Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1938 — Page 4
Football and Shooting
Exodus Well Balanced By Arrival of Visitors
Dr. and Mrs. Jewett V. Reed Issue Invitations for Wedding of Daughter, Betty, Nov. 22; Vonneguts Sail for America.
\ By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON
A brief checkup of coming events reveals activities stretching out in every direction. The fall football and shooting exodus is nicely balanced by the influx of visitors and returning travelers find important weddings looming brightly ahead.
Dr. and Mrs. Jewett V. Reed issued invitations today to the mar- ”
riage of their daughter, Betty, to Robert E. Sweeney Jr., which is to take place at 4:30 p. m, Nov. 22 at Dr. and Mrs. Reed’s home. Mrs. William C. Bertermann will be her sister's maid-of-honor and Mr. Sweeney's niece, Carol Ziegler, will be flower girl. James Ballard of Detroit will be Mr. Sweeney’s best man and Albert Smith and Walter Shiel are to be ushers. . .
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The Princeton-Yale football game at Princeton’s Palmer stadium Nov. 12 will attract several Indianapolis rooters. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Appel, whose son Alan Appel is a student at Princeton, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Scott Jr, will attend the game and go on to New York for a week to visit Mr. Appel’s other son, John. Mr. and Mrs. Donald N. Test will join Mr. and Mrs. A. Hastings Fiske, who are spending several months in New York, for the game at Princeton. Donald N. Test Jr., who attends Princeton, will have as his guest, Miss Anne Dunlop of Cincinnati. Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall who has been in Boston for several weeks is to arrive the first of next week for several days’ stay with Mrs. John W. Kern before leaving for Phoenix, Ariz, for the winter.
Vonneguts Sail for U. S.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Vonnegut, who spent the summer in Cannes on the French Riviera and have been visiting relatives in Germany since the first of September, sailed Thursdey on the S. S. Antwerp from Hamburg. They are returning via the Panama Canal to California, where they will join Mrs. Vonnegut’s mother, Mrs. Charles Dryer, in Los Angeles for the Christmas holidays. They will be home after the first of the year. Dr. and Mrs. G. H. A. Clowes returned today from their summer home at Woods Hole, Mass. Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge will remain in the East until December. Mrs. Lawrence G. Hess has returned from a visit with Mrs. Alice Zollinger Turner at Tucson, Ariz. Mrs. Samuel B. Sutphin recently returned from New York. Mrs. W. Richardson Sinclair is back from her summer home at Hyannis Port, Cape Cod, Mass. Dr. and Mrs. Larue D. Carter are back from a trip to the Great Smoky Mountains. Dr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Ensminger have returned from New York. t J 2 2 » ” 2
Mrs. L. E. Gausepohl, Mrs. Frank S. Dowling and Mrs. Arthur H. Wyatt will motor to Washington Monday, where they will visit Mr. snd Mrs. Arthur Meyer, formerly of Indianapolis. Mrs. Meyer will later accompany them to New York for several days’ stay. Mrs. Wyatt also will visit her daughter, Miss Helen Wyatt, a student at Sarah Lawrence College at Bronxville, N. Y. Mrs. Robert P. Hanna of Columbus, O., who will arrive Nov. 11 to attend the wedding Nov. 12 of Miss Maryellen Gartland, daughter of Mrs. Peter V. Gartland, to Marvin M. Martin, will be the guest for two weeks of Mr. and Mrs. George T. O'Conner. George T. O’Conner Jr., who is to come from Notre Dame University to spend the week-end with his parents, will have as his guests Ray McKeever and Joseph Le Strange of Philadelphia. William Beechler of Richmond, Va., will be the week-end guest of Donald O’Conner.
Dr. and Mrs. G. B. Wolfe and Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cox re-.
cently returned from grouse hunting trips to Michigan’s upper and lower peninsulas. They spent a few days at Mr. and Mrs. Cox’s cabin at Fountain, Mich.
