Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 July 1938 — Page 15
FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1938
Mlle. de Laforest and
Virginia Brown Learn History During Travel
Former Saw First Lady in Kentucky, Leaves Here For Montana; Latter Returns After Six-Week Tour Abroad.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON The odds are better than even that Miss Virginia Brown and Mlle. Marie Antoinette de Laforest wouid trade all their school books for the actual glimpses they have had this summer of what their contents describe. While Miss Brown has been getting acquainted with Europe’s glories, Mlle. de Laforest of Vannes, France, has been learning about America by fraternizing with
Americans. Merely seeing the British Prime Minister and Mrs. Neville Chamberlain riding in a carriage in the park in London will add a certain verve to classroom discussions of British foreign policy from Miss Brown's point of view and all royalty has assumed flesh and blood proportions since she saw the Queen Mother riding in state to Court. Mille. de Laforest, on the other hand, will never forget that she saw Governor Chandler and Mrs. Roosevelt this spring at a farmers’ convention at Lexington, Ky. and that while she was very close to the President's wife who was “very charming and much prettier than her pictures, I did not speak to her.” Miss Brown, who with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Austin H. Brown, and her cousin, Miss Nina Brown, has recently returned from spending six weeks abroad, had a wonderful time seeing England’s palaces and churches, Oxford, Eton and the Thames as well as scores of other places she had learned about in English history two years ago at Tudor Hall The Beefeaters (soldiers with gold-trimmed scarlet coats standing guard at the Tower of London) added a martial flourish to her first-hand history lesson. Roaming about the quaint places of which Dickens wrote has lent zest to her study of English literature. When French history and literature appear on the school curriculum Miss Brown will need only consult her diary for impressions of Versailles and Fontainebleau as well as the cathedrals and gaileries of Paris. As for the French capital itself, she saw it in gala dress with gorgeous wreaths and pictures of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth hanging everywhere in anticipation of the royal visit which was postponed because of the death of the Countess of Strathmore and Kinghorne. Versailles, too, was beautifully decorated for the state banquet which was to have been held there. A taste of Italian history came with a brief visit to Pompeii, but most exciting of all was the iceberg “standing 150 feet out of the water just a mile from the boat on the way home.”
After a brief visit here Mlle. de Laforest is to leave today for Montana via the Grand Canyon where she expects to see a great many of the Indians she failed to find in Indiana. She attended the University of Kentucky last semester although she knew not one word of English upen her arrival in this country more than a year ago. She will return to her native Brittany in September. Mlle. de Laforest has “learned a lot in America” about our language and people. She learned the language by taking courses in French and English at the University and by reading newspapers (she never passes up a murder) and magazine detective stories “which are written in such simple words.” She's especially fascinated by our mechanical aids to living and our drug stores. “I shall miss air conditioning and ice cream and iced tea very much when I return,” she said. “After what I had read in the French newspapers I came to this country with the idea that nothing would shock me because we all thought anything could happen in America. At first I even thought all American women dressed exactly alike.” Now that she knows the American people she intends to tell her friends at home that they are “just as polite as the French, have just as nice manners, are considerably more generous and are not ashamed to work.” She regrets that she will not get to see Hollywood because “it is the most famous thing here and everyone in France talks about it.” Asked whom she would most like to meet in Hollywood she unhesitatingly replied, “Charlie McCarthy! I have a friend in Lexington who has seen him.”
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Women trap and skeet shooters are to participate in two state championship tournaments within the next few weeks. The ladies’ championship event in the Indiana State Trap Shooters Association State Shoot, being held today, tomorrow and Sunday at the Carmel Gun Club, is scheduled for Sunday morning. Among those expected to enter are Miss Martha Jenkins, Orleans, Indiana ladies’ trap shooting champion; Mrs. John Leonard, Acton, runnerup last year; Miss Ruth Osborn, state women's skeet champion, and Mrs. M. L. Sanders, Portland. The women’s event in the Indiana State Championship Skeet Shoot, to be held Aug. 5, 6 and 7 at the Capitol Citys Gun Club, will take place the morning of Aug. 7. :
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 15
Four Become Brides in Recent Marriage Ceremonies
Plowman-Platt Photo.
