Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1938 — Page 4
PAGE 1%
McCormicks Bring Film Log and Lace as ‘Booty’ From European Trip
Long Banquets Marked Doctors’ Congress at Amsterdam; Local Couple Later Visited Vienna, Rome, Berlin and Budapest.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON There is something to be said for the husband who takes his wife to a convention—that is, if he chooses the
locale of his gathering with care. Mrs. C. O. McCormick, who accompanied Dr. McCormick to an international congress of physicians in Amsterdam last month and then on several! weeks’ travel over the changing European map, returned with some enviable loot from the lace shops and vivid impressions of the visible effects of totalitarian governments. The doctors, being sturdy by profession, saw to it that their wives were not bored by monotony. They arranged, for example, a visit to the Amsterdam cheese market, where the famous Dutch cheeses are ed and bystanders enter weight-guessing contests and eat crackers and cheese. On this, as well as on expeditions to the Schipol airport and Alkmaar bulb fields, the program stated simply: “A cup of coffee will be had.” Incidentally, the congress was staged in tulip time, so the first impressicn of Amsterdam was of vivid tulip fields, accented by lavender and purple hyacinths and with a quaint backdrop of windmills and dykes The physicians, when they dined, avoided quick snacks. Mrs. McCorniick said four hours was a reasonable estimate of the time et, aside for ealing at a banquet. Probably the doctors knew the secret of avoiding dyspepsia. Prof. K. de Snoo, president of the congress, was host for a memorable “evening country party” at Nyenrode Castle, 15 miles from Amsterdam where the “Collection Guadstikker” is housed. The 700 or 800 guests were served an elaborate buffet supper and they repaired to the stables to dance. Since the equine hostelry once was the castle armor room the place was rather eerily decorated with stuffed horses and coats of mail. Dr. and Mrs. McCormick's colored movie log of the trip includes some excellent shots of Herman Goering who, with his motorcycle entourage, stopped across the street from their Vienna hotel. Signs, “Der Jude est verboten,” on public schools and shops, swastika flags, marching soldiers everywhere and taxi drivers who irged travelers not to patronize Jewish shops were concrete evidence of the infusion of the Nazi regime into what used to be Austria. Rome, Mrs, McCormick said, was at its spic and span best iate in May, following a general scrubbing and polishing in honor of Adolf Hitler's visit to Mussolini. They found German fields dotted with women who carried on he farm work, In Berlin, the old Germans who had not bowed to the Nazi influence assiduously avoided the square where it was necessary to “Heil Hitler!” every few steps. Pictures of Belgian lace-makers, who work all day for 40 cents, are included in Dr. McCormick's movie log. Their handiwork embellishes some of the exquisite linens Mrs. McCormick brought home. Despite threatening war clouds Budapest was the “gayest and loveliest place of all,” Mrs. McCormick said. American jazz held sway in all the night clubs and strolling gypsies played haunting melodies on their violins at the sidewalk cafes. The Danube was brilliantly blue, and everyone promenaded on the Corso from 6 to 8 o'clock in the evening and dined at 10. A bit of swank at St. Gellert's Hotel, where they stopped, was the outdoor salt water swimming pool, surrounded by flowers and gay umbrellas, where machine-made ocean waves kept bathers alert. ” » = » >
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Lieber, Dr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Ensminger and Mr. and Mrs. Leo M. Rappaport spent yesterday with Col. and Mrs. Richard Lieber at Whippoorwill Lodge, their summer home in Brown County. Mrs. George M. Hoster and her children, George Jr. and Joan, and Miss Dora Wagnon are spending a month in Mobile, Ala. The Indianapolis Radcliffe Club is to meet tomorrow with Mrs.
»
Mrs. Allen A. Edwards has returned to her home in Columbus, O., after a visit with her sister, Miss Harriet O'Meara. Among the recent visitors at White Sulphur Springs have been Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knode, Miss Jeanette Fishbein, Dr. J. William Wright and Charles S. Rauh,
State Parents and Teachers
Mrs. Howard Meeker (left)
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Pier spent the week-end as the guests of Mr. and Mrs, Eugene E. Whitehill at their Lake Wawasee Cottage.
son, Paul, have gone to spend the summer at the cottage of Mrs. Todd’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Paul, Lake Maxinkuckee,
Miss Magdalena Mayer will return tomorrow to her home at Hewlett, L. I, after spending several weeks as the guest of Miss Anne Tyndall, daughter of Maj. Gen. and Mrs.