Mrs. W. E. Gavin Entertains Monday
Mrs. William E. Gavin will entertain at luncheon at Woodstock Club Monday, following Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown's lecture on Chopin, first of the series sponsored by the Indiana State Symphony Society’s Women’s Committee. Guests will include Mrs. James Rogan and her sister, Miss Mary Easley of Lincoln, Neb., Mrs. John M. Hare, Mrs. H. H. Arnholter and Mrs. Robert Habig of Miami Beach, Fla., who is visiting Mr, and Mrs. J. I. Holcomb. Mrs. Guy Chester Smith of Bloomfield Hills, Mich. and her daughter, Kitty, will arrive tomorrow to spend a week with Mrs. Smith’s mother, Mrs. Carl Vernon Griffith, at the Marott Hotel. Mrs. Smith will bring an exhibit of handwork made by the Detroit League for the Handicapped, an organization sponsored by the Detroit Junior League. Mrs. Dudley A. Pfaff and Mrs. John L. Eagles- - field ‘will be hostesses for the local display and sale of merchandise from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at Mrs. Pfaff’s home. Proceeds will go to the Detroit League for the Handicapped and the Indianapolis Junior League's Next to New Shop. Harold Triggs will entertain a group of friends at his studio at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music tomorrow evening.
Halloween Party Set
Halloween games, pumpkin ice cream, ginger bread men and feats of prestidigitation by Hubert Collins, magician, will entertain Riley Hospital patients at the Halloween party the Indianapolis Junior League will give at 2:30 p. m. Monday in the occupational therapy shop. Mrs. William H. Wemmer, party chairman, will be assisted by members of the League’s hospital committee, of which Miss Josephine Madden is chairman. :
Candidates to Be Listeners At Women Voters’ Meeting
Candidates for Congress and the Legislature will listen rather than talk to Indianapolis League of Women Voters members at the Athenaeum Wednesday, when the members entertain the candidates and guests and
speak on their legislative policies.
Mrs. John Hillman will talk on “Why We Need the Merit System, What We Mean by a Good One and What the League Will Do.” Mrs.
William Snethen’s marriage law revision will include a description of the Indiana “mar-
riage mill,” the Governor's commit- |
tee of investigation and provisions for a “more satisfactory” law. Mrs. James Murray will discuss the proposal to remove the office of State Superintendent of Public Instruction from the list of elective - offices. 8he will present her views on why a two-year elective office is bad; and why the league will © work for passage in the 1639 Legislature of the bill making the office
discussion of ®
school attendance and child labor law. Mrs. Lester Smith’s topic will be
registration and improvement of nomination methods. Mrs. 8S. N. Campbell, last year’s president of the Indiana League, will describe the state program as a part ef the national program. Mrs. John K. Goodwin, president, will greet .the guests. Mrs. Leo Gardner, chairman of the league's legislative steering committee, will review the league program in gen-
tinue through Thursday at the vdnia and Walnut Sts.
Needlework Guild to Start Roundup of Garments Tuesday
The annual roundup of new garments collected by the Indianapolis. branch of the Needlework Guild of America will begin Tuesday and conFirst United Lutheran Church, Pennsyl-
A display of the garments will be held Wednesday from 3 to 9 p. m.
for the public. ter of Alpha Omicron Alpha will serve tea, with Mrs. Foster Stanley as chairman, assisted by Mesdames Russell Bleeke, Guy O. Byrd, Walter Christy, J. Frank Herdrich, Richard Ralph, J. R. Robertson and
| William Stewart.
Section presidents will hold a business meeting Wednesday noon at the Y. W. C. A. with a.luncheon following. Reservations should be made with Mrs. C. K. Calvert by Tuesday. Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood will be chairman for Tuesday and will supervise the counting and arranging of the garments with Mrs. Fred N. Hooker as assistant chairman. Mrs. George M. Spiegle will be chairman of the arrangements committee, assisted by Mesdames H. A. Pfafflin, Hazel Alig, Arthur Wagner, H. M. Teban and Miss Clara Twiname. Mrs. H. A. Baker is door committee chairman. Mrs. Oscar L. Pond heads the publicity committee, assisted by Mesdames Fred E. Gifford, Bert McCammon and H. E. von Grimmenstein.
