Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1938 — Page 22

. NEW BIBS FOR RILEY CHILDREN i

Times Photos. _ Brownie Pack -4 members are remembering that tomorrow, Citizenship Day, means community service and thinking of others as they prepare bibs for children at Riley Hospital. Left to right—Jaret Hilgemier, Joan Spitznagel and Virginia Kistner (on floor) are putting the finishing touches to bibs they will present the patients.

going to assist the hostesses, among whom i§ Mrs. Horace R. McClure (left). The Scouts are observing seven Service days ‘this week as a part of National Girl Scout Week. A Fall Frolic and Camp Reunion will be held Saturday at Camp Dellwood. Monday was Homemaking Day and Arts and Crafts Day was observed Tuesday.

Today is Hostess Day and the Girl Scout Council is entertaining friends of scouting this afternoon at a tea at the Little House. Members of the council, their husbands, troop leaders, committee; chairmen and the grandmother sponsor of each group will attend. Joan Schmidt (center), Troop 40, and Lela Jo Servas, Troop 46, are

Girls Scouts today were busy balancing their budgets, however small, following consultations yesterday with troop leaders in Thrift Day of Girl Scout week. Barbara Renick is shown receiving some pointers from Miss Lucile Cannon, local director, on how to save pennies with which to attend Camp Dellwood next summer.

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Sarah Lawrence Aims College Head’s Topic; Parties for Play Set

Mrs. G. H. A. Clowes to Have Tea for Maternal Health League Speaker and Delegates; Woman's Club to Hear Two Talks.

By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON “The independent work under individual guidance,” which epitomizes the progressive education philosophy of Sarah Lawrence College at Bronxville, N. Y., will be explained here tomorrow by Miss Constance Warren, college president, at a tea at the home of Mrs. William Ray Adams.

Sarah Lawrence alumnae and their mothers, Tudor Hall department heads and mothers of Tudor Hall seniors are to hear Miss Warren speak on “Progressive Education for the Modern Girl.” Assisting Mrs. Adams will be Miss Nina Brown, an alumna of the school, and the Misses Mary Sheerin Kuhn, Josephine Mayer and Prudence Brown. © There are no required courses at Sarah Lawrence, which has distinguished itself since it opened in the fall of 1928. Each student meets with her “don” or faculty adviser and devotes her first week <0 choosing her program. She may interview a dozen or more faculty members before she maps a course for the year along the lines best suited to her inclinations and abilities, Miss Warren said. Indiana girls now at Sarah Lawrence are Mr. and. Mrs. Adams’ daughter, Jane, and Lucina Ball, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ball of Muncie, who are sophomores; Helen Wyatt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wyatt; who is a junior, and Mary Ellen Tindall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Tindall of Greenfield, who will be graduated in June. Among the alumnae from here are Mr. and Mrs. Adams’ other -daughter, Mrs. Louis McClennen, now of Boston; the Misses Brown, Estelle Burpee and Frances Petrl and Mesdames Oscar A. Jose Jr., Wallace Jim Roberts, Walter A. Complon, Bernard D. Rosenac and Mrs. Henry Meis of Danville, Ill. : = n n = » ” Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Johnson will give a tea from 5 to 7 p. m. Sunday for Miss Evelyn Chambers and Julius Birge, who are to be married at 4:30 o'clock Nov. 11 at the home of Miss Chambers’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Laurance Chambers.