Mrs. Edwin I, Poston, Martinsville, | president of the Indiana Federation of Clubs, is visiting friends and rela- | tives at New York and Boston. |
Mr. and Mrs. Willis E. Kuhn, | 3840 E. 62d St, are spending a | month with Mr, and Mrs. William | Henry Harrison at the IXL Bar
Ranch, Dayton, Wyo.
Mrs. William Steck will entertain | members of the Delta Delta Club | this week with a house party at her | cottage at Lake Freeman.
Rotary Club delegates to the In-| ternational convention at San Fran- | cisco left yesterday accompanied by | members from other Indiana Rotary Clubs. Indianapolis people to at-| tend include Mr. and Mrs. Harper J. |
To Attend Muncie Meeting
Ransburg and daughter, Miss Mir- | iam; Paul G. Moffett, Mr. and Mrs. | R. Norman Baxter, Mr. and Mrs. | William T. Gruber and daughter, |
| Miss Hester; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lee | 1 Hargitt,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C.| Ropkey, Mr. and Mrs, Albert ed Worm, John W, Warren, William M. Zeller and Col. Bertram Rodda. |
Sailing from New York tomorrow
and Mrs. Boozer are among the many Indianapolis society folk who often may be seen at local country clubs
Robert H. Tyndall.
Ralph these days.
Club,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Enjoy Country Club Activities
cali
Time& Photo,
They are shown watching a group of swimming enthusiasts in the pool at the Woodstock
‘Meridian Hills Country Club
Issues New Yearbooks Today] me beta cu o
| today.
|
‘Sunnyside Guild To Hold Garden
Party and Picnic)
Sunnyside Guild will hold a garden party and picnic {omorrow at) the Marion County Tuberculosis | Sanitorium. Mrs. B. B. Pettijohn and Mrs. Mort Martin are general arrangements chairmen. Frank Ainsley’s student orchestra will play and Miss Barbara Suits and Miss Betty Barnhill will present readings. Also appearing on the musical
| program will be Jackie Rogers and Je
an Louise Phillips, acrobatic team; Sarah Louise Bell and Joan Robinson, vocalists, and Betty Joe Harms and Pattie Roesch, dancers. | A ballet ensemble which is to! appear includes Susie Smith, Diane Wohefeld, Sarah Louise Bell, Peggy | Fusner, Barbara Gregg, Joan Ebner, Julia Johnson, Nancy Shockney, Barbara Giles, Nadine Frazier, Pa- | tricia Sullivan, Betty Hanchett, Joan Wright, Rose Rodocher and Marilyn Fesler. Mrs. B. B. Pettijohn are in charge of refreshments and Mrs. | Rufus Mumford and Mrs. George W. Schaffer are directing arrangements for the June party. Mrs. Carrie Hamel and Mrs. Edward V. |
{ Olive, Diddel, Flickinger and
v
New yearbooks were issued to Meridian Hills Country Club members 30 te home ot My E. Follinger, | Included in the book was the announcement of committees who Ft A npn Ms en be and white roses lined the aisle] D Mrs. Henry Todd and her small will be in charge of various dinners, dances and sports for the summer | Indiana Sity Sv
season. On the house committee are John T. Heckel, chairman; Charles Arensman and Mrs. James L. Murray. Charles H. Hagedon heads the swimming pool and children’s playground committee, also composed of Mesdames A. V. Stackhouse and Hughes Patten. T. G. Fleming is chairman
| and Dan W. Flickinger, cochairman,
of the tennis committee, assisted by Miss Muriel Adams and William R. Chapin Jr. On the outdoor sports committee are Frederick Grumme, chairman:
| Mr. Flickinger and William F. Keg-
ley. The men’s golf committee in-
[cludes John E. Spiegel, chdirman:
S. B. Lindley, cochairman. Working under them is the tournament committee, composed of Don Ellis, chairman; Harry M. Stitle Jr., Dr. Bert E. Ellis and Russell W. McDermott. The handicap committee is led by C. L. Schaab Jr. assisted by Paul Fishback, Newell Munson and Robert Rhodehamel. On the greens committee are Ira A. Minnick, chairman; Ben C. Stevenson and W. H.
| Diddel.
