Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1936 — Page 24

‘Annual Event to Be Held at ~ Columbia Club

Alumni to 0 Raise Funds for Scholarships to College.

Notre Dame University alumni of Indianapolis and several neighboring towns are to assemble tonight at an annual scholarship dance gt the Columbia Club. Many are to form parties for the party, given to raise funds for Notre Dame scholarships to be awarded to local high school graduates. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cotter Shea are to attend with Miss Ellen Rogers, Havens Kahlo and Reilly G. . Adams. Other groups are to include Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mahaffey, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kirby, Judge and Mrs. James Deery, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Mooney Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stuhldreher, Miss Jane Fitton, Michael Fox, Michael Layden, Mr. and Mrs. William McGowan, Mr. . and Mrs. Harry Scott, Dr. and Mrs. D. R. McDivitt, John Blackwell, Miss Eleanor McNamara and John T. Rocap. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Mason are to be in a party with Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Kemper, Dr. and Mrs. Glen C. Lord, Messrs. and Mesdames R. D. Sheen, 1. V. Green, A. E. ButJer, A. H. Hueber, C. .C. Bose, L; W. Mohlenkamp, H. B. Bryant, E. E. McFerren, Harry Sidrow, F. G. Weisenberger, E. G. Dehner and Glenn Griffith. Philip J. Kiley is to come from Marion with a group of friends, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hilger are to be Columbus guests. Guests also are expected from Muncie, ‘Kokomo and Terre Haute. A football motif is to predominate in decorations. Special features are to include group singing of the “Notre Dame Victory March.” Many of the guests are to attend the Notre Dame-Wisconsin football game tomorrow at South Bend. Alumni Club officers include Mr. Mason, president; William H. Krieg, vice president, and J. Albert Smith, secretary-treasurer.

Fall Program Announced by

Athletic Club

After the dance of the Indac Juniors tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club, the organization is to turn its attention to two Halloween parties, a dinner and fashion show, the women’s luncheon, bridge and bingo parties and an election returns celebration. The fashion show is to be presented by Louise Miller Thursday night as a feature of the weekly maid’s-night-out dinner. Members’ young sons and daughfers each may bring a guest for.the Halloween “fun festival” in the gymnasium from 2:30 to 5 p. m. Saturday. A “black and white” ball is to be given for members and guests Saturday, Oct. 31. Mrs. Edwin White is chairman of the series of luncheon parties for women and their guests, to be given on the second Tuesday of each month until spring. Bridge is to be played at the first one Nov. 10, and bingo is to be on the program on alternating months. A Demo-Publican dinner is to precede election reports Nov. 3,

‘Heads of New Guild Branch to Be Guests

Mrs, Howard Lindley, president of the new Mooresville Branch, Needlework Guild of America, Inc, and other officers are to be honor guests at the Indianapolis Branch's tea from 3 to 6 today at Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood’s home. Mrs. Sherwood's assistants .are to be Mesdames Charles A. Garrard, George B. Elliott, Cecil K. Calvert, E. L. Shaver, Oscar L. Pond, Ray Fatout, P, C. Reilly, J. R. Sentney, E. O. Wagner, George Spiegel, Lyvman Pearson, Herbert Ball, L. S. Carroll, J. I. Tyson and Charles M. Hoffman, Others are to be Misses Juliette Bryan, Lillian Taggart, Alida Sherwood, Victoria Schreiber, Marjorie Emerson and Thelma Krentler,

Dinner Arranged for Bridal Party

Mr. and Mrs. Clark B. Hicks are having their daughter's bridal attendants as dinner guests tonight at the Marott Hotel. Their daughter, Miss Helen Hicks, is to be married to Samuel Walker Downing at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church. The attendants are Miss Marjorie McBride, maid of honor; Misses Lois Randolph, Mary Elizabeth Ikerd, Martha Jane Banister and Mrs. Richard Disher, bridesmaids. © William C. Downing Jr. is to be his brother's best man, and E. Hollis].