1. Mrs. Henry C. Prange was Miss Miriam Irene Roesener, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto W. Roesener, before her marriage June 18. Mrs. Prange is a Butler University graduate and member of Kappa
Delta Sorority. Illinois.
Mr. Prange was.
graduated from the University of
2. Miss Margaret O'Brien became the bride of Thomas Vavul in a
recent ceremony. Daniel O’Brien.
Mrs. O'Brien is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs.
3. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Schowengerdt are at home at 1435 Tuxedo
St. Mrs. Schowengerdt was Miss
Mary Hall, daughter of Mrs. John
Surber, New Augusta, before her marriage July 9.
4. Mrs. Jean Hittle was Miss Mary McKibben, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William McKibben, before her marriage July 9.
Series of Week-End Parties
To Honor Local Brides-to-B
been arranged for the week-end for |
Several prenuptial parties have
C
Indianapolis young women who will be married this month and next.
Mrs. Hubert Wann will entertain tonight at her home, 5127 Schofield Ave. in honor of Miss Evva Frances King, whose marriage to Paul M.
James will be Aug. 20. Guests are®
to be members of the Marthada Club, Nettie Ransford chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,
” = 8
Parents Will Be Guests of Girls
Miss Lovilla Horne will fete Miss |
Thelma Roller tonight. Miss Roller will become the bride of Robert R. Palmer, Miami, Fla. July 30. Mrs. George Walker will give a luncheon bridge tomorrow in honor of the bride-to-be. Guests are to include Miss Mildred Cross, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Mrs. Joseph Macy, Kansas City; Misses Mary Jean Clark, Doris Driggs, Janet Chapman, Anne Chapman, Carolyn Hawekotte, Ruih Hickman, Josephine Bennett, dine, Fry, Mary Lee Richter and Mesdames Stewart Smith, Geoige Walker, E. L. Bolin, Ryan Hall, Farless Hewlett and Edmund C.
Na- |
Horst. 4
events
= Other prenuptial
Conditions Wax Better for. “3 Pretty Store Window Models
sched-
party which Misses Mary and Alice | Watson will give tonight for Miss ( Mildred Lewis and Mrs. Earl T. Ly- { on’s garden party Sunday for Miss
uled for the week-end include the |
“Diana, did you hear that passerby say What's she got that I haven't?
Evelyn?
the only model in all Indianapolis windows.
“Of course, she’s modeling something from the French Room. but | gagement to Thomas E. Lyons was | let me tell you I was doing the best French dresses befor
upstart was thought of. Look at her! Why she’s positively skinny! “I don’t want to be catty, Diana, but somebody really ought to tell her that the life of a window mannequin is only five to seven years. “Look at me! Why five years ago I was the Mae West rage. I had that spot where she stands now,
the snooty thing! But now I have
to stand just the same way with this $1.95 bargain. “Why can’t that window trimmer
strange hand on me today and this wig, actually Diana, it hasn't been dressed for a year. wearing someone else's head? consider yourself lucky.”
Well,
We didn't really mean to eavesdrop on the window models, but, at
s n
that, theirs is a happier life than
their predecessors. As a matter of fact, clothes models once didn't even have heads. Queer thing is that they started
putting heads on the models just |
about the time Carrie Chapman Catt started the suffrage movement. Near
the turn of the century
women were using wire forms cov- |
ered with cloth over which to fit tailored clothes. The merchant was not long in recognizing the value of the forms {~~ displaying merchandise and appropriated them for use in store windows.
