Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1937 — Page 5

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.D. A. R. MAY PROGRAM ANNOUNCED BY NEW REGENT

| Golf Season To Open at Woodstock |

Activities Committee Aids Chosen

Six Young Women Select Spring Season as Time to Exchange Nuptial Vows

Bi IE PR

Official to Visit State ~~ Chapters; Board Meeting Set.

Mrs. William H. Schlosser, Franklin, Indiana D. A.'R.S new regent, has announced her May program. She was guest speaker at an open meeting sponsored by the Margaret Bryant-Blackstone Chapter at Hebron today. Mrs. Earl Miller, regent, entertained with a luncheon in Mrs. Schlosser’'s honor before the program. Tonight she is to be dinner guest speaker for the _ William Henry Harrison Chapter in Valparaiso. . Tomorrow she is to be honor guest | at the Pottawatomie Chapter’s spring luncheon in Gary. State board members and past state regents are to attend the luncheon which the Alexander Hamilton Chapter at Franklin is to give for Mrs. Schlosser on. Friday. In the evening she is to preside at a state board meeting following a formal dinner in the Columbia Club. State Meeting Saturday

All state chairmen and vice chairmen are to meet with the state board at 10:30" a. m. Saturday in ‘the Columbia Club. Mrs. Schlosser is to preside during the discussion of the year's work. The Bloomington chapter is to entertain for Mrs. Schlosser in the Indiana University Woman's Builds ing on. May 11. Other entertainments scheduled for her are: Irvington Chapter spring luncheon, May 13; speaker for the Maj. Hugh Dinwiddie Chapter, Knightstown, May 15; Salem Chapter jmeeting, May 19; Mount Vernon’ Chapter meeting, May 20 and 15; speaker at guest meeting oft Lebanon Chapter, May 21. State chairmen announced by Mrs. Schlosser are: Mrs. Louis D. Keck, Mount Vernon, Americanism; Mrs. Frank C. Ball, Muncie, approved schools; Mrs. William T. Morgan, Bloomington, conservation; Mrs. L. L. Bomberger, Hammond, correct use of flag; Mrs. R. B. Hougham, Franklin, good citizenship pilrimage; Mrs. Voyle Martindale, Cambridge City, magazine; Mrs. H. G. Ervin, Hartford City, manual for citizenship. Others. Are Appointed

Mrs. Harry Potter, Princeton, museum: Mrs. Luke Duffey, Rushville, Ellis Island; Mrs. F. R. Burns, Mentone, filing and lending bureau; Miss Mary Carr Guernsey, Charlestown, geneological records; Mrs. Paul K. Thiery, Newcastle, girl home makers: Mrs. W. H. DeBolt, .Vincennes, Harrison mansion; Mrs. E. H. Darrach, Indianapolis, Indiana room, Memorial Continental Hall; Mrs. Porter J. Coultas, Tell City, “Junior American citizens; Mrs. Thomas C. Eley, Plymouth, legislaive. : Mrs: Howard L. Hancock, Rockville, motion pictures; Mrs. J. C. Webb, Portland, national defense through patriotic education; Mrs.

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T. C. Frazier, Warsaw; Miss Elvira is =.

_Qaks, LaPorte, national membership; Mrs. Henry ‘B. Wilson, Delphi; Mrs. Josephine Dix, Edinburgh, press relations; Mrs. G. W. Wetherbee, Elkhart, Real Daughters;

Mrs. George F. Chester, Valparaiso, state director, C. A. R; Mrs. | Wayne Cory, Veedersburg, strans- | portation; Mrs, S. J. Crumpacker, South Bend, parliamentarian; Mrs. W. R. Davidson, Evansville, reso-

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Lambs Club Gets Mascot as

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Clubs Hold Luncheon at ;

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First Tournament’ for * Women Is Scheduled { for Tomoriow.