Unpacking Committee
Mrs. Norman Bassett heads the unpacking committee. She will be assisted by Mesdames J. F. Boesinger, L. C. Brown, F. H. Cheyne, M. Kirk Coleman, F. A. Curry, Othniel Hitch, W. M. Howard, Laban Johnson, Jennie June, M. J. Karabell, T. S. Kuhns, Russell Machael, A. M. Maguire, J. W. Mallow, Ross Manly, H. H. Ochiltree. Also Mesdames H. S. Ratliff, Carl Schey, W. H. Schneider, Roy Seward, Merle Sidener, A. G. Shoptaugh, C. W. Starks, Joseph Stine, Harrison Walters, J. F, Ward, G. A. Wright, C. R. Wyatt and Misses Elizabeth Manly and Lillian Taggart. : Mrs. Ray T. Fatout will head the transportation committee which arranges for the collection and dis-
‘I tribution of bags. Her assistants will
include Mesdames Robert Aldag, E. A. Baker, C. B. Blakeslee, S. G. Bush, F. A. Curry, Benner Davenport, C. E. Hendrix, H. R. McKinstray, Ochiltree and Herschel Wheeler.
Table Chairman and Aids The table chairman and assistants
Twill be Mesdames R. E. Cavanaugh,
C. E. Hogate, men; Mrs. E. D. Wilhite and Mrs. Norman Beeson, boys; Mrs. Malcolm Moore and Mrs. Gifford, women; Mrs. Bleeke and Mrs. Stanley, girls; Mrs. Pond, Mrs. A. C. Reynolds, Mrs. O. S. Mueller and Mrs. Wheeler, pre-school age children; Mrs. Will H. Brown, Mrs. Fred Ropkey and Miss Julia Enlow, infants, Also Miss Opal Little and Mrs. Walter C. Hiser, househdld linen; Mrs. P. C. Reilly and Mrs. Robert Bracken, instituticns; Mesdames L. R. Pearson, Ray Sparrow and Stewart Ruch, junior auxiliary. Thursday Mrs. Fred Doeppers, assisted by Mrs. E. I. Wagner, will have charge of packing the garments for delivery to 28 social agencies in the city. The checking committee, headed by Mrs. C. A. Garrard, will include Mesadmes Sherwood, N. F. Jerome; Misses Lucy Hardy and Edna Curtis. Members of the packing committee are Mesdames Ralph E. Bird, S. G. Bush, C. K. Calvert, Norma Cone, Davenport, G. B. Elliott, Frank
Fromer, G. T. Gilbert, J. H. Grubb, Cc Herdrich, J. G, M.
The Lambda Chap- & =
Hill, J. B. Hoffmeyer, A. H. Humphrey, J. F. McKinney, McKinstray, Ralph, Kennedy Reese, R. R. Scott, C. M. Starr, Stanley Timberlake, von Grimmenstein, J. B. Webb, J. F. Wilson and Frank Yount. New section presidents this year are Mesdames W. Scott Hiser, Sanford Benham, L. G. Cummings, Joseph Matthews, Riley Bradford and Miss Patricia Ann Sentney. New directors are Mesdames Bert Cordle, Ernest R. Smith, Fred Ballweg, Paul Rhoadarmer, Preston Woolf, Paul McNamara, L. G. Cummings Jr., W. B. Hockett, Browning Gent and Miss Mary Pickard.
Women to Hear
Talk on Control Of Marijuana
H. J. Anslinger, commissioner of narcotics, Washington, will speak Tuesday at the November meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Women. “Marijuana and Its Control” will be Mr, Anslinger’s topic. Mrs. Hugh J. Scudder, chairman of the legislation committee, arranged for his appearance here. , Committee reports will be made at the 10 a. m, business session. Mrs. George Ruth, municipal affairs committee chairman, will present E. O. Snethen, who will speak on “The Purchase of the Indianapolis Water Co.” Mrs. Myron Miller, chairman of the national defense committee of the American Legion Auxiliary, will speak on “National Defense.” Mrs.
J. H. Armington, chairman of the
Human Relations—World Peace Committee, will present Mrs. Myron. A luncheon will follow. The Rev. Ellis W. Hay will speak in the afternoon.
