Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1937 — Page 9
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. 3:30 p. m. tomorrow. Invitations in
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* Mr. and Mrs. Gerrard are at home . at 5718 Winthrop Ave. Chicago.
‘liam S. Seegar, national vice presi-
AOriginality Sororities’ | Party Aims
Unique Settings Will Add Best at Events for Rushees.
Original party ideas, gay decorations, and clever appointments are to’ feature sorority rush parties on the Butler University campus. this week. i Small booklets in red and white are to outline the program for the “Schooldays Party” given by the Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority this afternoon in the home of Misses Marjon and Frances Messick.
Miss Dorothy Powers, chairman
by Miss Marion Messick and Miss Marie Schubert. Guests are to be the rushees, Mrs. Warren C. Drummond, national president; Mrs. Wil-
dent; Mrs. Frank Cox, Ohio Valley District superintendent; Miss Janet Meditch, Northwestern University; Mrs. Robert Ellis, Bloomington, and Mesdames L. Victor Brown, Shockley Lockridge, Robert Nicholson, H. W. Hamilton and Miss Marie Sullivan, Chicago. A huge bed of artificial pansies with each flower bearing a rushee’s name is to be a feature of the Pansy Party given by the Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority at 8 p. m. today in the garden of Mrs. Ensley Johnson, 3447 Washington Blvd.
More than 70 rushees are to be guests, according to Miss Betty Wangelin; rush chairrhan. The garden is to be lighted with Japanese lanterns. During the course of the evening, a stunt written by sorority members is to be presented.
Alpha Chi Omega Tea Tomorrow
The Alpha Chi Omega house, 725 Hampton Dr. is to resemble an artists’ studio at the tea from 1:30 to
the form of palettes have been issued to more than 125 rushees.
The house is to be decorated with palettes and paintings. Guests are to be given palettes as favors and young women serving tea are to be dressed in smocks and berets. Music is to be provided by Miss Marjorie Newman, pianist. In the receiving line are to be Mrs. Minnie
Richardson, chapter president, and Miss Mary Jaqueline Holliday, rush captain, : Balloons, clowns and pennants are to give an air of circus reality to the Kappa Carnival from 4 to 6 p. m. tomorrow in a tent on the Kappa Kappa Gamma house lawn, 821 W. Hampton Dr. The event is to be given for more than 50 rushees, according to cochairmen Betty Schroeder and Carolyn Varin. A fortune teller is to be present, and the afternoon is to be spent playing cards. A circus menu of pink lemonade, popcorn-balls and peanuts is to be served by two clowns. Miss Betty Weir is rush captain. She is assisted by Miss Dorothy Schrader and Miss Genevieve Campbell. Delta Gammas Go Nautical
A nautical motif is to be carried out in the Yacht Club party to be given for 150 rushees from 8 to 1 p. m. tomorrow in the Delta Gamma house, 737 W. Hampton Dr. Guests are to enter the house by means of a gangplank. The interior is to be decorated with flags, anchors and life preservers. Active members are to model in a style show in the evening. A skit written about the Yacht Club by former sorority members. is to be presented. Music is to be provided by Miss Betty Noonan, pianist.
Miss Betty Prinzler 1s rush captain. In the receiving line are to be Mrs. Anna Gordner, housemoth- - er; Mrs. Lenore Lauter, Miss Dorothy Durham, Miss Ann Stork and Miss Helen Flaridge, chapter presi-
Elizabeth Cate. To Be Honored
Miss Adele Meyer is to entertain with a dinner in the Indianapolis _ Country Club tonight for Miss Elizabeth Carr. Miss Carr, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Carr, is to be married Saturday night in McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, to Edwin Ransburg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harper J. Ransburg. Mr. and Mrs. Carr are to entertain with a bridal dinner Friday
Room in honor of their daughter and her fiance. Miss Carr has announced that Miss Martha Banta is to be maid of honor and that bridesmaids are to be Miss Barbara Haig, St. Louis; Misses Jeanne Smith, Miriam Ransburg and Adele Meyer. Gregg Rans-burg-is to be his brother’s best man and Harold Ransburg, Robert Carr, Boyce Hinshaw and Kirkwood Yockey ‘are td usher."