W | By BEATRICE BURGAN OODSTOCK CLUB women will settle down to serioud golf playing in the season's first tournament at the club tomorrow,” The nine-hole blind par tourney is a starter for the country club’s out-

door recreation season. ;

will be informal. rs. Herman C. Wolff, last year’s woman’s champion, is working out the golf schedule with the help of Mrs. John B. Stokely and Mrs... Thomas Ruckelshaus. Mrs. Ruckzl= shaus is playing her first season at the club, for she came here last winter as a bride. Golf is her favorite sport. The women are to concentrate on their competitive games every Tues= day morning and then forget their poor shots at the luncheons. They are to match their skill with the men in mixed foursomes on Sunday afternoons. The first tournament of this kind is to be held 1ate this month. Club rie nbers in Golden Hill. adjoining tne club grounds, are to entertain the players at teas fqllowing the matches. |

Informal Dance Sa‘urday

An informal dance at the club Saturday night will be a curtain raiser for the official opening party

So many club members always have run out to the club after their refurn from the Kentucky Derby that this year.a party is to be made of the occasion. t Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus| again are responsible for the social! activities. Mr. and Mrs. -James F.

Jr, John Watson, Mrs. Lafayette Page and Miss Janet Noyes are on the committee. - If the weather is warm on Memorial Day, the swimming pool will| be opened. Charles R. Weiss, chairman; Mrs. Orland Church, Mrs. Hiram Wasson McKee, John Moore and Samuel Runnels Harrell are’ crossing their fingers—hoping that) their committee can start the sea-| son as scheduled. Members not at the races will be! at the club on the holiday, breaking up the time with a buffet luncheon at noon. | ’ = ” ” Spring formals blossomed out at the St. Vincent Hospital Guild dance Saturday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Yellow flowers rioted over Mrs. Robert Kirby's -white pique gown; she attended with Mr. Kirby and Mayor and Mrs. Kern. Red velvet grapes were “clustered on Mrs,

Kern's back net gown. Mrs. Hiiam F. Dudine’s gown was as colorful as a flower bed. Its printed chiffon skirt was flared in pleats. Mrs. Harold Trusler's white organza gown with its azure blue accents was as fluffy as spring clouds. .Robin’s:egg blue slippers showed beneath the black marquisette gown worn by Mrs. Ellard B. Duane, club president. The dance . chairman, Mrs. Walter Brant, wore white lace over taffeta, contrasted by-a paisley patterned sash.

The luncheon following the games

on Saturday before Memorial Day.

Carroll, Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge -

lutions; Mrs. D. S. Conner, Can- Rridticer nelton, official stenographer; Mrs. { Elizabeth S. Payne, New Albany,

lay omo, pages. By Z. ! Mis. Rey A Mayes, Ko% “Student Caleb Lodge, Lambs Club founder, today had acquired a wooly—

Other committees are: Lif Td . | ’ oats, | if not wild—honor, and the club, a new mascot. loan fund, Me Jems A | Club members chose the occasion of the “May Day Gambols” at the | Veedersburg; Aha 1s valentine, | Columbia Club Saturday night to express their appreciation to Mr. Lodge. | er, Hanover; os nC vunck- | Near the close of the performance, Paul Matthews reminded the! Franklin; Mrs. Hk W D. Price, | members that the first meeting of the Lambs was held in October 1931 ! er, Greencastle; : D 3 Robinson, with Mr. Lodge, (Mrs. Hervey Bates, Messrs. and Mesdames Myron Green, ! Mundie: rT ie Blanche A. Mil- Harold Tharp and Charles Wells as the charter members. Membership ocomington; >

. | now stands at about 230. Jer, Lafayette; Mrs. Robert L. Hud Kurt Pantzer, Harlan H. Hadley &—

