Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 December 1937 — Page 6

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PAGE 6 __ |

Wade Recreation Room

Christening Set Today;

llege Stag

70 Await Co

Many Who Tried Hand

2

By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON

on Those Variegated

Walls to Take Part in Play Basement Dedication; Youngsters Frolic at Skating Party.

: The last blob of. paint is dry and everything's in readiness for the christening of Mr. and Mrs, Harry V.

Wade’s new recreation room

this afternoon. Mr. and

Mrs. Wade are to entertain a number of friends, including some who helped wield brushes at painting parties, at

a tea dance in honor of Mrs. Lester.

Wade's sister, Miss Carol

Miss Lester who came from Albany, N. Y., to spend the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Wade is, in her more serious moments, attending meetings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

There’s been lots of fun in

the basement of the Wade

house in Golden Hill as modern decor has been applied by amateur talent. In order toget away from the monotony of walls all the same color, they have painted one wall red, one blue and two yellow. At each end of the room are long mirrors and on all the walls are photo-

graphic murals. There's a large bay window at one side. The dancing part of the party is to be in the new room and

tea is to be served upstairs.

The tea table in the dining room will

be arranged with holiday decorations, and a number of Mrs. Wade's

friends will assist her there.

Included in the group who will pour

at various times during the afternoon are Mesdames Samuel Runnels Harrell, Donald Mattison, Henrik Mayer, Booth Tarkington Jameson, Erwin Cory Stout, G. Vance Smith, Hugh Carpenter and

Albert Lang. 2 2 =

The college boys are going into

= s = a huddle and leave the young

women to catch up on a much-needed rest before New Year's Eve when William H. McMurtrie gives his annual stag dinner at Woodstock Club this evening. Seventy guests are to be seated at a U-

shaped table decorated with candles and Christmas wreaths. piano player will accompany the boys A few toasts are also to be given as a

lege songs.

A

in their lusty singing of colpart of the en-

tertainment for this evening set aside for the young men. A wide assortment of colleges will be represented at the party with students from Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, Williams, Cornell, Hamilton, Connecticut Wesleyan, Indiana, Wabash, DePauw, Purdue, Colorado, Arizona, Illinois, Michigan, Perinsylvania, Swarthmore, Johns Hopkins, Brown and Lawrenceville Preparatory School. Out-of-town guests will include William Diven and Thomas Werbe,

Anderson; Richard Jennings, Newcastle, and Harold Cunning,

ville, Ky.

Mays-

8 2.8 : 2 =» To the deafening whistle of the calliope little girls with pigtails

swinging,

sub-debs with curls bobbing, small boys and large and a

few mothers roller skated at Riverside Skating Rink yesterday after-

noon.

Several tumbles, but no broken bones,

made the party staged

by the Tudor Hall Alumnae Association to help fill the coffers of the Undergraduate Scholarship Fund a lively affair. A quartet of small girls which skipped along the walk to the skating rink was audibly thrilled with their first sight of a roller

coaster and other dismantled amusement devices.

Their excitement

grew as they heard the faint sounds of “The Sidewalks of New York”

issuing from the rink.

Among the larger skating parties were those given by- Mrs. Alex Meizger for her daughter, Louise; Mrs. Charles Harvey Bradley's for her daughter, Barkara, and Mrs. A. K. Scheidenhelm’s for her daugh-

ter, Gene. : - Mesdames Dan Flickinger,

william R. Simpson and Robert Ray

Bunch acted as judges for two skating contests held during the after-

noon. Barbara Klein won the gifls’ prize ) 12. The judges selected six boys and six girls. 12, and the crowd on the sidelines picked Moyra

for children under from the group over Saxton and Basil Reiss as winners.

2 » #

and Jack Jelliffe the boys’

s # #

Resort clothes are the costumes to be worn by guests at Mr.

and Mrs. Dudley R. Gallahue’s Palm in their “home.

Beach party tomorrow evening

A group of friends who have spent New Year's

eve together for several years will amuse themselves with impromptu stunts as the main feature of the evening's entertainment. Kurt F. Pantzer is to act as master of ceremonies. Guests at the party are to include Messrs. and Mesdames Pantzer, Earl B. Barnes, sierman C. Krannert, John K. Ruckelshaus, Paul R. Matthews, John B. Stokely, William B. Stokely, Miss Emita Ferriday, Wilmington, Del., Mrs. Pantzer’s sister who has been spending the holidays here; Edward F. Gallahue and Julius Birge.