Leedy, Harold Bredell, Samuel Lesh | Martin,

and Warren Ruddell, ushers. - Other guests are to be Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Downing, Miss Isabel Downing, Dr. and Mrs. E. Arnold «Clegg, Mrs. Leedy, Mr. Disher and Miss Bertha Evans, Denver, Colo.

\T

Mr. and Mrs.

Orren Benjamin Bromley Jr. are to make their home in New Rochelle, N. Y. Mrs. Bromley (above) was Miss Eleanor Anne Barrett,

- daughter of Mr.

the Indianapolis

before her recent marriage.

—Photo by W. Hurley Ashby, F. R. P. 8. and Mrs. Ernest Clifford Barrett, She is a ‘member of Junior League and the Christa-

more Aid Society.

Theta Sigma Delta. Mon, Mrs, hostess. Rummage sale.

room. Founders’ day observed.

man.

Opening.

bingo and euchre.

hall,

Committee:

EVENTS

PROGRAMS

Arbrae la vie. Today. Miss Roberta Kerr, 3820 Winthrop-av, hostess. Rushees honored: Misses Florence Chung, Mary Gardner. Epsilon Pi Chapter, Delta Theta Tau. 8 p. m. today. Blue Bell tea- ~

Beta Chapter, Gamma Phi Alpha. 8 p. m. Sat. Miss Marie Kiefer, 1106 Pleasant, hostess. Scavenger hunt. Miss Eileen Foley, chair-

Bonnie Briar Club. 7:30 p. m. today. Mrs. Libby Runyon, 2062 Centralav, hostess. Leap Year Halloween party.

CARD PARTIES Meridian Euchre Club. 2:30 bp.

Variety Club. 8:30 p. m. Sun. 1454 N. Delaware-st. Bingo. Camp B. P. O. of A? 7:30 P. m. today. 29 S. Delaware-st. Chili supper,

Lauter Mothers’ Club. 8 p. m. Sat. Rooms, 1309 ‘'W. Market-st. Indianapolis; Bingo Club, 8:30 p. m. Sat. Fountain Square Assembly

LODGES

Brightwood Chapter 399. O. E. S. 8 p. m. Mon. Veritas remple, 2 Roosevelt and Allen-sts. Mrs. Nellie Riffle, Worthy Matron. Holy Name Society, St. Philip Neri Church. Sat. Auditorium. Dance. Ray Cyler, chairman; Pat Moran, Frank Rogers, James Farrell, John Butler and James Brennan. :

Harriet Miles, 5288 Pleasant-st,

m. Sun. 1322 S. Meridian-st.

A. R. Heiskells’

to Precede Marriage Rites

To culminate the series of prenutial parties given for Miss Elizabeth Heiskell and her fiance, Charles E. Rogers, Miss Heiskell’'s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Heiskell are to

‘entertain with a bridal dinner at the

Indianapolis Athletic Club tonight. The ceremony is to take place at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Dr, J. Ambrose Dunkel is to officiate. The dinner is to precede a rehearsal of the bridal party, which is to include Miss Jane Diddel, Mr. and Mrs. J. Irwin Cummings, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Derry, Greencastle; Mrs. Biagio Lapesta, Norman Perry Jr. and George Cain, Evanston; Ill... Other guests to be entertained by the Heiskells include Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Rogers, Mr. Rogers’ parents; Mrs. Cain, Mr. Lapenta, Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Thorn, Mr. and Mrs. James Riley, New Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Heiskell,

