Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1938 — Page 11
D! AUC
AJ
1938 __
T heodore Roosevelt Jr. Family Moves Into New
Dwelling at
Oyster Bay
‘We Built This House Because We Had to Have a Place to Keep the Curios We Have Collected On Our Travels,” Owner Explains.
By HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, Aug. 9.—Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., likes to make an adventure out of everything she does, whether it’s bringing up a family, running the Girl Scouts, globe trotting or doing needlework. She said today that her latest adventure was getting settled in a
new home.
She and her husband, two sons, two grandchildren, Senorigna
Maria Nam, the Italian companion;
Poilu, the French poodle; Bis-
mark, the German Schnauzer, and the two unnamed monkeys from
South America have Georgian house at Oyster Bay.
Sagamore Hill apple orchard where
as a boy.
just moved into a brand new pink It stands on the site of the old
brick Colonel Roosevelt used tog play
The house itself, while very beautiful, is not unusual, but the
things it contains are. “We built this house,”
Mrs. Roosevelt explained, “because we had °
to have a place to keep the curios we've collected on our travels. No home we've ever had before really showed them off properly.
Now take that table,” pointing to a the far end of the library, “it was given Governor of the Philippines. We loved it, but we
n enormous mahogany table, at to my husband when he was never had any place
to put it. This room was designed for it.”
. The table,
made out of a single piece of tawny,
shades were repeated in the room.
nine feet long by four and three-fourths feet wide, was
light red mahogany. The same
“Everything here stands for an interesting experience,” Mrs.
Roosevelt said. “We got
those two carved stone heads in Indo-China,
The hanging above the bookcase came from a temple in the city of
Changtu. Those figures on either dancers.”
‘Fastened
side of it are Javanese shadow
“to the back of a quaint old rocking chair near a win-
dow was a needle-point cushion on which had been worked in cross-
stitch: “This chair belonged
of Jared Green, she topk it with her
to Prudence May, born A. D. 1766. Wife
in 1817 when she journeyed
in winter from Vermont to Ohio by ox-sled.”
“That was my grandmother «1 worked the back rest for it.
Green’s chair,” Mrs. 1 should have added that I did it
Roosevelt said.
while traveling by plane on a lecture tour.” Her love of recording the historical also showed in the petit
point panel heyond anything in her animated figure of a man (Colonel ping from crag to crag. ” f J ”
“My husband
husband's study. It portrayed the Roosevelt) with a red beard, hop-
2 8 8
always grows a beard on a hunting trip,” she ex-.
plained. All the animals the Colonel encounters on his expeditions— elephants, Tibetian antelope, giant pandas, rhinoceros and water buffalo—lurk in a frieze at the bottom of the panel.
On the white walls of the hall shot by Mrs. Roosevelt herself. She encounter, - skin had been presented
but she did admit that the gold to her by the King of Naham, for being a
hangs the skin of a huge tiger modestly refused to describe the medal in a case near the
virtuous wife. The gold medal, elaborately carved, lay in a case with
Colonel Roosevelt’s war medals.
- «My husband said the King should have consulted him before giving the medal to me,” smiled Mrs. Roosevelt. Another souvenir presented to her by the leader of a foreign
country
junk, beautifully executed, down to the Kai-shek gave that to me when my son
last year,” she said.
~ Beside it on the mahogany sideboard “The old Empress of Japan gave that to my father-
silver junk.
was displayed in the dining room.
It was a small silver last detail. “Madame Chiang Quentin and I were in China
stood a much larger
in-law, President Theodore Roosevelt, many years ago,” she ex-
plained.
- All of the bedrooms in the house are named for
® s 2
places where
the Roosevelts have traveled. On the white door of Quentin’s room is
printed in black letters, Changtu. “Quentin and I were there last a city of 1,000,000 or more, up the
August,” his mother said. “It’s Yangtse River. But there isn’t
one autorhobile road. Everybody travels by water.”