2 ” # Joseph Blakeslee

#® # #

is the guest of William VanNuys, son of Sen-

ator and Mrs. Frederick VanNuys, in Washington, for the holidays. Mrs. Frank Howard, Bedford, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Zinn. Mr. and Mrs. J. Mack Ely have as their guests Mr. and Mrs.

R. T. Beglinger of Cincinnati. Mr. and Mrs. Laurens son, Laurens Jr. left yesterday to Ariz.

she will spend the winter.

L. Henderson, their daughter, Janet, and

spend two months in Phoenix,

Mrs. R. G. Stall left yesterday for Daytona Beach, Fla., where

Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Rogers are to return today from a visit

in Chicago. =

-

* National Officers Scheduled to | Talk Before A. A. U. W. Here

—-

be contributed to the Million Dol-

* clubroom in the Woman's Depart-

#s

= -~

xs -

"Chapel Neighborhood House. ; Books

w wo

CARY ERR ERRD

> > od

%

“a wo

« an intensified study of juvenile de-

: “in the Consumers’ Research Group

Creative Writing Class again this

Two national executives of the

American Association of University

Women are to speak before the local branch in January and May, accord-

ing

be the guest of the ret S. Morriss,

to an announcement today by Mrs. Calvin R. Hamilton, president. On Jan. 18, Dr. Kathryn McHale, A. A. U. W. general director, is to Evening Discussion group of the local branch. Dr. Pembroke College, national president of the associa-

tion, is to speak here in May. In a letter mailed to members, the organization’s objectives and activities for the opening of a new year are outlined in detail. The association is to sponsor a play in the spring. Proceeds are to

lar Fellowship Fund. Contributions to the group’s new

ment Club clubhouse are to be made.

by bridge groups formed recently. “The objectives of the Social paon-

lems unit in the coming mon linquency, juvenile courts and particularly the Marion County Juvenile Court. It has been arranged that individual members may assist with a club for women at the Mayer

to Be Reviewed . Books of today, some fiction and some biography and a few of scientific interest, are to be reviewed and discussed at meetings of the Contemporary Literature group. A Creative Arts Class is to be formed if there is a demand for one, according to the organization executives. ~~ Women or remodel houses will be interestec|

‘meetings. Buying problems are to be stressed particularly. Dr. Allegra Stewart, English and short story writing instructor at Butler University, is teaching the

year. Class work in the coming - months is’ to include criticism of

- members’ stories besides the study

Sa

to center about the Far crisis.- The historical background of both China and Japan, international complications, Amer’s stake in the Pacific and related

oF

who are planning to build |

nal Relations]: * lating program for the new year.|.. Study is - Eastern

~

zation members. The Evening Discussion Group meets each fourth Tuesday night in the Business and Professional Women’s Club clubhouse for a dinner meeting. Programs are being arranged to follow the dinner. Members interested in speaking and reading better are joining .the Speaking Choir.

| Mrs. William B. Wilcoz is president of the Indiana University Women’s Club of Indianapolis, which is to. entertain

with a tea "in the L. 8S. Ayres & Co, auditorium.

Talesnick, daughter of Mr. and

5 Smith College Students Speak In Club Meeting

Five students of Smith spoke on various phases of school life at the Smith College Club luncheon today noon in the Woodstock Club. Alumnae, 34 Tudor Hall and Shortridge High School students and other prospective students attended. Prof. Howard Meyerhoff, professor of geology at the school, is to speak. Students who spoke included the Misses Maude Balke, Virginia Balke, Patricia Jones, Patricia Taggart and Barbara. Hadley. Mrs. David P. Williams Jr. and Mrs. John Pearson Jr. were in charge of arrangements.

