Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1936 — Page 5
THURSDAY, DEC. 31,
1936
— THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 5
CLUB MEMBERS ARE TO GREET 1937 WITH GAY RECEPTION
Parties and | Arrange Open House for Tomorrow
Dances Are On Program
Many Guests From Out of City to Attend vents Here.
The New Year is to have a joy- |
J i |
{
|
ous welcome at parties at country!
and town clubs tonight. Groups are to start the celebrations at informal and dinner parties before Joining gatherings at clubs. Meredith Nicholson Sr., United States minister to Venzuela, and
Mrs. Nicholson, who are vacation- |
Ing, are to have with Nicholson's sons, Meredith Nichol~
them Mr.
|
|
son Jr. and Charles Nicholson, and |
their wives at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. At the Indianapolis Country Club
is to be a party composed of Mr, |
and Mrs. Marshall Dale, Wayne, formerly of Indianapolis;
Fort |
Mr. and Mrs. Bennett Bobbitt, Ko- |
komo; Messrs. and Mesdames Wal- | ter Stuhldreher, Ralph Lieber and William J. Mooney. Mr. and Mrs.
Lieber are to have an informal party |
for the others before going to the | club. Parties Are Formed Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Piel, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Piel and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fleischer are to form a party at the country club. Mr. and Mrs. George Mercer also are to be there with Messrs. and Mesdames C. C. Coffey, Marvin Nulsen and Paul Grubbs. In a group with Dr. and Mrs. B. E. Ellis are to be Drs. and Mesdames Damon Goode and J. C. Schoenlaub: Messrs. and Mesdames Frank X. Kern, Oral Bridgford and W. B. McCaw. Mr. and Mrs. William G. Sparks, social committee chairmen, are to join the celebration with Messrs. and Mesdames Henry Davis, William H. Wells, William G. Davis, E. M. Chamberlain, John Brandt, Russell W. McDermott, O. J. Smith Jr. and Ralph Flood. Breakfast to Be Served
Breakfast is to be served follow-
P.-T.A.Short Bangles Fascinate Visiting Tot New Year's
Course Set
For Jan. 27
Programs of Local, State And National Units To Be Discussed.
A parent-teacher short course is | to be sponsored by the Congress of Parents and Teachers Jan. 27-29 at the Indiana University Extension Center, 122 E.| Michigan-st. The course is to consist of 50minute periods covering the organ- | jzation and program of the state and national congresses and the lo- | cal units. Dr. Edna Hatfield Ed- | mondson is to be in charge of class | work and Mrs. Logan G. Hughes, | Indiana Congress president, in charge of discussion. Mrs. D. R. DaVee, the state congress office secretary, is to be an assistant. The state committee includes Mrs, Faye Hester Wheeler, Danville, chairman: Mrs. Glen Bowen, Fort Wayne, and Herman Vorgang, Jeffersonville. The course is to open at 2 p. m, on Wednesday, Jan. 27. Classes are to be held from 2 to 5 p. m. Jan, 27; 1 to 4 p. m, Jan. 28, and 9 to 12 a. m. and 1 to 3:30 p. m, Jan. 29. Registration may be made at the state office before Jan. 20. A certifi- | cate is to be issued by Indiana University for satisfactory completion of the course. The first of a series of projects in co-operation with the Indian-
apolis Red Cross Chapter is to be a | © class in home hygiene and care for |g
the sick on Saturday, In Marion | County and Indianapolis, the Red | Cross Chapter is providing a trav-| eling home hygiene instructor for | several months to teach classes | arranged by the P.-T. A. council. Mrs. Robert Shank is in charge of | the project.
are being supplied local units by | county medical societies, the bureau | of maternal and child health and |
Indiana »
The shining bangles in holiday decorations fascinate young Aimee Health education programs also DuPuy, dauzhter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles DuPuy, Greensburg, Pa. She reaches for one as her mother holds her, The DuPuys are visiting Mrs. DuPuy’s father, Dr. A. B. Graham, and Mr. DuPuy’s parents, Mr. and Mrs, William Avery
the Indiana state board of health.| Golden Hill.
§ Celebrators RE To See Play
Parties Arranged for
Presentation by Triangle Club.