Arrange Party For Miss Akin
Miss Betty Akin, whose marriage to George Horst Jr. is to take place Sept. 12, is to be honored tonight with a personal shower. Miss Helen Carver and Miss Louise Troy are to be hostesses at the Colonial Tea Room, 1433 N. Pennsylvania St. Fall flowers are to be used in the table decorations which will carry out the bride’s chosen colors of blue,
4
Guests with Miss Akin are to include her mother, Mts, S. W. Akin, the bridegroom-to-be’s mother, Mss, G. W. Horst, and Mesdames Carter, Melvin Robbins, we Campbell, Dana Hannan, Clarence “= Wacher, Frank Keppin, Charles Boswell and Misses Betty Ann Nichols, Jean Golding, Wilma Aulenbacher and Margaret McLaughlin.
R. E. Gerrard and Kansas City Girl Wed
Mr. and Mrs, Thurman J. Sharp, Kansas City, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Madalyn, to Rolland E. Gerrard, son of Mr, and Mrs. Archie C. Gerrard,
. The wedding took place in June.
1. The rush is on!
And this trio is directing Greek letter activity
on the Butler University campus this week. Left to right are Miss Mary: Catherine Mangus, assistant in the dean of women’s council office; Miss Geraldine Johnson, president of the sorority president’s
council, and Miss Ellen Hamilton, Panhellenic Council president.
H. Wright Photo.)
(H.
2. Miss Kartryn Lewis (right) is busily searching in a recipe box for
aids in
“yum-yum” Southern cooking for guests at the Pi- Beta Phi
“Plantation Party” to be given Friday afternoon at the chapter house. Miss Jeane Wintz (left) and Miss Carol Fenner plan for that “South-
ern nospitality.” (Times Photo.)
3. Plans for the “Pansy Party” to be given this aftertioon at the
Kappa Alpha Theta house are being made by this foursome.
They are,
left to right, the Misses Betty Schissel, Betty Wangelin, Mary Jane
Shafer and Mildred Scales.
(Times Photo.)
Hoosier Collegians in ‘Swish’ On “Quiilling, if Yo You Ask Them |
~ “Apple polishiflg” and “quilling” are in season again!
Whether you know it or not, to a professor,” according to Indianke their leave for colleges in all parts
phrases which mean “making u ‘apolis upperclassmen about to ta of the country.
Every school seems to have its own “lingo.”
these terms are almost universal
Butler University “eds”
are accused of “jelling” when they stop to talk ‘to coeds on the campus..
Many a freshman may shake withe
fright when ordered to “the Stack,” but it won’t take the local “greenies” many days to catch on that it is only the current name for the Butler library.
“The Spoon” is, of course, the Campus Club, says John Barnett, Butler upperclassman. Every man at Indiana University aspires to the rating of “B. M. O.C.,” (big man on the campus), Miss Harriet Craycraft, I. U. junior, reports. To be a “goon,” a common term for a “boring person,” is a worse stigma than to be called a “flunkee,” in the life of a State University coed. Abbreviations are De Pauw University favorites says Miss Ann Holmes of that school. “In the ree,” merely means “in recreational hall.” The campus drug store is referred to as “Bill's,” with a double meaning for the expenses incurred coupled with the familiar name of the manager. Here's the ‘Swish’
“If youre in the swish,” “you're in the know,” explains Miss Emma Gene Tucker, another DePauw coed, who knows what¢it means to wear a piece of “hardware,” the school expression for fraternity jewelry. “Shining the apple” is the Bradford College girls’ way of saying “playing up to the teacher,” according to Miss Joy Geupel, who returns there this year as a sophemore. “Kee-wee” is a complimentary term meaning “a smooth article,” she says. and “jain sessions” are good, noigy free-for-all get together occasiobhs. If you've never heard of the “soap palace,” you just don’t know your Vassar College, says Miss Harriet Jane Holmes, Vassar sophomore. TX is the traditional name for the driveway and walk in front of this university’s main hall,” she explained “Matthew’s Reformatory’ is a pet name for the school which was founded by Matthew Vassar, it seems. Elementary econcmics is branded “Baby eke,” and trips to the “farm” are as regular a routine as classes among the students who dash to the drug store for chocolate malts between classes. Nobody wants to be a “nub,” at any school, these students say, for (maybe you've guessed it already)— it means the same as another three letter word spelled “d-u-b.”
