Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1937 — Page 27
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 27
Le FRIDAY, APRIL 16, ik i... TUDOR | Hunters’ Aid
* _—
Exhibits by
HALL ACTIVITIES TO BE SEEN AT OPEN HOUSE |
New ier
a | ¢-}
Girl Scouts Are to Begin Cookie Deliveries Monday Bridal Party
' stairway.
Is Given to Drama Club
Hollidays’ . Trophies Give ‘Atmosphere’ To Play.
to
By BEATRICE BURGAN : Society Editor ; HE Frederick T. Hollidays have put an end to worries of the _ Dramatic Club's property committee. They have all the animal skins ‘ needed to provide a realistic Alaskan setting for “Petticoat Fever,” booked by the club for tomorrow _ night ‘at English’s. Several skins borrowed by the club are trophies of the Hollidays’ hunting trip to Kuiu Island ‘in southeastern Alaska late last summer. -
Mrs. Evans Woollen Jr., a com-
_ mittee member, visited Mrs. Holli“day to choose the properties. She _ selected an antelope head, collected “on a Wyoming expedition. She admired Mrs. Holliday’s prize, a great elk’s head with spreading horns, which hangs on the wall above the In the social room she inspected a moose hezd, which also was added to the properties’ list. 2 Hunting Annual Venture Not a season passes without the
, Hollidays leaving on a hunting trip.
The Alaskan venture is memorable because every member of the party shot a bear. Just this week the Hollidays’ son John had his story. of the trip published in a Chicago newspaper. He described how he sneaked up on a gravel bar to° watch the grizlies catch salmon on the beach. He became so excited when his father said “Shoot!” that he fired without aiming—but he hit the animal in the shoulder. “I'm lucky to have the skin,” he said. “We left the bear out on the . beach overnight and the next morning the tide had taken it out in . the bay. We had to rescue it in a : skiff. My brother Frederick profited by my experience. He tied his bear to a stake before he left it.” : Mr. and Mrs. Holliday are so enthusiastic about hunting that they are to have their recreation room redecorated in this theme. Over the fireplace is a plaque, which reproduces a picture of their 14-year-old pointer, Junior (short for Gen. Jackson Jr.), and Spot. Junior and Spot accompanied the family on its annual trip to the Holliday Nightingale Plantation at Georgetown, S. C., during the Christmas holidays. In season the Hollidays visit the Crows “Nest Skeet Club range, on the Hathaway Simmons’ estates next door. They go out to their farm near Zionsville for quail hunting. Even Lucy, the young daughter, is learning the fundamentals of gun handling.
Mind Your Manners
Test your knowledge of correct social usages by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. Has the practice made “crashing” parties an accepted form of conduct? 2. Should a house guest enter enthusiastically into all of the plans of the hostess? 3. Is it good manners at bridge for the confident player to say, “The rest of the tricks are mine”? 4. How many score pads and pencils should be on each bridge table when a hostess is making the arrangements for a party? : 5. How long does a hostess usually plan for her guests to play cards at an afternoon party? :
What would you do if— You are a hostess serving a buffet meal and your guests, after helping themselves, stand around the table instead of going into the living room to eat— : A. Ask them to go in the living room? : B. Take your own plate in the living room and hope they will follow? C. Leave your guests as they are? » s 4
Answers
1. No. 2. Yes. . 3. No. It is quite possible he is mistaken! 4. Score sheets and pencils for every player. 5. An hour and a half or two hours if refreshments are to be served afterward.
Best “What Would You Do” solution—A. ‘ (Copyright, 1937. NEA Service. Inc.)
Girl Scouts are to begin annual cookie sale deliveries Monday. Orders will be filled until April 24. | A group from Troop 4, receiving
hostess. :
hostess. CARD
38th St., Warren Drive, hostess.
a
EVENTS SORORITIES Chi Delta Chi. Council. Tonight. Mrs. Leona Ennis, 1212 Naomi St.,
Theta Sigma Delta. Mon. p. m. Miss Alma Arnold, 1401 Olive St.,
Lauter Mothers’ Club. 8 p. m. Sat. 1309 W. Market St. Card party. LODGES
Sahara Grotto Women’s Auxiliary Telephone Committee. Mon. p. m. Mrs. Rena Yager, 615 N. Bradley St., hostess. Photo Engravers Auxiliary. 1:30 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Roland Lambert,
A. S. Shaffer, Bert Langenbacker, assistants.
PROGRAM
Broad Ripple Townsend Club. 6:30 p. m. Mon. Covered dish supper. Lucia Wild Dance Studio, program. Speaker.