Problem in Hot Windows
The wax figure in the image of the customer finally evolved minus
the excess flesh, bow legs and dou- | Of course, the wax man- |
ble chins. nequin presented a problem to the merchant who found them a little impractical for use in hot windows. One feature of this early type was beautiful natural hair wigs—which now are coming into vogue again. Models are made in a 16 size and wear size 12 and 14 dresses. The shoe size is 5%2B and hats, if they
can be worn over intricate hair- |
dresses, are size 22. A composition material is at present the most popular for mannequins. The average weight is 22
pounds and nobody worries about | The cost is based on the |
her figure. novelty and details. One hundred dollars is the minimum for the full size model with some choice ones valued at $300. The average model is bought for $125 to $150. The mannequin’'s body is a jointed affair detachable at the shoulders, neck and sometimes at the knees. A recently created type ha: rather realistic muscles in the arms and legs. The coiffure of a model ranks as the most expensive feature. A Hollywood hairdresser will provide a mannequin with the latest coiffure
waist, |
J
| for the trifling sum of $45. The hair is waved at least once a year. Novelty hairdresses include those
|
| | |
of yarn in silk for women and cot- |
| ton for children. At least half have
| the sculptured hairdress of the same | material as the bod
‘smart’ about that snooty | Lois Imogene Campbell. Miss Lewis | Why you'd think she was | Will be married to Charles I. Prin-
gle July 31 and Miss Campbell's en-
e that young announced recently.
=
Mrs. John Bolyard entertained last night in honor of Miss Florence Condrey whose marriage to LeRoy A. Dudley will be an event of July 23.
Guests
»n »
Among the novelty figures dis- | Ray Condrey, Catherine Dudley, | played by local stores is an amber | Claude Wilson, Anthony Fussner,
| cellophane figure with a natural wig. | Kenneth Campbell, Louis Wicken, | A cosmetic is advertised by a pa- | Kenneth Duncan, Randall Lawson, be more careful? Look, he has a | Pier-mache figure with paper shav- | Harold Worth, Edward Wilson an
ings for curls. Rubber Models Used
What, you are | took | Miniature mannequins in rubber | McElroy,
the Misses Marguerite Bader, Betty Beckman, Mary Bohnstadt, Maurine Campbell, Mildred Langdon, Billy Katherine Smith and
(already are being used by one local | Marian Sones.
store, but they have not yet been | perfected for large figures. They are [easier to handle and less breakable. Children’s models often are made of balsam wood, A Shirley Temple | model comes in the composition ma- | terial like the “grown ups.”
| A mannequin retoucher is welcomed once a year by one store (and during the interim scratchss, | bumps, etc., are repaired by regular | employees. Facial features may be painted or | created from colored bits of cloth glued to the face. Artificial eyelashes and fingernails are more extensively used by the mannequin | family than by their beauty-seeking | animate sisters. | Exclusive women’s shops in New York have been using the full size | model only in the last three years. The retailers believed that the mannequin’s charming face attracted ere attention than the merchanise. One local department store owns between 75 and 100 models of men, | women and children. Another display man said he used approxi- | mately 15 mannequins in the windows and six models for displaying better dresses on the interior of the store. | costumes changed once a week. The number of head forms for millinery and jewelry display ‘is | higher than that of the mannequins. The large stores also use several backless, headless and legless forms for showing yard goods. The heads are usually striking in composition
with silver and gold masks and dead
white skins popular types. The newly purchased mannequins usually model first in the windows. When less attractive and less stylish, they are relegated to the windows less frequented by shop- | pers and finally pose on the interior.
The large dolls have their !
| Eventually they may be found | standing in storage closets and in |
| the end are sent to the warehouses. | That means oblivion. Only a few | of them ever “come back.” That's life for a mannequin— from cast to cast-off.
Mrs. Pugh Hostess For W. C. T. U. Outing
Mrs. Claude Pugh, 157 N. Vine St., was te entertain the Washington Union of the W. C, T. U. at a picnic today.
