Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 303, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Orchestra’s Music Liked by Children Next Program Will Be Given Wednesday at Tech School. BY BEATRICE BURGAN TlmM Woman'* Page Editor SCHOOL children clamor for the tickets admitting them .to the children's concerts of the Indianapolis Symphony orchestra. Nearly 6,000 will throng the Tech high school auditorium at 2 30 Wednesday to hear the concluding program of the year.

The children are prepared to appreciate the music they hear at the concerts. For several weeks before the programs are presented they study the stories of the compositions and the lives of the composers. Their i m p ressionable minds are fired by the glamour and adventure

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Miss Burgan

of the stories thev hear, and they go to the concerts eager to hear their musical interpretations. Members of the symphony enjoy playing for their youthful audiences. Their appreciation is exceedingly enthusiastic. The children particularly appreciate the interludes when individual orchestra members illustrate their instruments. By this individual presentation the children learn to distinguish the tone qualities of the various instruments. The French horn, the English horn and the oboe are favorite instruments of the children. Herman C. Wolff is chairman of the children's concert committee of the society, and co-operates with Ralph Wright of the public schools in arranging the programs to fit the curriculum of the schools. Mrs. Herbert Woollen has taken charge of attendance of students from parochial schools. Pupils of Tudor Hall and Park school have attended the concerts, already held at Shortridge and Washington high schools. Children in the Manual high school territory will attend a concert Tuesday. The orchestra is completing its third year of children's programs.* In Philadelphia and New York symphony orchestras present similar programs. The children particularly enjoy the opportunity to join in the singing of two selected songs played in the concerts. Mr. and Mrs. John Hollett attended the Woodstock Club's opening dance Saturday night with their house guest. Miss Louise Stout, Vincennes, and Julian Oliphant, Vincennes, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Shea and Mr. and Mrs. Henderson Wheeler. GROTTO HOME WILL RE MAY FETE SCESE Women's Auxiliary of Sahara Grotto will entertain with a May day party and luncheon tomorrow at the Grotto home with Mrs. * Lee Reed, general chairman. Assisting Mrs. Reed will be Mesdames Ruby Pettigrew. Stewart Houston. Raymond Ruth. Verna Kephart, Ira Hendrickson. Fred Hollingsworth and Herman Blomberg. Mothers of members will be guests. Mrs. Roy Stebbing. chairman, has arranged a special Mother's day program which will include readings by Mrs. Arthur Dobbins and Betty Ann Gcnny; vocal solo by Mrs. Josef Nelson; piano selections by Miss Myrta Tilson; dances by pupils of Miss Rosalind Ludwig. Billy Shirley will present a group of songs. Benefit Party Set Benefit bridge party will be held bv the Butler university pledge chapter of Alpha Chi Omega sorority Saturday at the Hoosier Athletic Club. Miss Ruby Gene Beaver is general chairman to be assisted by Miss Virginia Straughn. prizes, and Miss Josephine Brush, publicity.

A Day ’s Menu Break fast — Sliced bananas with stewed dried apricots left from previous breakfast, cereal, cream, eggs poached in milk on graham toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream of celery soup with oysters, toasted crackers, beet and lettuce salad, brown bread, rice pudding, milk. tea. Dinner — Baked spaghetti and veal, cream cheese and orange salad, rhubarb shortcake, milke. coffee.

