Friendly. Epsilon chapter. Omega Phi Delta fraternity, will meet tonight at the home of Claude Merrill. 5543 University avenue.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Orange juice, cereal, cream, soft cooked eggs, toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Baked macaroni and cheese, rye bread and lettuce sandwiches, canned peaches, cocoanut cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — Savory c h i c k en stew, twice baked sweet potatoes. salad of mixed greens with Roquefort cheese dressing, maple mousse, sponge drops, milk, coffee.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Champions at Bridge Will Play ; Contract Event Will Open Wednesday at Athletic Club. Recognized bridge champions from the middle west will participate in the eighth annual inter-club contract bridge tournament, which will open Wednesday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Opening play will be the qualifying round for the individual championship and the J. W. Stickney trophy, and a special amateur game for players who have never won a top score pin in a city, state, or national tournament. All sessions of the four-day event will be played in the afternoons and nights, beginning at 1:45 and 7:45. In addition to daily championship play, contract games will be held at all sessions. Club team and pair championships are featured in the annual tourneys, and the trophies consist of a group of cups, donated by presidents of the I. A. C. Additional awards include three kinds of top score pins, a blue enamel Din for winners for all trophy games; a red enamel pin for the runner-up of all trophy games, and a white enamel pin for winners of open duplicate games. * Special Prizes Offered Other cups include the Henry Dollman trophy to be awarded in the mixed pair championship, and United States Bridge Association and American League cups, to be awarded winners in special games. Mrs. Grace C. Buschman is tournament director, and will be assisted by Miss Hervey Hooker. John Graham is tourney treasurer. The entertainment committee includes Walker Winslow. Walter Pray, Lawrence Welch, J. E. Cain, John Graham and William Zeller. The prize committee is composed of Ralph Ittenbach, E. E. Gates Jr. and William R. Cooper. Players Announced Mrs. Buschmann announces the following players as members of the special tournament and reception committee: Mesdames M. K. Alexander, C. A. Aldrich, Thaddeus R. Baker, R. K. Barlow, H. G. Carmichael, A. R. Coffin, Hortense Evans, Ray C. Fox, H. E. Funk, Elizabeth Hastings, A. C. Hoffmeier, C. W. Nokes. O. G. Pfaff, Harry H. Ramsey, Ralph K. Smith, J. B. Suttles, Tipton Young and Messrs. W. P. Anderson, C. H. Angell, Ward Batty, E. M. Brennan, Don Brewer, W. E. Brownback, C. L. Buschmann, F. R. Buck, E. R. Buss, William C. Cooper. William K. Cooper. H. L. Dollman, Fritz Durelle. G. H. Fosdick, E. E. Gates, Jr., P. S. Germain, L. J. Haddad. C. H. Hall, R. W. Halpin and Frank Hopkins. Millard P. Kaiser, M. W. Kastriner. Ralph Kempner, A. E. Kimberly, E. M. Lagron, J. H. Law, C. H. McCaskey, C. J. McDiarnid, J. I. McDonald. H. E. McFerran, Louis McLean, Maurice Maschke, A. J. Mouat, Omar Mueller, Cleon Nafe, A. M. Ogle, P. D. Parcells, H. A. Payne, S. A. Perrine, Alex Printz, N. S. Reilly, R. R. Richards, L. L. Riggs, C. N. Rilling, Lewis Saxby, Fritz Schneider, Phil Steiner, E. J. Tobin, John Turpin, Charlton Wal’ace. Ford Wallick. M. P. Walley, R. M. Wildberg, E. C. Wolfe, Lieutenant E. A. Routheau and Lieutenant C. H. Calais.