included the Mesdames |
At Hilltop Camp
At least eight Indianapolis girls | will be waiting to welcome parents | tonight and tomorrow night at | Hilltop Camp for girls. The parents | are to be guests at festivities mark- | ing the close of the camp's first | month of this season. Among the local girls enrolled are | the Misses Dorothy Loy, Jo Ellen | Burroughs, Christine Weaver, Helen | Pollack, Emily Andrews, Joan Davis, | Hanna K. Beck and Nancy Iles. | The week-end program opened | this morning for both the girls’ | camp, and the Brown County Camp | for Boys with a swimming meet at | the Brown County State Park pool. Dancing is to be at 7 o'clock tonight
followed by a presentation of “Tam- |
| ing of the Shrew.” Tomorrow afternoon dancing and | a repetition of the play by the older | girls are scheduled. “The Princess | and Mr. Parker” will be presented tomorrow night by the younger girls. The camp will close Aug. 153. |
| Edward Farmer Jr. | Weds Scranton Girl
Miss Margaret Catherine Motter | became the bride of Edward Dallas Farmer Jr. in a ceremony Tuesday | at the parsonage of the First Re- | formed Church, Easton, Pa. The | Rev. George Creitz officiated. | The bride is a daughter of Frank [ J. Motter, Scranton, Pa., and Mr. | Farmer is the son of E. D. Farmer | of this city. | Attendants were Mr. and Mrs. John E. Stempel, sister and brother-in-law of the bridegroom. Following a wedding trip through the East the couple is to be at home at 87 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y. | The bride graduated from the | Scranton High School and Mr. | Farmer is a graduate of Bloomington High School and the University of Kentucky.
x
; i
Moorefield Pho Ramos-Porter Photo.
Midsummer Travels Go
On Unabated
Mrs. Williams Guest of Mrs. L. S. Ayres; Vonneguts Return.
The middle of summer finds Ine dianapolis residents still making an exodus to resorts and long-anticie pated visits with friends. Seldom have cool lake and far places seemed more attractive. Mr. Blaine Miller Jr. and her chile
dren, Sandy and Susie, are to leave the first of August to visit Mrs. Mile ler's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Henry S. Owsley, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., at their summer home on Long Island Sound. Mr. Miller plans to join Lis family later in the month. Mr, and Mrs. Kurt Vonnegut and their family have returned from Lake Maxinkuckee where they spent a month. Mrs. David P. Williams Jr. will return the first of the week from Virginia Beach, Va., where she has been the guest of Mrs. Lyman S, Ayres. Mrs. Ayres and her small
Porter Photo.
®
Sorority to Hold
Aug. 9 Founder’s
Picnic.
meeting. Cards at 1:45. Public
| | «| | Day Celebration
Mrs. L. H. Noble heads the arrangements committee for the Founder's Day celebration to be held Aug. 9 by Alpha Omicron Alpha | Sorority at Feeser's Tearoom. Assisting the chairman will be Mrs. | L. J. Bland, place; Mrs. J. R. Sent-!
charge.
phine Okey, prophetess.
EVENTS
CLUBS Workmen's Circle. Sun. Picnic grounds, 2901 S. Meridian. Annual
Maj. Robert Anderson, W. R. C.
Women’s Auction Bridge Section, H. A. C. 2 p. m. today. Hoosier Athletic Club. Mrs. Glenn G. Bertels and Mrs. George H. Bechill in
LODGES
Alfaratta council 5, Degree of Pocahontas. 7:45 p. North and Capitol. Officers: Mrs. Marie Dale, Pocahontas; Mrs. Katie Cuberts, Wenonah; Mrs. C. W. Hart, Powatna, and Mrs. Jose-
Tues. p. m. Hall. Short business invited.
m. today. Hall,
| ney, reservations; Mrs. J. P. Parker, prizes; Mrs. Richard Ralph, decorations; Mrs. M. J. Karabell, trans-
| portation, and Mrs. J. W. Hill, id) Civic Theater Selects Teams
| and taXies. The organization will held its na- | | tional convention Oct. 1 to 3 at the | | Lincoln Hotel.
5 ” n Indianapolis alumnae of Chi | ; . of assistants for Omega Sorority will entertain Mon- | A partial list BS
For Fall Membership Drive
the Civic Theater's annual member-
dav afternoon with a tea at the | ship drive was announced today. The drive opens officially Sept. 15.