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Camp Fire Girls Work

oh Hobbv Fair Entries i

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BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON Ttmr* Hobbv Editor. If I roiild hr % Camp Fire Girl, nrprndablr and strong. Know nature and her big outdoors, Tfll what is right from wrong. Id strive to win an honor badge And in my leisure time Pursue some hobby that instructs Or trains the hands &nd mind. Then when my girlhood years were past And I must work, not play. I could repeat with confidence, “J.ove, Honor and Obey.” nun THE 250.000 Camp Fire Girls in twenty-two countries of the world, including the Indianapolis groups, have chosen hobbies as their 1934 project with which to win the coveted Birthday honor award. This decision prompted many famous persons to offer the national headquarters of the organization congratulations on the wisdom of the choice and suggestions for hobby ideas. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who is chairman of the national advisory council of Camp Fire Girls, spoke over the radio on March 17, to all Camp Fire members in America in celebration of the lounding of the organization. She said in part : ‘A program of hobbies is perhaps the most helpful thing that can be done for the youth of today. Mothers may think it a nuisance as hobbies sometimes are none too neat, but they may be developing confidence in your ability which will help you to make good at something important later in life. I know a great deal about hobbies, for you know my husband has many of them.” Kathleen Norris wrote; "My love to all Camp Fire Girls. For four happy years I was Katoyah the Pine Tree, and I still have my headband of pale blue with dark pine trees encircling it. Picnicking is one of my hobbies. My sister says she expects to find me picnicking on top of the Statue of Liberty some day.” a a a THE Camp Fire organization is the outgrowth of the realization by a group of educators that girls need the same beneficial influences that scouting gives to boys. In 1911 Mr. and Mrs. Seaton Thompson, James West of the Boy Scouts, several educators from the Teachers college, Columbia university, and Dr. and Mrs. Luther H. Guliek of the Sage Foundation formed the first group in New York, and on March 17, 1912. with Dr. Guliek as president, the National Camp Fire Association was incorporated. The Camp Fire program Is planned to take care of the .out-of-school time of the adolescent girl and to train her for womanhood by activities built around the home. The laws of the Camp Fire are: Seek beauty, give service, pursue knowledge, be trustworthy, hold on to health, glorify work and be happy. The watchword, Wohelo, formed from the first two tetters of work, health and love, expresses the Camp Fire ideal plan for living. The first Indianapolis group was organized in 1913 by Mrs. J. W. Putnam, wife of Dean Putnam of Butler university, at the Downey Avenue Christian church. Today there are 1.500 girls enrolled in the Indianapolis groups, which meet usually at schoaj buildings. Each group chooses musical Indian names and each is sponsored by a guardian, who often is a mother or teacher. To display their hobby activities the Indianapolis groups will hold a hobby fair Saturday night. May 5. in the auditorium of the Young Men's Christian Association, to which the public is invited.

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Have a Hobhif

Through the courtesy of the Chicago & Northwestern railroad, S. A. Campbell, conservationist, author and lecturer from the Argonne National Forest in Wisconsin, will entertain with a talk, “My North Woods Sanctuary,” illustrated with pictures of interesting phases of animal life, such as the activities of beavers building dams at night. a a a EMBERS of the Kicicinyan group of School 35, who chose cooking as their hobby, will be dressed as cooks and will bake cookies to serve to guests. Mrs. Frank Burns’ group from School 60. which has been studying folk dances, will give a Dutch dance in costume. Os course every group will have a display. The Shugapa group numbers from School 81. under the guardianship of Mrs. Florence Barnard, will dress to represent their individual hobbies. The group from School 84 and the Elutani group, which meets with Mrs. Paul Laser, will exhibit beadwork and headbands. The Aishlu-Ami group sponsored by Miss Erma Beidermeister at School 78 chase sewing as a hobby. The members have made a tepee to exhibit at the fair and to use this summer at the hew fifty-two acre camp near ..Morgantown, recently purchased by the local organization. The teepee will be one of the most pretentious exhibits at the show and is a test of needlework, as making the eyelets for the stake ropes requires as much finesse as other embroidery. The eager turning from studies and homework to the fascination of creative pastimes, outdoor sports, or collecting, reflects the joy of self-expression that should be encouraged and fostered. Every girl wishes to do something she likes and do it well. In the pursuit of this hobby is laid the foundation for those invaluable assets self-reliance, precision, tenacity and enthusiasm.

PARTY LEADER

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Miss Yona Cox Annual May dance of Alpha Eta Pi fraternity and Fa Lo Sis Club will be held Saturday night. May 19, at the Indianapolis Country Club. Miss Vona Cox and Lewis ■7S. Haynes, entertainment chairman. are in charge of arrangements. Music and floor show will be presented by Shorty Phillips and his entertainers.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Problems of Home to Be Club Topic Seventh District Group Will Be Sponsor of Institute. Mrs. Paul C. Miller of Mt. Summit will speak at a home institute, to be held at 2 Wednesday at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium by the American home department of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs. Mrs. J. R. Farrell -of the home-making center will give demonstrations. In charge of haspitality at the institute in observance of better homes in America week are Mrs. Frank Kinzie and Mrs. Max Wall, assisted by Mesdames G. J. Bookwaiter, Harold Hoefman, W. Bert Denison, J. C. Barnhill, Orren E. Smith, E. J. Young and Joel G. Wilmoth. Presiding at the tea table will be Mrs. Felix T. McWhirter and Mrs. Paul Hurt, who will be assisted by Mrs. Dewitt Morgan and Mrs. Edna Sharp, and a group of Latreian members, Mesdames Royer K. Brown Paul Suits, Robert Berner, Raymond McElwee, R. W. Watson. Foster Oldshue, N. F. Schaefer, Ernest Edwards, Robert Coleman and William Albershardt; Misses Elizabeth Hisey. Margaret Stilz. Mary Helen Borcherding, Elizabeth Hurd and Helen Coffey. Mrs. George E. Lowe, accompanied by Mrs. Will C. Hitz, will sing. Mrs. J. F. Edwards, president of the district, and Mrs. W. C. Bartholomew. chairman of the department, will preside. A prize will be given the club having the largest number of members present.