The Roosevelts’ room, mahogany bed and antique chests The room of Signorina Nam, jly over 19 years, is named Cuneo, she was born. The room in which
who has been after the province in Italy where
an early American one with a four-poster
of drawers, is called Vermont. with the Roosevelt fam-
Mrs. Roosevelt's two grandchil-
dren (3-year-old William and baby Eleanor McMillan) slept was
called Manilla. a job as mining engineer, room, with its gay scarlet hangings, strange native paintings. # 2 8
The two oldest Roosevelt have left home. married to William McMillan, the house and is living in Baltimore. visiting their grandparents now. “And you never saw ‘Nam. “They don’t know what fear
Cornelius, the third son, has been occupying the Puerto Rican
who leaves soon to take
dark mahogany furnishings and
¥
children, Theodore and Grace, already The former is working in Chicago. The latter is architect who designed the new They are her two babies, who're
two more darling children,” said Signorina
is. Why, only this morning the
baby chuckled when the two monkeys climbed on her carriage and
peeked ober at her.”
This might be unusual in another child, but not in a grandchild Roosevelt. Although she looks like a
of the Junior Mrs. Theodore
Dresden shepherdess, with her curly blond hair, dainty figure (she
weighs 108) and small heart-shaped thing. “My only regret was summer,” she said.
face, she is interested in every-
that I had to leave China when I did last «I wanted to be in another bombing. I was s0
excited I forgot to take pictures of the first one.”
National Chairman to Speak At Child Welfare Luncheon
Glenn Hillis, Kokomo, Aug. 21, during the American The national child
together of four co-ordinating organizations, the Forty and Eight
American Legion Auxiliary,
will speak at the child welfare luncheon Legion Auxiliary convention. welfare chairman will address the only get-
the American Legion, the and the Eight and Forty.
The luncheon will be held in theY
Riley Room of the Claypool Hotel. Representatives of public - and private agencies are to attend. Arthur Lemmon, Greensburg, child welfare chairman of the Indiana Department of the American Legion, and Mrs. L. 8S. Leiter, Eaton, O., auxiliary chairman, are chairmen of child welfare programs for the state convention. Mrs. John A. Cejnar, 12th district child welfare chairman, is in charge of the luncheon. Assisting her are Mrs. Allen H. Mitchell, 12th district auxiliary scholarship chairman; Lester Moorman, 12th district legion chairman; Miss Vivian Taggart, Boy Scout chairman for the Forty and Eight; Miss Rosemary Kirkoff of the Forty and Eight; Mrs. Marguerite Seibert of the national child welfare division of the legion; Mrs. G. I. Seybert, Indiana Department Knightstown Home chairman; Mesdames O. J. Pool, Lee Sims, Marguerite McDonough, W. J. Overmire, Pleas Greenlee, Gerald Frazier, Hugh ‘Copsey, John Byers and C. K. Rob-
Invited to Meeting
Personals
Miss Edith Jane Fish, contralto and - voice teacher, has returned from an extended visit in New York where she was the guest of Edith White Griffing. Miss Fish will return to New York for a course in German Lieder under Conrad Bos.
Prof. Gildas E. Metour of Butler University was guest of honor Sunday evening at a party at the home of Miss Allene Stidham, 502 E. Maple Road. Prof. Metour will leave this week for where he will receive his Ph. D. degree from the University of Pittsburgh. : Miss Courtenay Whitaker, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Joel M. Whitaker, sailed Saturday from New York for a trip abroad. She was accompanied by Mrs, Peter Arrington, Warrenton, N. C.
Saddle Club are planning a swim-
at Northern Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Clift are va-
On Women’s Rights cationing at Spring Lake, N. J.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 9 (U. P).— Miss Doris Stevens, feminist leader and chairman of the Inter-Ameri-can Commission of Women, will confer with Dominican Republic President Rafael Tujillo at Trujillo City this week on Women’s rights in that country. President Trujillo, military leader of the Island Caribbean republic, Jhas invited Miss Stevens to discuss the problem with Dominican leaders. The invitation was tendered through Dominican minister to the United States, Andrew Pastoriza. Miss Stevens, a leader of the fight for women’s suffrage in this country, will leave Miami by plane : nd Shend the rest of the
few days in New York.
Camp, Brevard, N. C.
Misses Dorothy Weber, Lewis, Edelle Smith and Evelyn Gillion have returned from Camp Kosciusko, Winona Lake.