home of Mrs. C. S. Ober, 678 Fall! Eight division chairmen head the Creek Blvd. | list of workers. Under these come | oo siaret W. V Roberts, J. E. | the majors, and each major has | Voie ©. Be Ss nnsitile five captains working under him. charge of arrangements. All captains have five workers. A partial list of majors to date includes Mesdames William A. Miskimen, Harold H. Arnholter, Ted Ros, Richard Bunch, Miss Sara Lauter, Miss Katharine Fulton, Garrett Olds amd George .'otheringham and R. Kirby Whyte, coma jors. A partial list of captains comprises Mesdames Taylor Land, Ford Kaufman, Larry Shappert, Eugene E. Whitehill, A, K. Scheidenhelm, William G. Sparks, Richard Hill, Willard Ulrich, Burchard Carr, Oli-
| ” n n { Mrs. Chris Hankemeier and Miss |
| Dorothy Addington will be hostesses | for members and guests of Epsilon | Pi Chapter, Delta Theta Tau Sorori- | ty, Tuesday evening at Whispering | Winds. | Guests are to meet at Mrs. Han- | kemeier's home first. They will include Mesdames Margaret Austin, | Helen Fuqua, W. R. Forman, Arthur | Moran, C. E. Roderus, A. H. Scheidt and Misses Ovilla Glascock, Florlence McHugh, Kathryn Messner {anc Helen Olsen.
‘Women to Pick Best Employer In Their Town
(U. P.).—Members of the nation's Business and Professional Women's Clubs will turn a critical eye on their bosses during the next year, they decided tocay at their annual convention. The National Federation of Busi-
{ness and Professional Woinen's Clubs will study employer-employee | relations as part of their yearly pro-
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. July 15
ver Greer, Horace McClure, Russell | gram, federation officers announced.
daughter, Elise, have taken a house | there for the summer. They will | return later to their Golden Hill | home. Plan Lake Stay
Mrs. Charles Mayer and her | daughter, Miss Josephine Mayer, have left for Walloon Lake, Mich., where they are to stay at the Mayer
cottage for the remainder of the summer. Mrs. William Wiggins and her small sons, Bill and Stevie, have left for Higgins Lake, Mich., where they are to spend the summer at the cottage of Mrs. Wiggins’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Taggart. Ane other sister, Miss Elizabeth Taggart, and a daughter-in-law, Mrs. A. L. Taggart Jr. and her children are also spending the summer there. Miss Helen Taggart, who has been taking an art course in Chicago, plans to join her parents later. Mrs. Thomas R. Kackley will ree {turn Tuesday from White Bear | Lake, Wis,, where she and her son, Fritzie, were the guests of Mrs, Alan H. Stem. Fritzie will remain for several weeks before coming home, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Randells, New York, are at Lake Wawasee where they are the guests of Mrs. Randells’ mother, Mrs. J. K. Lilly and Mr. Lilly. Miss Reed Visits Seattle
Miss Betty Reed, daughter of Dr, (and Mrs. Jewett V. Reed, has left {for a three weeks' visit to Seattle,
| Mr. and Mrs. John McEwen, 1321
| N. Meridian St. are to return toe
| morrow night from a several weeks’ trip to New Mexico. Miss Louise Vonnegut, daughter | of Mr. and Mrs. Anton Vonnegut, | 3245 N. Pennsylvania St. is spende | ing several weeks at the summer cottage of her aunt, Mrs. Niles | Chapman, at Ogunquit, Me. | Mrs. Ralph Reahard and her | daughter, Miss Sally Reahard, have | returned from Lake Wawasee where | they spent several days as guests | of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Elder Adams | at their cottage. Mrs. Morris Lan- | ville Brown and her child and Mrs. William Macomber and her chile | dren, Kendallville, daughters of the Adams, are spending the summer
| Lockwoods to Open Cottage at Leland |
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph G. Lockwood |
McDermott, Richard Efroymson, Harold Victor, Charles Martin, Richard Coons, Fred Albershardt and Frank T. Peltier.