1 . >i / ~ 9: . ° . : ! Souvenir of ‘May Day. Gambols™ gia rt Nutrition Cam] / | 5 B rition amp - | a | 5 Photoplay Indorsers Clubs which are interested in the health building program of the Set Closing Meeting | Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp for Children at Bridgeport met for a al covered dish luncheon today at the camp. Women on the board of di- _ 1ndianapolis Indorsers of Photo-

| rectors and advisory committee discussed the clubs’ entertainment at the P!2¥s are to close the year‘with a | camp during the summer. | meeting at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the

The wedding is to take place in June. | Mrs. Henry H. Hornbrook was hostess chairman, assisted by Miss | C12yPopl Hotel, with Mrs. David | Mary A. Meyers, executive secretary - | Ross presiding. [ie . lof the Tuberculosis Association; | Frank W. Wood, Evans Woollen Jr., | —rr \ Mrs. Herbert Wagner, camp com- | R. S. Records and the Misses Emma | MERIT Shoes for the Family

1. Mrs. Marvin P. Cuthbert was Miss Marjorie Bell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bell, before her marriage. (Photo by Voorhis.) 2. Mr. and Mrs. I. Watt Pugh have announced the engagement of their daughter, Rosalind| Eileen, to Harry B. McKee Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. McKee. (Photo by Photo-Craft.) 3. The marriage of Miss Doris Isola Slavens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Stavens, to Leslie McKeand Graham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis M. Graham, took place recently. (Photo by Dexheimer-Carlon.) 4. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Berkowitz have announced the engage-

s Louise Kleiser, Furscott, Kenneth Baker, George

_ACharles wolf, Peru;

"Delta Zeta Club

value of nature study, is to be host-

son, Richmond; Mis Terre Haute. Aids Historical research, Mrs. Wir Lafayette; Mrs. Sy Mrs. S. A. ison, Frankfort; Mrs. Roscoe na, Columbus. Junior Tem bership; Mrs. Wilbur Johnson, ol dianapolis; Miss Marion Gross, LaPorte; Mrs. Robert H. King, Daye ville; Miss Mabel Claxton, Tench Lick. Radio, Mrs. Frank R. Ba ~ Indianapolis; Mrs. Frederic Rell, Indianapolis; Mrs. william B. Duff, Ft. Wayne; Mrs. J. C. Bus Jr., Gary; Mrs. Floyd T. Jones, Lafayette; Mrs. C. S. Nuckols, Anderson; Mrs. Ivan Loer, Evansville; -Mrs. R. G. Nunn, e Haute. : TO of revolutionary soldiers, Mrs. Roscoe C. O'Byrne, Brookville; Mrs. Theodore Craven, Indianapolis; Mrs. Harvey Morris, Salem. Special celebrations, Mrs. James B. Crankshaw, Ft. Wayne; Mrs. Rob--ert A. Hicks, Cambridge City; Mrs. Kate Milner Rabb, Indianapolis; Miss Mary E. Clark, New Albany; Mrs. John B. Campbell, South Bend; Mrs. James R. Riggs, Sulli-

Are Listed nfield

van. Assistants to state directors, Miss Marion Gross, LaPorte; Mrs. Robert H. King, Danville; Miss Mabel Claxton, French Lick.

Will Hold Picnic )

Delta Zeta Mothers’ Club mem‘bers are to attend a picnic luncheon tomoirow at the Nature Study Club cabin in Woollen’s Gardens. Mrs. H. H. Coburn, who is to talk on the

ess. Mrs. H. Ray Condrey is in charge of transportation. Mrs. Daniel E. Early is the new president; Mrs. Clarence M. Sones, vice president, and Mrs. A. E. Campbell, secretary-treasury.

