Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 58, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 May 1936 — Page 7

MAY IS, 1936-

Club Arranges Activities for Memorial Day 0

Indianapolis Golf Group Outlines Events for Local Members. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Society Editor Indianapolis Country Club entertainment committee n.omDers have outlined a complete program of Memorial Day amusement for every member of the family. For members who don’t go to the 500-mile race, swimming, tennis and golf matches have been scheduled.

Golfers are to compete in the Mayer Cup and handicap flag day tournaments. Adults and children are to be entertained in a swimming meet, being arranged by William G. Davis, chairman; Mrs Henry T. Davxs and Mrs. Herbert S. King.

Miss Burgan

Tennis Meet Arranged Tennis players are to participate in a tournament. Don P, Hawkins is committee chairman. His assistants are Oscar M. Kaelin Jr., Henry Severin and Miss Helen M. Sheerin. Many parents who are to be entertaining out-of-town visitors probably will turn their young sons and daughters over to the special attendants who will be at the club for the holiday. Mr. and Mrs. William G. Sparks, entertainment committee chairmen, are choosing suitable race day decorations for the dinner dance to close the day’s activities. The outdoor dance pavilion is to be opened that day. Other Aids Listed Other committee members to ba hosts and hostesses at the party are Caleb Lodge, Messrs, and Mesdames Dudley Gallahue, Harlan J. Hadley, Norman R. Kevers, Perry E. O’Neal, William Wemmer, Herbert C. Piel, William F, Fox Jr„ John G. Williams, William F. Wiggins, Gerald R. Reading, P. R. Mallory. t a tt Mrs. James B. Minor, Mrs. Russell Fortune Sr., Mrs. Ralph Henderson and Mrs. James Gale Van Winkle, Terre Haute, as young matrons, attended many, teas together in the days when open houses were weekly social events. Tomorrow Mrs. Minor is to be at home in honor of two recent bride*, Mrs. Russell Fortune Jr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Henderson, Mrs. Van Winkle’s daughter and Mrs. Ralph Henderson’s daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Van Winkle are to drive here from Terre Haute. Mrs. Van Winkle with Mrs. Fortune Sr. and Mrs. Ralph Henderson are to assist Mrs. Minor. Mrs. Allison Williams, Columbus, Ga., is to be one of the callers. With Col. Williams, she is a houseguest of Mrs. Allen A. Wilkinson. CITY GIRL TO WED IN JAMESTOWN, N. Y. Miss Betty Hancock, with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Hancock, is to leave May 27 for Jamestown, N. Y„ where she is to be married to Charles Crawford, formerly of here, on May 29. Beta Chapter, Phi Theta Delta Sorority, is to entertain with a party for Miss Hancock on May 25.

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Butler University Woman’s Faculty Club Outlines Activities

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The Butler University Woman's Faculty Club is considering plans for next year’s activities, which were outlined Saturday at the luncheon at the Spink-Arms honoring the retiring' president Mrs. A. Dale Beeler, and the newly elected president, Miss Sarah Sisson. Miss Sisson talked on future activities at the luncheon. The luncheon was arranged by the general committee which included (left to right) Mrs. George Schumacher, Mrs. Seth E. Elliott and Mrs. Mervin A. Palmer. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Watkins, 3677 Birchwood-av, are at ChalfonteHaddon Hall, Atlantic City.

Clinton Woman Named to Head State B. P. W.

