Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1938 — Page 6
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A NII A IN A SE GB 0
-Legion.”
Dartmouth Glee Club
Will Be Entertained At Dance Here Tonight
Ball to Follow Their Program at Caleb Mills Hall; ‘Robin Hood’ to Be Presented at Children’s Civic Theater.
Dartmouth College Glee Club members will have the comeliest of Indianapolis debutantes for their partners
“at a dance in their honor tonight at the Woodstock club.
The event is to follow their program tonight in Caleb Mills Hall
- under the auspices of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Junior Auxiliary
and the Dartmouth College Alumni Association. The dance is the first money-making project sponsored by the recently organized junior group. Proceeds will be donated to the
Day Nursery.
The college’s Barbary Coast Orchestra will play for dancing. It is one of the most popular bands for Eastern college proms. Miss Barbara Haines leads the debutante committee which will
form the receiving line at the beginning of the dance. the committee are Misses Katherine
Mary Sheerin Kuhn, Josephine Mayer, Betty Messick, Joan Metzger, Betsy
Sylvia Griffith, Dorothy Braden,
Home, Barbara Stafford, Nina Broan,
Snyder. x
Others on Cunningham, Alice Vonnegut, Barbara Noel, Anne Johnston,
Prudence Brown and Jane
Several Parties to Be Formed
Several groups, both large and s ance and dance to follow. Mr. and
as their dinner guests before the performance Mr. and
mall, are to attend the performMrs. Leroy Gordner are to have
Mrs. George
Daily and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Massoth. Attending together will be Messrs. and Mesdames Arthur T. Cox,
Frank Binford and Frederick E. Matson. have been made by Fred Clippinger, Thomas Lamb, Dan d John Bookwalter.
Reservations also John Noble, Harvey Bradley,
Zinn, James Murray, Ned Merrell an Mr. and Mrs. John E. Messick, 3525 club members with a buffet Mrs. Messick is vice president of the auxiliary and is a debutante committee member. Supper guests will
tertain for the glee performance. Miss Messick
James T. Cunningham,
Washington Blvd., will en=supper before the
include all glee club members except those attending dinner parties
given by Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Albright and Miss Barbata Stafford.
Walter W. Kuhn Jr. and George Mahoney Jr., two vacationing
Dartmouth students, will entertain s leges at a dinner at the Woodstock Club. Russell Ryan bash; Donald Test, Princeton;
Their guests will include
Harvard; Ward Hackleman Jr., Wa Jerome Noel, Cornell; Harry Rhodehamel Jr, Miller, Purdue. : °
Civic Theater once again in Sherwood Forest when
‘Robin Hood’ at
Adventure will ride high
tudents from several other col-
Jr. and John Rauch, Robert Brant and Sam
“Robin Hood” is presented Saturday and Sunday at the Children’s
Civic Theater.
The play, which was presented several years ago at the theater,
has heen adapted
this time by Muriel Brown, productions for several years at the Goodman Theater,
who directed children’s Chicago, and
also has had experience in script writing at Hollywood. The play °
ries of incidents in the life of Bay the Sheriff of Nottingham, is an estab-
for 14 months with the Federal Theater.
Hal Hawkes, who plays lished player, having worked
Robin Hood.
He was seen recently in the Civic Theater's last production, “First
James Muller, also of “First
Legion” fame, is to play the cele-
brated “Little John,” Robin's trusted henchman, and the incompara=
ble Robin will be Billy Shirley. Mr. of amazement to those the boy-actor class, he has
who have followed his career. been a prominent Children’s Theater
Shirley’s versatility is a matter
Hardly out of
player for five years, juvenile lead in the Civic’s production of “Se=
cret Service” and a “song-and-dance
revue, “Dollars to Doughnuts.”
» man in the recent musical
“Priar Tuck,” whose quaint humor and lovable eccentricities make
him second only in fiction to Shakespeare's by Allen Beck, who took the part only Sunday. |
Falstaff, will be played
The charming “Maid Marion,” whose flight into the forest, clad as a page to seek the protection of the gallant Robin makes one of the play’s most arresting scenes, will be portrayed by Miss Elizabeth
Weiss. The spurned daughter of the Betty Carter, Miss Carter’s mother,
costume department for many years and
who is also an “old trouper” of t Mrs. Donald H. Carter, has been active in the
Sheriff will be in the hands of Miss
e Children’s Theater,
is solely responsible for the
assembling, designing and execution of costumes. The cast is composed chiefly of adults and “Robin Hood” will
be the last production of the season.