Women's golf activities are in charge of Mus. Stevenson, chairman; Mesdames W. L. Brant, Frank Dorothy Ellis. Committee Includes The general entertainment com-
| mittee includes Mr. and Mrs. H. E, | Speake, 645 E. 58th St. | Nyhart, chairmen: Dr. and Mrs. H. | M. Bever, Indianapolis, and Miss
|R. Kerr, cochairmen; Dr. and Mrs, | [ola Black, Muncie, will be guests. | William E. Gabe, Messrs. and Mes- |
dames R. L. Colby, F. H. Langsen- |
a " 3 Is Aa. A es ne AAR Toh tia
Party Dates Set Here by “Sororities
Six Pi Omicron Chapters To Hold Convention Echo Meeting.
A “convention echo party,” a rush party for university students and an installation service are included in the activities scheduled by local sorority groups for the coming week.
Six Indianapolis chapters of Pi Omicron sorority will hear reports tomorrow on the highlights of the recent seventh annual state convention at Lake Wawasee. ' Registration will be at 6:30 and Miss Leona Lingenfelter will present the convention business report,
The banquet is set for 7 o'clock. Miss Helen Magee is toastmistress
| Theta Sigma Delta Sorority held
Miss |
and Miss Betty Lee Zimmerman will | extend the welcome, Miss Bea 200k, | Marion, will respond. Mrs. OC. I. | McKenzie will speak on “Optimism | vs, Preparedness” and Miss Bertha | Staub’s topic will be “Reflections | From the Hoosier Mirror.” A song fiesta will follow. Miss Margaret Waggoner will be master of ceremonies for a beauty contest,
Name Chairman Miss Amelia Cook is general arrangements chairman, assisted by Mrs. D. B. Wood. Miss Geneva Cook will play the accordion.
” Kappa Kappa | Gamma Sorority will hold a rush
| party and bridge tomorrow evening
| guests. | Miss Betty Beasley and Miss Mi(riam Ellison, active chapter members from Indiana University, will | attend. Mrs, Don Kaga is arrangements (chairman, assisted by Mrs. James (J, Tyler, rush chairman, and Mes(dames Allan W. Boyd, William | Morman, Lyman Pearson, Edward { Boleman and the Misses Mary Jane { Pate, Evelyn Dunlap and Barbara
Steele.
» = ”
a June Frolic at the *« Athenaeum Saturday night from 10 o'clock to 1 o'clock. Jack Berry's Orchestra | played. The arrangements committee included. Mrs. Joseph McHugh, Mrs. | Glenn Hendrickson, Miss Ethel | Raasch and Miss Justine Nugent.
{ o' #4 8
Epsilon Pi chapter of Delta Theta | Tau Sorority will attend a dinner (this evening at Swift's Chicken | Dinner Place. Members will meet at the home of the hostesses, Miss Gladys Hoffman, and Mrs. J. L. Richardson, 4824 N. Illinois St., at 16:30 p. m. A business meeting will | follow, 5 ” ~ Alpha chapter, Delta Theta Chi, will hold a chicken dinner this | evening at the home of Mrs. Ruth Mrs. Ruby
¥ 5 % Pi
fand Nicholas H. Noyes Jr, were
ar
OY x
erin MO Janet Noyes, F. M.
Miss Noyes wore a gown of ivory slipper satin with a skirt flared from the hips and falling into a medium length train. Her finger tip veil of tulle was edged with satin, and her lace mitts were made from her mother’s wedding gown, She held the prayer book which her mother carried at her wedding, with a cluster of orange
blossoms.
» n ”
NDAY, JUNE 20, 1938 Ayres Jr. Marry
ara IL, Hill Phots,
aA Standards of lilies of the valley
at the 4:30 p. m. Saturday wedding of Miss Janet Noyes and Frederic M. Ayres Jr. Miss Noyes is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas H. Noyes and Mr. Ayres is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres. The Rev. Jean S. Milner read the ceremony before an improvised altar on the dais at the end of the | Noyes’ living room in their home, | “Lanesend,” Crows Nest. The altar was banked with ferns and flowers | and lighted with candelabra.