Mrs. Marie Ferguson Thompson, Clinton, is the newly elected presijdent of the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, which held its annual convention in Muncie last week. Other newly elected officers are: Miss Ruth Calpha, Newcastle, first vice president; Mrs. Ethel Hendricks, Muncie, second vice president; Miss Sally Butler Indianapolis, recording secretary; Miss Harriet Dickinson, Richmond, treasurer, and Miss Esther Nolan, Clinton, corresponding secretary. The federation is to study the Lucretia Mott equal rights amendment to the Constitution, upon which it expects to take action in the 1937 convention. It also resolved to urge Mount Holyoke College alumnae to support a woman for the presidency, at the retirement of Miss Mary Woolley, now president. Party to Honor Rebekah Shideler Mrs. Leland Johnson, who is to be matron of honor at the wedding of Miss Rebekah Shideler and Charles Lawrence Price Jr. June 7, is to entertain soon with a prenuptial party for Miss Shideler. Evadne Club entertained with a surprise party yesterday for the bride-to-be at Miss Louis Thompson’s home. Miss Shideler is the aaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Shideler. P.-T. A. Calendar Crooked Creek. 7:45 Wednesday. Chorus, songs. Installation of new officers: Mrs. C. B. Blakeslee, president; Mrs. Ralph Soots, first vice president; Robert Cummings, second vice president; Mrs. Fred Kuhn, secretary; Mrs. Oscar Fox, treasurer, and Mrs. Thomas McGoldrich, assistant secretary. MUSICAL FESTIVAL ARRANGED JUNE 2 The National Association of Worn- ! en is to entertain with a musical festival at 8:15 June 2 at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Demarchus Brown is to speak on “The Life and Phil- j osophy of Omar Khayyam.’’ Appearing on the program are to be Mrs. Irene Blanchard Heppner, Mrs. Mary Traub Busch, Leslie Aye, Edward LaShelle and a string ensemble. Mrs. Florence K. Thacker is association president. Other officers are Mattie Joe Hackley, first vice president; Miss Alta A. Thompson, recording secretary'; Mrs. Sarah A. Wager, corresponding secretary; Mrs. E. R. Bebout, treasurer; Mrs. Izona M. Shirley, membership chairman. and Mesdames Bonnie K. Robertson, Martha Abel and Ida S. Broo, directors. Mrs . Phillips Named , Mrs. Wendell Phillips is the newly elected president the Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls Guardians’ Association. Other officers are Mrs. W. D. Little, vice president; Miss Dorothea Paige, secretary and Miss i Doris Mae Brady, treasurer.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

E VENTS SORORITIES Alpha Chapter, Delta Omega Chi. 7:30 Tues. Miss Rosylan Bollser, 2957 Winthrop-av. Beta Chapter, Phi Theta Delta. £ tonight. Mrs. John Trout, 47 N. Brookville-rd. Eastopolis Club. 7:30 tonight. Miss Marie Foley, 1515 Brookside. Business. Card party. Guests. Beta Beta Chapter, Pi Omicron. 7:45 tonight. Dr. Thurman B. Rice, program director. DANCES St. Joseph Men’s Club. Fri. 617 E. North-st. Committee, Vincent Fox, Charles Fleetwood, Dencil Mattingly, Don Strahl, Robert Naney, Ivan McShea and James Mattingly. CARD PARTIES St. George Episcopal Church. 8 30 Tues. Parish Hall. Mrs. Mathilda Christoph, chairman. St. Philip Neri Altar Society officers. 8:30 tonight. Auditorium. Lotto. 2:30 Wed. Card party. Mrs. Max Kriese, chairman.

Miss Margaret Rees to Be Guest Tonight at Shower

Miss Julia Guess and Miss Betty Lou Myers are to be hostesses tonight at Miss Myers’ home at a party for Miss Margaret Rees, who is to be married to Joseph Kemp Taylor Sunday at McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Miss Myers’ mother, Mrs. John King, is to assist at the miscellaneous shower and bridge party. Light and dark blue appointments and decorations are to be used. Guests are to include Miss Lillian Rees, sister of the bride-to-be, who is to bf bridesmaid; Misses Adele Meyer, Martha Banta, Harriet Randall, Elizabeth Carr. Helen Rogge, Ann Amos, Marthabelle Bond, Dorothy Reasoner, Martha Jane Banister and Mary Elizabeth Ikerd. Miss Banta is to entertain with a dinner Thursday night at Hollyhock Hill in honor of Miss Rees and Mr. Taylor. Lawrence Davis is to be best man at the wedding. Miss Rees is the daughter of Mrs. M. I. Rees, and

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Mr. Taylor’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Herman C. Taylor. Both Miss Rees and Mr. Taylor are Butler University graduates. Miss Rees is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority and Mr Taylor is affiliated with Delta Tau Delta Fraternity.

Blouses Popular in Paris Fashions BY ROSETTE HARGROVE PARIS, May 18.—Blouses have stolen a good deal of the spotlight in the fashion world this season. They staged a pretty effective comeback last year after many seasons of comparative neglect, but this year they are responsible in many cases for the note of color and fantasyin the übiquitous tailleurs which are being worn by smart women for all hours and all functions of the day. For the more or less classical, sober, man-tailored type of suit, there are blouses as clean-cut as a man’s shirt, usually with long sleeves. Then there are the vest blouses to fill the hiatus at the waistline. This type of blouse usually sports a youthful Peter Pan or Eton collar or, newer still, Lanvin’s jomantic twin-pointed collar almost reaching the chin (completed by a voluminous maculine silk tie), or a less exaggerated wing collar demurely finished off with a narrow black tie. In blouses to go with formal and informal afternoon suits the mascui line note is absent. The print blouses, i especially the new challis prints and i printed foulards, belong to the informal category. These are often j cut on a bias, with cross-over es- ! sects in front, or perhaps a basque but in every case the neckline is ihigh. Sleeves usually are short.