Miss instructor at the Riviera Club, has left for Camp Lewis Ernst, near Madison, where she will be counsel« joe and director of waterfront activies.
and. daughter “have
Pittsburgh,
Members of the Williams Creek
ming party and picnic for Aug. 28
Mrs. R. E. Adkins and Miss Mary Alice Adkins have been spending a
Miss Barbara Foster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foster, is among the campers at Eagle’s Nest
Betty
Alice Rice, swimming
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Richardt left for a
Booth Jr. (Holland Photo.) 2. Miss Merle Matheny
Tabernacle. Matheny. of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Tavel.
riage July 14. (Voorhis Photo.)
1. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Aldous, 3625 Salem St., announce the engagement of their daughter Dorothy to James H. Booth Jr. The wedding will be Sept. 2. Mr. Booth is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John H.
will become the bride of Denver Baker, Alfordsville, in a ceremony to be read Saturday at the Woodworth Etter Miss Matheny: is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
3. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Grossman, Texarkana, Ark., have announced the engagement ‘of their daughter Irene Ruth to Dr. Lester Tavel, son The wedding will be Sunday in Texarkana. Mr. and Mrs. Tavel will attend the ceremony. 4. Mrs. Thomas J. Sullivan was Miss Edith Pippin before
her mar-
hostess
House. Exhibit all day.
EVENTS
SORORITIES : Lambda Gamma. 8 p. m. Thurs. Miss Virginia Campbell, 26 E. 14th,
Alpha chapter, Phi Delta Pi. 8:30 p. m:. Wed. Miss Frances Pat- _ _. terson, 2851 Central Ave., Apt. 4, hostess. Kappa Delta. Wed. eve. Mrs. Harry T. Ice, 4421 Carrollton Ave. hostess. Miss Florence Schaub, Amicus chapter, Verus Cordes. Thurs. Mrs. C. E. Nichols, hostess at her summer home on Blue River.
SOCIETIES
Alliance Francaise, Sat. noon. Hotel Washington. Luncheon. Marion County Gladiolus Society. Sat. Brookside Park Community
assistant.
A rose arbor and tall baskets of for the garden wedding of Miss
Joseph W. Nesbit Will Marry Miss Alsie Corn in Rite ;Today
gladioli will provide a background
Alsie Corn and Joseph Wilbur Nesbit at 2:30 p. m. today at the home &
of the bride’s sister, Mrs. Walter B. Striebeck, and Mr. Striebeck, 4116 Graceland Ave. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Corn, 3504 Kenwood Ave. Mr. Nesbit is the son of the Rev. and Mrs. B. R. Nesbit, South Bend. : The Rev. Mr. Nesbit is to read the ceremony. Mr. Corn is to give
-| his daughter in marriage. She is to
wear a white mousseline de soie gown with a square neck, full sleeves and a flaring skirt with appliqued pastel flowers around the bottom. She is to wear a garden hat of
- | white hairbraid trimmed with white
chiffon velvet ribbon, white lace
Ralph Norris, Miss Finnegan To Wed Today
The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond R. Noll is to officiate at the marriage of Ralph Waldo Norris and Miss Margaret Rose Finnegan at 7:45 p. m. today at the rectory of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Luke Finnegan, 4248 Graceland Ave. The bride is to wear a white mousseline de soie gown fashioned on princess lines. Her flowers will be white and blue in a colonial bouquet. Miss Betty Finnegan is to be her sister’s only attendant. She will wear aquamarine mousseline de soie frock with a peach jacket and will carry a similar bouquet. Lowell Anderson is to be best man. Mrs. Finnegan is to wear orchid colored sheer with a corsage: of gardenias. : After a wedding trip North, the couple will be at home Sept. 1 at 4907 Ralston Road.
Missionary Society Will Discuss China
A roundtable discussion of China will be a feature of the Women’s Home Missionary Society of the Memorial Presbyterian = Church meeting at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Fred Ellerman, 422 W. 43d St. Mrs. Fred Peine will present the Bible lesson. Mrs. Harry Stombaugh will read. Assistant hostesses will be the Mesdames Oscar Lee, James T. Stewart, H. M. Stradling, J. Edward Stilz and A. Joe Schofield.
