Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 January 1937 — Page 17

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FETES WILL MEET

Engagement Announced

CHAIRMEN OF PRESIDENTS BIRTHDAY

Assembly Women’s Aids to Be Chosen

Joy Found In Mottoes For Homes

- Luncheon To Be Given At Hospital

of Work At Riley Arranged For Vi itors.

Civic Patron Parties for Play Formed

Many to Have Guests at Performances This Week-End. | -

Maxims Given Places of Prominence By Residents Here.

—~

The week-end performances of the Civic Theater's production of “Biography,” by S. N. Behrman, are to be attended by parties of patrons. Tomorrow night Mr. and Mrs, Charles Hagedon and Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Bennett are to be in Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Fenstermaker’s party. Robert Butler, Louisville, is to be Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Morrissey’s guest. In a dutch-treat party are to be Dr. and Mrs. Russell Spivey, Dr. and Mrs. Murray De Armond, Dr. and Mrs. Clifford Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Weiland. Mr. and Mrs. Allen M. Overton are to be with Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Stevens. Dr. and Mrs. I. J. Kwitney are to attend - with Mr. and Mrs. Victor Seiter.

Smiths Arrange Party

Drs. and Mesdames Gordon W, Batman, Charles Thompson, Edmond Alvis and Rollin Moser are to be Dr. and Mrs. David Leslie Smith’s guests at the play and a supper after the performance. / Additional parties are ranged for Saturfiay night. Dr. and Mrs. John J. Bibler and Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Webb are to attend together. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Davis are to attend with Mr. land Mrs, Howard Painter the same night. Richard Hoberg is to give a dinner at the Woodstock Club and is to bring his guests to the theater. In his party are to be Miss Lillian | Schreiber, Miss Jane loore and Addison Howe. Mr. and s. Howard Smith are to be with Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Mayer. i Misses Elizabeth Ohr, Cerene Ohr, Helen Osgood and Mrs. Byron La=follette are to be in another party. In Mr. and Mrs. George T. Parry's party are to be Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Pantzer and Mr. and Mrs. Meredith Nicholson Jr. :

Buffet Supper Planned

Mr. and Mrs. Francis Schmitt are to entertain Mr. and Mrs. Robert Minta at a buffet supper before the performance. Mr. and Mrs. Pearson Smith are to have Miss Madeleine Byrkett and Robert a as their

General chairmen .for the Birthday Balls to be held in honor of President Roosevelt on Jan. 30, are to see a demonstration of facil-

ities at the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children following a luncheon at the hospital tomorrow. Seventy per cent [of the proceeds from the annual balls are to be used for infantile paralysis victims at the Riley and City Hospitals, while 30 per cent is to be donated to the na~ tional committee. Among leaders to see the exhibitions of exercises in the therapeutic pool are civic and club executives, including Mrs. C. J. Finch, Seventh District Federation of Club’s president; Mrs. H. P. Willwerth, Inter- _ national Travel-Study Club president: Mrs. Louis Markun, birthday | balls’ executive committee chairman; Mrs. Max Norris, Twelfth District American Legion = Auxiliary president; Mrs. Bloomfield Moore, ball executive committee vice chairman, and Edwin C, Snethen, ball general chairman. Reservations have been made by 95 persons.

Numerous Balls Arranged

George J. Marott is chairman of the Marott Hotel invitational formal ball. The Elks and Knights of Co- - lumbus lodges are tp hold a joint ball at the Hotel Antlers. Frank W. Spooner and Humbert Pagani are co-chairmen. South Side civic clubs are to sponsor [a dance at the South Side Turners Hall with Henry Goett as chairman. The American Legion and Auxi- * liary is arranging a dance to be held at the Municipal rdens. Judge Wilfred Bradshaw and Joseph Lutz are co-chairmen a Mrs. = Norris, auxiliary chairman. The ball at the Murat Temple is to be sponsored by the Shriners and Ft. Benjamin Harrison officers. The committee includes Walter Boetcher, Herchell Tebay, Dr. C. E. Cox and August Mueller. The Central Labor [Union is to entertain at the Athenaeum with D. R. Barnecho, Joseph Fritz and Courtney Hammond| as chairmen. Another party is being arranged at Walker Casino.