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P. E. O. Groups Name Aids for State Meeting

Convention Opens at South Bend on Thursday. Indianapolis P. E. O. Sisterhood chapters are to send delegates and other representatives to the annual state convention in South Bend Thursday. The convention is to close Saturday. Officials of Chapter N, South Bend, hostess organization, have announced all sessions are to be held in the -Oliver. Mrs. William Craigle, Indianapolis, state president, is to preside. Other state officers are Mrs. Jennie E. Hallowell, Lafayette, first vice president; Mrs. Pearl T. Kennedy, second vice president; Mrs. Lillian Matthews, Indianapolis, organizer; Mrs. Glea Smith. Kokomo, recording secretary; Mrs. G. Margaret Hoffer, West Lafayette, corresponding secretary, and Miss Helen Meek, Kokomo, treasurer. Honor guests are to include Mrs. J. W. Newell, St. Louis, supreme president; Mrs. Winona E. Reeves, Mt. Pleasant, la., editor of “The Record.” official P. E. O. publication, and Mrs. Cecelia Gobble, West Lafayette, board of trustees chairman. Local Delegates Named Attending from Indianapolis, as chapter delegates, are to be Mrs. Kate Adams and Mrs. Arthur R. Dewey, Chapter F; Mrs. I. H. Staley and Mrs. Ralph L. McKay, Chapter G; Mrs. Emmett C. Michael and Mrs. Rosa F. Storer, Chapwr P; Mrs. Floyd M. Stacey and Mrs. Edna Fae Smith, Chapter Q; Mrs. Lucille Holaday and Mrs. Elizabeth Crowell. Chapter S, and Mrs. B. H. Lybrook and Mrs. Horace E. Boggy, Chapter U. Mrs. Boggy is by-laws committee chairman, and is to report on suggested changes. Mrs. Emma Lafollette, Thorntown, is to give the historical background of the organization, the first Indiana chapter of which was in Thorntown. The convention is to be in celebration. also, of the state organization’s fiftieth anniversary.

Sorority to Give Musicale to Aid Building Fund Delta Gamma Sorority active and alumnae members are promoting sale of tickets to a dance revue and musicale to be given Friday night at the Riviera Club. Proceeds are to be added to the Alumnae Association building fund for the Butler University chapter’s new house. Miss Mary Ann Patterson is to present the revue. Included in th? cast are to be Betsy Aucker, Joan Todd, Betty Anne Dorn, Louise and Sonny Jones, Barbara Strauss, Georgia Ann Beurket, Anna Louise and Frank Hill, Martha Malone, Suzanne Reeder, Marjorie Turk, Dorothy McKinstray, Maxine Patterson, Marjorie Deutzscher, Jean Kipple, Virginia Mittendorf, Richard and William Patterson, Aileen Scoggan, Barbara Shaneberger, Gail Olson, Patty Lou Moneyhun and Everett Lee Jones. Music is to be provided by Miss Helen Dauner, cellist; Mary Jeannette Sellers, pianist, and Marilyn Knowlton, violinist. GUILDS TO MEET AT NURSES’ HOME White Cross Guilds have scheduled their meetings for this week in their workroom at the Methodist Hospital nurses’ home. The meetings are to be as follows: Business women’s auxiliary, Grace Church, tonight; New Jersey Street Church, Tuesday; Mary Hanson Carey Research and St. Paul Methodist, V/ednesday; Methodist Hospital Guild, Thursday; Alpha Omicron Alpha, Friday. CLUB’S OFFICERS TO BE INSTALLED Annual reports are to be made at the final federation meeting of the International Travel-Study Club Inc. at the Claypool at 7:30 tomorrow night. Officers are to be installed, and plans for the annual dinner are to be completed. Mrs. Robert Caplinger, president, is to be in charge of the meeting.