Miss Noyes and her father came down a winding stairway to the! altar,
Attendants in Blue
Her two attendants, Miss Vir- | ginia Solley, a cousin, and Miss | Anne Ayres, the bridegroom's sister, | entered in French blue shirred chiffon girdled in matching velvet. They wore large, open crowned garden | hats ana carried old fashioned | round bouquets of American beauty roses.
Lyman S. Ayres Jr. was best man and Miss Noyes two brotBers, Evan
|
ushers. During the ceremony the bridal couple knelt on. satin cushions marked with the letters N and A. A reception followed for the guests. The table was massed with white orchids. The couple is to be at home at “Lanesend Cottage,” on the Noyes estate after Oct. 1,
Attended Tudor Hall
st Jota Xi Convention
Is Scheduled
Mrs. W. E. Sayer, Indianapolis, grand treasurer of Psi Iota Xi Soe rority, is to head a local delegation to the 36th annual convention Thursday and Friday at the Shoreland Hotel in Chicago. Music is to be the theme. Beta Nu chapter, East Chicago, is to be hostess. Mrs. Thomas Schumaker, Richmond, national president, is to pre side at all sessions, More than 300 delegates from 60 chapters are expected to register. A program of music by the Beta Nu octet is to open the convention. Mrs. Beatrice Kelly is to greet dele= gates. A luncheon and style show is to begin at 1 p. m. A tour of Chicago conducted by Miss Edna Dobbie will follow the formal dinner Thursday night. Featured on the dinner program will be music by the East Chicago male chorus, affiliated with the Indiana University extension division, Calumet, Center, and directed by Robert J. White.
Mrs. Robertson fo Sing
Music during the luncheon Friday is to be provided by Mrs. Grace Robertson. National officers with Mrs. Saver
{on the S. S. Exeter for a Mediter- | Mitchell are in charge of enter-
! i sessions 11 rs. W. ranean cruise will be Miss Gene attending sessions will be M
kamp, W. H. Montgomery, C. N Bela Beta chapter, Omicron The bride attended Tudor Hall | D. Simmons Jr, Ft. Wayne, grand
June 20 1di arent: teachers will att a | tainment. . « Nu gan ’ ortai ; it E, € 20.—Indiana parents and teachers wi end a | Carter, E. P. Everett, J. H. Waldo | Sorority, entertained recently with
Ball State Teachers College nere
development conference at day and Thursday. The co Parents and Teachers are cosponsor
llege and the Indiana Congress of s of the sessions.
National and state leaders in the® child welfare movement will speak] and direct discussions. “Child De- | velopment: The Joint Task of the Home and the School,” will be the theme of the two-day conference Registration will be held at 9 o'clock Wednesday in assembly hall Greetings will be extended by Dr L. A. Pittenger, president of Ball State, and by Mrs. Logan Hughes, Indianapolis, president of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers, the genera] sesopening 10 o'clock of the Child be discussed
nt
Aa
nb
sion at The Development a8 a Personality” will from the psychological viewpoint by Miss Ethel Batschelet of the visiting teacher department of the
chools, Hartford, Conn. and!
the sociological viewpoint by rd R. Shaw of the Institut uvenile Research, Chicago.
c
Explain Program
At the general session Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Hughes, five committee chairmen, plain the program of the state and national congresses of parents and teachers in connection with child development and will show how oublic school teachers and parents assist with the work. feature sound film. produced by the Yale clinic on child development, ill be shown at the conference dinner Wednesday night. At the general session Thursday morning § Dr. L. T. Meiks, pediatrician of Riley Hospital, Indianapolis, will scuss “The Development of the a Personality” from the 1vsiological viewpoint. operative Role Parents Teachers in Child Development” will be the general topic at the afternoon sessicn Group discussions will be Wednesday afternoon and Thursday morning, to consider the topic The Twenty-four Hour the Child” To insure effective group discussion, four sections are being planned; each one will be made up of high school and college students, teachers, parents and principals, Although no fee will be charged
nav A six-reel Life Begins’
on
di Child as ri Pi
£ ol
and
for the conference, persons who wish |
to attend the dinner Wednesday night should make reservations with Miss Mary Beeman, head of the home economics department at Ball State Teachers College, Muncie.