Turpin-Leonard Nuptials Are Set

Times Special WINNETKA, Ill, Dec. 30.—Miss Harriet Leonard, daughter of John R. Leonard of this city, is to become the pride of William R. Turpin, Indianapolis,- at. 4:30 p m. Saturday. The Rev. E. Ashley Gerhard is to read the ceremony at Christ Church. The bride-to-be will be given in marriage by her father. Mrs. Frode Jensen, Miss Leonard’s sister, is to be matron of honor, and Miss Helen Chapman, Evanston, is to be maid of honor Bridesmaids are to be Mrs. Daniel Leonard and Miss Jean Gourlay, Winnetka; Mrs: Edward P. Carter Jr., New York, and Mrs. Hibbard Casselberry, Winter Park, Fla. 3 ° Harrison James Carter of New York is to be best man and ushers are to be Daniel Leonard, Winnetka, brother of the bride; Dr. Frode Jensen, brother-in-law of the bride; D. John Turpin, Indianapolis, brother of the bridegroom; Harold Waller, Winnetka; Arthur G. Leonard Jr., Wilmington, Ill, and Edward Carter Jr., New York. :

Coyle-Wood Rites

Held in Louisville

The marriage of Miss Mary Elizabeth Woods, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Woods, 5616 E. Michigan St., to Lewis William Coyle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oral C. Coyle, Warsaw, has been announced. The ceremony took -place Jan. 9 in Louisville. Mrs. Coyle is an Indiana University senior. Mr. Coyle received his degree from the Indiana University Law School. He is a member of the Indiana Bar Asso-

ciation. - After Jan. 1, the couple is to be at home at 5627 Julian Ave.

WF

Dexheimer-Carion Phoio. Mrs. Philip Fichman was Miss Thelma

Talesnick, before her marriage on Dec. 19 in

College |

. Year's Day.

Recent

¥ Mrs. Louis

here.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __

Miss Lorraine Beauchamp, daughter of William L. Beauchamp, became the bride of Leon L. Goodman in a recent ceremony

Indianapolis

Plowman-Platt Photo.

Dec. 26.

discussion of Jan. 29 dance.

Whitehill auditorium.

Talbot, hostess. Kuhn.

EVENTS .

: ] . COUNCILS Panhellenic. 6:30 p. m. Mon. 5157 Park Ave. Business meeting and

Indianapolis Council, P. E. O. Sisterhood. 10 a. m. Mon: Banner-

LODGES Past Grand Arch Druids. Noon today. Miss Mary Geider, 1822 S. Assistants, Mrs. Bertha Lynch and Mrs. Bertha Past, Chiefs Association, Myrtle Temple Sisters. Noon today. Mrs. George Jenkins, +1536 Olive St., + CLUB

North Side Mothers. Noon, today. Mrs. L. M. Maroney, 4468 Guilford, hostess. Annual covered dish luncheon and gift exchange.

hostess. Covered dish luncheon.

night.

Personals

Dr. Maxwell. Jones, Edinburgh, Scotland, has been spending the holidays with his aunt, Mrs. William M. Rockwood, ‘Spring Mill Road, and Mr. Rockwood. Judge and Mrs. Smiley N. Chambers, 1605 N. Talbot Ave, have left for Hanover, N. H., where they are to spend two weeks as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Stone. Miss Ruth Bybee Milliken of New York, formerly of Indianapolis, returned East yesterday after spending the holidays here with her sister Mrs. Fisk Landers, Golden Hill. Mr.-and Mrs. John G. Williams and Mr. Williams’ sister, Mrs. Owen Lovejoy, Reno, Nev. are to go to New York for the New Year’s weekend. ‘ Returning to her home in Washington, D. C., today is Mrs. Metcalf Walling who has been spending the holidays with her mother, Mrs. A. R. Holliday, Golden Hill. Mrs. Walling is the former Miss Frances Holliday of this city. Miss Martha Wood, Evanston, I. is spending the week between Christmas and New Year’s with her mother, Mrs. Frank W. Wood, 2933 N. Meridian St. Miss Wood is a member of the staff of the Evanston Family Welfare Society as a psychiatric social worker, Visiting Miss Wood and her

Baroness von Holsteen of New York. The Baroness is the former Miss Mary Elizabeth Staples, Shelbyville,