Ephamar Club
Event Is Today
A luncheon today in the Colonial tearoom opened the year for the Ephamar Literary Club. A tea honoring past presidents was to follow the luncheon. Mrs. H. H. Esky presented a tribute to the honor guests. Mrs. Effie Rogers reviewed the club history. Mesdames H. J. Scudder, Arthur Brown and Mack Parker were hostesses. Mrs. Scudder is president, Mrs. Brown is first vice president and Mrs. Parker, second vice president. Other officers are Mrs. R. H. Hiller, treasurer, and Mrs, Lloyd W. Hughett, secretary.
Pienie Is Arranged
By Moose Juniors
The Junior Order, Loyal Order of Moose, are to have their annual basket lunch picnic at Garfield Park Sunday.
Members and their families are | to meet at the shelterhouse at 12:30 '
Pp. m. Games and contests are to be played. Mrs. Phoebe Hart and Mrs. Ruth Jackson are to be ‘hostesses. The Women of the Moose will hold a card party at 2:15 Thurs-
day afternoon in the Moose Tem-
ple, 135 N. Delaware St.
OGRESS|
LAUN DRY [|
{ Museum director, spent several days
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mayer, who
have been traveilng abroad this |
summer, expect to sail for home Sept. 18. . Mrs. Thomas Kackiey has returned home after six weeks spent in the East. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Carr have returned from a motor trip’in the East. Mr. Carr, who is Children’s
touring and observing displays at the Rochester Municipal Museum, Rochester, N. Y., and the Buffalo Museum of Natural History, Buffalo, N. Y. Mrs. Edward A. Ramsey, Columbia Club, is staying at ChalfonteHaddon Hall while vacationing in Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Forry are expected home this week “after having spent the summer at their cottage at Roaring Brook, Mich. Mrs. Charles Latham and son, Charles Latham Jr., have returned from the East. Mrs. Latham spent the summer at Little Boar's Head, N. H, and Mr. Latham toured Europe via bicycle for several weeks, accompanied by his cousin, Leroy Breunig Jr. Mrs. W. M. Donahue and daughter, Phyllis, have left for a threemonths tour of Europe. They are to sail this morning aboard the Queen Mary from New York. Miss Josephine K. Bauer has re- | turned from a motor trip through Wisconsin and Michigan. Mrs. Ernst Wiles has gone to Nantucket Island, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Enright and family, 5824 Forest Lane, have returned after two months spent with relatives in Memphis, Tenn.
Engagement Announced
The Rev. and Mrs. Abraham Portnov have announced the engagement of their daughter, Estelle, to Lawrence Caplin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Caplin. The wedding
County Medical Society’s Unit Meets Monday
1
Mrs. August S. Kech, Altoona, Pa. Women’s Auxiliaries to Medical Societies national president, and past presidents of the Marion County chapter are to be honor guests at an all-day county meeting Monday at Woodstock Club.
Mrs. Kech is to be the luncheon speaker. Mrs, Walter P. Morton, Marion County auxiliary president, is to preside. Swimming, golf and tennis in the morning are to be followed by an afternoon of bridge. County physicians’ wives and state officers have been invited to attend. The past presidents are Mesdames Louis D. Belden, John Carmack, William F. Clevenger, Harry UL. Foreman, D. O. Kearby, Ross Ottinger, David Ross, William E. Tinney and Charles F. Voyles. The social committee in charge of arrangements for the event is headed by Mrs. J. Thayer Waldo. Assisting her are Mesdames Russell J. Spivey, Harold M. Trusler, Barnard D. Rosenak, Thomas A. Cortese, Foster J. Judson, Robert M. Dearmin, Robert D. Howell, S. D. Johason and John R. Swan.