BY BEATRICE BURGAN Society Editor AKE It Away,” the Princeton Triangle Club show at the Murat, is to provide amusement for {many New Year's Eve celebrators { tonight before they join dancing | parties at the various clubs. | Mrs. Charles Latham, Mrs. Syl | vester Johnson and Mrs. W. Riche- | ardson Sinclair are having a dinner | party at the Indianapolis Athletic {Club for their sons, Charles Lath= (am Jr. Sylvester Johnson Jr. and | Thomas Taggart Sinclair, all Prince- | ton students | Their guests are to be Miss Nina | Brown and her guest, Miss Kathe | leen Benet, New York; Misses Betsy | Home, Gloria Geddes, Mary Birch | Ingram, Coronada, Cal; Jane | Adams, Sheila Saxton, Prudence Brown, Eileen Booker, Joan Metz« | zer, Alice Vonnegut, Barbara Haines, | Barbara Stafford, Josephine Mayer, | Mary Sheerin Kuhn, Evelyn Lilly, Janet Noyes, Irving Moxley, Anne | Rauch, Helen Taggart and Dora | Sinclair, | Others to Attend | Others are to be Allen and Alex | Carroll and their guest, William (Scott, Rome, N. Y.; Allen Clowes { and his guest, Henry Mowbry, Bos= (ton; Homer Lathrop Jr. George { Home Jr., Gordon * Hall, Joseph | Minor Jr.,, Midshipman William In- | gram, Annapolis; Noble Dean Jr, ( Robert Smith, Richard McCreary, | Robert Elliott, Jack Appel, Thomas | Mumford, Richard Vonnegut, Dud= [ ley Sutphin, Frederic M. Ayres Jr, { Nicholas Noyes Jr. and Samuel | Moxley, | Miss Mary Jane Sheerin is to ( have a dinner party at her home for her guests. They include Misses Margo and Barbara Sheerin, Agnes Coldwell, Florence Gipe, Laura | Sheerin; Rohert Failey Jr., John | Bennett, William Brennan Jr, | Thomas Bulger, Theodore Thomps=
ing the dance. Favors and noisemakers are to be distributed at mid- | night. The club has been decorated | with white fir trees, lighted with | blue lamps, cedar branches and red | and white lights. At the Woodstock Club, cast members of the Princeton Triangle Club | show, to be presented at the Murat,
The board also provides health ex-| [ son and John Shiel.
hibits, such as motion pictures, | charts, stereopticons and free lit-| [{elen Myers’ Party
erature.
| 5 ” ” Mann, whose marriage to Clarence| The junior Merrymakers are to ® Eberhard is to take place Satur- welcome the New Year at a dance AY 3 +0. ay. at the Woman's Department Club, . Honors Bride to Be Miscellaneous gifts were pre-| A cotillion is to begin shortly before Di P rties Miss Helen Myers, 3039 N. New | sented to Miss Mann. Other guests | midnight, when the guests are to inner a Jersey-st, was hostess recently for| were members of Sigma Alpha Chi receive noisemakers and serpentine, |a party honoring Miss Frances] Sorority. and sing “Auld Lang Syne.”
Miss Maude Balke (left) and Miss Virginia Balke take time out between parties to talk over the open house they are to hold tomorrow at the
home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Balke, They both are Smith College students. No invitations have been issued to the open house.
are to be honor guests at a dance following their performance, Betsey Wolfe, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Gayle B. Wolfe, is to have as guests Miss Betty Sudberry and William Matthews, Bloomington, and Remster Bingham Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Collett are to be there with Mr. and Mrs. Cullom. Mr, and Mrs. Kirk McKinney are to attend with Mr. and Mrs. James Deery.
Others Arrange Party At another party at the I. A. C. are to be Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Hilgemeier, Misses Clementine Kissel, Dortha Woodsmall, Ruth Theabold, Peru; E. L. Kruse, Warren W. Dills and Paul H. Harmon. Others arranging parties include Robert Zaiser, Jack Gehrt, Ralph Knode, P. O. Ferrell, Carl York, Don G. Kaga, R. C. Fox, George F. Hilgemeier, D. P. Andrews, Vincent Shea, H. L.. Dithmer Jr., A. M. Ogle, Q. G. Noblitt, John Bulger, Francis
Courtney, Fred Brown, Jack McVey, | Robert Bolles, B. F. Lacy, Ray Seidel |
and Allen Lillikan, Approximately
700 are expected to attend the club's |
West Point ball
In a party at the Athenaeum Club |
are to be Drs. and Mesdames Gayle B. Wolfe, Glenn Pell, Posey Kime and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cox Jr. Breakfast is to be served at the Columbia Club following its. New Year's Eve celebration tonight. Nine hundred reservations for dinner preceding the dance have been made. Amos Otstot’s club orchestra is to play for dancing in the ballroom; Chic Myers’ orchestra is to play in the dining room, and the Harmodears trio in the Cascade room. “The 1937 Swing Show” is to entertain in all three rooms.