St. John’s Alumnae ~ To Sponsor Dance

St. John’s Alumnae are to sponsor a dance Saturday night at Indiana ballroom. . Miss Betty Mansfield is general chairman, assisted by Misses Dorothy Deberger, Ann (O'Gara, Rose O'Gara, Helen Turner, Mary Werner and Helen Connor. Alumnae officers also are to |serve on the committee.

Club Members

By BEATRICE BURGAN Society Editor

AINTILY embroidered mottoes are cherished by revering reiatives, but most of these sentimentalities usually are tucked away in inconspicuous places. : But in several Indianapolis homes pertinent maxims are far from hidden. Instead they are given proniinence in some favorite room or spot. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burns enjoy cosy evenings in their library. When they built their home, they anticipated spending many hours there and decided they wanted a motto for the fireplace. They decided it must be Scotch. So they read Robert Burns and found the very phrase to express their sentiments. So carved in the wood is “’Tis Gude to Be Merrie and Wise.”

Phrase Suited Couple

“The phrase suited us perfectly,” said Mrs. Burns. French provincial homes often have welcomings engraved over their doorways. Mr. and Mrs. Emory Baxter approved the precedent so they chose one to be chiseled into’

stone over the entrance to their home.

| Callers stop to read the phrase and enter in anticipation of hospitality. They go in remembering, “Above the door the builder placed my seasoned stone firm braced. The Master charged me to bestow a blessing on all who pass below.” Take Pride in Garden Mr. and Mrs. William Ray Adams take pride in their garden and enjoy seeking relaxation by spending quiet moments beside the stream which winds and gurgles through it. Mrs. Adams’ parents, Thomas Halleck Johnson, and the late Mrs. Johnson, were visiting in Florida and saw a verse in a bird sanctuary, which they thought would fit the

—Photo by Breztman.

Mrs. Harry Y ich has announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Josette Mar; uerite Yelch, to Edmund C. Horst, son of Mr. and Mrs, George Hors | |

5 SCRORITIES Verae Sorores Cl apter, Verus Cordis. 8:30 p. Warriner, host ss. Beta Chapter, Fi i Theta Delta. Sat. p. m. K. of C. Hall. Miss Lillian Jensen, ti ket chairman. MOTHERS’ GROUP

Brightwood Kindorgarten Mothers’ Club. 7:30 p. m. Today. Fathers, guests. Charlof e Carter, School 51 principal, speaker. Officers in charge.

being ar-

m. Today. Miss Ruth

> WV

* The Indiana State Assembly Woman's Club officers are to appoint committees at a meeting at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday at the Claypool Hotel. Mrs. Posey Kin:e, vreasurer, and Mrs. James P. Hughes, Greencastle, president (left to right, sitting), Mrs. Merle Coons, Crawfordsville, recording secretary, and Mrs. Bruce Lane, Bainbridge, first vice president (left to right, standing), are to® make the selections with the, assistance ® Mrs. Henry Schricker, Knox, second vice president, and Mrs. Lloyd Claycombe, corresponding secretary. These officers were chosen at a meeting yesterday at .the Claypool. The club members are being invited to luncheons, - dinners and meetings by Indianapolis women's groups.

CHURCH GROUP

St. Philip’s Altar Society. Tonight. Parish Hall. Social for parish women. Install tion.

Many Parties Are Planned at

Marott Dance

DANCES

Young Peoples’ £iacial Club. 9 p. m., Fri. St. Joseph’s Hall. John Murphy, chairtiian. Misses Thelma Poinsette, Mildred Bohem, Amelia Arvin, 1 ouise Fauer; Carl Bohem, Herbert Gilligan, John Bonowski, Josej'h Bretthauer, committee. ; 3 Le Phi Lambda Epsi on. 9 p. m. Fri. Hotel Antlers. Formal dance. Gorgarden. They came home with it don Sutton, ‘ch: irman; Robert King, Walter Stone, Paul Porter,

engraved on a bronze plate, now Ja Es : pa ? : : mes Thomas, Wilford Wilson, George Porter, committee. Harold permanently set in the lawn near Williams, presi ni. ;

the veranda. Holv Rosary Yon Walking through the garden you or jo Sony 1g see it: “Smile of the sun for par- 1celi, chalrmass. : don the song of the birds for mirth. Temple Boosters. 3at. p. m. Cumberland Community Bldg.