Guests From South ~ Will Be Entertained
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman H. Tompkins are to entertain tonight at their home in New Bethel for Mrs. Albert Quigley, Greenville, N. C, who with her daughter, Barbara, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Tompkins and Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Stempfel. A buffet supper is to be given tomorrow night for Mrs. Quigley by 4502 N. Delaware
St. Mrs. Quigley
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Pinnell,|
mitts and is to carry a bouquet of pink and white roses and delphinium. i Mrs. Striebeck, who is to be matron of honor, will wear a sheer green empire-styled frock with a square neck and yellow chiffon velvet streamers with a yellow hairbraid hat to match. She is to carry
pink and white roses and yellow
gladioli. Brother Will Be Best Man
Owen Nesbit is to be his brother’s best man. Miss Victoria Montani, harpist, is to play a group of bridal airs including “Liebestraum” during the ceremony. Miss Melba Nesbit is to sing “O Promise Me,” and “Because.” Relatives and intimate friends are to be present at a reception following the ceremony. Mrs. Alice Newland is to assist Mrs. Corn and Mrs. Striebeck. The couple will return from Michigan after the first of September. They are to live at 307 W. 42d St. Both Miss Corn and Mr. Nesbit were graduated from Butler Unis versity. : Out-of-town guests at the wedding will include Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nesbit, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nesbit, Terre Haute; Mrs. Anna Corn, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Corn, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. McWhinney and Mrs. William Martin,
Crawfordsville; Mr. and Mrs. Cari |.
Rhodes, Miss Doris Rhodes and Mrs. Flora Rhodes, Ladoga, and Miss Grace Nesbit, South Bend.
Miss Mingle
To Be Guest
Miss Duvall Selects Her ‘Attendants for Aug. . 20 Wedding.
Bridge parties and other informal events are usually without decorations, but hostesses planning parties for brides-to-be often strive for colorful and novel decorations. American Beauty roses will be used in decorations and appointments at a personal shower tomorrow for Miss Eleanor Mingle. Miss
will be the hostess. . Miss Mingle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Glenn Mingle, is to be married to Ben Johnson Weaver, son of Clarence R. Weaver, Aug.
Church. . : Guests tomorrow will include the mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Kenneth E. Kinnear who was Miss Margaret Ramey before her recent marriage; Mrs. Paul D.. Hinkle,
Lee Riddell, Jane Morgan, Louise Brandt, Marjorie Raiser, Harriet Sracraft, Virginia Blackley and Marian Blackley.
2 #8 = Miss Margaret Duvall today announced that Miss Helen Scanling
she is married to Donald E. Herrin Aug. 20 at the Broad Ripple Christian Church. Miss Duvall is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Duvall, 6322 College Ave. Mr. Herrin is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy S. Herrin. Miss Edna Weir will be bridesmaid, Vernon Reynolds will be Mr. Herrin’s best man, and Thomas Herrin and Roy S. Herrin Jr., both brothers of the bridegroom-to-be, are to usher. Miss Alice Schaefer and Miss Martha Sullivan will give an informal tea and linen shower Sun-
Schaefer, 1139 W. 33d St. Mrs. Glenethel Thrush will entertain with a utility shower Aug. 16 at her home, 705 Lanerock Road. Misses Scanling and Weir will give a kitchen shower, Aug. 18 at Miss Weir's home on Pendleton Pike. The bride-to-be attended Butler University. = ” 2 : Mrs. Irvin L. Thompson will entertain at her home Aug. 30 with a buffet dinner parfy in honor of Miss Mary Elizabeth Miller, whose marriage to Harry E. Echard will be Sept. 4 at the North Methodist Church. Miss Miller is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde P. Miller, W. 56th St. Mr. Echard is the son of Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Echard, Hoopeston, Ill. Last year, Miss Miller was maid of honor at the marriage of the Thompsons’ daughter, Miss Dorothy Cecile Thompson to Thomas Horral Williams, Washington. Among others who are to entertain for Miss Miller are Mrs. Ear! Nolting who will be hostess at a party Aug. 18; Mrs. Malcolm Thurgood and Miss Joann McDermed who will give a luncheon party Aug. 20; Mrs. John Alexander and Miss Ladora Smith who have set Aug. 24 as the date of their party for Miss Miller, and Mrs. James E. Hopping who will entertain Aug. 26.