Dinners Scheduled
Among those who have made dinner reservations are C. Bruce MecConnell, Howell Ellis, Waren A. McCurry, W. Ray Enochs, Joseph R. Todd, A. L. Paynter, Anderson: C. E. Wilkinson, E. G. Dehner, B. B.
Blieden, Dr. B. D. Rosenak, Morris |
M. Conn, Edgar L. Kline, R. T. Brocker, W. A. Green, L. R. Carson. F. Grove Weisenberger, Don Wilson, Paul E. Crane, C. K. Nickel, Mrs. Ella V. Staub, C. V. Cross, J. H. Kiplinger, Rushville; J. L. Murden, Peru; Dr. J. H. Kemper, W. D. Williams Jr, Richmond; Miss Gertrude Barnett, Muncie; Joseph Epstein, Ray H. Briggs, Wallace O. Lee, George Edick, J. H. McCluskey, Richard T. Lineback, Greenfield: J. Harry Holtman, R. T. Rogers, H. R. Stout, George A. Poteet, Leo Levenson, W. D. Lewis, Paul W. McKee, Hartford City; C. E, Bonser, Anderson; Ben Caldwell, Sam PF. Purnell, Attica; J. A. Whipker, J. E. Johnson, Muncie; H. Norris Cottingham, Noblesville; Robert H. Engle, W. B. Brass, Dr. H. F. Parr,
Frank D. Hatfield, F. A. Gallagher, | John J. McCarthy, Dr. John R.| Lou Leventhal, R. W.
Surber,
ENTER JANUARY 4
Onward With 1937
Many who started their training here a year or a little more ago are holding pleasant, promising positions today. They have found their investment in these definite, specific business courses most profitable and helpful. Why not make 1937 your preparation year? This is the
Indiana Business College
of Indianapolis. The others are at Marion, Muncie, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond and Vincennes— Ora E. Butz, President. Call personally, if convenient. Otherwise, for Bulletin, describing courses and quoting tuition fees, telephone or write the I. B. C. nearest you, or Pred W. Case, Principal.
Gentral Business College
Glen O. Marsh, Helen Mattice Exchange Vows
at Highland Golf and Country Club today, Glen O. Marsh and his bride, the former Miss Helen Mattice, left for Chicago. They are to make their home in Bluffton where Mrs. Marsh is art supervisor in the city schools. The marriage took place this morning at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd J. Mattice, 5416 N. Pennsylvania-st. The Rev. Morris H. Coers, Bluffton Baptist Church pastor, officiated. Only immediate families attended. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Olinda Marsh, van Wert, O. Mrs. Marsh was graduated from Indiana University and is a member of Delta Gamma Sorority. Mr. Marsh attended Ohio State Uni- | versity, The bride wore blue crepe with a cameo which was worn by her paternal grandmother and great- | grandmother at their weddings. | Her corsage was of gardenias, |
Luncheon Fetes | Park *36 Class
Members of the 1936 graduating [class of Park School were guests of Harley W. Rhodehamel Jr. at a | luncheon today at the home of his | parents, Mr. and Mrs, Harley W. | Rhodehamel. | The luncheon is to be an annual | event for the holiday season.
| O'Neel, John E. Steeg, J. H. Pinson, | Richmond; Dr. B. N. Lingeman, Crawfordsville; Alex Levenstein, Shelbyville, and C. K. Sheffield, The fourth annual New Year's eve | celebration of the Riviera Club is [to be held tonight at the club | house. George Pollard's orchestra [is to provide the music for dancing from 9 p. m. to 1 a. m. The Royal Reveliers are to occupy a special table and numerous out-of-town
Survey Shows Women Gain 5 Places in State Legislatures
The National League of Women
Following a wedding breakfast Voters has made a survey of wom-
en’s representation in 1937 legisla-
tures. Indiana is to be represented by Mrs, Roberta West Nicholson, reelected, and Miss Bess Robbins, a new member. The report made public by Miss Marguerite M. Wells, president, discloses that 135 women are to be legislators in 34 states, a gain of five over the 1936 record. Mrs. Nicholson was a member of the Indianapolis League board and child welfare committee before her election to the house.
Landslide Reflected
The Democratic sweep of the November elections is reflected in the politica] affiliations of women legislators, particularly in the West, the report says. Only six Republican women are to be serving in legislatures west of the Alleghenies. The remaining 48 are from Maine, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, New York and New Jersey. In state Senates, there are to be 12 ‘women, a gain of one over the last two years. Seven states, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, New Mexico, Washington and Utah, are to have the largest number of women legislators, New Hampshire leads with 19. Connecticut follows with 18, and Vermont, with 14, Of the 1937 total representation, 60, or 44 per cent, are re-elected. The majority are serving third, fourth and fifth terms. Outstanding in length of service is Miss Eleanor Miller, a Republican, a member of the California House since 1922. Minnesota's two ‘“non-partisans,” Mrs. Mabeth H. Paige and Mrs.