Card Parties

Ladies of Cathedral Altar Society will entertain Friday afternoon in the Knights of Columbus auditorium with a card party. All games will be played. Mrs. J. Albert Smith is society president. Degree staff of Banner Temple, No. 37, Pythian Sisters, will entertain with a card party Thursday night at the home of Mrs. David Price, 2743 North Sherman drive. All games will be played. Mrs. Emma Cole and Mrs. Blanche Cole are sponsors of a card party for the benefit of A. D. Streight Circle, Ladies of G. A. R., to be held at 2 tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Aurelia Benson, 4 West Nineteenth street. St. Roch's Altar Society will hold a supper from 5:30 to 8 tomorrow night at the hall. 3600 South Meridian street, followed by a card party. Mrs. Carl Pfleger is chairman. MISS GREENWOOD WED IN NEW YORK By Times Special NEW YORK, April 16.—Miss Helen Mae Greenwood of Chillicothe, 0., formerly of Indianapolis, and David C. Roche of New York, were married Saturday in the Little Church Around the Corner by theRev. Randolph Ray. Miss Greenwood, is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Greenwood. Mr. Roche, a son of Mr. amd Mrs. David H. Roche, formerly lived in Chillicothe. Mrs. Harry Cook, 3800 South Sherman drive, will be hostess for a card party Wednesday afternoon for the benefit of Holy Name church. All games will be played. The public may attend. Mandoleers Appear Musical program was presented yesterday afternoon by the Mandoleers under the direction of Mrs. Ida Broo at a tea at the home of Miss Virginia Siefker, 4015 Ruckle street. Thirty guests attended. On the program were Misses Julia Benson, Betty Cook, Virginia Siefker, Esther Steup and Alice Andrews and Arno Siefker Jr. Italy to Be Subject Miss Grace Emery of the Latin department of Arsenal Technical high school will give an illustrated lecture on “Italy” at a Meeting of the Three-Arts Club at 8:30 tonight at the Brightwood branch library. 2364 Station street. William Allison will preside.

P EVANS ’ - Ljfrg.AU. PURPOSES J

Little Miss in Blue

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Light blue polo cloth is used to make a dressy coat and a pert beret for this tiny girl.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Discuss your problems with Jane Jordan if you need help. Put your side of the Question in a letter and read your answer in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l was married to a man four years who drank, gambled and liked wild parties. He promised he would stop all of this if I would marry him, which I did for I loved him. I do not believe in booze and I do not even smoke; so his ideas were not mine. After a year I sued for separation, but withdrew the case as he promised faithfully that he would stop the foolishness. In about three months he was at it again. He went out of the house and said I had to follow him or else; so I did else. I sued again and in about three months he wanted the case withdrawn, but I stuck it out and was granted a divorce. Now he w'ants to be friends and says that we will be married in a year if I care anything for him. Well, I do, but do you think it would pay me to wait for him a year, or would you go on looking for someone else? He seems sorry enough and sees me every week. He is going with another girl, but says he just goes to pass the time away. What would you do? BLUE AND SO LONELY. Answer—lt has been said that promises are like pie crust, and there is a good reason for the statement. It is difficult for an individual to change habits of long standing by a conscious resolve. Your ex-husband’s habits, though objectionable to you, apparently yield him considerable satisfaction. He w T ili not change until he feels a profound dissatisfaction with his adjustment to life. The fact that he is sorry does not guarantee you a change of conduct. Unless he can get at the hidden reasons that push him to escape in drink, he will not be any different in a year than he is now, and your waiting will have been in vain. Without enlightenment and a real wish for change on the part of your ex-husband, you are just ■wasting your time in waiting for him. Dear Jane Jordan—l am engaged to a little French girl in Canada. We are going to be married in June. I have never seen her or her people. We met through a letter. I am going to Ottawa and bring her back to Indianapolis to live. She is 19 and I am 22. We have written to each other for two years, and although we have never met, I am very much in love with her. I have a good job and can support a wife. Do you approve of such a meeting? Do you think we can be happy? Maybe some of your readers have had the same experience and can help me. JUST ABOUT MARRIED. Answer—lt is hard enough for engaged people to get acquainted when they see each other frequently. In a romantic attachment, the pair usually twist the facts to suit themselves. Reality is seldom faced by infatuate* lovers. I should say that it is practically impossible to acquire any real knowledge of a girl by correspondence. I have never known the marriage of two people who were absolutely unknown to each other before the wedding to succeed. If any of our readers have had experience along this line, I shall appreciate their letters. Dear Jane Jordan—l have just started to go steady with a boy for whom I care a lot. He says he loves me and does not want to do anything I wouldn’t like. Nevertheless, he always wants his own way. I love him enough to do anything for him, but do you think