Philanthropic Group to Hold Founders’ Day
Mrs. .H. E. Turley, Minneapolis, Minn., national second vice president of Alpha Omicron Alpha national philanthropic sorority, will be a special guest at a Founders’ Day dinner and bridge party tonight at Feeser’s Tearoom. Members of the twelve senior chapters and four junior chapters will attend the party. Mrs. Herschell Haines, Gainsboro, Fla., an Alpha chapter member, will be a guest. Mrs. J. R. Sentney, who organized , Alpha chapter here in 1920, will preside. The arrangements committee includes Mrs. Harold Noble, chairman, assisted by the Mesdames J. P. Parker, Richard Ralph, M. J. Karabell, J. W. Hill and Sentney. Presidents of the Indianapolis chapters are Mesdames H. A. Baker, John Ferree, William Kassenberg, J. P. Parker, Russell Bleeke, William P. Weimer, Hill, Karabell and Noble. : Junior unit presidents are the Misses Emily Daniel, Patricia Sent-
Ret Sarah Jane Wyatt and Anita
At Shower
Helen Pielsticker, 4954 Ruckle St.
27 at the Tabernacle Presbyterian
Mrs. E. N. Trago; Misses Margaret
will be her matron of honor when |-
ddy, Aug. 14, at the home of Miss
Like anyone else,
the Duke and Duchess of Windsor think a cruise
is about the best cure for those “dog day” letdowns. These pictures
show the famous couple The Duchess, tioning young
on a recent voyage from Genoa to Cannes. with her dark glasses, looks like many another vacawoman. And the Duke, who goes in for sightseeing
with a telescope, seems to need a haircut.
& =»
Windsors Good
Shipmates,
Gladys Swarthout Learns
Times Special
NEW YORK, Aug. 9—Marriage has done a lot for the Duke of Windsor, said Gladys Swarthout, the singer. She returned recently with
her baritone-sportsman Savoia. They had been
hours aboard the liner on July 27 from Genoa to Cannes,
husband, Frank Chapman, shipmates with the Duke and Duchess for four
aboard the Conte di
where the
Windsors disembarked for their home on the French Riviera.
And almost a moment after spot-¢
ting him on the liher’s deck. in Genoa’s harbor, said, she was shaking hands with the royal pair, sipping cocktails with them and presenting the Duchess with what was left of a bottle of “marvelous cleaner that takes spots out of clothes in a jiffy.” “My husband and Herman Rogers, the Duke's friend, who was with them, are friends,” she related. «prank had met the Duke when he was Prince of Wales in New York in 1024, and he couldn’t believe his eyes when he saw him. - They ‘are lovely, charming people, and the best listeners I have ever met. When we were sitting around having cocktails. with the ship’s officers, they were the most attentive people present. “He smiled at her frequently, and she often looked at him as if they understood what each other was thinking without using words.
‘Delightful and Happy’ “I noticed all the time we were with them they were very gracious to: each other, and delighted and happy with each other’s company. I am sure that marriage has done a lot for the Duke, and I should say, and I think I am a good observer, that they are very happily married. It -wouldn’t be fair if I didn’t say that no picture I have ever seen of the Duchess has done her justice. She is really a beautiful woman, but terribly camera shy. I think that is one reason why she does not take a good photograph. “When I gave the Duchess what I had left of the American cleaner she: was so pleased and ' gracious about it that she came to me when she was leaving the boat and thanked me a second time for it.” Mr. Chapman said -the Duke is a much healthier looking person than when he met him in New York in 1924. He has taken on weight, Mr. Chapman said, and the deep lines he had then are out of his face. Capt. Antonio Lena, formerly master of the Conte di Savoia, here on. a vacation from his home in Italy, said the Duke looked much better than when he last met him five years ago in Italy. Two Chapters Plan Picnic Alpha chapter, Indianapolis, and Eta chapter, Anderson, of Alpha Delta Omega Sorority, will hold a joint picni¢’ Thursday evening at Forest ‘Parl§, Noblesville.
Help Arrange Church Garden Party
Swarthout:
a.