H osiery and Gloves Match
Hosiery and gloves in matching colors are the new fashion in accessories, prompted by. shorter skirts. Four dramatic new shades to be found in sheer hose and doeskin gloves are red clay, titian rust, cafe
date has not been set.
au lait and sherry tone.
LVE
St. Fish fry. A. D. Streight Circle. Ladies of G. St. Mrs. Hazel Miller, presiding. Prospect Aux. O. Noon dinner.
106 N. Wallace St., hostess. Beta, Phi Tau Delta. Wed. Mrs. hostess. Business meeting. Sigma Delta Tau. 8:32 p. m. Wed. Ave., hostess.
1 >
Kulke, chairman. Luncheon.
Luncheon. Monthly meeting.
LODGES
Queen Esther ar Q. E. 8S. Fri. Masonic Temple, North and Illinois Sts. Mrs. Ethel Dean Morin, hostess. Barbara Fritchie Council. D. of A. Sai. night. 2000 E. Washington
E. 8. All day Thurs. Hall, Prospect and State Sts.
SORORITIES Eapin, Alpha Omicron Alpha. Thurs. night. Mrs. Ralph Sechrist,
CARD PARTY "Sept. Circle. St. Patrick’s Church. 12:15 p. m, Thurs. Mrs. Paul
CLUBS Elite Friendship Club. Wed. Mrs. Alice Buck, 1706 Ingram St.
Artemas Club. 1 p. m. Tues. Citizens’ Gas and Coke Co. auditorium. Business meeting. Mrs. Arthur Stevenson, presiding.
NTS
A. R. 2 p. m. Thurs. 512 N. Illinois
Clyde Andrews, 1038 Reisner St. Mrs. M. B. Bailey, 2840 Brookside
Now ONLY
Cok lf
Doesn't stick to your lips Prevents loose ends Always firm, never soggy
* TAREYTON
CIGARETTES
This SOMETHING abou Liem youd bike
CA
Eastern Star Choir Rehearsal Sunday
Mrs. Hazel Thompson Coats, past worthy matron, Indiana Grand Chapter, O. E. S., has announced that there will be a rehearsal of the Hoosier Choir at 1:30 p. m. Sunday at the Cadle Tabernacle. The choir is composed of 500 members of the Order in 21 districts of the state, under the direction of Mrs. Coats.
Omega Phi Tau To Initiate Six
Six neophytes are to be initiated into Alpha Chapter, Omega Phi Tau Sorority, tonight at the Kopner Kettle. Initiates are Misses Dorothy Travis, Chariene Hoff, Claramae
Calloway, Dorothy and Betty Prosch and Mrs. Delores Settles Barnard. Miss Dorothy Thomas is to preside.
Sorority Unit to Meet Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority is to meet at 8 o'clock Thursday evening in the home of Miss Panoria Apostle, 3766 Ruckle St.
Miss Metcalf To Be Feted at Party rty Tonight
Mrs. Jesse Pritchett Jr. '3742 N. LaSalle St., ana Mrs. Gifford Cast are to entertain tonight with a bridge party and kitchen shower in the Pritchett home for Miss Martha Louise Metcalf. / Miss Metcalf is’ to be married Oct. 1 to Joseph Marquis Cahill in the home of her uncle, Kleber W. Hadley, 3840 Fall Creek Blvd. Guests are to be Mrs. Lucy Metcalf and Mrs. Mae Cahill, mothers of the couple; Mesdames J. D. Dungan, J. C. Pritchett, John Templeton, Erwin Schafer, Herbert Sweet, Herman Brecht, Wililam Berry,
Willard Stamper, Hadley, William | Mount, Crawfordsville, and Misses | Norme* Davidson, Betty Hadley, | Jane Howe, Helen Ehrich and Pa-! tricia Kingsbury.
Zip—On Go the Furs Molyneux would have ladies zip into their furs, come winter. In his Paris collection he shows several coats with slide fasteners.