Columbia University. . . Mr. and Mrs. James B. Nelson of the Marott Hotel are to leave Jan. 20 for Miami Beach, Fla, where they are to spend the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Herold H. Reinecke, 3216 N. Pennsylvania St, are to hold open house from 3-7 p. m, New Mrs. Reinecke is to be assisted by Mrs. Maurice W. Klefeker. No invitations will be issued. Mr. and Mrs. Jo Desha McDowell, who’ have been the holiday guests of Mrs. Hortense Rauh Burpee, 3025

| N. Meridian St., have returned to

has been visiting Richard T. Miskimen. : Attending the Trader's Point Hunt breakfast on New Year's Day at the Woodstock Club will be Mrs. Bur‘pee, who is to have as her guests, Mrs. Agnes Duggan; Bethlehem, N. Y., Herbert Reade, and Edward Ogle. Mrs. Myra G. Clippinger is visiting in New York. ; Miss Lucy Anne Meurer, 4714 Central Ave. is spending the holi-

:| days in News York City as a guest of

‘her aunt, Mrs. Charles Northam Lee. Miss Meurer is a Purdue University

9

mother for a few days has been the |

and is a student of anthropology, at,

Gilbert Ogle |

700 Expected to Dance at LA. C. New Year's Eve Party

: Seven hundred members and guests of the Indianapolis Athletic Club are expected to attend the club’s New Year's: Eve party tomorrow

The annual New Year’s Day dinner dance on Saturday is to bring to a close the club's round of holiday events. > Dancing at tomorrow’s event is

‘to be in the Lantern Room and the fourth floor ballroom, with Louie Lowe's I. A. C. orchestra and Jack Berry's orchestra playing at intervals in both rooms. Supper is to be served at 12:30. ; Entertainers from Chicago ' include Maurice and Nadja, ballroom dancing team; Miss Marion Renee, dancer; Lois Marie, acrobatic dancer; -the eight Bytonettes and Eddie Bates, master of ceremonies. Reservations for the event began coming in last April when C. C. Cooper arranged a table for 20 guests. Miss Betty Augustus is to have 22 at her table. Other Table Reservations ‘Other members who have made table reservations for parties numbering from 10 to 20 persons include Paul O. Ferrel, C. D. Ward, A. E. Dorsey, A. G. Wilson, Dr. FP. M. Gastineau, Paul - Starrett, A. M. Campbell, Davis - Harrison, Harold Jafle, George ' Davis, George L. Brinkworth, J. E. Miller, W. C. Bevington, Charles Ray, Sam Allen C. E. Moreland, J. A. Swope, Glenn Benner, William Bennett, Charles Johnson, Maurice Harrell, J. ‘A. Sturdyvin, J. A. Brower, H. L. Drake Jr. and C. R. Gillespie.

Cains Entertained At Flory’s Home

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Flory entertained last night at their home with a dinner party in honor of Mrs. Lee Cain and her daughter, Miss Betty Cain, of Denver and Robert Cain of Flint, Mich. ‘Mrs. Cain, her daughter and son are the holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell F. Eickenberry. Mrs. Eickenberry assisted the hostess. Decorations and appointments were in a New Year's motif. Bridge followed dinner.

Weddings

Mr. and Mrs. Meyer B. Cohen are at home at 1138 N. Meridian St. . Miss Sadye Dock before her marriage on

Plowman-Platt Photo.

Mrs. Cohen was:

I. U. Trustee Is Speaker at Club Tea Here Today

(Photo Below) Mrs. Sanford F. Teter, Bloomington, Indiana University trustee, is to speak’before members of the local Indiana University Women’s Club and their guests at a tea this afternoon in the L. S. Ayres & Co. auditorium. : Mrs. Teter is to speak on “Behind the Scenes at Indiana.” Mrs. Walter S. Greenough is to tell of the work and plans of the University Alumni Association. The talks are to follow an informal reception and short business meeting. Tea is to follow a style show. Hostesses are to be the Mesdames William Hutchison, Albert Stump, Daniel T. Weir, P. R. Hightower, Herman Gray, Gordon Batman, Warren Oakes, C. O. McCormick, Stuart Wilson. Homer Eberhart and the Misses Ruby Bell, Ruth Gorman, Mary Kervan and Hazel Force. All graduates, former students and women students home for the holjdays are invited to attend. The University Book Store in Bloomington is to have a display at the tea, including campus scenes, etchings and a recently published book by President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan.