300 to Be Guests Of Alumnae Club At Propylaeum
Alpha Gamma Delta Alumnae Club was to entertain 300 guests at the Propylaeum at 3 o'clock this afternoon. Several of the guests were to come from Weland Camp, Ontario,
they have been serving as instruc-
projects of the organization. Mrs. B. E. Silver, club president, Mrs. Merton Johnston and M Mary Ann Tall were to receive. Appearing on the program were to be Miss Aloha Mae Carlin and Miss Marjorie Nelson, DePauw University chapter active members and pianists. Mrs. Norman Beeson was to play several trumpet selections, accompanied by Miss Carlin. A one-act play, Gown,” was to be presented by students of the speech department of Shortridge High School. The cast was to include the Misses Virginia
Mary Lou Mitchell, Mary Kathryn Cass, Patricia Walter, Betsy Reed, Marion Skillman, and Thelma Carter. Miss Eleanor Theek, instructor at Shortridge and club member, was to direct the play. Garden flowers were to throughout the entertaining rooms and a bowl of roses, the sorority flower, were to be used on the tea table. - Mrs. Silver was to pour. Miss Carlin was to play during the tea hour. :
Members of the Aperio Club will attend a dessert-bridge tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Asa Newhouse, 4002 Guilford Ave.
se & =» Mrs. Wilbur Mohr, 1807 N. Pennsylvania St., will be hostess for a Inter Libros Club meeting Friday night at her home. |
Members of the Telephone Belles Club spent the week-end at Lake Manitou. The party included. the Misses JLaverne Anderson, Margaref Dalton, Alma Lee Hill, Martha Graves, Betty Mangus, Ethelda Meyers, Florence Muir, Martha Schissel, Martha Scott, Ruth Thompson, Betty Ulrich and Betty Vitz. 2 8 8 { s Miss Willa Jo Britan will hostess at a slumber party Ior members of the Imp Club tomorrow evening at her home, 987 Campbell Ave. Guests will include the "Misses Marie Love, Jean Glascock, Janet Murphy, Margaret Ann Lindsay, Jean Oglesby, Emily Jackson, Martha Lee Brenner and Jayne Schmalholz. : | a o 2 The Women’s Democratic Club of Center Township will meet at 7:30 tonight with Mrs. Thelma Oakes.
University Heights W. C. T. U. Will Elect
University Heights Women’s Christian Temperance Union was to elect officers at 2p. m. today at the home of Mrs. Robert Baerman, 1720 Lawrence Ave, The Rev. Jonas Collins was to discuss “Relation of Temperance fo Character,” and Mrs. Emma Miller
| was to have charge of the devotional
hour. Pauline Kappmeyer Named Chapter Head
Miss Pauline Kappmeyer is the ly ent of Alpha chapter, Alpha Beta Phi Sorority.
| Fauchier, Schmidt, assistant chairman, Mrs,
Canada, and Jackson, Mich., where tors. The camps are philanthropic
“Alice’s Blue
Ward, Dorothy Ruark, Jean Wright,
be used
Guild Picks’ Its Roundup Committees
Mrs. Oscar Perine Gens eral Chairman for Event of Oct. 9.
Mrs. Irving D. Hamilton, Sune nyside Guild president, has ane nounced committees to assist with arrangements for the sixth annual Indiana Saddle Horse Association Roundup Sunday, Oct. 9, at the Gregg Farms. The guild and ase sociation are ‘cosponsors.
Mrs. Oscar Perine is general chairman and Mrs, William T. Eisenlohr and Mrs. LeRoy Ford are
| cochairmen. Mrs. Chantilla White "| is publicity chairman.