2:30 p. m. performances on Saturday and, for the first time,
Sunday performance.
be 10:30 a. m. and a3p m
There are
Mrs. D. L. Chambers in New Yor
Mrs. David Laurance Chambers is in Ne
York visiting her
daughter, Miss Evelyn, wio is taking a post-graduate course in Amer=
ican History at Columbia University. They Chambers’ son, David Laurance Chambers Jr., ' yard Law School, who will spend his spring vacation in New York.
ere joined by Mrs. a student at the Har-
Thomas T. Sinclair has returned from Princeton University, to spend the holidays with his parents, Mr. and | Mrs. W. Richardson
| Sinclair, Crow’s Nest.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Lynn, Crow’s Nest, | left several days ago
| for New York. They were to sail today on the
a two months’ stay in England.
| Mr. land Mrs. Walter C. Marmon, | evening from Palm Springs, Cal, where they Mrs. Philip Boyd, and Mr. Boyd. | Mr. and Mrs. Dana Stevens, Annapolis, house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Fortune, have returned to their
home.
2 S. Queen Mary for
Brendonwood, returned last ited their daughter, {
Md, who have been the
vil Mr. and Mrs. William Avery Atkins, olden Hill, have returned from Grand Rapids, Mich., where they visited 1
rs. Atkins daughter,
Mrs. William L. Taggart, and Mr. Taggart. Mrs. Taggart was Miss Dorothy DuPuy of this city before her marriage.
Mrs. John Martindale was at Miami Beach. Miss Susan Gatch, daughter of
to return today from her winter home
Dr. and Mrs. Willis D. Gatch,
has returned to spend the spring holidays with her parents. Miss
° Gatch is a student at Wellesley College.
Mrs. William Coleman Atkins and her aunt, Miss Elizabeth Brown, are spending some time at a ranch near Jokake, Ariz. They will go to California before returning home. Mrs. Atkins and Miss Brown have made an extended visit to the West. ; Officers are to be elected at the Junior League’s annual meeting Tuesday.afternoon at the American United Life Building. All mem-
yearly reports.
_ bers are required to attend. Committee chairmen will read their
Noon Wedding
Today for
Miss Day and Stewart Smith
A cascade of lilies banked with palms and candelabra provided an attractive background for. the marriage of Miss Dorothy Day to Stewart R. Smith at noon today at the First Presbyterian Church. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Huntington Day, 3938 Broadway. Mr. Smith is a son of the Rev. and Mrs. Francis E.
Smith, 530 W. 44th St.
x
Dr. J. Ross Stevenson, Princeton,®
N. J., the bride’s uncle, read the
| ceremony assisted by Dr. George . Arthur Frantz, pastor of the church.
Miss Gertrude Free, organist, played a group of bridal airs, including “Bridal Chorus” from «Tohengrin” by Wagner, and “Wedding March” from “A Midsummer Night's Dream,” by Mendelssohn; «I jebestraum,” “I Love You Truly,” and “Ave Maria.” : The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore the wedding gown of her aunt, Mrs. James Y. Simpson, Edinburgh, Scotland. The dress was cream colored satin fashioned on princess lines with a square neck, and a long train trimmed in lace. Her long twotiered: tulle veil was caught with orange blossoms and .she carried a shower of gardenias, lilies of the valley and orchids. ‘Miss Anne Tennant, maid of hon-
or, wore a dubonnet lace dress with |
a matching picture hat and slippers. Her bouquet was composed of Talisman and Johanna Hill roses and delphinium. : Frederick Huntington Day Jr. was best man, and classmates of Mr. Smith at Indiana Medi «ushered. They were: uel Manalin, Milton McCall, Pdul Rieth and : the bride’s mother, kers’ cape navy blue crepe with repscroll trim, a sailor hat with a
snood veil and blue accessories: with white accents. 7 Mrs. Smith, mother, wore Watteau periwinkle blue silk crepe fashioned with a lace yoke and navy accessories. Mrs. Day’s flowers, lilies of the valley, Talisman roses and iris, were fashioned in a waist corsage. Mrs. Smith wore sweetheart roses and lilies of the valley. The couple received in the church foyer "after the ceremony. A wedding breakfast for the bridal party, immediate families and out-of-town guests followed at the Propylaeum. Out-of-town guests at the ceremony were Dr. and Mrs. Stevenson; Mrs. Chdrles R. Williams, New York, formerly of Indianapolis; Mrs. Edward P. King and, daughter Rosemary, Charleston, W. Va.