are to open their cottage at Leland, | Mich., the first of next week. | tary gifts. Miss Peggy Lockwood and Miss| On the executive committee for | Nina Lockwood are visiting Dr. and | the drive are Mortimer Furscott, | Mrs. James Bruce of Louisville at | Vallace O. Lee, J. Perry Meek, Mrs. { their Leland summer cottage until | John Gordon Kinghan and Mrs. | their parents and Miss Nancy Lock- | Rosamond Van Camp Hill. wood arrive. Miss Nancy, who grad-| Since 1925 when the Playhouse at {uated from Tudor Hall School in| 19th and Alabama Sts. was conJune, has been the guest of Mr. and | structed, the drive has been carried Mrs. G. M. Williams and their | on with definite organization, Prior daughter Shirley, formerly of this | to that time the group was too small city, at Farmington, Conn. | to necessitate such concerted acBefore returning home she spent | tion. Plays were picturesquely reseveral days with her cousin, Mrs. | hearsed in barns or attics and pro- | Thurston Greene and Mr. Greene at | New York and Montclair, N. J. Be- | fore her marriage last fall. Mrs. | Greene was Miss Eileen Bingham | Booker, Indianapolis, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. E. Bishop Mumford.
150 Northwestern U. Alumni to Pienie
Dr. and Mrs. George C. Garceau | will entertain 150 alumni of North- | western University and their wives | and husbands at a picnic this eve-
Masonic Temple. As interest was stimulated and the financial burden grew heavier, the need for an efficient system for “seiling the theater” parent. Out of that small group has grown the present campaign in which 310 members’ and interested persons take part. ’ The drive is to last 10 days. Reports are made two or three times each week at luncheon meetings. Exact graphs are kept of the num- . : bers of sales made, turned in or ning at their home, 4334 N. Penn- promised and compared with for-
sylvania St. 3K The arrangements committee in- | Mer years. Mr. Lee, Civic Theater
: : i t last year, is drive chaircludes Leland Fishback, Kirk Cole- | President year, man, Leland Kirkpatrick, Maurice | aR, assisted by Mr. Meer. Souiiaire Harrell and Mesdames Vance Smith, | man. Frank Hoke is theater presi-
| Paul Fifer, Herschell Davis and R,| dent for 1938-39. a | L. Nessler. Types of membership include
founder, life, donor, sustaining,
Society Folk Attend All-Star Game
Among the spectators at the American Association All-Star game last night at Perry Stadium were several Indianapolis society folk, Following the
me from one box were (left to right) George ZeigIer, Mrs. Rosamond VanCamp Hill and Mrs. Raymond P. VanCamp.
group, regular and double. This is to be the fourth consecutive year that the Children’s Theater drive is carried on in conjunction with the adult theater. The same workers sell both tickets. Mrs. J. I. Cummings is directing the campaign for the Children’s Theater.
Methodist Medical Staff Plans Outing
The Medical Staff of Methodist Hospital will hold its annual picnic for members, families and friends Wednesday afternoon and evening at the Meridian Hills Country Club. Awards to be made in the golf tournament are now on display in the hospital lobby. Dr. Roy Lee Smith is golf chairman. Bridge play is planned for the women, and the youngsters will swim in the pool. Dr. James F. McBride is arrangements chairman, assisted by Dr. Lillian B. Mueller and Dr. Smith.
Missionary to Talk At St. Paul’s Church
The Rev. John Nelson, executive secretary and general missionary of the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis, will speak at the season’s closing meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary of St. Paul's Episcopal Church Monday. The 1 p. m. luncheon will be held at the home of the president, Mrs.
Times Photo. E. May Hahn, 555 Central Court.
T. P. Burke | is to be in charge of large mone- |
| Judge Lucy Somerville Howorth, | With their parents.
Washington, chairman of the fed- Motor to West Coast | eration’s program co-ordination committee, announced the study | Ralph Reahard Jr. and Harley theme as “my business and yours,” | Rhodehamel Jr. are to leave Mon-
| The program will include a secret | 9ay for a motor trip to the West
ballot to sele “ : or | Coast. They will go the southern select “the best employer and return the northern
i ” | 4 in our town. route route.
duced at the Art Institute or the |
became ap- |
Study Success Chances
“During the last year our 68,000 members have studied the business of their communities and all its ramifications,” Judge Howorth said. “Next year our members will survey their chances for success or failure under present conditions. They will learn the extent to which success depends upon their. own initiative and to what extent upon | group action.” She said the business women also will study incomes and budgets and | the possibility of the average business woman securing
Mrs. Nettie Simms, Hastings, Neb., national chairman of international relations, proposed that the ventien advocate an embargo
to warring nations.