Entertain With

Buffet Supper and Hay Ride

After a buffet supper tonight, Miss Jo Ann Stedfeld and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Shalley are to entertain their guests with a hay ride. The party is to be in honor of Miss Elizabeth Lupton and Frank Hurlbut Fairchild, who are to be married Oct. 24 in the Irvington Presbyterian Church. Miss Lupton is to have her sister, Mrs. Alva W. Graham, Woodstock, Ill, as her matron of honor. Miss Virginia Leonard, Bellefontaine, O., to be maid of honor and Mrs. ack Gulling and Elizabeth Jean bridesmaids. Mary Ann Graham, Miss Lupton’s niece, is to be flower girl. , Philip Craig Baker, Columbus, is to be best man, and George Dirks, Gable and Richard E. Hug-

and Bobbett Brandt, Mrs. Abigail

entertained with a group of songs

Bridal Dinner

Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brandt

Brandt, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brandt, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Boone Jr. Mrs. Charles E. Hall, Miss Nancy Ballenger and Carl Weiss. The table is to be centered with an upright heart-shaped arrangement of gardenias and lilies of the valley. From the center are to be wedding bells and beneath it a miniature bride and bridegroom. Foliage is to surround the base of the heart. ; Placecards are to be blush satin hearts, bases for miniature bride and bridegroom replicas. Tall white tapers are to light the table.

Kindergarten Society Lists New Officers

Mrs. Edward B. Taggart, Mrs. James Pearson and Miss Marguerite’ Dice are new executive board members of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society. Donald Jameson, Ernest De Wolfe Wales, Paul H. White and Larz A. Whitcomb are re-elected members. They were chosen at the fiftyfourth annual meeting held yester- | oo day at the Propylaeum with Mrs. Henry H. Hornbrook presiding. Miss Ida Conner, parent education supervisor, spoke on “Mothers’ Club Activities.” Annual reports were read by the treasurer, Mrs. White, and the secretary, Mrs. Robert A. Hendrickson. Miss Grace L. Brown, kindergarten superintendent, reported their activities for last year. Fairview n children

under Miss Ellenor Parker's direcHon with Miss Mary Jeanette Sel-

Mesdames | K

accompanist. Luncheon preTl per

Monte Carlo Party, Shower Are dl

A Monte Carlo party and linen shower are to be held tonight honoring Mrs. Thomas B. Athey, Fort Wayne, formerly Miss Ruth Louise Willcox, Fort Wayne and Indianapolis. Miss Margaret Davis and Mrs. Edith Wilson are to entertain at the home of the former, 2920 Ken-wood-av. Pink and white decorations are to be used. Guests with Mrs. Athey are to be Mrs. Myrtle Willcox, Fort Wayne, the bride’s mother, and Mesdames Holman Weeks, William Redding, Kenneth Hufford, Doyle Zaring,

Vernon Coryell, Al Davis, John

Steffy, Carl Fuller, William ‘Willcox, John McHenry, Harry Ice and Misses Evva King, Mary Bohnstadt, Marjorie and Maurine Campbell, Margaret Jackson, Katherine Maurer, Katherine Yeaman, Marie Wilde, Alice Collester, Juanita Badger and Hazel Cunningham.

Mas BROWN ON CLUB PROGRAM

The Scottish Rite Ladies Luncheon Club is to present Mrs. Demarchus Brown in a program Tob lowing its luncheon at 12:30 p. Tuesday at the cathedral. Virgji Phemister, accompaniéd by Miss Alice Rayburn, is to sing. Mrs. Walter T. White is the presiding officer; Mrs. Clarence R. Martin, program chairman, and Mrs. Charles E, Cox, reception chairman. Reservations are due Monday noon.

Legion Auxiliary

to Hold Meeting

A business"fieeting Thursday and a benefit card party Oct. 28 at the Ranner-Whitehill auditorium are to open fall activities of the Federal Unit 62, American Legion Auxiliary. Mrs. Iverson is to tell the group of her Europeon trip at the business ‘ meeting. Committee reports are to be given. ~ Mrs. Bertram Teepell, president. announces the following committee appointments: Membership, Mrs. George Karl, chairman; Mrs. Logan Jenkins ®and Mrs. Allen Et kad denon 5 ord. Wai byphent Mesdames Charles ake, hy OSenkin: ud Wika 3. Suststs: is Task and means, Mesdames Ralph Moser, George arl, EB. Collings, William Ric! son n; music, Mrs. Ie. chairman; commun activities. Mrs. Earl By eric Fidac, Mrs. Charles Drake. mericanism and national defense, Mrs. yer Kennedy: Sanstitution, laws and resolutions, Mesdam Allen Collings. Connie Taylor an and Don Mrs. James

Eth: mgporial, Mes. 8 Stinson: finance;

ry. Russell; publicity. 8 Mars Ahern, chairm Mrs.