You are nearer God’s Heart in a SKATING PARTY

goraen Gon mie ew St. John Acadeny senior class. (7:30 p. m. Fri. Riverside rink. : Frances Foltz, ¢ airman; Margaret Gangany, Lucile Kahl, Dorothy Remembers Watching Work Oliver, commit? e. Mrs. George Southworth remembers as a 5-year-old girl watching her mother, the late Mrs. Sarah Jane Williams, carving fascinating designs on wooden blocks. The flying chips of wood caught her eyes. Sometimes she was amused as her mother said that this “plump round apple” was being carved for her. Then the little girl’s interest would be fixed on the block of wood, and she watched the apple being shaped. Mrs. Southworth recalls those days when she stows away things in the carved walnut cabinet, which hangs in the living room bearing “Do Well and Let Them Say.” In the hallway visitors take note of an oak mirror, hat rack, umbrella stand and chest, all carved. But particularly they notice the chest with its

3 Meetings of’ County P.-T. A. Set for Week

Three Marion = County ParentTeacher Associations have scheduled meetings next week: Southport Grade School, Bluff Avenue School and Crooked Creek. Dr. Matthew Winters is to address the Southport P.-T. A. meeting at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday. Music and entertainment are to be provided by the Stork School of Music. A social hour is to conclude the program. Mrs. Grace Brown is to lead devotions at a meeting of tne Bluff Avenue School group at 3 p. m. Tuesday. Miss Ann Brown is arranging a program. Edward S. Kepner of Indianapolis Life Insurance Co. is to speak at the Crooked Creek meeting at 7:30 p. m. wednesday. The association is sponsoring a course in home nursing and hygiene given py Miss Katherine Cameron of the National Red Cross. The class is to meet from 9:30 to 11:30 a. m. on Tuesdays for 12 weeks. A certificate is to be given at the completion of the course.

Mrs. Samuel C. Carey is to entertain with a dinner party tonight at the Marott Hotel's formal dinner and dance. Her party is to honor two recently married couples: Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Mothershead and Mr, and Mrs. Albert Lang. Covers also are to be laid for Messrs. and Mesdames B. W. Duck Sr. Berkley Duck Jr. Arthur Vv. Brown, Volney M. Brown, Edwin H. Forry, Paul Lee Hargitt, Edgar H. Evans, Erwin C. Stout, Samuel Runnels Harrell and John R. Lynn, Dr. and Mrs. B. A. Richardson, Mrs. Carolyn S. Atherton,

Dr. and Mrs. Jean Milner and Mrs. Julia Jean Rudd. Dinner is to be served from 6 to

‘To Hear Papers About Gardens 9 p. m. at the hotel with a program of music to be presented by Con-

- . suelo Couchman Dunmeyer, assisted Mrs. Henry Atkins| and Mrs. Ed |by Carolyn Ayres Turner, pianist; Pitcher are to read papers on Jack Ford, Sich: and Teens YspD- - ” ner, soprano. ancing is to follow Garden Law” and garden catalogs, 111 Lhe Dosiroom. Mrs. D. M. Gilchrist’s guests dre to be Mesdames St. Clair Parry, Chestine Mauzy, Henry Thornton, C. C. Perry, Henry Eitel, A. H. Steinbrecher, S. T. Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall T. Levey. Judge and Mrs. Robert C. Baltzell are to entertain Mr. and Mrs.

Ladies Sodality. Tonight. Hall. Miss Mary guests.

In Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Swanson’s party are to be Mr.|and Mrs. Ramond Morgan and Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Campbell. Mrs. Philip Reed, Mr, and Mrs. John Weldon, John Kingham and Henry Severin are to be in another party. In another dutch-treat party are to be Messrs. and Mesdames Wendell Hicks, John McConnell, Dana L. Jones, John Bruhn, Kenneth Adair and Marvin Lugar. Mr. and Mrs, R. C. Knauss and Mr. and "Mrs, H. H. Arnholter are to attend to= gether, and Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Robinson are to be with| Mr, and Mrs. Max Recker.