PARTY
Party. Mesdames Mae Farrington,
Subdebs Reign
At Spring Dance Recital Tonight
into its own. Mrs. William Byram Gates’ annual spring dance recital in the Murat will be preceded by several dinner parties. Dr. and Mrs. Gayle B. Wolf are to entertain with a dinner at the | Woodstock Club for their daughter | Betsy. Other guests will be Anne Elder, Sylvia Griffith, Elizabeth ‘Kiger, Jane Carter, Marybelle Neal, Mary - Jeanne . Ottinger, | Noel, Jane Leasure, Martha Anne
| Schaf, Robert Cusack, Robert ‘Boh-
| len, William Bowen, Ralph Reahard, ! James Brock, Anderson; Sheldon
' Sayle, Edward Turner, Lucius Ham-
ilton, Jack Rauch and David Smith. |
| Mrs. Arthur Wells’ dinner at the Columbia Club "will be for her ‘daughters Patricia and Barbara.
Others to Attend
Others attending will be Carolyn | Culp, Catherine Cunningham, Nancy | Goodrich, Margaret and Susannah | Jameson, Evelyn Maraist, Elizabeth
| Meeker, Joan Mick, Nancy Lock- | wood, Polly Fifer, Fayette Anne Mil-
|ler, Marilyn Whitaker, Selena Alig,
| Mary Jo Clapp, Mildred Milliken,
| Alice Reigner, Frederick T. Holliday | Jr, James Burke, William Failey. | Also Benjamin Hitz, John Noble, | Charles Bruenig, Frank Balke, | James Darlington, John Dean, Harry Hendrickson, Walter Milliken, { Robert Mayer, Ralph Nessler, John | Osborne, Robert McBride, Charles | Rockwood. Roger Smith, Henry Per- | ry, Tom Young,
Robert Bracken, | Richard Zimmer,
Wendell Little,
IMPORTED CHENILLE TYPE
SCATTER RUGS
Size 20x40 4 3
JiseSeone
$1.29 Value 25 West Wash. St.
C—O ly
OXFORDS
CORRECT IN EVERY DETAIL
Tonight the subdeb set will come |
Barbara
Jerry Smith, Tom Tanke, Robinson Meeker and Fred Meyer. In another dinner party will be | Louise Wilde, Virginia Coyner, Lafa- | vette; Jane Winters, Sarah Lindley, { Janet Beach, lviargaret Becker, Mary (Jane Carr, Sue Virginia Hull, John Cregor, Walter Carpenter, Joe Guedelhoefer, Ervin McCullough, Alfred Symmes, William Bruenger and Malcolm King.
IB To Rehearse
—Times Photo.
packages from Mrs. George O. Swaim, general chairman, includes (left | to right) Patsy Summers, Joanne Orr and Margaret Doub.
Cause and Cure of War Study Course Mapped for Summer
The Indianapolis Committee on the Cause and Cure of War has mapped a program on which its members will concentrate during sum-
mer months.
A series of projects to aid organizations interested in in-
| ternational relations has been arranged. Mrs. Leonard A. Smith and Miss Genevieve Brown, general commit-
tee © cochairman, are assigning
members of a speakers’ bureau to;
groups seeking information. In addition panel discussion groups, round table speakers, drama casts and a six-weeks’ study course are to be provided. The course, being arranged by { Mrs. John L. H. Fuller, is to train ‘leaders for international relations | study groups and to provide a ‘background for the understanding | of the United States’ foreign policy, the committee reports. | At the season's closing - meeting { yesterday at Mrs. Smitb’s home, ( Mrs. Emma Kominers gave a report on radio’s influence in educating the public on world problems. {Mrs. Fred Fishman described a | committee's arrangements for the «use of drama in developing world
Mail Orders tilled promos
ly. for Mailing
Let it be blue... or let it be gray! In any event you'll find here the latest entrancing styles in shoes, Choose the one you like best... c for these two colors are marching side by side in the popular color parade this spring!
HOSIERY AND HANDBAGS
interest and understanding. Mrs. William O. Johnson and Mrs. E. J. Unruh are assisting her.
For Wedding
Mrs. Godfrey to Entertain For Bride-to-Be At Dinner.
Rehearsal for the wedding of Miss Margaret Virginia Godfrey and Oscar M. Kaelin is to be held tonight on the eve of the ceremony. Mrs. J. T. Godfrey, Miss Godfrey's mother, is to entertain before the practice with a dinner at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Guests with Mr. Kaelin’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar M. Kaelin Sr, will include the bridal party; Mrs. Jack T. Godfrey, matron of honor; Mesdames George Hilgemeier Jr, L. D. Foster and William Wiggins, attendants; William B. Ansted, best man; William Coleman, Atkins, Russell Langsenkamp, Mr. Wiggins and Edward Gallahue, all ushers. Others will include Jack T. Godfrey, Mr. Hilgemeier, Mr. Foster, Mrs. Atkins, Mrs. Paul Bessire and Frank C. King, Atlanta, Ga. the bride-to-be’s uncle. The table is to be centered with a wedding cake, surrounded by smilax .and white flowers. White tapers in silver holders are to light the setting. 2 Miss Godfrey and Mr. Kaelin are to be married at 4:30 p. m. tomorrow in the First Presbyterian Church.