MERIT
Shoes for the Family
Thrift Basement Shoe Markets Merchants Bank 118 E. Wash, St. Bldg. 832-334 W. Wash. Mer. and Wash, St.
Neighborhood Stores: 930 8, Meridian; 1108 Shelby
3
LI 7511
70 Teachers, Specially
MUSIC FOR ALL
Trained
All musical instruments, voice,
dancing, dramatic art, speech
% RY START NOW wii or phone tor catatog Collegiate Department Second Semester Begins February 1, 1937
1204 N. Delaware St.
OF INDIANAPOLIS ESTABLISHED 18% DAY and EVENING CLASSES
Second Semester Begins February 1, 1937
For Information, Address the Registrar
Hannah Kempfer, have responded to legislative roll calls since 1923. | Mrs. Rhoda Fox Graves, Republican member of New York Senate, has served 10 years in the Assembly and Senate. Mrs. Kate E. Taylor, Republican of Vermont, and Mrs. Margaret H. Barden, Democrat of New Hampshire, are to begin their seventh terms, In 14 states, there are no women legislators. They are Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia and Wyoming. Women increased their representation in Connecticut, Maine, New | Hampshire, New Mexico, North | Carolina, Ohio, Rhode Island, Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Michizan and Tennessee. Losses in strength are noted in Arkansas, Massachusetts, Washington, Mississippi, New Jersey, Kansas, Kentucky, Nebraska, Nevada, Texas and Utah.
Engagement Announced | Mr. and Mrs, George H. Handorf, | Oak Park, Ill, have announced the | engagement of their daughter, Miss | Eda Marie Handorf, to Karl Richard Sutphin, formerly of Indianapolis. The wedding is to take place Jan, 23.
Are to Precede | Old Glory Dance
overal dinner parties are to precede the annual New Year's Day dance of the Old Glory Society, | Children of the American Revolution, at the D. A. R. chapter house. Barbara Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Merriam, is to entertain with a dinner party at her home, 2801 Sutherland-av, for a group of friends. In the party are to be Mary Jo Albright, Martha Rupel, Peggy Trusler, Elsie Ann Locke, Barbara Alig, George Jeffrey, Robert Kasberg, Allen Hendren, James Smith, John Mason and Dan Zinn. Emmy Lou Posson is to entertain with a dinner at the Kopper Kettle for Shirley Ten Eyck, Robert Strat- | man and Dick Boswell. |
Mr. and Mrs. Cofer To Have Open House
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Cofer, 2127 N. Meridian-st, are to hold their annual open house New Year's Day at their home. No invitations are be-
ing issued.
® REPAIRING @ / d Rams, Sol Rubin
Gus Meister, Jeweler
24 Pembroke Arcade 133 E. Washington-st.
different students
on the campus.
factor in the every day great state.
r.
Forward."
A New Year's Greeting |
TO THE
Citizens of Indiana FROM
PURDUE UNIVERSITY
During the Past Year .. More than 5500 received culture, Home Economics, Civil, Chemical, Electrical or Mechanical Engineering, Pharmacy, Industrial Education and Physical Education. Moré than 30,000 others came to the campus seeking the direct, practical help offered in the 74 short courses, conferences, and conventions held
Approximately 3,000,000 were given direct aid through the various extension services of the University, Scores of contributions of immense value for the common good came from research projects completed or under way on the campus or farms. These and many other services have made the University and the ideals for which it stands a vital
Purdue University exists for the people of the state and nation. It's efforts in 1937 will be directed toward surpassing, if possible, the value and scope of the worthwhile accomplishments of the closing
"As Purdue Goes Forward so the States Goes
PURDUE UNIVERSITY
LAFAYETTE, INDIANA.
instruction in Agri-
Indiana residents
life and progress of our
WRITE REGISTRAR POR CATALOG
8 Weeks’ Winter Course in
Second Sr 3
a ian | (FI RIV § ©
brings far-away friends NEARER and NEARER
A series of rate reductions in the last ten years
has substantially eut the cost of Long Distance
telephone service.
The latest reduction becomes effective January 15, 1937. Savings on many interstate calls for the first three minutes will range from Sec to 81. depending on distance.
Reductions have been made in accordance with a long-standing Bell System policy to reduce Long Distance rates whenever improvements in
telephony and the volume of business allow it to be done.
Again your ou'-of-town friends and relatives are brought nearer. You can share each other’s
lives more fully and frequently by telephone. See for yourself soon.