D. A.R. to Hear Mrs. Cornish
Mrs. Melissa Jane Cornish will speak on “Guatemala, the Land of Enchantment” at a meeting of the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, Daughters of the American. Revolution, Thursday afternoon at the Chapter house. The program, in observance of Americanism Day, is sponsored by the Wheel and Distaff Committee. A tea at 4 p. m will follow the
talk. Mrs. Frederick D. Stilz, re-.
gent, is to preside at a board meeting at 10 a. m. Mrs, George Cable Wright is tea chairman, with Mrs. Kenneth Dix Coffin as vice chairman. Assisting will be Mesdames Roy K. Coats, Noble: W. Hiatt, William PF. Kegley, Carl F. Maetschhe, Sylvan L., Mouser, William E. Niven, Edgar Y. Pattison, Carl W. Piel, Verne A. Trask and Miss Alice Velsey. Mrs. . Charles F. Voyles, sponsor of Wheel and Distaff, and Mrs. Frances E. Black, president, will
line Long, Peru, and Mrs.
and Emily Lou Posson.
2. (Left to right) Mesdames William L. Polk, Charles Maley and
Ernest B. Thompson will be pages
of Clubs dinner at Ayres, opening an exhibit by resident Indiana artists. Mrs. William C. Kassebaum will also be a page. 3. Mrs. Edward Anderson and her children, Mary Ellen and William, Winnetka, Ill, are visiting Mrs. Anderson’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Goepper. ’
4. Mrs. June Moll Wilcox (right) and Miss Rose Louise Wald are assisting with arrangements for a book review to be sponsored by
the Alpha Chi Alumnae Chapter
World War Memorial. Mrs. Bernice Avery Smith will review “My Son,
My Son” (Spring).
5. The engagement of Miss Marjorie Carr to Elbert R. Gilliom has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl C. Carr, Spring Mill Road. The wedding will be Dec. 3 at the Broadway Methodist Church. Mr. Gilliom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Gilliom.
Photo-Craft Photo.)
6. Miss Kathryn Louise Schmitt, daughter of Mrs. Herman E. Schmitt, will be married to W. Lawrence Sexton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Timothy P. Sexton, at 10 o’clock
Joan of Arc Catholic Church. (Bass Photo.)
1 Freshmen women at Butler University are as easy to identify as their male classmates now that the beginners are required to wear their own green and red “beanies.” (left to right) the Misses Sara Renfrew, Lois Mathieson, Patty Hill
Times Photos.
Wearing the popular caps are
tonight at the Indiana Federation
of Beta Beta Wednesday at the
Thanksgiving morning at the St.
Women’s Groups Will Hear Librarian, Museum Curator
Luther L. Dickerson of the Indianapolis Public Library, Mrs. R. O. McAlexander and Miss Anna Hasselman, curator at Herron Art Museum, are to speak Wednesday at department meetings of the Woman’s De-
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partment Club. Mr. Dickerson will speak on “A Public Service Institution” at a meeting of the literature and drama department. a Mrs. C. E. Wolcott, chairman, will preside at a business meeting at 2:30
p. m. at the clubhouse precéding the afternoon talk. | The Book Hour study class, directed by Mrs. Hezzie B. Pike, will meet at 1:30 p. m. to discuss travel and literature. Mrs. Oscar L. Watkins will talk on “Travels with a Donkey” (Robert Louis Stevenson) and Mrs. John M. Williams will speak on “My Impressions of the Rob Roy Country.” Mrs. Williams returned recently from a tour of the British Isles. Tes - hostesses for the afternoon will include Mrs. Carl J. Weinhardt and Mrs. Charles F. Thompson, chairmen; Mesdames R. J. Anderson, Robert Elliott, Frank E. Gates, L. S. Graham, E. H. Katterhenry, E. B. Jackson, Angela K. Moler, J. A. Sumwalt, James P. Tretton, J. M. Thistlethwaite, Harry E. Wood and Miss Elizabeth A. Hall and Miss Lena Laura Nester: Mrs. McAlexander and Miss Hasselman will speak Wednesday at the first meeting of the Ten o0’Clock Art Study Group at the home of Mrs. E. A. Brown, 5420 Central Ave. Mrs. McAlexander’s topic will be “Art in Home Life” and Miss Hasselman. will discuss “Rewards of Art Study in England.” Mrs. Charles Hanna and Mrs. Leonidas Smith will pay tributes to
Mrs. H. T. Burnet, founder of the
group, and a tribute written by Mrs. Robert E. Burke, Indiana University, will. be read by Miss Lena: Laura Nester. .