Xi Delta Xi to Hold

New Year's Festival

Members and friends of. Alpha and. Delta chapters of Xi Delta Xi Sorority are to attend a New Year's party and dance Saturday evening at the Hotel Washington. Miss Helen Scanling is arrangements chairman. Mrs. Windsor T.

but frocks and frivolity.

Next Year With Tir

Students Home On Holiday Are Guests of Honor

Young women home from .schools and colleges are being feted at many holiday * luncheons and parties.

| Three luncheons yesterday were at-

tended by students visiting parents during the Christmas recess. Miss Berta Conley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Conley, 524 E. 44th St. gave a iuncheon yesterday in her parents’ home in honor of

four young women who are home from college for the holidays. The guests of honor were Miss Dorothy Jean Bates of Purdue University; Miss Peggy Ann Sturgis of Western College; Miss Helen Marxer from DePauw University, and Miss Claire Quinn of St. Marys-of-the-Woods. Other guests were the Misses Dorothy Mansfield, Jerry Hughes, Virginia Johnson and Phyllis Donahue. The hostess was assisted by her mother, # ” ¥ The Misses Anna Hereth, Barbara Sternberger, Jean: Clairmont and Helen Yates entertained yesterday with ‘a luncheon in the home of Miss Hereth, 402 E. 37th St. Guests included Miss Margaret Wallace, Ashland, O. and the Misses Louise Cohee, Barbara Badge, Mary Helen Madden, Dorothy Evans, Jean Smelser, Mary Myers and Sue Gabe. = 2 » Mrs. Carl McCaskey, 3551 Washington Blvd., entertained yesterday with a luncheon and card party in honor of her daughter, Miss Lois McCaskey, who, is home from DePauw University for the holidays. Guests with Miss McCaskey included the Misses Johann McClean, Jean Pennington, Julia Anne Pen-

Cohen, -Betty : Finch, Jane Shaw, Anne Holmes and Margaret McClure. Several of the guests attend DePauw with the guest of honor.

Events Set for New Year Party At French Lick

Skeet shooting, a golf tournament and a New Year's Eve dance and midnight supper at French Lick this week-end are to attract many members of Indianapolis society. Leaving tomorrow are to be Messrs. and Mesdames Garvin Brown, Roger Wolcott, Sylvester Johnson, ‘W. Hathaway Simmons, Albert J. Beveridge Jr., W. Richardson Sinclair, Sylvester Johnson Jr. Charles Greathouse Jr., Fabien Sevitzky; Misses Mary Johnson, Nancy Lockwood, Anne Ayres, Letitia Sinclair, Prudence Brown, Mary Sheerin Kuhn. Also John Ryan, Peter Hackleman, Burford Danner, John Rockwood, Sylvester Johnson Jr. and

White is in charge of the door cards and Mrs. Earl Wilson, favors.

3 Parties, Open

‘Eve parties and an open house attend the Indianapolis Country

treat groups attending the dance at the Indianapolis Country Club is to be one which includes Messrs. and Mesdames Harrison Eiteljorg, J. I. Cummings, Charles E. -Rogers, Talbot Denny, Silas Reagan, Robert Stang, Columbus, Ind.; Miss Nancy Ballinger, Carl Weiss, Wal-

|ter Schott and Robert M. Arm-

strong. Mr, and Mrs. Otto William Eisenlchr plan to entertain informally New Year's Eve at their home, 4735 N. Illinois St., before

going to the club. Guests are to be

Mr. and Mrs. Duncan R. Miller, Mr.

Thomas Sinclair, who has been visiting in Lakeland, Fla.

House Added

To Gay New Year's Calendar

. Added to the week-end’s gay social calendar are three New Year's on New Club ennual dinner dance.

Among the many large Dutch &—

Year's Day. Three groups plan to

and Mrs. Dillon Huder, Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Todd, Miss Frances Kearby and Arthur Kelly, Navel

Air Station, Norfolk, Va. At another table are to be Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Weathers and Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Cantwell. On New Year's Day, Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Noel are to entertain with an open house from 4-6 p. m. in their home, 5455 N. Meridian St. Honor guests are to be Miss Barbara Noel and Jerome Noel, son

and daughter of the host and hostess. There are to be no invitations.

