Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1938 — Page 8
ary Lodise Merrell Home From Trip East; ~ Park Club Dance Set
Mr. and Mrs. William
Ray Adams to Leave
Thursday for New York; Faculty, Students Invited to Tea for Mrs. Ratti’s Guest.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON Miss Mary Louise Merrell is at home after an ex-
tended stay in the East and a
trip to Minneapolis. While
in New York she visited Miss Eleanor Morris and her college classmate, Miss Masry McCracken, at Poughkeepsie. Miss McCracken is the daughter of Henry N. McCracken, president of Vassar College, and Mrs. Mc-
Cracken. Miss Merrell’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carence F. Merrell, are back from a visit at Columbus, O., where they attended the Purdue-Ohio State football game Saturday. : Mr. and Mrs. William Ray Adams will leave Thursday for a week's stay in New York. Later, their daughter, Miss Jane Adams, who attends Sarah Lawrence College, will accompany them to Cambridge, Mass., to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with their other daughter, Mrs. Louis McClennen, and Mr. McClennen. Miss Myla Jo Closser, who has been visiting Mrs. Wood L. Wilson, has left to spend a week at the Grand Canyon before returning to her home in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Myron J. McKee will leave Friday for a week's stay in New York.
Southerner to Visit Freihofers
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Higgins of White Sulphur Springs, Va., will arrive tomorrow to spend a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Freihofer en route to the Notre Dame-Minnesota football game
Saturday at South Bend. William H. Wemmer, president
of the Traders Point Hunt, and
Mrs. Wemmer will entertain hunt members informally following the regular drag hunt Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Wemmer are to return today from a shog visit in New York. The Varsity Club of Park School will hold its annual fall dance
Nov. 19 at the school.
Mrs. Frederick G. Appel will be hostess chairman for the tea following the second of the November series of art appreciation lectures at the John Herron Art Museum at 2 p. m. today. Assistants will be Mesdames Arthur E. Krick, Frank C. Dailey, Harry D. Goode
and Mrs. Dudley Williston.
Wilbur D. Peat, museum director, is
to discuss “Questions of Taste and Style.”
Tennis Enthusiasts Active at Woodstock
Several indefatigable Indianapolis matrons have been chasing tennis balls over Woodstock Club's tennis courts far beyond the usual season. Occasionally the group visits Mr. and Mrs. Philip R.
Mallory’s court for a few sets of doubles.
Among the players who
admit they're “hanging on for dear life” until the snow flies are Mesdames Mallory, Lee Burns, Noble Dean, Alec E. Saxton, William
C. Bobbs, George L. Denny and Mrs. Two members now are having a brief respite.
spending a few days in New York.
Warrack Wallace. Mrs. Mallory is Mr. and Mrs. Saxton will re-
turn next week from a visit with their daughter, Mrs. Herbert
Irwin, formerly Miss Sheila Saxton, Later this month Mr.
ington, L. I. Newark, N. J., to live.
” ® #
and Mr. Irwin at Port Washand Mrs. Saxton are to go to 2
® 8
Mrs. Gino Ratti will entertain Butler University faculty members and students at a tea from 3 to 5 o'clock Friday afternoon in honor
of her house guest, Mrs. Francis Rugg of Newton, Mass.
Assisting
the hostess will be Mrs. Thor Griffith Wesenberg and Mrs. M. O. Ross, who are to pour, and Mesdames Guy H. Shadinger, Clyde Clark, Fletcher Price, James Peeling, Clide Aldrich, Roy M. Robbins and
Mrs. Glen Maynard.
For five years Mrs. Rugg and her husband, a candid camera enthusiast turned professional, have had a summer studio in Dorothy
Canfield Fisher's old Carriage House at Arlington, Vt.
There
hundreds of visitors view the exquisite photographs taken during their travels in Europe, Africa and this country. Mr. Rugg is a master craftsman of the Society of Arts and Crafts.
Mrs. Rugg, who was in England
for the coronations of George V
and George VI, will address the Woman’s Department Club tomorrow
afternoon on “Gala Days in London.”