Young-Powlen Rites Held at Logansport
Times Special LOGANSPORT, June 20 —Miss Beth Powlen and Marvin Young, Des Moines, Ia, were married here yesterday. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Sadie Powlen, Logansport, and has been an art instructor in the Des Moines schools. Mr. Young is assistant state editor of the Des Moines Register. The bride graduated from Indiana University and Pratt Art Institute, New York. Miss Stella Fairchild, Portsmouth O, and Robert W. Griffin, Rensselaer, were married here Thursday. The Rev, E. C. Kunce officiated.
beginning at 9:30 o'clock, |
“The Co- |
held |
Day of
At Winona Lake For Two Weeks
Miss Bertha Rachael Palmer, national Women’s Christian Temperance Union alcohol education director, is in charge of the Alcohol convene at
G.|
Winona Lake June 27 for a two weeks’ session.
tions and latest official discoveries.
The program is especially planned
for Vacation Bible School teach- |
ers, young people's leaders, pastors and others interested in religious and welfare work. It will be the first of a series of such schools to be held during the summer. A course is planned at Chautauqua, N. Y., July 11 to 23 and at San Francisco Aug. 3 to 5, Immediately preceding the annual
national W. C. T. U. convention to |
be held there.
Burkhard-Beal Rites
| Are Solemnized Here |
Holy Angels Church was the scene |
Of a pretty wedding Saturday when Miss Mary Catherine Burkhard be-
came the bride of William J. Beal. ! Pink roses and ferns lighted with |
cathedral tapers provided a background for the rite which was read by the Rev. Fr. J. A Coulter.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Burkhard, 948 WwW. 31st St. Mr. Beal is the son of Mrs. Charles Jackson, 541 W. 30th St.
The bride, who entered alone, wore a white chiffon gown made | With large puffed sleeves, a square neck, an embroidered girdle and a
full skirt falling into a semi-train,
Her tulle veil was floor length and | she carried a sheaf of lilies. Mr. and Mrs. Beal left early yesterday for the South where they are to spend two weeks before returning to Indianapolis to live. Their at-home address is to be 964 Eugene St.
| Bertsch, 4819 Park Ave.; Miss Jean | { Lenore
Education summer school to |
The program will include dem- | onstrations of scientific investiga- | interpretations of the!
A. Dickey and Miss Hazel Rusek.
Irvin Haven Jr. is staying at the
{ Hotel Algonquin, New York.
W. C.T.U. Meets!
{ Miss Doris Ellen Belzer, 3314 Ken- |
Students who have returned home | from Western College, Oxford, O., | for the summer vacation include | wood Ave... Miss Ruth Esther | 5808 Julian Ave; | 53 N.|]
Smith, Miss Jean Mildred Smith,
| Audubon Road; Miss Ruth Harry, | 4720 Park Ave.; Miss Margaret Ann
Sturgis, 2816 N. Delaware St.; Miss { Dorothy E. Chapin, 5703 Central | Ave, and Miss Mary E. Bowen, 6141 | | Primrose Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Baker and Mrs. John David Baker are recent | arrivals at the Hotel Vanderbilt, | | New York. | Miss Susan Gatch has returned | from Wellesley College for the | summer. |
Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Jacquart re- | {turned this week-end from Den- | ison College, Granville, O., where | they attended alumni festivities at the school. Mrs. Jacquart was in | charge of the Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority banquet at Granville Inn. |
|
Board of White | Cross Will Meet
| The White Cross Guild executive | board is to hold its final meeting | before a two-months recess at 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Methodist | | Hospital Nurses Home. Newly ap- | pointed work chairmen of the 33 | | guild units will meet following the | board meeting: The Plainfield unit was to work | at headquarters today and the Meridian Heights and New Jersey | units are to sew tomorrow.
|
| Logansport Couple To Make Home Here
i | Times Special | LOGANSPORT, June 20.—Mr.| (and Mrs. Ernest Cloud are at home | |in Indianapolis following their mar- | | riage here June 5. , | formerly i rerpeck, | | ] Ove K, | |daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marion | | Overpeck. i The marriage of Miss Marjorie | { Lienemann and John McIlwain was {to be today at St. Joseph's par- | Sonage. Father Michael J. Aishin- | ger was to officiate. |
Lambda Chapter, Omega
Phi Omega Kappa. Tri Delta Chi. 7p. m. Tues. Kennedy, hostess. Lambda Chi Delta. 8 p. m. Tues.
to be made for the Sport Hop
Independent Card. eon. Public invited.