Parties to Precede Play Saturday

~ Several dinner parties are planned preceding the Dramatic Club's presentation of “Three Men on a Horse” Saturday evening at English’'s and the supper dance afterward at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Among those who will entertain are Mrs. William C. Bobbs, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley W. Shipnes, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Mothershead and Mr. and Mrs. Adams. Guests of Mr, and Mrs. Adams will include Messrs. and Mesdames Earl B. Barnes, August C. Bohlen, Perry O'Neal, W. I. Lengsworth and Mr. and Mrs. James Frenzel. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Collett. Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Atkins Jr., Miss Eunice Dissette and John Gamble will dine with Mr. and Mrs. Mothershead. Mrs. G. H. A. Clowes will give a fea tomorrow afternoon at her home in Golden Hill in honor of Dr. Norman E. Himes, who is to gddress the Maternal Health League's annual meeting tomorrow noon at the Claypool Hotel, and out-of-town delegates. Presidents of Associated Maternal Health Leagues who will attend are Mrs. Harry Ninde Jr., Ft. Wayne, who will be the house guest of Dr. and Mrs. J. Jerome Littell; Mrs. W. Waits Smith, South Bend, and Mrs. Richard L. Hanson, Evansville. : Mrs. Christopher B. Coleman will read a paper on “Noises in the Street” and Mrs. Wendell Sherk will discuss “Portrait of a Neighbor” at the meeting of the Indianapolis Woman's Club at 3 Pp. m. tomorrow at the Propylaeum. Invitations to thé Smith College Club’s dance Nov. 26 at Woodstock Club will be mailed late next week. At a meeting of the dance tommittee yesterday at Mrs. Collett’s home the Misses Florence Barrett and Joanne Dissette, cochairmen, appointed as subcommittee cochairmen Mrs. David P. Williams Jr. and Mrs. Collett, invitations and tickets; Mrs. John S. Pearson Jr. and Mrs. Frederick T. Holliday, decorations; Mrs. James F. Carroll and Miss Irving Moxley, special feature, and Mrs. Mothershead, publicity. Mrs. Morris Lanville Brown will entertain the club Wednesday. - : ; Aspiring chorus girls ana principals will appear this afternoon snd would-be gentlemen of the ensemble will line up at 7:30 this evening at the Indianapolis Athletic Club to try out for the Junior League “Gaieties of 1883—Every Inch a Sailor or Adrift on the Ocean of Life.” Arthur Seelig of New York, director for Jerome Cargill, producer, who staged the Junior League “Follies” three years ago, expects to select a cast of 50 by Saturday to begin rehearsals next week for the production Nov. 23 in the auditorium of the new Naval Reserve Armory.

Hostesses to Arrange Plans

For Book and Toy Exhibit

Hostesses for the American Association of University Women’s annual Book and Toy Exhibit had been named today. The exhibit will be

Nov. 7-12 at Ayres’ auditorium.

¢ The hostesses met at 10:30 a. m. this morning at Ayres’ audi-

. forium for instructions in assisting visitors to the show.

: Mrs. Kenneth E. Wolfskill heads

the hostess committee, assisted" by, Mrs. John Goldthwaite. Other com- | jmittee members are Mesdames Kenneth G. Baker, Oscar M. Helmer, Edmund W. Hebel, Calvin R. Hamjlton, S. Walker Downing, Albert E. Martin, John P. Lahr, Fred R. McComb, William Trelease Jr. and J. A. Bowden. ¢ Also Mesdames V. C. MacNabb, Horace A. Shonle, Carroll O. Skaar, J. D. Layman, Harold Votaw, Lyman Meeks, LaVerne Kohlstaedt, Donald ©. Drake, Herbert Russell, Paul H. Beard, Kenneth L. Kipp, Milton Elyod Jr, C. W. Compton, J. R. Townsend, R. H. Mueller, C. Norman Green, Keith Smith, Wayne C. Kim“gel, Harold C. Donnell, William E. Rogers, Walter L. Caley, Charles L. Rose, Henry Unger, Claude A. Potts, ‘Myron J. McKee and H. R. Mowrer. *. Others are Mesdames Clyde Culpertson, W. Donald Wright, John W. Graves, Marvin E. Curle, Oren D. tchard, J. A. Leighty, Robert M. Lingle, Joseph R. Todd, Paul R. Summers, Clifford C. Taylor, Frank . ‘Hatfield, William O. Johnson,

| Lewis, Jeston C. Storey and David L. Smith . Hostesses also include the Misses Elizabeth Taft, Jean Booth, Mar-

gery Pike, Elizabeth Hall, Gertrude

Schellschmidt and Lillian G. Clark.

Welfare Group to Meet

Members of the Lutheran Orphans Welfare Association are to meet at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Lutheran Orphans Home, 3310 E. Washington St. Mrs. Paul E. Rupprecht is chairman of the luncheon committee. She will be assisted by Mesdames - Minnie Irving, John: Shull and Herman Boyer.