Invited to Festival

Today the Seventh District Federation of Clubs invited them to the Federation's fine arts festival in Ayres’ auditorium. The Indianapolis League of Women Voters is to welcome them to its dinner meeting at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow at Indianapolis Athletic Club, where T. V. Smith, Illinois legislator and University of Chicago professor, is to speak. The League also is to entertain for the women at a 4 p. m. tea Wednesday at Mrs. J. A. Goodman's home. On the same day Woman's Department Club members are to be hostesses to the Assembly Club at a 12:30 o’clock luncheon. The Indianapolis Matinee Musicale has extended an invitation to the Assembly Club for the Musicale’s artists” program at 3 p. m. Friday, Jan. 22, at Ayres’ auditorium. The Indianapolis Council of Women’s meeting and luncheon on Feb. 2 at Ayres’ auditorium is open to the'club, as 1s the Scottish Rite Ladies’ Club luncheon at 12:30 p. m7 Feb. 16 at the Cathedral.

Mrs. J. D. Johnson

LODGES Naomi Chapter, 31 O. E. S. 8 »b. m. Fri. Masonic Temple. Mrs. Genevieve Bard worthy matron; William R. Wigal, worthy patron. Monitor Temple ythian Sisters 3 p. m. Today. 523 N. Belle Vieu _ Place. Card paity. i Hoosier Auxiliary V. F. W. 8:30 r. m. Today. 143 E. Ohio St. Irvington Rebeka Lodge. 608 Club. 8:15 p. m. Sat. Odd Fellows Hall, 5420% E. Washington St.: Card party, Mrs. R. U. Rodkey, chairman. | | Prospect Auxiliary’ O. E. S. 2 p. m. Fri. Temple, Prospect and State Sts. Birthday pi rty. Past presidents, honor guests. Emera Club. Fri. p. m. Prospect: Masonic Hall. Birthday dinner. Initiation, instailation, Guests, club members’ mothers and Prospect Chapter O. E. S. past mations.

Card Party Lrranged j Tuesday in the Wm. H. Block Co. . a ‘auditorium. : By Leg 10n Auxiliary Mrs. J. C. Meyers, general chair- \ 2 Trvington Unit 28% Americon Le- man, is to be assisted by Mesdames hospitable scroll, “Welcome the| -fvINgion Unit 54, America Verne Sholty, Louis Phelan, Glenn|| INDIANA FUR CO. coming. Speed the parting guests.” | gion Auxiliary, is i¢ give a card, 29 E. Ohio St. h Art party, tea and style ‘how at 2 p. m. | Giubka, auxiliary president. : Luncheon Today Tones Others Ae i ye i

Brock, R. L. Schutt and D. V. S. Mrs. Williams painted, too, and she carved her own easel lettered with “Art is long.” She took the

Mothers’ Club Meets

Holliday Mothers’ Club, Indian apolis Free Kindergarten, met today at the kindergarten. : SKINS

FUR FOR HATS

- COLLARS

Irvington Garden cl hp at 2 p. m. _ tomorrow. Mrs. H. B. Tilman, 970 ..'N. Campbell Ave. is [to be hostess.

ers are Mrs. ent; Mrs. W. t; Mrs. Paul Mrs. Ralph

hd

. Spencer, secretary;

_ Schwartz, treasurer; ~ Griffith, historian.

iss Margaret

A. B. Cronk, and Mrs. George W. Cummins is to have Mr. and Mrs. McNamara as her guests. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell G. Wilkinson are to include Messrs. and Mesdames Glenn E. Duttenhaver, Albert Ehlers, E. M. York, J. D. Sparks, Edward J. Dowd, J. C.

To Speak at Lebanon

Mrs. John Downing Johnson, flag chairman of the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, D. A. R., is to be a luncheon guest of the James Hill Chapter, Lebanon, tomorrow. Mrs. Johnson is to address the

For Bride-to-Be

Mrs. Louise Berger, 1614 Broadway, is to entertain with a lunchecn today in honor of her granddaughter, Miss Eleanor Louise Berger, whose marriage to Thomas Hip-

kiss is to take place Feb. 17.

«Art is long. Time is fleeting.” The

dining room, holding a pictarial tile. Mrs. Williams taught her sister-in-law, Mrs. E. E. Flickinger, the art of woodcarving and Mrs. Flickinger’s

phrase from Longfellow, who wrote

Socuthworths have the easel in the

RAIN «+ SLEET « SNOW |

The hostess is to be assisted by the brite-to-be’s mother, Mrs. Fred R. Berger. ’

son and daughter, Dan W. Flickinger, and Mrs. Herman C. Wolff have many of their mother’s pieces.