Reception Will Mark Opening of Salon Art Show Opening of the Hoosier salon exhibit of paintings at the SpinkArrns will be marked with an informal reception tonight. Reception committee members will be Mrs. H. Bf. Burnit, Miss Lenora Bernloehr, Mrs. C. C. McFann, Kokomo; Mrs. William Allen Moore and Mrs. Helen Woodward. Thirty-eight pictures will be included in the exhibition, among them the prize picture, “Procession,” by Dunlap. Members of the hanging committee for the exhibit are Edw'ard K. Williams, president of the Indiana Artists Club; Clifton Wheeler, Simon P. Bans, Randolph Coats and Oakley Richey.

A Woman s Viewpoint

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON AMERICAN women always are in a breathless state from the gargantuan efforts which seem necessary to wrest sufficient money from the altruists to provide another scholarship for another worthy girl. At present, those of us who are not concerned with getting culture are concerned with getting somebody else educated. Yet in talking to a dean of high school girls I learn that one out of every seven under her must have help to get through the course. It’s shocking, she says, to see the kind of homes some of them come from. I’ve no doubt it is. Nevertheless, we go on turning out hundreds of thousands of college graduates. Is It undeniably true that there are now more women secretaries and stenographers than there are jobs for them, and far more school teachers than we shall ever be able to hire? Education must not cease, but certainly it should take on new forms. I dare says it might be just as well if we could, for the time being, toss our books into the fire. Efforts to transform all our girls into half-baked intellectuals should be stopped. We must begin to train them instead in the art of being natural women, by giving them a knowledge of the true values of work and of life. Those organizations which recognize the need for social service endeavors are the ones which will survive and grow in the future. The others may as well tear up their charters and send home their vice-presidents. It is the duty of mature women to help girls to see life as it really is, and what it may be if we do not lose the vision of its possibilities. They must be given personal counsel instead of sermons; a warm individual interest instead of so many scholarships if they are to find their place in the vast kaleidoscope of the human scene. High school and college girls face the task of making terrific adjustments. They will have to discover for themselves the dignity, contentment and power that comes from simple toil, from gardening, sewing, household employment and home making. Right now these arts are more essential to our well-being as individuals and as a nation than any future knowledge of Latin verbs and geometry theorems.

Daily Recipe SPICED POT ROAST 4 pounds chuck or rump of roast 3-4 cup flour Lard 2 onions 4 hay leaves Salt and pepper 5 whole cloves 1-2 cup vinegar Dredge meat with flour and sear on all sides in a heavy kettle. Slice the onions and lay them over the meat. Season with salt and pepper; then add vinegar and spices. Cover closely and simmer for three hours.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Girl* *n<! h*>T who want to rome to a hotter nndomtandint of each other are invited to diaravs their problem* with Jane Jordan, who will answer their letters In this column. Dear Jane Jordan / I am a young girl of 20 and what you term a romantic type of person. In fact I'm in love with love. I am very disgusted with the type of young men there is to choose

from nowadays. It seems when I say love, the matter of sex is always included. But don’t you think you can be in love without that? I really‘think that love is s o m e t hing much more to look up to than just that. I guess that I am old-fash-ioned when it