Jeweled Collars Aid

The Shortridge Parent-Teacher

Shortridge P.-T. A. Sets Dinner; Council Plans for Cookie Sale; Warren Central Head to Speak

Association will hold its annual fall

dinner Tuesday evening as a National Education Week event and the Marion County Council of Parent-Teacher groups are making plans for a cookie sale. Other P.-T. A. organizations have planned a variety of programs which include speakers, a playlet and a cafeteria supper.

shown during the Shortridge meeting. The High School orchestra will present a concert at 8 p. m. at Caleb Mills Hall under the direction of Will F. Wise, Shortridge music department.

6:45 to 7:45 p. m. at their rooms. The home economics department will exhibit work with students as hostesses. Advanced chemistry students will present laboratory research experiments and displays of students’ work - in physics and science departments will be shown. Patrons may observe jewelry sketching and architectural drawing classes at work. In the Roda Selleck art gallery, the Shortridge Art Department will have on exhibit more than 50 water color paintings by Anita Willetts Burnham. Cookie Sale Starts Thursday The Marion County Council’s cookie sale will begin next Thursday. Mrs. C. E. Cannaday is chairman of the sale in Warren, Lawrence and Center Townships. Mrs. Lola Jenkins is chairman for the sale in Franklin, Perry and Decatur Townships to be held Nov. 17 and 18. The sale in Washington, Wayne and Pike Townships also will be conducted Nov. 17 and 18. Mrs. Fred Myers is chairman. A cafeteria supper will be held next Friday from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. by the Nora P.-T. A. Dr. Herbert Call will speak on “Modern Methods in Health” at the meeting to be held following the supper. Mrs. Herman Shields will be leader at the meeting at 1 p. m. Thursday, Nov. 10, of the Pleasant Run Study Club. Mrs. Clifford Van Cleave will be hostess at the meeting. C. E. Eash, principal of the Warren Central High School, will speak at 7:45 o'clock Thursday evening, Nov. 10, at the P.-T. A. meeting at the ‘Township House. Music will be furnished by pupils of Mrs. Ernest Day. The Ben Davis Grade School Association will meet at 2 p. m. Wednesday. Mrs. George Gerichs will preside. The intermediate grade

|will present a program on “Thank-

fulness.” Next Thursday the Ben Davis Study Club will tour the Riley Hospital and the Indiana War Memorial. Mrs. Dewey Gaddi and Mrs. Ruby Bever will be in charge. "A playlet, “Good Americans” wili be presented by Grade 2-B Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. at the meeting of the Beech Grove P.-T. A. Jo Ellen Sigmon will dance and Mrs. Lee Mendenhall will preside at the meeting. The Garden City Parent Education Group will meet at 1:30 p. m. next Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Lester Boughton, 4993 Rockville Road. R. J. Dearborn will be leader,

Teachers to Hear of National Convention

Times Special ELWOOD, Nov. 3.—Miss Blanche Digel will report on the National Education- Association convention held at New York at a dinner meeting of teachers of the 11th Congressional District to be held next Thursday at the First Methodist Church here. Members of the Federation of Elwood School Teachers will be hostesses at the meeting. A musical program will be presented following the talk. Reservations will be received by Miss Mattie Griffin, Elwood.

Musicale Meets The Indianapoils Matinee Musicale held a board meeting at 10:30 o'clock this morning at the home of the president, Mrs. James H. Lowry 3109 Park Ave.

Teachers will meet patrons from |

Displays of students’ work will be®

Dinner Parties Are Planned by

Sorority Units

A dinner for alumnae members, 2 party in honor of sorority members’ mothers and a card party are among the activities planned by fraternal groups for the remainder of this week and early in the next. Miss Ida B. Wilhite will be hostess at a 6 o’clock covered dish dinner tomorrow night at her home for members of the Indianapolis Alumnae Chapter, Alpha Xi Delta Sorority. Mrs. O. M. Helmer and Miss Reeta Clark will assist the hostess. A short business meeting will follow the supper. Tri Psi, mothers’ organization affiliated with Delta Delta Delta at Butler University, will be entertained today at the chapter house. Among the mothers’ club members acting as hostesses will be Mesdames J. K. Langfitt, D. T. Brownlee, L. W. Eiser and J. J. Davis. Alpha Chapter of Sigma Delta Sigma, will hold a business meetirg Monday evening at the home ot Miss Dora Mae Rees, 737 E. 22d St. Mrs. F. BE. Dukes will be in charge of the annual card party at 2 p. m. Monday at Block's auditorium sponsored by the Phi Delta Theta Mothers’ Club. Mrs. Dukes will be assisted by Mesdames C. V. Sorenson, Arthur Mundt and B. C. Ward, tickets; Mrs. A. J. Laugh, entertainment; Mesdames Oliver Martin, Ben Rodrick and Morse Bowen, candy; Mrs. C. E. Miller, cards; Mrs. Arthur Gilliom, door prizes, and Mrs. Jack Moore, table prizes.