The couple will be at home at 835 N. Delaware St., following a week’s
motor trip. i
The bride, who was graduated
from Butler University, will receive
her M. A. degree in June from Indiana University Graduate School for Social Service. She is a member 6f Alpha Chi Omega Sorority. Mr. Smith, who also was grad-
Juated from Butler, will take a de-|stalled
gree in June from Indiana Medical School. He is a member of Alpha Omiegs Alpha, medical honorary
the bridegroom’s
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CANDIDATES FOR RIVIERA CLUB'S ‘SWEETHEART
/ Riviera Club’s “Sweetheart” will be announced at the Riviera. Royal Reveliers. annual Easter dance April 17. Candidates -include
BRIDE-TO-BE - . .
I. U. Extension Photo. Miss Martha Jane Mode, Jeffer= sonville, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Mode, Muncie, will be married Saturday to William Johnson, Jeffersonville.
Miniature mannequins are (left to right), Marjorie Lowe, Norma Jean Doak and Betty Jane Bellfry, daughters of members of the Woman’s Auxiliary to the Railway Mail "Association.
They modeled
HEADS DINNER. .
Dexheimef-Carlon Photo. Miss Ruth Stone is chairman of the DePauw University alumni dinner and rally at 6:30 p. m. tonight at the Broadway Methodist Church.
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Times Photo.
(left to| right) Misses Dorothy McCleaster, Barbara Jean Osterheld, Irma Berry, Ruth Beauchamp and Sue Ann Knippenberg.
MODELS FOR CHILDREN’S STYLE SHOW
Virginia Edwards Photo.
clothes made by the sewing committee for children who attend Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp at the auxiliary’s annual dinner last night at the Woman's Department Club. .
. SALE CHAIRMAN .
: Moorefield Photo, Mrs. Marvin E. Curle is chairman of the annual Girl Scout Cookie sale to be April 30. Proceeds will go to the fund for maintenance of Camp Dellwood.
With Easter
Country Clubs Herald Spring
Party and Dance
Gountry club parties may be added to diminishing coal bills and the appearance of Easter bonnets as signs of spring. a Local clubs, almost inactive since the holidays, have responded to spring sunshine and announced dates for early season avents. :
are to be entertained at an Easter Egg Hunt on Easter afternoon. Eggs will be hidden in the playground and around the swimming pool. In case of rain, children will be sent to the attic for their frolic. A plate lunch, games and moving pictures are to follow. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Pinnell and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rogers are cochairmen of the event.
Claude Jones, Robert Stempfel and Walter Stuhldreher are chairmen of the annual formal dinner dance to open the club season Saturday night, April 30. Music for dancing is to be provided by a Bloomington orchestra. Spring housecleaning at Highland Golf and Country Club has been
frigerating equipment has been in- , the men’s locker room has been overhauled and the ladies’ locker room Tedeporated. Sa The season open formally Sat April 23, with *a dinner:
completed. . A new cooking and re-|
Indianapolis Country Club kiddies®-
dance. Music is to be provided by
Larry Price and his orchestra. Res-
ervations are to be made at the clubhouse. The main dining room was opened Sunday night The house committee includes Chester L. Robinson, chairman, Jake Wolf and Emerson Chaille. | 3 . Hillcrest Country Club women golfers opened their season. yesterday with a “throw-out ' tournament.” 8 : Hillcrest women ‘bowlers will conclude their playing season tomorrow with their annual sweepstakes tournament. Luncheon at the club is to be followed by awarding of prizes. ;
Scout Mothers to Meet The Mothers’ Club of Scout Troop 72, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church,
will hold a luncheon meeting to-|Mrs. J. E.
morrow at the home of’ Mrs. H. L.
Lxuliiorg
Chaillaux to Address ‘W.C.T.U. on Loyalty
Homer L. Chaillaux, American Legion National Americanism Commission director, will speak at 2:10 p.‘'m. Friday afternoon in the home of Mrs. H. M. Stitle, 3960 Guilford Ave, under the auspices of the Central W.C. T. U. His subject. will be “Education for Loyalty.”: Mrs. Frank Boles, recently of Marion, will sing, accompanied by Mrs. B. M. McDonald. Mrs. Roy Egbert is to be pianist for the group singing. . Mrs. Payne Clark will conduct the devotions and Mrs. W. W. Reedy will preside. Members may bring
Church Unit to Hear Student Speakers
The quarterly meeting of the Third Christian Church’s Home ce Department will be “held at 2:15 p. m. tomorrow at the church parlors. Fang j Following a short business session ‘Mrs. George Goldman is to present a program by the advanced public speaking department students from
[
Indiana Dietetic Group to Hear
p. m. Friday at the Propylaeum.
Saturday morning. © Dr. John Gi. Benson,
on
at the afternoon meeting.
Deficiencies.”