Club Entertains

The Welfare Club's first of a series of enterfainments for -resi-

es Russell.

denis of the Indianapolis Home for

ard Hair cut, Nu-Life Shampoo, Rinse, Push-up Set all included. FOR ONLY"

~ [Musicale Sets | Program Date, ||

N ames Artists Mrs. Chairman for Event Next Week.

Indianapolis Matinee Musicale

active members are to be responsible

for a program to be presented at 3 p. m. next Friday a Ayres’ auditorium. Mrs. Robert Blake, program chair-

| man, has arranged the entertain-

ment to include numbers by Virginia

Leyenberger, cellist; Imogene Pier-.

son, pianist; Lenore Iva Frederickson, mezzo-soprano; Lucille Wagner, pianist; Dorothy Merrill, pianist; Mrs. Richard Sharpless, soprano, and Mrs, John Kolmer, pianist. Mrs. Blake's committee members include Mesdames Howard Clippinger, Wendell P. Coler, Stewart A. Greene, E. O. Noggle, James Ogden, Milton Rybolt and Bernard Rosenak. : Auditions to Be Held Membership auditions are to be held at 10:30 a. m. Tuesday at.the

home of the president, Miss Carolyn Richardson. Mrs. Ross Cald-

well, membership committee chair-, man, announced that requests for

auditions should be directed to Miss Richardson. ; Mrs. Robert Bonner has charge of the artists series of concerts beginning Nov. 6 in Ayres’ Auditorium. Miss Margaret Speaks, concert and radio soprano, is to be presented. The Friday program is to be as follows: Cancerto ‘Saint Saens Virginia Leyenberger, cello, and h Imogene Pierson, piano. oe paso ’

ggia’’ o Bl ver Queen Ca, i The Flas Had ten’ "Shepherd's Lamb

- Wagner, et

; Suite par la piano relude

Sarabande ves ® Dorothy Merrill, piano. “YAR,

ux vivre’ (Romeo and Je Goun

Giannini Warren

“Ee stas: MIS, SY ohiaid Sharpless. soprano; John ‘Kolmer, at the piano.

Scholarship Fund to Get Proceeds of Club’s Party

The Kirshbaum Center scholarship fund is to receive the proceeds of the Federation of Jewish Women’s Clubs’ bingo party, to be given Oct. 22 in the Banner-Whitehill auditorium. The hostess committee includes Mesdames Jack Harding, Rudolph Domont, Samuel Bunes, L. W. Sagalowsky, Sidney Romer, Philip Falendar, Harry Cohen, Hannah Frankfort, Samuel Davis and Abe Schwartz. The prize committee is composed of Mesdames H. A, Cohen, Daniel Stabuer and Morris Perk. Mrs. Ben Shalansky and Albert G. Dannin are in charge of games. ‘Tea is to be served following the games. The serving table is to be decorated in autumn colors.

Mrs,

Joins Faculty

Miss Phillis Straus (above) has joined the Tudor Hall faculty as guidance counselor in the field of remedial reading. A graduate of Wellesley College and postgraduate of Harvard and Columbia Universities, Miss Straus has taught at Miss Lee's School, Boston, and the South Side Country Day. School, Islip, L. I

Robert Blake Is|

Louis X VI Style Boudoir Painted Cream and Blue

Anne Morgan’s Louis XVI boudoir, designed by Elsie de Wolfe. The walls are warm cream, the carvings and moldings are painted in blue. The chairs are covered with Louis XVI tapestries, brocade and needlework, and on the floor is a Persian rug. Other furniture is brown walnut.

This is the last of a series of weekly articles ‘by Elsie de Wolfe, world famous authority on -interior decorations.