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it would be best to let him do just as he pleases? I don’t want to lose him, but I hate to give in. Will you please tell me what to do? JUST WONDERING. Answer—A person so self-centered that he wants his own way in everything still is too childish to make a satisfactory friend. Part of the process of growing up consists of learning how to give up some of one’s own rights to others. Perhaps with skillful handling on your part he will come to see this point. But if your friendship becomes nothing but one long struggle between your will and his, it would be better to give it up early. Dear Jane Jordan —I ride to and from school with some school mates of mine, and I fell in love with the driver. I like him a great deal better than the kid I am going with. He seems very friendly, and is not going steady with any one. I am backward and so is he. I would like very much to go with him. He is popular at school and has nice clothes and a car. What would you advise? HELEN. Answer—Some women have the knack of encouraging a man without seeming the least bit forward. They have a certain radiance of personality that invites people to know them better. A warm, friendly, interested attitude generally attracts others more than a backward one does. My guess is that you are too i absorbed in your reactions to observe this. Try to be more interested in what he is thinking and feeling than you are in yourself. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl of sixteen. My previous boy friend is of the same age. I am very fond of him and he was of me until recently when he was made acquainted with a girl of 19. She has a bad reputation. Do you think a girl of 19 would care for a boy of 16? Do you think it will last? If he should want to come back after he has gone with her for a while, should I accept? PUZZLED. Answer—l can not answer your questions for I do not know. I guess that the new attachment will not last any longer than the first. After it is finished, he may or may not turn to you again. Bridge Group to Meet Duplicate Study Club will meet tomorrow at the Spink-Arms with Mesdames Mabel Long, Frank E. Bates and John A. Beatty, hostesses. Mrs. S. C. King will talk on “Slam Bids.” Mrs. H. E. Brewer and Mrs. E. L. Hamlin were top score holders last week.

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Lieber’s Will Observe Eightieth Birthday With' Miniature World’s Fair Fine Art Creations of Several Nations Will Be on Display at Store Through May. BY HELEN LINDSAY FOR eighty years the H. Lieber Company has offered to its patrons unusual specimens of old and new modem art and science. In recognition of that eighty years of service, Lieber's will conduct, from May 1 to May 31. a miniature world's fair. The art galleries will show an exhibit of origmal oil paintings by old masters. The famous Orrefors glass of Sweden will be shown, with collections of Lierdam glass of Holland, and Steuben glass, made in the United States. Other collections for the' fair will be George Jensen Danish silver, exclusive with Lieber's in Indianapolis; William Adams English silver; Royal Copenhagen porcelain, and English china by Spode.

A,nother interesting collection will be one of famous art fans, with color autographs of worldfamous artists. For student-artists, plans have been made to show products of the A. W. Faber Company, a color display by a Devoe & Reynolds, and drawing instruments of the Keuffel & Esser Company. Hand craft aluminum pieces, fine fabric shawls from Mexico, lens by Carl Z’iss. and a camera display by Leica will be included in the celebration. The Eastman Kodak Company will bring a display to Lieber's, showing the evolution of the camera from its inception to the present. In addition to these displays of well known companies which have contributed to the success of Lieber’s during it s eighty years, workmen will illustrate the manufacture of fine moldings and mirrors. Included in the fair will be collections never in Indianapolis before. For a month the store will be