New Century
this afternon at the home of Mrs Otto Ernberg, 4801 Broadway. Mrs Ernest Ruster and Mrs. Knight assisted.
dessert-luncheon.
selections by Mrs. Millicent Ward Bruce; whistling numbers by Miss Joan Robinson; dramatic excerpts by ‘Don Spicer, and numbers by the Seventh District Federation of Club’s Chorus, including Mesdames Louis Kirch, Albert Gray and Lela Holmes, accompanied by Mrs. C. W. McKean. The president, Mrs. J. Earl Brown,
preceding the program. ‘Miss Roth Engaged
To Homer Harwood Times Special ;
daughter, Betty, wood of this city.
to
Lake Freeman. : The bride-to-be attended Northwestern University and is a member of Phi Omega Pi Sorority. She
Theta Tau Sorority.
- Lenna F. Cooper
Miss Lenna FP. Cooper, national Dietetic Association president, is to be speaker at the Indiana association’s annual meeting opening at 7
Miss Cooper formerly was dean of the School of Home Economics at Battle Creek, Mich., and director of foods at the University of Michigan. Present nutrition director at Montefiore Hospital, New York, she is author of the “Nutrition in Health and Disease,” a textbook for nurses. Mrs. Mary D. Benham, Columbus, 0., will discuss “Cafeteria Manage- | ment” -at the business ' meeting
Methodist Hospital superintendent, will speak at a luncheon in the Columbia Club on “Hospital Nutrition Problems.” Dr. Irvine I. Page, director of research, Eli Lilly & Co., will speak = “Diet in the Treatment of Bright's Disease and Hypertension”
Dr. Cecilia Schuck, Purdue University nutrition professor, will discuss “Recent Developments in Clinical Methods for Detecting Vitamin
Meeting Held
Mrs. Grace Willis was in charge of the New Century Club’s program
Burton
‘The program, with-a broadcast as its thems, followed a 1 p. m.
Included on the program was a talk on the club history since 1900 by Mrs. Knight; a talk on television by Mrs. J. E. Barcus; vocal numbers by Mrs. Ernberg; dramatic
presided at the business session
° MONTICELLO, April 6—State Senator and Mrs. William Roth announce the engagement of their Homer Har-
‘The ceremony will be Easter Sunday at the Roth home near
is also a member of the local Delta
SEEING NEW YORK
Flows.”
§ | Club Broadcast
To Discuss Soil Saving Program
Indiana’s soil conservation program will be discussed at the state Federation of Club’s broadcast at 3:45 p. m. tomorrow over WFBM. Ralph E. Kriebel, Washington,
biologist from the Department ®of Agriculture, will pyrticipate. The program is'the fifth in a series sponsored by the Indiana Federation as a part of its conservation project. Mrs. Louis Markun of the Indianapolis Park Board will announce. Mrs. Andrew Jackson, pianist, will play musical interludes and the program theme song, “Trees.” Others taking part will be Mrs. Norris Ray, Indiana Federation conservation chairman, and Mrs. H. P. Willwerth, Seventh District chairman. “Conservation of Wild Life” was discussed at the broadcast last week. Miss Margaret March-Mount of the United States Forestry Service and Jackiel W. Joseph, Board of Park Commissioners president, took part.
Initiation, Ball Head Sorority Calendar Here
An initiation and dance are included in the program planned by local sororities for the next tw weeks.
Lambda Chi Delta is to hold a swing dance in the Hotel Antler’s Gold Room Saturday night. A formal initiation and dinner are to precede the ball. Miss Mae Thigpen is general arrangements chairman, assisted by Miss Frances Morgan and Miss Virginia Payen.
” 2 A dinner and formal initiation services are to be held by Beta chapter of Sigma Delta Zeta Sorority next Monday night at the Gold Room of the Marott Hotel. The appointments and decorations are to be in the sorority colors, blue and gold. Miss Dorothy Rearick and Miss Urma Polter are members of the arrangements committee. . 2 2 2 Miss Doris Allen and Miss Julia Dwyer are to be hostesses to a rush party of Gamma chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha Sorority at 8 p. m. this evening. 2 2 = Theta chapter of Delta Sigma Kappa Sorority will meet at 8:30 ‘|p. m, tonight at the Y. W. C. A. Officers are to be elected and plans made for a joint meeting of the chapter with several other state chapters. A
n » ” Alpha chapter of Omega Kappa Sorority is to hold a meeting at 8 p. m. tonight at the Hotel Lincoln.