Mrs. Coldren Hostess For Crescendo Club
Mrs. George Coldren will entertain the Crescendo Club at her home in University. Heights today. ‘Miss Grace Hutchings will discuss “Modern Spanish Music” and illustrations will be played by Miss Frances Wallace, Mrs. Ernest Kues-
ter, Miss Lois McKelfresh, 8t. Fran-
ciseville, Ill., and Mrs. Catherine Stafford Cox, Plainfield. Mrs. Leo-~
Johnjand fancy, napkins, for the dinner
Mary Spalding Will Entertain ~ Musicale Group
The Student Section of the Matinee- Musicale will open its season’s
activities at 4 p. m. tomorrow at the home of Miss Mary Spalding, 246 E. Fall Creek Blvd., president. Appearing on the program will be Joan Miller, harpist; Marion Thompson, soprano; Betty Miller, pianist; Helen Cusack, pianist; Doris Myers, soprano; Muriel Jean Garrett, violinist; Mildred Voyle, pianist; Mary Jane Froyd, violinist; Betty Jane Sweetman, pianist; Mary M. Blessing, cellist, and Mary Catherine Stair, harpist. ga
Latreian Club Benefit Nov. 15
The Alpha Gamma Latreian Club will hold its annual benefit bridge party at the Columbia Club Tuesday, Nov. 15, at 8 o'clock. Proceeds will be used for the organization’s philanthropic activities at the Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp near Bridgeport. . Mrs. John Cromie is arrangements chairman, assisted by the
Misses. Zona Brindle, Elizabeth Matthis, Lucille Pryor, Mary Louise Mann and Mrs. E. M. Costin and Mrs. Frank Malott. :
Hospital Children To Be Entertained
The White Cross Children’s Cheer Guild ‘will entertain children who must spend Halloween in the Methodist Hospital with a party at 2:30 p. m. Monday in the solarium on the Thomas Taggart Memorial Children’s Floor. : Mrs. S. A, ‘Baker will tell stories and Miss Jane Ebner and Miss Darol Ann Kingham will present readings. The guild unit will provide nut cups
|apolis Junior
ts
Dinner to Open
University, also will speak. Mrs. American Culture.” The exhibit, sponsored by the Art Division of the. Indiana Federation of Clubs, will continue through Nov. 7. More than 90 resident artists will exhibit works. The exhibit is one of several observances of American Art Week, opening Tuesday. : Frank C. Dailey will be master of ceremonies tonight and Theodore B. Crifith will extend greetings. Mrs. Eli Seebirt, South Bend, will sing, accompanied by Mrs. Forest G. Hay. ” Members of the honorary committee for the exhibit have been invited as the guests of Mr. Griffith. The committee includes Governor and Mrs. ' Townsend, Messrs. and Mesdames Floyd I. McMurray, Wilbur D. Peat, Edward C. Elliott, DeWitt S. Morgan, B. F. Lawrence, Walter McCarty, Ludwell Denny and Dr. Wells. District presidents will attend and serve on the reception committee with Mrs. W. D. Keenan, Seventh District president, chairman. Mrs. Walter S. Grow, I. F. C, art department chairman, arranged the dinner and exhibit. » » 2
Two exhibits will open Tuesday at John Herron Art Museum, one of self-portraits by Indiana artists, the other a memorial exhibit of the
work of Durr PFriedley, former Indi‘anapolis artist, who war killed in an auto accident in the tast some months ago. The self-portrait exhibit will remain until Nov, 13 and the other will continue for a nth. The Indianapolis Camera Club’s invitational éxhibition of pictorial photography will remdin in the gallery for visitors tomorrow.