Ann Lepple, Future Bride, Is Honored
Mrs. Edward Heidenreich entertained last night in. honor of her sister, Miss Ann Lepple, whose marriage to Everett E. Dammeyer, is to take place April 25. Guests included Mesdames Eugene Lepple, Charles Damieyer, Edward Cooney, Robert E. East, Karl Bauchle, Sopia Otting, George Fox, William Fox, Walter Brehob, William Brehob, John Heidenreich Sr., John Heidenreich Jr. Arthur Heidenreich, Wilbur Dammeyer, Fred Hohlt, Russell Clift, August Hook, Julius Luplow, Walter Hoffman and Misses Carolyn, Rose, Edna, Clara and Mildred Otting.
Miss Elizabeth Henderson has been elected to the national vice presidency of Spurs, honorary for sophomore women. Miss Henderson, a member of the Butler University chapter, recently represented the local group at the national convention of Spurs at Pullman, Wash.
F uture Bride To Be Honored At 2 Parties
Miss Joan Aufderheide, a brideto=be, is to attend .a dinner party tonight following an afternoon’s entertainment arranged by Miss Esther Jane Throckmorton. Miss Betsy Bryan is to give the dinner for Miss Aufderheide. and her fiance, William Herbert Thompson, at the Marott Hotel. Miss Throckmorton’s pantry shelf shower and luncheon were at the Columbia Club. Guests with Miss Aufderheide included her mother, Mrs. Rudolph Aufderheide, and the hostess’ mother, Mrs. H. R. Throckmorton; Misses Judith Chambers, Peggy Pearson, Katharine Fulton, Helen C. Petri, Alma Lyon and Laura Miller. : : Miss Aufderheide and Mr. Thompson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Porter, are to be married
Pupils to Be On Program
Athletic, Dramatic and Musical Events Are On Schedule.
Tudor Hall pupils’ parents will see the school in action at an open house Monday. A faculty commite tee arranged the program, sponse sored by the Parents’ Association. Mrs. Shirley Murphy, Muncie, As= sociation president, is to preside at a tea in the school residence follow ing the classroom period. The program will begin at 2 p. m. with “A Dictionary Dream ” a study of words to be presented by Classes 5 and 6. Dancing routines by pue )ils in Classes 3 and 4 are to be illustrated by “The Minuet.”
| Athletics to Be Surveyed
Ruth Fishback, Athletic Associae. tion president, is to present a gene eral survey of the school athletics. Other pupils and their subjects in this section include Barbara Noel, hockey; Rosalind Barskin, basketball; Anne Elder, baseball; Sylvia Griffith, tennis; Phebe Perry, swim ming; Georgiana Dedaker, junior school, and Barbara Klein, lower school. Musical studies of Classes 7 and 8 are to be illustrated in “Lively Tunes.” Nature study by Classes 1 and 2 is to be interpreted in “Tudor Fledglings.” Sophomore dramatic pupils, Nancy Lockwood, Clair Mor=ris and Virginia Smith, are to present “The Wasp” by Essex Dane.
Operetta Preview Scheduled
A preview of the Prelude Club’s production of “The Mikado,” a Gil=bert and Sullivan operetta, is to conclude this division. The room schedule is: Class 1, home room activities; Class, 2, art; Class 3, dramatics; Class 4, social studies; Classes 5 and 6, music appreciation; Class 7, history and English correlation; freshmen, ancient history; sophomores, English; junjors, Latin, Algebra and ZFrench; seniors, history of art and physics laboratory. : While the mothers are attending the tea, pupils from Classes 1 to 6 are to have an hour of supervised
April 24,
play.
Both for daytime and evening wear oxfords are correct. For the woman who wears glasses they make a delightful change just like a new dress. For a gift there would be nothing more appreciated. We will examine your eyes and give you new lenses or follow prescription of present lenses.
Dr.) E KERNEL
TRACTION TERMINAL BLDG. GROUND FLOOR, MARKET AND ILLINOIS STREETS
Sheer, ringless chiffon hosiery to go with your blue or gray spring outfit. . . 64c a pair, 2 pairs $1.25.
Smart blue and gray handbags . . . $1
FELTMAN ¢ CURME | JOYS I —
38 EAST WASHINGTON STREET Special Attention Given to 103 NORTH ILLINOIS STREET Out-of-Town Customers
Op-n Saivrday Until 6:30 P. M.