Committees are: Finance, Wayne Stone, chairman; Mrs. William Hanning, assistant chairman; Mesdames John Burke, E. B. Mce Comb and G. W. Dunnington; ushe ers, Mrs. Wallace O. Lee, chairman, Mrs. Gus Meyer, assistant chaire man, Mrs. G. F. Kleder and Mrs, N. E. Boyer; program, Mrs. O. P. chairman, Mrs. Kurt
A. CC. Zaring and Freunds. | Reserved seats, Mrs. Floyd Mate tice, chairman, Mrs. Theodore Root, assistant chairman, Mesdames Charles Seidensticker, Albert Clafe fy, Earl Cox, George Dickson, H. E, Elwert, Alvin Fernandes, John Gare rett, Frank Holmes, George Kole staedt, Mort Martin, Lewis T. Ferguson, A. E, Hubband, Maxwell Lang, Edward Lawson, Gaylord Rust, George Shaffer, Walter Web ster, J. Hart Laird, Edward Enners, Donald Graham, Jesse Marshall, tila Martih, G. G. Schmidt, D. B. van, ard Tuttle Yelch. 50] Tay Others Are Listed
Concluding the list are: Gate, Mrs. Charles Renard, chairman, Mrs. Howard Linkert, assistant chairman, Mesdames E. Park Akin, Myron Austin, Daniel Bower; Donald Brodie, Robert Clark, Edward Hilgemeier, Ralph Martin, E. V. Mitchell, George Morrison, Rufus Mumford, John D. Pearson, C. W. Richardson, James Seward, Maurice Thomas, Herbert Tyson, Stowell C. Wasson, Dallas Foster, O. A. Chillson, William Durkin, Robert Sturm, John Bulger ‘and Elmer Sherwood. Boxes, Mrs. Glenn J. Bookwalter, chairman, Mrs. L. C. Burnett, assistant chairman, Mesdames J. C. Berry, A. B. Chapman, Fred Krauss, Lemaux, Carrie Hammel, George Hilgemeier, William Wemer, B. B. Pettijohn, Carl Wood, O. H. Bradway, E. J. Braman, Ethel Bromer, Charles Byfield, B. M. Forbes, H. D. Hamilton, Adrian Hamersley, A. J. Hueber, Leroy Mar tin, Hal Meyer, E. L. Burnett, W. D. Keenan, J. Edward Morris, Sidney Rice, John Sawyer, Boyd Temple= ton, Sydney Weinstein and Thomas Whallon. The Sunnyside Guild was organized in August, 1920, by a group of women who were interested in the sanatorium. : They sponsor monthly
Mrs. William
Miss | entertainments, parties and musi»
cals; a picnic each June and Christe mas parties.
Membership Limited
The guild is now an incorporated organization with a limited membership of 100. Besides sponsoring
{| monthly parties and musicals, a
picnic each June and Christmas parties, the guild has given victrolas, a radio for every bedside with a public speaking system that enables the superintendent to give talks to all the patients at one time, pianos, a motion picture machine, lawn swings, porch furniture and a greenhouse. A recent gift was. 18 fracture beds and stools and 99 mattresses. A relief committee gives aid to needy people on the sanatorium’s waiting list and also gives medicine, food, milk, coal, clothing and furnie ture to families of tubercular pae tients. ‘Aids Needy Families
At Christmas, the relief committee with the assistance of guild meme bers furnishes each needy family with a basket of food and a gift for each member of the family. Another committee maintains the loan closet at the sanatorium. While the guild has as its obe jective aid for tubercular people, it has also contriputed to other worthy causes. It donated $2500 to the Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp at Bridgeport, furnished the reception room and a room for nurses; it has contributed more than $2000 to the Flower Mission Hospital, $500 to the Sevehth District Federation of Clubs radium fund, $500 to the Red Cross for flood relief and $100 to the Wheeler Rescue Mission Buiide ing Fund. The money necessary for the guild’s many activities is raised by the annual card party, the annual dance and cosponsorship of the roundup.
Coming-Out Party of Deb to Cast $30,000
NEWPORT, R. I, Aug. 9 (U. P), A debutante coming-out party remi« niscent of boom years will be held Saturday when Lesley Hyde Ripley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. H. Ripley, makes her bow at a cost of approximately $30,000. “A $15,000 ballroom is being built for the party on the Rip= ley estate, and may be torn down afterward. There will be about 1000 guests. The party probably will be the biggest and most expensive of the Newport. season, since: Mrs. Hamil ton Rise’s death ended her long series of $50,000 parties.
+ i
A. M. Truc to Marry, Miss Beulah M. Cox
‘Aug. 20 is the date set for the marriage of Miss Beulah M. Cox, Lafayette, to Arthur M. Truc of this city, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. True, Chicago. The announcement
Mrs,
was 3.08 by 2 | Mr. and Mrs. John T. Hoffman,