Marshall McAllan, chairman. Goodwill Service. Spacial bus to leave
EVENTS
SORORITIES Nu Tau. Tau Delta Tau. 8 p. m. today. Mrs. Alvin Nahre, hostess
8 p. m. today. Miss Virginia Graham. hostess, Hotel Antlers, Lambda Chapter, Delta Sigma Kappa.
munity House in connection with the Beta Phi Sigma Fraternity,
CLUBS 12:15 p. m. Tues.
Altar Society, St. Philip Neri Catholic Church. 8:30 p. m. today. Mrs, Social meeting. Wed. Mrs. Harry Stanton, terminal at 9:30 a .m.
8 p. m. today. Y. W. ©. A
Tues. night. Miss Dorothea
Miss Fri.
Mae Thigpen. hostess. Plans night at the Brookside Com-
Foodcraft, Cards and lunch-
Magtinsville, hostess,
| for the entire association.
‘John M
| the ceremony.
Looking Back to Look Forward,’ Is Y.W.C.A. Theme!
L
All Y. W. C. A. program councils and committees were to meet at 5:30 Pp. m, today for a dinner and busi- | ness session under the auspices of ! the Program Planning Council. “Looking Back to Look Forward” was to be the theme. During the presupper hour, a presentation and evaluation of the council's accomplishments was to be made. Mrs. B. Scott Goodwin, Y. W. C. A. president, and Miss Essie L. Maguire, general secretary, were to speak following the dinner on plans Mrs. Frank Young was to lead community singing. The “Look Forward” is to start at 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Boyd I. Miller, committee chairman, and Miss Harriet Eberhart, council chairman, will | present future plans for the two] groups. Miss Doris Holmes, health | education council president, and Miss Elizabeth Blaisdell, program correlator, will lead the discussion | of plans for fall setting-up con-| ferences. {
St. Francis Guild
| |
To Hold Annual 4 The initiates are Mrs. Gladys |
, A Party Thursday | Mis. Fdward Trimpe is chairman | of the St Prancis Guild's annual garden party Thursday afternoon | and night on the hospital grounds. Assisting her are Mrs, Lafe Lock- | wood and Mrs. A. P. Lauck. Other committee members are: | Mrs. A. W. Heidenreich and Mrs. | Henry Gardner, miscellaneous; Mes- | dames Edwin Dwyer, William McKinney, Pierce Brady and Margaret | Chance, cards; Mesdames J. A. Arm- | buster, John Weber, Thomas Tate, | J. C. Gold, John Dansfield, R. J. Shephard, James Mugivan and John | Gedig, luncheon; Mesdames R. C. Kearney,
| Cramer a
| Reimer, soft drinks, and Mesdames |
Thomas Quill, A. R. Roth and Al Casse, cake and ice cream.
anley Weds | Betty Jean Wells |
| Miss Betty Jean Wells became the | bride of John J. Manley in a cere- | | mony read Saturday at the Holy |
| Cross Catholic Church.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. O. H. Wells, 4317 E. Wash- | ington St. Mr. Manley is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Manley. | The Rev. Fr. Willlam F. Keefe | read the service before an altar | of spring flowers and ferns lighted with candles in candelabra. i A breakfast at Blufferest followed A reception at the | Manley home was held later. After |
a short trip to Cincinnati, the couple will be at home at 1001 College Ave, Es
{hold a
{assisted by Mesdames George
P. G. Moffett and Robert McMurray. Mrs. HO W. Rhodehamel is chairman of the ladies entertainment committee, and her assistants are Mesdames C. B. Edwards, Russell Hippensteel, Olive and Nyhart. Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Fleming Jr. plan the young people's entertainment, with the assistance of Messrs. and Mesdames P. D. Powers, J. W. Hutchings, Ralph L. Colby, Lawrence V. Sheridan and Walter O. Holmes. Entertainment for children is arranged by a group including Mrs. Harry L. Foreman, chairman; Mrs. Edgar T. Hayes and Paul R. Summers.
The membership committee in-
{cludes Ralph L. Flood, chairman;
Mr. Powers, cochairman: Mr. Montgomery, W. F. Curry, C. C. Binkley, George P. Kingsbury, Jasper P. Scott, Roy K. Coats, C. P. Cartwright, Dr. O. N. Torian, W. R. Chapin, Walter Krull, A. K. Buchanan and C. H. Eno II. Women members of the club will luncheon-bridge Tuesday. Mrs. Frank C. Olive is in charge,
Olive, Sheridan, and E. A. Peterson.