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MY DAY By Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt

a great deal of time yesterday running down from my desk to shake hands with var ; ous and sundry small groups of ladies. The largest .group was about one hundred. Because I have quite a number of the family here, and amongst them a small boy, I decided we would lunch in the garden, remembering that in my youth that was always a Joy. In the morning my guests went over to the Bureau of Printing and Engraving, and then to Mr. J. Edgar Hoover's department. To me the most interesting thing was the room in which the men are trained in observation. I have always felt that most of us wera peculiarly lacking in the power to take in what we actually see. What is expected of these men w’ho must solve, what to most of us would be impossible mysteries, brings this home most effectively. Little Sonny Milholland, my young cousin. 9 years old, enjoyed being allowed to try a .22 rifle in the shooting gallery. As he left he turned to the men who had been taking him around and much to their amusement and joy said: “I am so sorry I have to go.” They promptly invited him to come back. I do not think he quite understood why his family insisted on bringing him home! In the afternoon they all went off to Mount Vernon and, after receiving two more small groups of people, my guests from the National Training School for Girls arrived at 4 o'clock. They all were much interested in everything, whether it was of historical interest like the China Room, or purely utilitarian, like the kitchen. In the evening I went over to a ship model exhibition to which my husband had loaned one of his models. There were some interesting old models, as well as some work done today by people whose hobby it is to make exact reproductions of larger ships on a small scale. After viewing this exhibition I attended the ball for the benefit of the thrift shop. Today after luncheon some of us went down to join the President at Quantico and came up the river on the Potomac with him. We were back in time for supper, when we were joined by Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Peabody. Mr. Peabody played and sang for the President and our guests after supper. (Copyright. 1936. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.l

Speakers Named for Meeting ot Voters’' League Wednesday

Fred Hoke, Indiana Public Welfare Board member, and state Rep. Joseph A. Andrew, Lafayette, are to be luncheon speakers at the Indianapolis League of Women Voters’ annual meeting at Woodstock Club Wednesday. Mr. Hoke is to speak on “Plans for Public Welfare in Indiana,” and Mr. Andrew is to speak on “Indiana and Unemployment Compensation.” The luncheon is to follow the business meeting, opening at 10:15 which is to be presided over by Mrs. Walter Greenough, acting president. Reports of each department are to be given. Miss Margaret Denny is to give the secretary’s report, Mrs. Howard Meeker, membership report; Mrs. J. w. Stickney, personnel, and Mrs. L. A. Ensminger, organization. In the program reports, Mrs. Lester Smith is to review the department of government and its operation; Mrs. Sylvester Johnson, government and child welfare; Mrs. Clarence Merrell, government and economic welfare; Mrs. Ralph Vonnegut, government and education; Frev-Barton Rite j Aids Are Chosen Miss Mary E. Frey and Russel V Barton, whose mairriage is to take place June 13 in Tabernacle Presbyterian Church McKee Chapel, have chosen their wedding attendants. Miss Frey is to have her sister, Miss Mildred Frey, as maid of honor. Bridesmaids are to be Mrs. Benjamin Tamney and Miss Mary Anne Tall. The bride’s niece, Helen Edith Cox, is to be flower girl. Joseph Sims is to be Mr. Barton’s best man. Ushers are to be Edward Hittle and Jack Strickland. Dr. J Ambrose Dunkel is to officiate. Miss Emma Doeppers and Fred Newell Morris are to sing, and Mrs. C. Hylton Eberhard is to be organist. Miss Doeppers has issued invitations for a shower honoring Miss Frey June 6.

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Mrs. Leonard Smith, government and foreign policy; Mrs. William Snethen, government and the legal status of women, and Mrs. Virginia Moorhead Mannon, the special session of the Legislature. Mrs. John Goodwin is to speak on the personnel campaign; Mrs. S. N. Campbell’s subject is to be "Mapping Our Course”; Mrs. George Fotheringham is to give the treasurer’s report, and Mrs. Thomas Sheerin, the report on the finance committee and presentation of the ’mdget. Other business is to include adoption of the budget, report of the nominating committee and election of officers.

Girl Scouts End Regional Meet By United Pres* CHICAGO, May 18.—Approximately 1500 delegates to the Great Lakes Girl Scouts’ regional conference had returned to their homes today after the close of the conference. They were entertained at * tea Saturday afternoon, with Mrs'. Herbert Hoover, American Girl Scouts president, as hostess. Miss Amelia Thoorsell, New York, executive secretary of the national camp advisory staff, told delegates ; that 159 Girl Scout camps functioned in this region last year and that 14,000 girls attended. The area, she said, is directed by 81 professional workers and 12,000 trained volunteers. The Girl Scout membership is approximately 60,000 in the Great Lakes area. Miss Thoorsell is to represent the national organization at an international Girl Scout conference at Stockholm, Sweden, June 22 to July 2. Next year’s conference is to be held in Detroit, probably in May.

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