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Jane Jordan

comes to young men and their morals. Every time you have a date with any of them they expect to pet and paw' you and think noth-% ing of it, and that is one thing that I abhor. Why can't they go out and show a girl an enjoyable evening without expecting payment for it? Os course, I don’t think that the girl should be boring, without conversation or humor, but if a fellow takes a to the theater or dance, why can't he dritfe her home satisfied with the evening instead of spoiling it by going some place to park? Os course he gets angry if she doesn't give in to his whims and vow r s she. is a wet blanket whom he will never show a good time again. A MODERN OLD-FASHIONED. Answer —It's a rare young man who isn't obsessed w r ith his own body and its tensions. Girls are not. people to him at all. They are adventures in which he fails or succeeds. He doesn’t worry much about his failures because of the plethora of his successes. Not one boy in ten has the remotest idea of w'hat kind of treatment a girl expects. Her idea of a good time bores him to extinction. His idea of a good time shocks her to distraction. The difficulty of the young in reconciling their viewpoints is largely the fault of their elders, w'ho teach them nothing about how to get along together. The adjustment of the sexes is one of the major problems of life, yet the subject is consistenly shushed in all circles. Mothers inform their daughters in shamegaced whispers that all men are tarred with the same brush, and have to be w'atched every minuted They scare their daughters so badly with yarns about men that a natural comradeship between the sexes is almost impassible. The girls are either stiff and self-conscious or bold and defiant. Either attitude has fear at its base. Fathers never teach their sons to be lovers, chiefly because they never learned how themselves. They take a sort of sneaking pride in their boy’s sexual escapades as proofs of their virility, and excuse them on the comfortable grounds that “boys will be boys.” In some social groups boys do not expect favors from girls of their own class. They escort them hither hnd yon for the pleasure of social prestige. Their adventures they hide in by-ways and alleys, removed from view of their associates. Many of these young men never succeed in making the hook-up of body and spirit in one person. Some women are regarded as “too precious” to approach, and the “other kind” must remain a dark secret. The silly segregation of the sexes in youth is partly to blame for the fact that they are strangers to each other w'hen at last they are ‘‘old enough” to be trusted together. If boys thoroughly understood the physical and psychological problems of girls they would be more considerate and less rambunctious. If girls thoroughly understood the

ATHLETIC CLUB WILL BE PARTY HOST

Sons and daughters of Indianapolis Athletic Club members will be honored at a party at the clubhouse at 2:30 Saturday afternoon, May 12. Each will bring one guest. Entertainment for the afternoon will include ju - enile contests and games to be held on the ninth floor. Tables for refreshments will be arranged in the west wing of the roof garden. Mrs. Harry Scott is chairman of the committee of mothers in charge of arrangements. The committee includes Mesdames John Carroll, W. F. Hendren, F. R. Fisher. A. C. Burrell, Everett Irish, Glenn Warren, R. C. Fox, Russell Williams. Ken Woolling. Frank Woolling, George Klein, C. B. Blakeslee, Tipton Ross, and E. E. Gates. TEACHERS WILL ATTEND MEETING Several members of the teaching staff of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society will attend the American chind education convention to be held Wednesday through Saturday in Nashville, Tenn. Among those leaving tomorrow for Nashville will be Miss Grace L. Brown, superintendent; Misses Ruby Stapp and Anne Fern, supervisors, and Miss Ida Conner, advisor; Mrs. William J. Surprise and Misses Ethel Mae Akers. Hazel Hart, Josephine Sherrod, Ruth Brown, Dorothy Yagerline. Ellenor Parker, Juanita Bivius and Dorothy Screes. Literary Club to Meet “Great Experimenters” will be discussed by William Niles Wishard Jr. tonight at the D. A. R. chapter house, before members of the Indianapolis Literary Club.

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physical and psychological problems of boys, they wouldn't be so disgusted and out of patience with their animal outbursts. Some girls, to be sure, in spite of everything that education and society has done to prevent it. have the'right light touch with boys and keep them at the proper distance without much effort. Although they may not pet, they are not revolted by the idea. Although they are encouraging and cordial, they are not bold or bawdy. It takes a very smart girl to attract a man and still know how to handle him while he is in the grip of the attraction. Instead of being merely disgusted with these young men for being barbarbians. see if you haven't tact enough to civilize one or two. oar Dear Jane Jordan—l am sixteen years old and am in the second year of high school. I have been going on dates for a year and I go to parties quite frequently. Mv falhei does not approve of it. He says I am too young and that this younger generation of people is too wild. He says that parties are not good and that people get drunk at them and girls smoke cigarets, which any lady-like girl will not do. I am a level-headed girl and get good marks at school. Shall I stay home or continue to go without regard for his disapproval? JUST N. B. Answer—ls you have your mother's support in your social life, I wouldn't blame you for disregarding your father’s complaints. No girl is too young to associate with boys, though 16 is too young for serious courtship. I can not blame your father for objecting to drunken parties. In that case he should provide some parties for his daughter which are not drunken. After all you can not be wrapped in cotton wool. You have to learn to live with people as they are, and if you are as Jevel-headed as you think you are. you will not be misled by who are wilder than you are. The old system of guarded girls is past. If your father has brought you up to be self-reliant and self-controlled he has nothing to fear.