——
Chief Big Bear Will Sing Here
The Hoosier Auxiliary 140 of Letter Carriers will sponsor programs of songs by Chief Big Bear,
Beaver, pianist, at Block's auditorium July 25 to 30. Programs are tn be presented each day at 12:15 p.m, 2p m and 3:30 p. m. The chief is a graduate of Boston College and has studied music in Italy and Germany. In addition to singing he is to speak on various aspects of Indiana folk lore. He will describe his boyhood in Montana and world travels. Auxiliary members in charge are to be Mrs. Roscoe McClain, president, and Mesdames John Stettler W. T. Ricketts, Jean Simpson, Paul
economic safety through a program of saving. |
con- | on | products .of industry and agriculture | and money from the United States |
Indian baritone, and Princess White |
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Brosey, | 4034 Carrollton Ave., and their son, | Charles, left recently for Grand | Rapids, Mich., to visit relatives. | Miss Julia Farish, 3446 N. Meridjan St., was to leave today for Los | Angeles, where she will be the guest | of Miss Marie Sutton, formerly of | Indianapolis. She is to return by | way of the Canadian Rockies, | Banff and Lake Louise.
Duplicate Bridge Winners Named
Mrs. Dorothy Ellis, bridge forum instructor at William H. Block Co, today announced winners of Tuese day's duplicate game. They are: Section 1, north and south: Mrs. L. 'H. Brink and Mrs. Merritt Thompson, first; Mrs. Arthur Kinkade and Mrs. B. J. Nute ter, second. East and west, Mrs. V, A. Newcomer and Mrs. Arthur Pratt, first; Mrs. Dennis Dalton and Mrs. Tom Eirod, second, tied with Mrs. Ellen Demree and Mrs. Wile liam Eckhart. Section 2, north and south, Mrs. Florence Béyer and Mrs. Irene Mc | Cormack, first; Mrs. Keith Johns (and Mrs. E. J. Ittenbach, second. | East and west, Mrs. C. C. Mathews and Mrs. M. L. Ent, first; Mrs. Eme erson Chaille and Mrs. Stella King, | second. Section 3, north and south, Mrs. A. A. Abraham and Mrs. R. C. | Goodwine, first; Mrs. R. E. Moore {and Mrs. Jack Moore, second. East and west, Mrs. Gerrit M. Bates and [ Mrs. Tom Hatfield, first, and Mrs. | Aimee Thayer and Miss Olive
| Aughinbaugh, second.
| waggoner, William B. Norris, Park | Foote, James White, John Schies, Harold Schrickengost, E. R. Alcorn, Paul Burkhart, Clarence Caldwell, Morris Layton and L. O. Wadsworth,
Scene of Bridge From City
cool terraces of country clubs. The Indianapolis Country Club
27. Mrs. William H. Wells heads the ladies’ bridge committee. Assisting her will be the Mesdames Earl S. Gilchrist, George C. Mercer, Cleon A. Nafe, Sheldon R. Sayles, A. Ewing Sinclair and William G. Sparks. ” » "
Women members of Highland Golf and Country Club are to meet Wednesday for their regular bridge and luncheon party. Mrs. Raymond C. Fox heads the ts commit assisted
arrangemen by Mrs. M. J. Duffecy™ and the
dip el
Play Moves
to Country Club
Bridge is a year-round diversion for Indianapolis women, although the scene of play moves these hot days from town clubs and homes to
will hold a luncheon bridge July |
| Mesdames Joseph Brown, D. M, | Klausmeyer, Charles Hammond, | Eoward R. Williams, Paul Browning, Charles Renard, Floyd Mattice, | Ben Perk, J. J. Kennedy, Irwin | Wesley, C. I. Covert, George Hilge= | meier, Lyndell Foster, F. L. Mae haffey and R. L. Gehrt.
» s
The Hillcrest Club is sponsoring a ladies luncheon bridge Wednesday at 1 o'clock. Mrs. Walter White and Mrs. W. R. Caskey are hostesses, assisted W. Rohlwing.