BY ELSIE DE WOLFE Ee Written for NEA Service My favorite house is the old Washington Irving house in New York, the quaint mansion that gave historic Irving Place its name. For 20 years, Elizabeth Marbury and I made it our home and I tried out all my theories on the old house. Like a patient, /well-bred maiden aunt, it always accepted my changes placidly. Then began my adventures as a professional decorator. My first big client was Mrs. William H. Crocker, San Francisco. I worked with her on the interior of ‘New Place,” which is even now one of the great estates of the' West. The interior of the Ogden Armour home at Lake Forest was my second big order and was entirely of my own planning. The winter garden in the center

od | of the house was, to my mind, the

perfection of beauty. It was a trellised room done in green and white with a black and white marble floor. The sofas were eight feet long, their covers, especially woven, were of white velvet striped in a design of green leaves. The tables were of green and black and white marble to match the floors and mantel.

Some Modern Houses

To catch up with the present, let us look at four houses which I have decorated recently for personalities well known through the stage, the cinema or the society columns. The first is Miss Anne Morgan’s house on Sutton Place, New York. Miss Morgan, together with Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt and Miss Elizabeth Marbury, discovered Sutton Place and established a smart colony overlooking the East River. Miss Morgan's home is radiant with color and individuality. The entrance hall is built around a seventeenth century St. Anne marble fountain and among its most interesting pieces are a Renaissance sculptured walnut refectory table, very finely carved, an old English cedarwood chest and several antique Louis XV walnut stools and benches. The drawing room is Colonial with ‘wo fine old Colonial mantels faced and hearthed with sienna marble. The dining room is bright with yellow gauze curtains at the windows and crystal sunburst lighting fixtures and candle shades of dull gou

: | lace over peach tafleta.

Has Oriental Note A second interesting house is that

| of the Countess di Frasso in Cali-

fornia. ‘The living room is an Oriental room, modern in its mirrored

.| door and window frames, and its wall treatment. Bamboo is the mo-

tif. The walls depict birds flying in 8 bamboo forest. The furniture and the fireplace are designed of bamboo, and the mirrored doorways and window frames are trimmed “with bamboo. The color scheme is blue, rose and white. In the Gary Cooper house in Brentwood, Cal., the rooms are laid out on the old French chateau plan, three important rooms on one long axis. You enter the living room from a raised platform with stairs, covered in zebra skin, descending on two sides of the room. The house has one vivid color highlighted in the decoration of each room. The Lving room accent color, poison

green; the dining room, canary yel- |:

low; the library, turquoise, and the bedroom; salmon pink. The Ina Claire apartment in the Hotel Pierre, New York, I have dec: arsed in a dramatic manner. tall mirror screen, divided into or tall occupying one end of the living room reflects the other end.

{A Louis XV walnut commode with

mounted handles and a fine, harrow inlay in checker design, is placed in front of the mirror screen. Two slipper chairs, covered in leopard plush, are set on each side of a mirror coffee table. At one end of the room is a comfortable group for living: An overstuffed chair covered in feather chintz and an antiqued white lacquer tray table with stand of metal

dow is an antique Louis XV table desk of fruitwood with a white leather top tooled in gilt. Six mirror flower pots decorate the tiouble window sills. The draperies are of swag chenille in an off-white ‘color.

Cast Is Selected for Tudor Hall

Class Production

Tudor Hall's junior class is to present “The Women Have Their Way,” at 8:15 p. m. Friday, Oct. 30, in the school auditorium. The cast includes Misses Dorothy Metzger, Betty Porter, Katherine Jones, Evalin Mitchell, Betsey Wolfe, Jane Leasure, Mary Jean Ottinger, Susanah Jameson, Sylvia Griffith, Ann Noble Johnston, Phebe Perry, Anne Elder, Martha Ann Schaf and Rosalie Lurvey. Miss Katrine Van Dyck Bucher is the director, and is being assisted by Margaret Junkin. Marybelle Neal is business manager; Miss Perry, school publicity manager; Jane Crawford, property and costume manager; Barbara “Brown, technical director; Elizabeth Kiger, assistant technical director; Ann Corbett, Patty Noble, Barbara Noel, Chloe Hooke and Harriett Ruby, technical crew.