Appears In Play Times Special DURHAM, N. C, May 3.—Miss Elizabeth Whitaker, daughter of Lyman B. Whitaker, appeared in the Duke University May Day pageant, “Hansel and Gretel,” pre-

sented Saturday. Miss Whitaker is}

@ sophomore in the woman's college.

and Willlam G. Sparks, formed a committee to present Mr. Lodge with - a certificate of membership which bore the signatures of most of the Lambs. Living “Badge™ Presented . A live lamb, complete with pink bow around its neck, was presented as Mr. Lodge's badge of office. The Jamb was Mr. Sparks’ responsibility and was kept happy and quiet with a bottle of milk. It now grazes at. the J. Perry Meek farm near Carmel where it is to be raised in the club’s best traditions. The performance included a number of old songs. The girls in the company were costumed charmingly in tulle capes and poke bonnets, worn over their evening gowns. Mrs. Frank Hoke's white marguisette frock, embroidered with scattered bunches of red cherries, was effective with a pale green cape. and bonnet. A blue facing ‘under the bonnet brim and red carnations on the top made it unusually becoming. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Kothe were enthusiastically greeted ‘when they rode in on a “bicycle built for two” to the accompaniment of Raymond D. Jackson's singing. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ferriday headed the committee for the evening, assisted by other members and a large cast. Mrs. Helen Thomas Bucher's songs delighted the audience. . ES . rr ” ‘ The Park School gymnasium was a gay spot over ‘the week-end as weary, but enthusiastic, patrons of the Park School Mothers’ Association Garden Tour ended the afternoons with a cup of tea. The prize-winning tables were unusually | beautiful. Mrs. Perry O'Neal’s formal ne table was laid with a pink satin damask cloth, pink glass compotes and a pink glass urn filled with pink roses, carnations and fuschia. Mrs. Albert Beveridge and Mrs. D. Laurance Chambers tied for first place with formal luncheon tables. Mrs. Beveridge used blue onionpattern china, cutlery with onionpattern handles and, as a center piece, two Dresden figures arranged with blue and pale lavender sweet peas. : Mrs. Chambers’ table was set with blue wildflower glass plates and blue hob-nail glasses, supplemented by blue bird shakers. J Edward L. Mayer's bachelor

breakfgst table was gay with a

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bright: blue cloth and yellow peasant china. A vase of dark blue cornflowers carried out the color scheme. It received a first award. Mrs. Themas Stevenson's blue ribbon breakfast for two was in contrast to the bachelor table with a pale pink linen cloth, white milk lass and bouquet of pink and white ruit blossoms. : ~" Mrs. Robert Failey’s' three tea tables, winning two firsts and a second, were set with exquisite china and. suitable flower arrangements. Mrs. James Carroll, who took a red ribbon in the formal luncheon class, used green glass on a glass-topped white iron table. The centerpiece was a pottery figure of two little burros pulling a wagon filled with

real fruit—grapes and strawberries. |

Other awards, graded on a point system, were Mrs. Perry O'Neal, formal table, first; luncheon table, Mrs. James F. Carroll, second; Mrs. George M. Bailey, honorable mention; flower arrangements, Mesdames G. H. A. Clowes, O'Neal, William C. Griffith, Bowman Elder, firsts; Mesdames Noble Dean, John

D. Gould, Elder, second: dish gar-|.

den, Mrs. Louis Burckhard, Mrs. Anna Hosea, firsts; miniature flower arrangements by children under 12, Mary Johnson, Perry O'Neal Jr., firsts; Barbara Bradley, John Miller Jr., seconds; potted plants, Walter C. Marmon, J. K. Lilly Jr, firsts; miscellaneous groups, Mrs. Lilly, Charles Springer, French Lick: Mrs. Frank Stalnaker, Mrs. J. I. Holcomb, figs: Mrs, William A. Atkins, second.

Playhouse Is Attractive

A tiny white-pillared playhouse on Mrs. Eli Lilly's estate attracted much interest. Its blue walls, fresh white - curtains and small early American furnjture make it a perfect haven for a retreat.

At Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood’s everyone was intrigued by a gate bearing a sign which read “Practical Gardeners Enter.” The gate led to Mrs. Sherwood’s~-work area where a large paved court surrounded by potting sheds, t houses and cold frames. The 12 gardens included in the tour were those of Mesdames Sherwood, Lilly, Blaine Miller, Josiah K. Lilly, Josiah K. Lilly Jr, Frank Stalnaker, John N. Carey, William Ray Adams, G, H. A. Clowes, Theodore Griffith, Nicholas H. Noyes and the Park School,

iil abl + v

and Mrs. Abe Myers.

ment of their daughter, Helen Eleanor, to Harry Myers, son of Mr, (Photo by Ayres Photo-Reflex.) 5. Mrs. Farless Hewlett was formerly Miss daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Stayton. 6. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hasecoster have announced the engagement of their daughter, Edith, to James D. Oakley, son of Mrs. Martha Oakley. The wedding is to be May, 29.

s Margaret Stayton, (Photo by Bretzman.)

(Photo by Bretzman.)

Club -on Sunday.

tral Ave., hostess.

Hamilton Berry Chapter,

party. j

EVENTS

; SORORITIES

Beta Beta Chapter, Pi Omicron. 7:45 p. m. today. Hotel Lincoln. Alpha Upsilen Chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta. 6:30 p. m. Tues. Hotel Antlers. To discuss Mother's Day party at Lake Shore. Country

Kappa Phi Delta. 7:45 p. m. today. Y. W.C. A. : Alpha Chapter, Delta Sigma Chi. Tonight. Miss Lucille Scheurer, 1709 Woodlawn Ave., hostess. Rush party. Alpha Chapter, Xi Delta Xi. Today. Mrs. Paul Pilkinton, 5310 Cen-

Kappa Gamma Alpha. 6:30 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Edward Sargeant. 417 N. Oakland St., hostess. Mrs. Jean Pasmezoglu, Miss Janet Gasper, assistants. Pledging for Mesdames John Dugan, Cecil McWilliams, George Ebbeler, H. King, Ralph Bacon, John Robards, Charles Kierner, Misses Betty Sommer, Vivian Myers.

LODGE

Prospect Chapter 452 O. E. S. Tonight. Masonic Hall, State, Pros= pect Sts. Mother's Day program. Mrs. Cora Lane, worthy matron. William Belford, worthy patron. .

PROGRAMS 4

Service Star Legion. 2 p. m. Tues. World War Memorial Building. To arrange state convention in Indianapolis"May 18, 19. Mrs. Charles K. McDowell, state president. Auxiliary 10, Sons of Union Veterans of Civil War. Tues. Ft. Friendly. St. Philip Neri Altar Society. 8:30 p. m. today. Party.

_ CARD PARTY St. George's Episcopal Church. 8:30 p. m. Tues. Parish Hall. Card

Auxiliary Meets Today Mrs. George Q. Biegler arranged the program for the guest day meeting of the Church of the Advent Women’s Auxiliary today. Mrs. Biegler, Mrs. Conrad Grath-

wohl and Mrs. Paul Whipple, accompanied by Mrs. Russell Sanders, entertained. Mrs. Edgar Ellsworth gave readings.

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Mrs. Crist to Entertain

Mrs. Charles B. Crist is to be hostess tomorrow for a covereddish luncheon and book review, sponsored ‘by Indianapolis Post 4, American Legion Auxiliary, Mrs. H. Nathan Swaim is chairman.

A Heaping Plate of Fried Spring Chicken

French Fried Potatoes A 5¢

Combination Salad Bread and Butter Rd. 29 South IR. 2182R 3

Served Country Style Open 11 a. m. fo 11 p. m. ° TS

MAC’

May Day Observed

Bowen, Alex L. Taggart, M. F. Ault, Charles H. Smith, William A. Brennan, Roy Corwin, Thomas C. Howe, | tained with A. C. Rasmussen, E. A. Clark, Sunday.

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Miss Kathryn Bremley entera May breakfast!

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