an educational institute. a a a a a a Gift Hose in Astrological Packages WITH the current interest in astrology, manufacturers of Holeproof hosiery have instituted a unique birthday service in gift packages of hosiery. These are zodiacal birthday boxes, each containing three pairs of chiffon Holeproof hose, tested and approved by the Better Fabrics Testing Bureau. The hose will be in new, correct shades. The box is in silver finish, with a sliding cover in a pastel shade. The cover bears the zodiacal sign applicable to the month, and the pull attachment is a synthetic birthstone. Inside the box. with the hose, Is a birthday greetings folder, containing a reading of the birth month influences, according to astrology. The packages can be obtained through Rink's Cloak House. a a a a a a Rubberized Seersucker Forms Raincoats ATTRACTIVE summer raincoats in rubberized seersucker for littla girls have arrived at the Wm. H. Block Company. They are in raglan sleeve style, or with cape collars, and each has a matching slouch hat. The new raincoats are shown in white or in small colored gingham checks. a a a a a a Ayres Offers New Cleaning Method FOR the housewife who is searching for new housecleaning aids L. S. Ayres offers Foam-X. for the cleaning of rugs, upholstery, drapes and tapestries. Foam-X is a liquid cleaner which is non-inflammable, nonexplosive and non-poisonous. The liquid is poured into a clean, dry wool sponge until the sponge is saturated. The sponge is squeezed until all the liquid is converted into foam. This is wiped over the article to ba cleaned in a circular motion, and left to dry.

Speakers Announced for State Voters League Convention

Call to convention of the Indiana League of Women Voters, mailed last week-end to members, announces Mrs. Quincey Wright of Chicago, secretary of the National League, and Mrs. James Morrison of Groton. Mass., former president of the Illinois League, as the principal speakers. The sessions will be May 15 and 16 at Lafayette. Other special speakers scheduled on the program are Dr. Edward C.

Athletic Group at Ladywood is Hostess at Tea Miss Clara J. Hildebrand, president of the Athletic Association of Ladywood school, and Miss Virginia Meyer presided at the serving table at a tea given yesterday afternoon by the association. Assisting were Misses Mary E. Gartland, Betty Leikem, Ann Miller, Isabelle Cardani, Doris Mowat, Martha Dietz and Emily Sherhant. Music was provided by Misses Antoinette Holzbauer, Jane Tracy, Katherine Gartland and Catherine Connor. The tea table was laid with a Venetian lace cloth and decorated with lighted tapers and spring flowers, featuring yellow and green. The students w-ere assisted by Miss Jeanne O'Connell, faculty adviser; Mrs. George Forderer and Miss Mary Connor. Officers, besides Miss Hildebrand, are: Miss Gartland, vice-president; Miss Serhant, secretary; Miss Miller, treasurer, and Miss Mowat, sergeant-at-arms. MISS POGGEMEYER MARRIED IN CHURCH Miss Ruth Poggemeyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Poggemeyer, became the bride of Roy V. Suioer, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Surber in a ceremony Saturday night The Rev. William Rotherburger read the service at the Third Christian church. The couple was attended by Miss Mary Goiter and Frank Hoefling. Mr. and Mrs. Sur- i ber are at home at 16 North Lin- j w’ood avenue.

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APRIL 16,1934

A 4

Mrs. Lindsay

Elliott, president of Purdue university. and David Ross, president of the Purdue board of trustees. Other speakers will be members of the league, including Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr., Indianapolis; Mrs. Don W. Coppock, Peru: Mrs. S. N. Campbell, Mrs. William S. Ehrich and Mrs William P. Snethen. Miss Florence Kirlin, executive secretary of the league, who has been on leave of absence while directing relief work for women in Indiana, will speak on “Technique of League Action.” Officers will be selected from a nomination list, prepared by a committee, headed by Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin, Indianapolis. Mrs. Charles N. Teetor, Hagerstown, is president. Programs will be adopted following discussions of the department of child welfare, economic welfare, legal status, government and its operation, education and government and international relations. Mrs. Dow Harvey is chairman of the program committee, which is composed of Mesdames Ralph E. Carter, Charles E. Cory, F. W. Kranz. Ralph Mowbray and Paul Prickett. Putting the league programs to work is the main idea upon which the committee planned the convention. Election Scheduled Indiana Woman’s auxiliary to Thirty-eighth division will hold a covered dish luncheon Wednesday at the home of Mrs. W. D. Cragle. Election of officers will be held. Beta chapter, Sigma Alpha Chi sorority, will entertain with a benefit bridge party tomorrow at the Foodcraft shop, 230 Century building. The committee is composed of Mrs. Glen Utterbach, Miss Jeanne Burrin and Mary Clayton.

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