Four to Be Initiated By Musical Sorority
Mrs. Lenore Ivey Frederickson, Mu Phi Epsilon Sorority Kappa
| chapter, president, will preside at | invited.
initiation services for four at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow evening at 34th and Pennsylvania Sts. A program will follow.
Chew, pianist, and Mrs. Harvey Locke, pianist, both of Bloomington; Miss Jean Pennington, violinist, and Miss Lillian Porter, harpist, ————————————
Mrs. Lyons to Entertain
Mrs. John A. Lyons will entertain the Bruce P. Robison American Legion Auxiliary tomorrow with a luncheon and garden party at her home, 1600 S. Emerson Ave. She is to be assisted by Mesdames Ralph Lynch, Louis Groh and Bernard Stuvel. Mrs. Lynch is to be in charge of entertainment, ———————
S. |
{a lawn party at the home of Mrs. Edward B. Scott. Among the guests | were Miss Ruth Smethers, president of the chapter; Miss Eva Mae | Lynch, first national vice president, {and Miss Ruth Allen, Tri-State corresponding secretary. | .
| Mu Chapter, Phi Chi Epsilon Sor- | ority, will hold an installation of officers at 8 p. m. today at the home of Mrs. Glen V. Ryan, 1637 Kessler | Blvd, Mrs. Immer Welsch, George | Knapp and Mary Orton are in charge of arrangements. | New officers are Mrs. Wilda Dobbs, | | president; Miss Emma Dobbins, vice | president; Mrs. Richard Layton, sec- | retary; Mrs. Gilbert Gee, treasurer; Miss Laverne Fleener, inspector; Mrs. Ryan, editor; Mrs. C. J. Iverson, historian, and Miss Martha Mc- | Cord, sergeant-at-arms.
|
‘Name Chairman | For Card Party
Mrs. Margaret Marlowe is ar- | rangements chairman for the card | party to be held at 8 p. m. Thurs{day by the house operating comi- | mittee of the Business and Professional Women's C!ub at the club- | house. Members and guests are
Mrs. Marlowe is to be assisted by | Misses Marie Tudor, Katherine | Kaercher, Charlotte E. Yule, Rebecca Swinford, Mrs. Mary W. Deems and Mrs. Mary Stubbs Moore. Miss Ruth Armstrong is to pre- | sent a number of summer vacation [tours open t6 members and their | guests. The board of directors will meet tonight to complete the appointment of committee chairmen { for the coming year. . | Deloris Laker Engaged
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Laker {announce the engagement of their | daughter, Deloris, to William L. Niedenthal, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. | E. Niedenthal. The wedding will be | June 28 at the Sacred Heart Catho-
Consul
’
J/ BE VERY SUR
That this summer's Permanent is Soft and Natural.
Robert, Stanley Thomas, Ine. 420 Guaranty Bldg. L1-2509
i
lic Church. | |
E
tation Free at
and
and the Ethel Walker School, Sims- |
bury, Conn. Two years ago last! winter she made her debut at a | ball at the Indianapolis Athletic | Club. She is a member of the Junior League and the Dramatic | Club. Mr. Ayres attended Park School and was graduated from the Thatcher School for Boys, Ojai Valley, Cal, and Yale University. He also attended the Lerosey School, Role Switzerland, for a year. He is a member of the Indianapolis Athletic | Club, the Woodstock Club, the Co- | lumbia Club, the Indianapolis Yale | Club and the Dramatic Club.
3
vice president; Miss Virginia Lee Brightwell, Jeffersonville, grand secretary, Miss Leah Flint, Rush-
[ ville, grand editor; Mrs. Lloyd Set-
ser, Bloomington, grand adviser and Mrs. Harry C. Mulder, East Chicago, grand conductress. Committee chairmen and leaders to attend are Mrs. E. J. Hancock, Greensburg, press; Mrs. Henry Jennings, Newcastle, extension; Mrs, J. W. Springer, Elizabethtown, charity, Mrs. Carlton Renbarger, Gosh« en, northern province chairman; Mrs. Paul Morton, Lebanon, central province chairman and Mrs. Warren H. Miller, Princeton, southern province chairman,
LADIES DERE
122 §
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