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Emersons Leave To Attend Son’s Wedcing in East
Members of the Dr. Charles Emerson family are to leave tomorrow for Ithaca, N. Y., where they are to attend the wedding of Miss Jean Campbell Chase of Ithaca, and Dr. and - Mrs. Emerson's son, James Perry Emerson. The ceremony is Lo take place at 4 p. m. Saturday. A reception is to follow ‘in the Sage Memorial Chapel at Cornell University. Miss Chase is the daughter of Mrs. James Merton Chase of Ithaca. Dr. Charles P. Emerson Jr. is to be his brother’s best man. Ushers are to be Dr. Walter Ames Compton, Bernard Vonnegut and John Sloane Kittle of Indianapolis; William I. Stoddard of New York, William B. Fells of Landsdown, Pa., and Lester R. Carrier Jr. of Lakewood, O., a cousin of the bride. Bridal attendants are to be Miss Chasp’s sistefrs, Miss Mary Campbell and Elizabeth Alden Chase. Other members of the Emerson family who are to attend the wedding are Mrs. Compton, formerly Miss Phoebe Emerson; Misses Marjorie and Alice Emerson. :
Parents Announce Thelma Eads’ Troth
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Eads, Crawfordsville, have announced the engagement of their daughter Thelina to Norman H. Schulz. Mr. Schulz is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Schulz, The wedding is to take place at 2:30 p. m, Oct. 3, at the Morris Street Methodist Church.
Legion Post 4 Unit Bridge Party Set
Auxiliary to Post 4, American Legion, is to have its final luncheon bridge Tuesday at the Indianapelis Athletic Club. Mrs, L. J. Badollet, unit’s activities chairman, is in charge of arrangements, assisted by Mrs. W. R. McGeehan.
Resort Lure Holds Many Vacationers
September Best Part of. Recreation Season, They Say.
By MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Although the swansong has been sung for the season at many lake resorts, as far as activities go, several families who own cottages at Northern resorts are lingering on into the autumn. With the hectic rush of house parties, resort dances and village fairs merely a summer rememsbrance, the very late summer offers the most enjoyable vacation period of the season, according to many vacationers. Cottagers at Burt Lake, Mich, who expect to spend the September there in the assured coolness of lake breezes include the Perry Lesh family and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hoke. Philip Boyd, who formerly lived in Indianapolis, and Mrs. Boyd come all the way from California each summer to enjoy this lake resort and are among the last to leave its shores. Which speaks well for the spot . . . California weather being what it is.
Ruckelshauses May Go Back
Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus, who opened her Burt Lake summer home early in the summer, expects to return to town next week to join Mr, Ruckelshaus, who has remained here during most of the hot weather. Together, the Ruckelshauses may return to Michigan for a short
P.| time later this fall to oversee move
ing the resort house.
William Stafford and son William Jr. left yesterday to join Mrs. Stafford at their Leland, Mich., summer home. They plan to remain for several weeks before locking up the cottage. The Staffords’ daughter, Mrs. John Mead, Ft. Wayne, who has been with her mother during August, also is to remain for another two weeks to complete the family group. Mid-September probably will see the feturn here of the G. B. Moxley family, who have spent the better part of the summer at their spacious home in Canada.
Due Back From Michigan
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Ayres are coming back from a vacation at Les Cheneaux, Mich.,, within the next week or two. The Sylvester Johnsons, who have been enjoying a summer of ranch life at their Wyoming home, The Homestead, are due to arrive here the middle of next week. Miss Mary Luten, also vacationing at a ranch, called Mountain View, in New Mexico, expects to remain there throughout the month. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Oakes are among the Michigan cottagers lingering on until the middle of this month at Bellaire, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Griffith returned last week from a summer at their seashore home in Little Boars Head, N. HA. The Jeremiah Cadick family arrived today from North Port Point, Mich., after a month’s vacation at the lake resort where they previously have sume mered for three seasons.
Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Dixon, 718 E, 17th St, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Verna Clay Dixon, to Kenneth Wayne Wright, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Wright, Hall, Ind. The wed ding is to take place in the near
future.
acation’s past . . .
But class is fun when
Lowell 1s play ce SCHOOL starts loday!
Oh, news so cruel! Dig out the books! Trudge off to school!
So... lots of milk: morn, noon and night!
youn chillin can wow get
FRESH "MIL
kids feel right,
EVERY DAY AT SCHOOL