GROUP TO VISIT BROWN COUNTY

Daughters of Isabella Circle is to go.to Brown County Sunday, leaving the city by bus at 8:15 a. m. and returning about 6 p. m. The group is to meet at the corner of Virginia. | 1 av and Pennsylvania-st. Newly elected officers include Miss Edna Buennagel, regent: Mrs. Ellen Kirkhoff, vice regent: Miss Mary Ryan, recording secretary; Miss Mary ‘Connor, financial secretary, Miss Margaret Monahan, treasurer; Miss Ernestine ‘Fuss, trustee; Mrs. Joseph Mentzer, custodian; Miss Edna Jay, chancellor; Mrs. Katherine Koss, monitor: Miss Dorothy Huss, first guide; Miss Marie Lenahan, second guide; Miss Lillian Weber, inside guard; Miss Grace Gabriel, outside guard; Miss Romaine Salladay, scribe, and Miss Elizabeth Madden, banner bearer.

Electric

in the form of bamboo. At the win-

Club Arranges Annual Brown

Algonquin Members to Make Jaunt on Oct. 24-25.

BY BEATRICE BURGAN * Society Editor HE Algonquin Riding Club members are to roam through Brown County hills on their annual cross-country party Oct. 24 and 25. They have woods of their own near the clubhouse here, but there's a difference in the Brown County range with its hills, creeks and look« cuts over hundreds of acres of woodland. These outings are a club tradie dition, and the stables are as deserted as a summer resort in midwinter on the week-end of the party. Only the most important business can keep members at home. The riders took trips to Mooresville and Martinsville, before the first Brown County trip three years ago. Cottages near the Abe Martin lodge are reserved for members and their guests, who are to celebrate Halloween with a hard times party at the lodge on Saturday night. Natives, who are masters of square dances and folk songs, are to be rounded up to play for the dancing. Members are anticipating learning some new tunes and new steps.

Miss Burgan

” n n

Miss Gertrude Brown, outing chairman, motored this week to the setting of this party to check up on all arrangements. She came back to confer with other committes members: Miss Grace Speer, Frank Samuel, Dudley Williston, Mrs. Rus< sel Williams and Mrs. Thomas C. Twyman. The club’s chuck wagon, equipped with all culinary utensils necessary for an outdoor meal, is to be taken cn the outing. On Sunday the wagon is to be driven to some in= viting spot where the riders are to prepare their own meals. .

. The youthful riders in the Traders Point Hunt are to learn more about hunting traditions after a dinner to. night at Robert Lesh Bohlen’s home, Mr. and Mrs. George M. Bailey, joint masters of the fox hounds, are to describe some of the formalities and their histories. Young Bohlen’s guests are to ine clude Selena Alig, Lucina. Ball, Muncie; Anne Elder, Eleaj or Dicks. son Frenzel, Lucy Kaufman, Nancy, Peggy and Nina Lockwood, Betty Mayer, Doreen and Moyra Saxton, Cynthia Test, William Elder, Wile liam C. Griffith Jr. and John Frene zel Miller. Mr. and Mrs. August C. Bohlen are to assist their son in Rospitaly es.

200 INVITED TO RIVIERA PARTY

The Riviera Boosters Club is to entertain with a dance at the clubhouse tonight to which more than 200 members and guests have been invited. William L. Bridges, club president, is in charge, assisted by I. F. Heidenreich, entertainment chairman. A floor show is to be held. Donna .

Glore and her orchestra are to pro.

vide music.

NEW GADGETS FOR

DINNER TABLE USE

If elimination of supérfluous de- 3 tail is the essence .of good designe ing, the appearance of your formal dinner table should be improved immeasurably by the use of the new combination individual ashe trays and placecard holders.

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