Federated Art Clubs Plan Exhibit
The Indiana Federation of Art Clubs will hold a handcrafts exhibit in conjunction with its 14th annual convention Thursday at Block’s
auditorium. . The craft exhibit, the second your een sponsored by the Fed£hud will Pon feature of Amerjcan Art week and will be on display from Monday through Friday. Demonstrations by craftsmen will be on the program daily. At 1:30 _ m. Monday Mrs. Woodburn Masson will demonstrate rug weaving. Tuesday morning Mrs. Mollie Rathpun Cawthra will illustrate copper and silver work. Mrs. Winifred Kahmann, director of the IndianLeague occupational therapy department, will ' have charge of the hospital demonstration Wednesday. At 3 p. m. Thursday David Milligan will present a puppet show and Mrs, Cawthra will follow his program with another demonstration of her work. Miss Agnes Coldwell will have charge of the St. Margaret's Hospital Guild's City Hospital occupational therapy department work on Friday’s program. Miss Mary Cain of the Industrial School for the Blind will illustrate weaving following the occupational therapy program, Mrs. David Klausmeyer is chairman of hostesses and Mrs. Bert C. McCammon is Federation president in charge of the exhibit.
Federation's
City Girl Scouts Plan to Observe 7 Service Days
Indianapolis Girl Scouts will .obe serve seven Service Days next week as a part of national Girl Scout Week which opens tomorrow with a Go-to-Church Day. Local pastors have planned special
13 will attend the Meadlawn Chris<" tian Church with their leader, Mrs, Margaret McAfee, and will pay tribe ute to Juliette Low, Scout founder, Troop 3, with Miss Agnes Calvert, leader, will attend services at the First Friends Church and will pre sent flowers as a memorial to the founder. A city-wide Scouts’ Own will be held at 3 p. m. at the Second Prese byterian Church. Troops will ase semble at University Park with their, flags and the flags of all nations which participate in the Girl Scout program. During the assembly a chimes concert will be played by Charles Hansen, organist. ; Following the color ceremony in charge of Miss Lucile Cannon, local director, the program will open with a greeting by Mrs. Horace R. Mee Clure,.commissioner. Fred Hoke will talk on “Are Girl Scouts an Asset to Indianapolis?” Other days to be observed by the organization are: Monday, Homemaking Day: Tuesday, Arts and Crafts Day; Wednesday, Thrift Day; Thursday, Hostess Day; Friday, Citizenship Day, and Saturday, Health Day. A tea for members of is the Scout organization will be held Thursday at the Little House, and a Fall Frolic and Camp Reunion will be held Saturday at Camp Dellwood,
Haviland Connolly Weds Jane Pahmeyer
Miss Jane Pahmeyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Pahmeyer, Decatur, Ill, and Haviland A. Con~ nolly, Indianapolis, were married this afternoon at the home of the bride’s parents. Attendants were Miss Mary Cone
of honor; Miss Alice Chapman, De«
-catur, and Miss Emogene Bramball,
Webster Groves, Mo., bridesmaids,
Indiana Art Exhibit ‘Tonight,
Mrs. Carl L. Schrader, Boston, Fine Arts Department chairman of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, will be the principal speaker tonight at a preview dinner which will open an exhibit by resident
artists of Indiana at Ayres’ eighth floor. Governor Townsend and Dr. Herman B. Wells, president of Indiana Schrader’s subject will be “Our A
messages. The Christian Park Troop j |
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nolly, sister of the bridegroom, maid
Thomas D. Catlin, Ottawa, Ill, was
best man. 3 After a wedding trip through Blue Grass country, Mr. and Mrs. Cons nolly will be at home at 1143 N, Pennsylvania St. wo
‘A’ New Profession, 7
Magazine Club Mrs. Ray J. : ! the Occupational Therapy. Dep iment of Indiana University Hi pitals, will talk on “A New P sion” before Magazine Club | bers and their guests this afte
Hostesses will be Mrs. Wil
Mrs, Paul Talbot and Miss pr i fe) 1
BI
Tope