Vassar Professor Attends Club Luncheon

nington, Betty Jane Grauel, Estelle |

G by a

THURSDAY, DEC. 30, 1

City Club Women Facing

Traffic Safety, Public Health, Child Delinque Citizenship, World Peace and Other Problems To Be Studied by Various Groups.

Fashionable magazines assume that women’s lives encompass little

But Indianapolis club women are facing a ‘new year. and their programs and objectives are as timely and vital as today’s news ~® dispatches.

Problems of safety, public health, world peace, child delinquency, mental health, American citizenship, the patronage system and adult education are to be studied in atterapts to discover solutions. Public welfare, comprising . probs lems of public health, child health, delinquency, mental health, industry and safety are to be stressed during January .by clubs in the Seventh District Federation of Clubs. ’ The safety programs are to be conducted in co-operation with the Indianapolis Civic Safety League. February is to be devoted to & study of American citizenship.

President’s Council to Meet

‘Further plans for the year’s course are to be outlined at a dise trict president's council meeting Jan. T in the Claypool Hotel, called by Mrs. W. D. Keenan, seventh dis-

trict president. Each club in the district has been asked to feature citizenship programs during February in prepa-

which has been set aside by the general federation as “Americanization Week.” Mrs. Henry W. Ker, Indianapolis Council of Women president, has announced that the organization is to intensify its efforts to gather information for clubs: on current civic problems. The council serves as 8 clearing house for 111 local clubs, studies utilities in an effort to reduce rates, and educates women as buyers. At present the council is co-operating in its work with the Better-Business Bureau and the Smoke Abatement Les gue. :

Safety to Be Stressed

Meeds for safety education, not only on the street, but in the home, and parent education are to be stressed at Parent-Teacher Association meetings this year, according to Mrs. Logan G. Hughes, Indiana Congress P.-T. A. president, . Mrs. Hughes has called a state board of managers meeting to be held Jan. 11 in the Severin Hotel. Plans for the state Convention May 3-3 in the Claypool Hotel are to be made. Founder's Day is to be observed in February. ° League of Women Voter members are to continue working for aboli-

| tion: of the spoils system and pro-

tection for consumers under food and drugs legislation.

act pending in Congress, which would place first, second and thirdclass postmasters under the civil service law. :

Opposes McKellar Bill

The league is opposed to the McKellar bill which proposes to abroe gate the President’s recent execu tive order plaeing these postmasters under civil service law. Miss Mary Sinclair, league execu= tive secretary, said today that ate tention was also centered on bills having to do with child labor legislation. Sunnyside Guild, of which Mrs. Irving Hamilton is president, is to continue its services to tubercular patients and their families. : Radios have been installed at each bedside in the hospital. The guild, which bought a moving picture machine, furnishes films once a week. A benefit dance is to be held the last of February in the Columbia Club. : The Indianapolis branch, Ameri can Association of University Women, is to continue to stress adult education by means of classes and study groups, according to Mrs. Calvin R. Hamilton, branch president, Offers Legislative Support Maintainence of high educational standards in the community, state and nation throughout practical educational efforts is the object of the A. A. U. W.

self willing to support any state or city legislation worthy of support, promote international peace, and contribute to fellowships for advanced women scholars. Obtainment of cultural and prace tical knowledge of peoples and cone ditions of international interest, is to continue to be the objective of : clubs in the International Travel. Study Club Federation. x Mrs. Merle C. Safford, president, said today that lectures and study courses about other countries cultivate thought in world terms and thus aid world peace. Dr. John J. Haramy, lecturer, who spent several years in the Holy Land, and Mrs. Demarchus Brown are to be among the speakers at Travel-Study Club meetings d the next few weeks. :

$100 Gifts to Be Enlisted

Twenty-five anniversary gifts of $100 each are to be enlisted in honor of the Public Health Nursing Ase -sociation’s 25th anniversary this year. : Proceeds are to go for nurses’ services. Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz, president, has announced ‘that the annual meeting, which is to be a silver jubilee luncheon, is to be held Jan. 13 in the Claypool Hotel Chateau Room. A play depicting tre organization's early activities is to be featured on the program. The Riley Hosiptal Cheer Guild is to intensify its efforts to provide

ma=:

fund donated Porter, guild 3

ration for the week of March 4, . .

The league supports the Ramspeck % A fd

The organization has declared ite