Riddle, Robert Driscoil and Albert Hohl. In Mr. and Mrs. George Olive’s party are to be Messrs. and Mesdames John Willard Hutchings, LIarshall G. Knox and Joseph P. Merriam and Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Belden and Dr. and Mrs. Sam Hook, Noblesville. Mr. and Mrs. J. Edwin Aspinall and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hooley are to be guests of Dr. and Mrs. Russell J. Spivey. Mr. and Mrs. Jess R. Robertson are to entertain a party from. Shelbyville, including Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Worland, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Plymate, Miss Marjorie MecKenson and Jim Whitcomb.

Dietitians Will Hear Speech on Cosmetics

Dr. John Eric Dalton, assistant professor of dermatology, Indiana University Medical School, is to talk on “Cosmetics,” at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the Indiana Dietetic Association meeting to be held in Lilly auditorium at City Hospital. “The Nature of the Vitamin B Complex” is to be the. subject of Dr. O. M. Helmer’s talk. He is a member of the Eli Lilly Research Laboratory, City Hospital. : The program is in charge of the diet therapy section. Miss Jean Crooks is arrangements’ chairman.

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A most complete assortment from geriuine rub ber galoshes to velvet creations with fur trimming.

group on “The Correct Use of the Flag.” :

IM ENTERTAINING AT BRIDGE. WHAT SHALL I HAVE ?

MAKE A PINEAPPLE PARFAIT CAKE. IT'S MARVELOUS

BUT MY CAKES ALWAYS TURN OUT

USE Spry THIS TIME. \ IT WILL BE LIGHT AS A FEATHER

THAT'S WHY Spry BLENDS TWICE AS FAST. YOU CAN MIX A LIGHTER CAKE WITH IT IN HALF THE TIME

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WHAT'S Spry?

‘rural resettlement as|a means to end lynching, described as the “disgrace of the South.” Meeting in biennial convention here, leaders of the Association of Southern Women for the Prevention ‘of Lynching, declared |the stamping — out of farm tenancy and sharecrop- - ping would go far to remove the underlying causes of mob rule. “Lynching. has been the method by which white “eon have main-

| USE SPry FOR ALL MY BAKING,

NOW. YOU OUGHT TO TASTE MY

tained what they considered control PIES AND CAKES

over the Negro,” Mrs.|Jessie Daniel Ames, association . executive director, said. : “The NRA, in ipite its high ~ motives, increased antagonism of _employers, as well as poorer classes, because of higher wages which they were forced to pay Negroes,” Mrs. Ames said. “The RA land its work will have just the opposite effect.” The association, organized in 1930, outlined a four-point |program for the next two years: °| Holding of institutes in various Squthern cities, propaganda to be fostered in oneact plays in colleges and little ‘theaters, efforts to secure co-opera-tion of sheriffs and other officers, and a campaign among youth,

of

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g sifted flour 3 Fake flour pre far 3 teaspoons baking powdel 34 cup canned pineapple juice # cup Sites degg W 414 cups sugar i 1k and blend. ,mbi , lemon rind and egg YO . Combine Spry: Soi) and cream unt] Deut and fluffy. : 3 a jiffy with triple-creame. . MA Sift flour and baking powd ey gmall amounts of { fag alter ith combined pineap t egg whites until stiff fac ition until smooth 05 ixture until well each addi On nd fold carefully into me ure wth ye Blended To wonder Spry Caer into bi deep 9-inch . . . 0 . ch fatty batter Bed with Spry. Bake in moderate ov! (350° F.) 25 to

30 minutes. : Spread Pineapple Posies Frosting on top and sides

of cake. . PINEAPPLE PARFAIT FROSTING

1 teaspoon light gg whites, unbeaten corn sirup pple juice

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fn 1-1b. and 3b. cans

Spry, Cemspoon salt teaspoon gra temon rind. 1 egg yolk

L

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Casey and Miss Agnes Tynan are visiting in Miami, Fla.

i +4)

between layers and

2e 134 cups su

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_-

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i Tt 1 1 1 1 3 . 1 . ’ . 1 : . 1 ' 1 1 : 3 2 . ? 2 . 8 2 2 : ? . :