Reading Tastes Are Discussed

The natural reading interests and tastes of children are wholesome, Luther L. Dickerson, city librarian, told members of the literature and drama department of the Woman's

Department Club yesterday at the clubhouse. He spoke on “A Public Service Institution.” “When children’s tastes become unwholesome, it is not because of children’s perversity but because adults unintentionally deflect natural interest in undesirable directions,” he said. Mr. Dickerson deplored haphazard collections of poor reading material grownups place before their children; attractive display of vulgarity on the screen and poor radio programs for children. “All these constitute a competition for children’s interests. for which substitutes of a worthy nature must be found if the child is to have a fair chance to form good habits and

|attitudes to which he is entitled.

Goucher Alumnae to Meet This Evening

Mrs. Steele Churchman, 5350 N. Illinois St., will be hostess tonight at 7 o'clock to members of the Goucher College Alumnae Club. A report will be presented by Mts. Edward H. DeHority, club delegate to the Alumnae Council meeting and 50th anniversary celebration of Goucher College, Oct. 13-16, at Bal-

timore. *

Lambda Chapter, Omega Phi Tau. ond rush party.

| Cornelian Auxiliary 456, O. E. S. Public invited. Lynhurst Chapter 505, O. E. S. Temple.

Castle Hall.

Have at least one dress with a!

plain neckline, so that you can wear one of those new, bright, jeweled | collars that scintillate so flatteringly. Add a jeweled bracelet to match —and no other adornment, please

Jniege for evening a jeweled

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Jessie Travis, 657 E. 22d St.,

EVENTS

SORORITY

LODGES

Masonic Temple, 2515 W. Washington.

Stated meeting. Mrs. Marcella Ginn, worthy matron. Pilgrim Shrine 12, White Shrine of Jerusalem. 8 p. m. tonight.

Sewing Circle, Myrtle Temple Pythian Sisters.

Tonight, Canary Cottage. Sec-

5:30-7:30 p. m. Fri. Evergreen

Dinner, cards, dancing.

Tues. eve. Bridgeport Masonic

Noon today. Mrs.

hostess. Luncheon and business

Sunnyside

Guild Party Aids Named

Mrs. Stone Announces Table Sponsors and Committees.

Table sponsors and committees for Sunnyside Guild’s annual card

party Friday at Murat Temple were announced today by Mrs. Wayne O.

| Stone, general chairman.

On the hostess committee are Mesdames Irving D. Hamilton, Wallace O. Lee, Glenn J. Bookwalter, A. E. Hubbard, O. H. Bradway, H D. Hamilton, George Lemaux, Carrie Hammel and Jessie Marshal. A partial list of table sponsors includes Mesdames J. J. Speaks, R. C. Beckeret, L. L. Lykins, Charles G. Sanders, L. L.. Jackson, H. C. Thomas, H. Y. Tinch, Leo Gutzwiller, J. S. Barth, Grace Pohlman, Edna Johnson, Leonard L. Murchison, Charles M. Hammond, Howard R. Williams, Walter J. Glassford, D. M. Klausmeyer, George E. Hall, John A. Welch, D. T. Burns, Williams FP. Moyer, Steve Rodford, E. N. Trogo, William R. Kraft, E. E. Zeke, Roy E. Hickman, O. F. Hands, Harry G. Hilton, E. W. Essig, E. R. Grisell, Everett Lett, Frank Alford, James F. T. Sargent Jr. Lee V. Hadin, Louise Pohlman, F. L. Tompkins, Alonzo Martin, J. W. Spiegel, Lena Croshier, Harold M. Trusler, Ralph Suits, Hermann P. Roesch.