Pupils to Make Cathedral Tour
City-wide junior high school Girl Reserves will make a tour of the Scottish Rite Cathedral Saturday. The group will meet at the Central Y. W. C. A. at 1:30 p. m. Following the tour the members will return to the Girl Reserve clubrooms for a program of games and songs. Hawthorne Club, under the chairmanship of Miss Marjorie Wiley, will plan and serve refreshments. 8 # 2
"A folk festival to be given by all city Girl Reserves the last of May was discussed at a meeting of the Senior Inter-Club Council recently at the Y. W. C. A. ; Members of the council also planned a skating party. Proceeds will go toward scholarships to send Girl Reserve members to the summer camp at McCormick’s Creek State Park.
By HELEN Times Special Writer NEW YORK, April 6—In Yorkville, the cafes are far more interesting than those on 86th Street and come nearer to being like old-time saloons, than anything else we have in New York, At any one of them you may see a bleary-eyed piano player strumming out “Waltz Me Around Again, Willie,” or “Down Where the Wurzburger
a &
WORDEN
on Second Avenue
Sawdust covers the floor and Mack Sennett Comedy boys rest their feet on the brass rail. Three or four dachshunds and a floride faced bartender supply local color, There are no tourists here, The specialties are big, husky, chopped - meat or Swiss - cheese sandwiches, at 15 cents an order. If you don’t mind a cloud of smoke, can stand the tin-panny piano, and care to sit back at one | of the little tables reserved for parties, you will find here a corner | section of the New York O. Henry | wrote about. The numbers don’t | matter. |
Many Cafes on Avenue |
Every other door on Second | Avenue is the entrance to a cafe, | They are all pretty much alike. But | if you don’t strike a good crowd | at the first one, move on to the next. ? | Anyone who visits Yorkville and | does not see the Labor Temple, | misses the center of German life] in this section of New York. Eighty-Sixth Street and the brau-| houses are for tourists. The Labor Temple is for neighborhood people.| Everything in the world goes on in| tHe funny, musty old place. oh ‘The main entrance looks like any office building of 15 or 20 years ago, with the usual tessellated-floored hall and wheezy elevator. But— behind that closed door at the far end of the corridor, you will find
cabbage and pigs’ knuckles, drink ing beer and swapping yarns. | The restaurant run for the bene« fit of the patrons of the Labor Temple is jammed night and day. German is the accepted tongue, with an occasional Hungarian voice raised in contrast, in the smoke+ filled, bustling, noisy room.
Hold Canary Shows
Some of the most interesting events at the Labor Temple are the Canary Bird Shows. They are never scheduled for any set time, but by questioning the people in charge of the restaurant you can find out just where the amateur bird fanciers are and when they will hold their shows.
The birds are of the Hartz Mountain variety and pedigreed. Contests for the songsters are usually held at night, with the strange, little old people who own them gathered around like gnomes lis tening eagerly to the silvery liquid notes of their birds. Feeling is strong and competition keen for the best singer. The owners of the birds are . not professional bird dealers. Raising canaries is a hobby. They care for the birds in their own homes. 7 For other unusual exhibits, consult the bulletin-board in the hall as you enter the Labor Temple, There is always something. unique going on,
Nurses to Address Local P.-T. A. Groups
Health Nursing Association second vice president, has announced that three field nurses will speak before
local Parent-Teacher Associations. Miss Reba Beale spoke today at School 10 and on May 4 at School 76. Patrons of School 77 heard Mrs. Arzelia Brian Shultz today. Miss Josephine Brown, will adress the Shortridge High School P.-T. A. on April 19. Miss Marie Winker, assistant superintendent of nurses, and Miss Bernice Cain, supervisor, will represent the P. H. N. A. headquarters staff at the American Nurses’ Association biennial convention in Kansas City, April 24-29.
Lambdas Will Stage Frolic Saturday,
' The annual spring frolic dance of Lambda chapter, Omega Nu Tau Sorority, will be held Saturday night at Hotel Lincoln. : Music is to be provided by Doe Grayson’s orchestra. Committee chairmen are: Mrs. Miles Shipp
Walter Simpson and Mrs. Eldred Lee, dance programs; Miss Dorothy Head, orchestra; Mrs. Harry Mann, publicity, and Miss Jeanette Kis
singer, reservations.
NO GRIT, NO PUMICE, NO DRUGS.
Vrd Zr?
hy
Try itl
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1g JDENT tooth Paste and _-—
22 0 UL FN TA A A
the citizens of the district, eating -
Mrs. Smiley N. Chambers, Publio _,
and Miss Marie Cook, tickets; Mrs. -
Cafes on Second Avenuein German Yorkville Hark Back to Old-Time Saloons |
Sawdust Covers the Floors, Dachshunds Dash About And Most Anytime You Can Hear Bleary-Eyed Piano Players Pounding a Tinny Tune. :
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