P. T. A. Notes

Parent-Teacher Association of School 1 will hold its May meeting at 2:30 Wednesday. Mrs. Clayton Ridge will speak on “The Wise Use of Leisure Time.’’ Music will be provided by the mothers’ chorus of School 69. Demonstrations by various children’s organization of the community will be a feature of a meeting at School 8, to be held at 3:15 Wednesday. Parent-teacher meeting of School 10 will be held at 3:15 Wednesday, at which election of officers will take place. Friday night the following program will be given: Play by mothers from each of the primary, intermediate and junior high school departments of the school; selections by the junior syncopators, composed of boys under 14 years old; song and dance by Billy Andrus, and specialty numbers by Mr. and Mrs. Walter Reed. Election of officers followed by tea served by the teachers will feature a meeting at School 21 at 2:30 Wednesday. Miss Katherine Leonard of the school music department, will sing. Mrs. Mary Traub Busch will give a musical travelogue at School 33 at 3:4s’Wednesday afternoon. The Shortridge high school orchestra will play. Installation of officers for the coming year will be held. May day will be observed at School 35 at 2:30 Wednesday with a program including cornet selections by Harvey Wyant Jr., a former pupil of the school; the story of May day by Henry Gardner, a pupil, and Tennyson’s ‘May Queen,” by Jane Flora, with musical accompaniment. Vernon Parker will speak on “Growing Up With Our Children” at School 36 at 3 Wednesday. Music will be provided. Election of officers will be held. Dr. Herman Morgan will speak in the interest of health week at School 46 at 2:30 Wednesday. Plays will be given by the 1A grade under the direction of Miss Frances Helleman. and by the 4AB under the direction of Miss Myla Smith. Election of officers is scheduled. A program by the junion high school glee club will be a feature ot the meeting at School 51 at 2:45 Wednesday. Election of officers also will be held. A musical program by children of the school will be given at School 53 at 3:10 Wednesday. Officers will be elected and tea will be served. MOTHER AND SON EVENT ARRANGED Mother-son covered dish luncheon will be served by the Lambda Chi Alpha Mother’s Club at 12 Wednesday at the chapter house. Mesdames H. P. German. Harry Koss, Robert Straughn. Thomas Barragra, O. E. Butz. W. L. Fear. J. O. Johnson, J. F. Lynch. M. L. McUvain. A. E. Witt and Edwin Manouge will be hostesses for the afternoon. Honor guests will include Harry Kcss, Bert Ferrara, Dallas Galbraith and Harold Baker, fraternity members of the Butler university chapter who will be graded in June. Following the luncheon, the club will hold election of officers. Lloyd D. Claycombe will talk and Miss Margaret Barragra will present musical selections. Miss Norma Fields. Lawrence, will entertain members of Alpha Theta Chi soprity at 8 tonight.

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Cotton Costumes, Rangir % From Sports to Evening. Wear, Shown at Block’s - —.— * Coats of Waffle Pique Available for Formal Use; Same Material Also Makes Street Attire. BY HELEN LINDSAY FROM early morning golf games to evening country dub dances, Indianapolis Junior League members probably will be dressed in cotton frocks this year. The junior department of the Wm. H Block Company has just received the newest idea in formal cotton wear—waffle pique evening coats, semi-fitted, long, and untrimmed. One is made with raglan shoulders, with a pleat down the entire length of the sleeve, and a wide tailored collar. It fastens with two huge

shining white buttons. Another of the pique evening coats is made with wide revers, and also is semi-fitteri. It is double-breasted, fastening with four buttons, covered in the same material of which the coat is nuTde. Waffle pique is seen also in a street coat, belted, with raglan sleeves, wide revers. and fitted. Around the revers and around the fitted sections which make the pockets is’pleating of the material. A black and yellow large geometrical print dress has a short jacket of white pique, with a full collar, which comes to a deep point in back. Other suits are in natural colored linen, with short, fitted aekets, both single and double-breast. A combination of linen and seersucker is seen in an Ellen Kaye dress, made in two-piece style. The skirt is brown linen, and the blouse is of diagonal yellow and brown-striped seersucker. A square yoke of the brown linen is fitted into the blouse, and a full.