Other committees are as follows:

Table Hostesses—Mesdames Stowell E. Wasson, E. B, McComb, G. J. Bookwalter, William Freund, Mort Martin, Ralph Martin, Oscar B. Perine, Morris B. Thomas, Carl Wood, L. C. Burnett, Myron Austin and O. P. Fauchier.

Decorations — Mesdames A. Lawson, Gaylord Rust, Hilgemier, D. B. Sullivan, Sturm, Elmer Sherwood, Shaffer, Adrian Hamersley Hart Laird.

Table Prizes—Mesdames Howard W. Linkert, William Durkin, Lee, John Garrett, E. Park Akin, Myron Austin and LeRoy Martin.

Door Prizes—Mesdames John W. Burk, Floyd J. Mattice, Orin Chilson, Charles Renard, William Wemmer, G. PF. Kleder, William T. Eisenlohr, George Dickson, Lewis Ferguson, Alvin Fernandes, John Pearson and Sydney Weinstein.

Cigarets—Mesdames Charles W. Richardson, Earl Cox, Robert Clark, LeRoy Ford, Dallas Foster, Edward Hilgemeier and Herbert Tyson.

Candy—Mesdames Charles Seidensticker, Maxwell Lang, Donald Brodie, B. B. Pettijohn, Sidney Rice, Robert Sturm, John Bulger, Edward V. Mitchell, J. Edward Morris; William D. Keenan and George B. Morrison.

Publicity — Mrs. Chantilla White and Mrs. Mitchell. Tickets—Mesdames William Hanning, Theodore Root, G. W. Dunnington, Kurt Schmidt and Gus Meyer. Card Tables—Mesdames G. G. Schmidt, Fauchier, Richard H. Tuttle, B. M. Forbes, J. Frank Holmes, Attia Martin, Boyd Templeton, A. J. Huber, Thomas Whallon and Hal Meyers. Table Covers — Mesdames Fred Kraus, Ethel Bromert, George Kohnstaedt, Albert Claffey, Donald Graham, Burnett, Harry Elwert and Charles Byfield. Cards and Pencils— Mesdames Alonzo Chapman, Burnett, Daniel Bower, J. E. Berry, E. J. Braman, John T. Sawyer, Margarette Mumford, Edward Enners and James Seward.

D.A.R. Will Mark

Americanism Day

Edward George Robert George and J.

Americanism Day was to be observed today by the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, at a meeting at the chapter house. Mrs. Melissa Jane Cornish was ‘o speak on “Guatemala, the Land of Enchantment.” A tea was to follow at 4 p. m. Assisting Mrs. George C. Wright and Mrs. Kenneth Dix Coffin as tea chairman and vice chairman, were Mesdames Roy K. Coats, Noble W. Hiatt, William PF. Kegley, Carl F. Maetschke, Sylvan L. Mouser, William E. Niven, Edgar Y. Pattison, Carl W, Piel, Verna A. Trask ‘and Miss Alice Velsey, The program was to be sponsored

tee of which Mrs, Charles F, Voyles is sponsor. Mrs. Voyles and Mrs. Frances E. Black were to pour.

Sorority Will Meet Gamma Onapie, Phi Gamma will t 8

by the Wheel and Distaff commit- |

Auxiliary of Southern Club

To Be Entertained Tomorrow

At Luncheon

by Mrs. Stevens

Mrs. Charles Stevens, 5301 N. Delaware St., will entertain the

Southern Club Auxiliary at luncheon at 1 p. m. tomorrow. Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. Ralph Colby and Mrs. W. D. Browning. Honored guests are to be wives of new members of the South-

ern Club, including Mesdames H., Emory, Thomas C. S. Codding, Thornton W. Sterrett, Morris South, Leslie M. De Voe, F. E. Turner, George T. Whelden, Harold Stucky, P. D. Powers and Maxwell

Droke.

Piano selections will be played by Nina Hayes Dutton, instructor in the Bomar Cramer studio, according to Mrs. W. R. Scaff, program chairman. Mrs. Paul A. SchafIner is president of the auxli-

ary this season.