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Mrs. Lindsay

pleated collar of seersucker falls over the yoke. a a a a a a Tailored Pockets Adorn Red and Black Print RED and black print is shown in a dress of cravat twill, made with tailored pleated pockets, and fastening down the front with shining black ball buttons. Very' fine chambray is seen in two-piece drosses, for active sports. One is a deep rose color, the skirt and blouse both having dark blue buttons. A brown chambray two-piece dress has a yellow and brown print roundup scarf at the neck. Cottons in evening dresses are unusual in color and frabric combinations. One is of plaid blue tissup gingham, with blue taffeta binding at the bottom of the full, long skirt, and is worn with a tiny blue taffeta jacket, with puffed short sleeves. The back of the bodice is cut in a deep V. and tiny buttons, covered with taffeta, run from the point of the V to the waist line. Seersucker organdy, in red and white diagonal stripes, is seen in another formal dress. It has ruffled capes over each shoulder. Water-marked white organdy is seen in a short-waist dinner dress, with large red buttons used on the waist, and red taffeta sash and tie. A square necked dress, vut very low in back, is made of embroidered w'hite organdy. Ruffles edge the square neckline, and also the edge of a small detachable cape of the same material. a a a a a a Lily Pons Buys Six Special Valle Hals MARION VALLE, whose millinery is seen in the French Room at Block's, just has completed a group of half a dozen hats for Lily Pons, opera star. Each l.nt has been styled for the type of costume with which it is to be worn. , > One is a white felt and brown paillasson braid combination, the crown of felt, with stitched band and bows. The brim lias a slight dip. Miss Valle has designed for Miss Pons a breton of white pique, faced with black velvet, and stitched. A derby type is shown in white linen, trimmed with navy and white belting ribbon. For sports w’ear, Mi.ss Valle has created a yellow felt with four-corr.ei crown folded and embroidered, and finished with a black leather belt In a capeline model, she has made a hat of alack lace, trimmed with stitched taffeta, with a bandeau covered with blue blossom. A patternstitched navy taffeta is shown in the collection of Miss Pons, in a mediumsized mushroom shape, with fringed belting detail in the same color.

Buffet Supper and Shower to Honor Bride-Elect

Mrs. Robert E. Kirby will entertain with a buffet supppr and linen shower tonight, at her home, 4330 Park avenue, in honor of Miss Martha. Elizabeth Barry, bride-elect. Miss Barry, daughter of Mrs. and Mrs. Oscar F. Barry, will become ihe bride of William Koehling Mc-

Announcements

Regular meeting of the Sons of Veterans and auxiliary, scheduled for tomorrow, has been postponed until May 8. Olive Branch Past Noble Grands Association will be entertained Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Arthur Demree, 1519 Sturm avenue. Mesdames John Glickert, Martin Hall, Elizabeth Landes and Margaret Seany will assist. Indianapolis-to-Baltimore Club will meet tomorrow night with Mrs. Lilly Fraul, 528 Woodlawn avenue. W. C. T. U. to Meet Mrs. Arthur Wolf, 4136 North Meridian street, will be hostess for a meeting of the Meridian W. C. T. U. Wednesday, when discussion of "Christian Citizenship” will be directed by Mrs. Thomas Barr. Mrs. A. C. Hawn, president, will preside. Devotions wall be led by Mrs. Martha Gipe. A musical program will be presented by Edw'ard Gaylord and Miss Mae Henri Lane. ’

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APRIL 30,1924

Gowan at 9 Wednesday, May 9, at SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. Apponitments for the party will be in white. Guests with the bride-elect, and her mother will be Mesdames Katherine Crush, Henry Langsenkamp, Paul McNamara. August Hook, Russell Clift, Maurice McNulty, Robert Dinnin, William H. Mooney Schnieder and William Horning; Misses Alice McGowan. Alice Koehling, Lillian Berner, Frances Kotteman, Eunice Dissette, Josephine Madden, Marjorie Spencer and Marjorie McDuffee. SORORITY TO HOLD VIOLET LUNCHEON Annual violet luncheon of Tri Psi sorority will be held at 12:30 Friday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Violet, green and gold, the sorority’s colors, will appoint the luncheon tables. Greetings will be extended by Delta Delta Delta sorority. The program will include piano selections by Miss Grace Hutchings and songs by Mrs. John Herrmann, accompanied by Mrs. M. L. Didway. Miss Heston to Wed Mr. and Mrs. James G. Haston, 3859 Winthrop avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Lucia Lee Haston, to Charles Shulhafer, Chicago, son of J. E. Shulhafer. The wedding will take place June 1.

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