Vote to Continue Club Institutes

On 1. U. Campus

Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Nov. 3.—Resolutions recommending continuation and development of institutes conducted by Indiana University, institute host, were adnpted yesterday by members of the second annual club institute of the Indiana Federation of Clubs. Further recommendations called for a co-ordination of dates, plans, subject matter and publicity and that appropriate techniques he worked out in the federation to accomplish this. Mrs. George R. Dillinger was appointed chairman of a committee to develop a peqarash for future institutes by Mrs. E. I. Poston, Martinsville, president of the Indiana Federation of Women’s Clubs. Other committee members include Mrs. E. A. Kelly, Carmel; Mrs. J. R. Mitten, Linton; Mrs. W H Lykins, Covington; Mrs Robert R. Wilson, Boonville, and Mrs. Edwin FP. Miller, Peru. Discussion Groups Report

Reports were made yesterday morning on group discussions held Tuesday. Mrs, Lykins, president of the Woman’s Club of Covington, reported for the group which discussed “The Family”; Mrs. Miller, chairman of adult education for the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, on research in government; Mrs. Mitten, president of the Elite Club of Linton, on the execeptional children group, and Mrs. E. B. Thompson, president of the Monday Club of Indianapolis, on consumers’ guidance. Satisfaction was expressed by President Herman B. Wells of the university that a group as large as

Fo EPA 8 Sa

Robison Auxiliary Arranges Party

A benefit card party will be held by the Bruce P. Robison Post Auxiliary of the American Legion at 2 p. m. today at BannerWhitehill auditorium. Mrs. Clarence Knipp is general chairman.

French Society To Hear Aldrich

“Jules Romains, French Novelist, Playwright and Poet,” will be discussed by Clyde E. Aldrich, profes-

sor of French at Butler University, at 8 o'clock tonight before mémbers of the Alliance Francaise at the Hotel Washington. A dinner will be held in the speaker’s honor at 6 p.. m. His talk will precede the reading of several scenes from “Knock, or the Triumph of Medicine,” one of Romains’ successes. The motion picture addptation of the play will be presented at the club’s next meeting. Members of the reception committee are Miss Esther Renfrew, Miss Jane Hampton and Ralph Decker.

the Indiana Federation of Clubs should be interested in research as it relates to social problems. “If our grave social and economic problems are to be solved, we need to keep alive the pioneer -spirit,” he said. “As important as the wunexplored realms. of physical science are, they do not cry for exploration as much just now as do the unexplored realms of social science. For i nsuch exploration there is reasonable expectation that we can find a solution to many of our most pressing social and economic problems.”

|Clubs Plan

Informal Lectures

|Kindergarten Mothers of

Irvington to Fete Parents Tonight.

Lectures and informal talks‘have been planned by several Indianape

olis clubs for meetings during the next few days. One guest party is scheduled and a special meeting of the Irvington Kindergarten Mothers’ Club for parents will be held toe night.

Dr. J. F. waldo will speak on “Diseases of the Morth” at a meeting at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow of the Florence Nightingale Club at the board of directors room of, the Ine diana ‘Nationai -Bank.

George Fischer, principal of School 54, will talk tonight on “Parents as Fartners” at a special meeting of the Irvington Kindergarten Mothers’ Club for both mothers and fathers, Music is to be furnished by Miss

Anna and Miss Pauline Wessel, and

Bob Johnson will present a reading,

Mrs. C. B. Blakeslee will be in charge of the program for the Monday Conversation Club which will meet with Mrs. E. J. Baker, 5315 Washington Blvd., on Nov. 7.

Members of the Irvington Forte nightly Club will meet tomorrow with Mrs. C. U. Watson, 5371 Julian Ave. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Carrie Black. Mrs. Karl Stur man and Mrs. Arthur Robinson will have charge of the program. .

A program on “Honduras’ will be presented’ at the meeting tomorrow of the Culture Club. Mrs. William A. Rowland, 3021 Park Ave., will be hostess to the group. 4

‘Members of the Spade and Trowel {

Garden Club will hold a guest meete ing tomerrow at the home of Mrs. C. C. Stump, 6446 Park Av

Mrs. J. H. Olsen, 1517 N. Kealing Ave., will be- hostess at 2 p.. m. tos morrow at a meeting of the Dee Molay Mothers’ Club.

Miss Helen Elliott, New Harmony Commission, will have charge of the program Saturday for the meeting of the Saturday Afterneon Literary Club, Mrs. David Hadley, 3520 E, Fall Creek Blvd. will be hastess,

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