“roof of London's swank Dorchester
From a reserved seat on the Hotel in Park Lane she had a
panoramic view of the last coronation procession from the Marble Arch to Hyde Park Corner. Breakfast of scrambled eggs, bacon, rolls and coffee was served at 7 a. m. Each spectator was given a bottle of champagne to drink the new King’s health at luncheon and tea
was served in the afternoon.
. The spontaneous enthusiasm of the crowds at George Vis coronation was lacking when George VI was crowned, Mrs. Rugg said. “It was more like a well-rehearsed affair with everyone determined it
was for the best for the nation.”
Mrs. Rugg will speak before the Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi Saturday; the American Association of University Women, Nov. 15; the Irvington Union of Clubs, Nov. 17, and the
Woman's Research Club, Nov. 21.
Sorority Units Arrange Varied Programs for Rest of Month
Programs planned by sorority groups for this week and the re-
mainder of the month are varied.
Lectures, business meetings, rush parties, a steak fry and
Thanksgiving dinner and dance are
The Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority will hold a supper at 6:30 ~ p. m. tomorrow at the home of Miss Beth Ann Williston. Miss Helen Elliott will talk on “The Romance of New Harmony.” Miss Dorothy Dunbar is chairman of the meeting, assisted by Mrs. William Krieg and Miss Dorothy _ Reasoner.
Mrs. John Poulter is chairman of the annual Thanksgiving dinner and dance to be given hy Beta Chapter, Sigma Delta Zeta Sorority, Nov. 24 at the Hotel Lincoln.
Committees Named
Committees named by Mrs. Poulter include Misses Helen Wilkes, Marjorie Hufford and Johanna Thoemann, orchestra; Mrs. Fred Clements, ballroom; Miss Clarabelle Woolery and Miss Phyllis Bertram, publicity; Mrs. Gene True and Miss Dorothy Rearick, invitations; Misses Mildred Jasper, Marjan Dausch and Melba Woolery, program; Mrs. Elmer VonPein and Mrs. Gene Loeper, favors and place cards, and Miss Mildred Jasper, flowers.
Meanwhile, committees were named for the annual card party to be given by Alpha Chapter, Phi _Pelta Pi Sorority, at 8 p. m. Thursday at the Columbia Club. Miss Frances Mae Patterson is .general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Ina Mae May and Miss Genevieve Uhl, cochairman. Members of the ticket committee include Misses Mildred Clark, Flavia Cox, Betty Jane Fouts and Marion Schrader. On the prizes committee are Miss Alice Goodnight and Mesdames Vorie McLaughlin, George Daniels, Bernice O’Haver and Lee H. Ben-
ner.
Rushees of Beta Chapter, Delta Phi Beta, will be honored guests ata puffet supper tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. Thomas E. White, 708 Wallace St. Rushees are Mesdames Maurine Murray, Dale Hadley, Elsie Saxon, Bernice Harms and Mary
Venus.
The Indianapolis alumnae chapter of Phi Omega Pi Sorority will give a benefit bridge party Friday night at the Citizens Gas Co. auditorium. Mrs. Walter F. Morse is in charge of reservations.
The Delta Zeta Psi Sorority will have a steak fry at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. H. L. Norman, 1825 Fisher Ave. A meeting tomorrow night will be that of ~ Rho chapter, Sigma Beta Sorority at the home of Miss Virginia Collier, 1904 Southeastern Ave.
- A musical program is to be feaured at the meeting of Beta Chap“a : ’
plans for a keeping members busy. .
ter, Kappa Alpha Gamma, at 8 p. m. Friday. Mrs. Delbert Rogge is to be hostess. Members of the Rho Zeta Sorority are to be guests tomorrow night of Mrs. Thomas Bohlsen, 1901 Holloway St. A luncheon was to be given at 12:30 p. m. today at the home of Mrs. Marjorie Lindley, 6149
Park Ave, for members of Mu Chapter, Alpha Omicron Alpha.
The Delta Gamma Mothers’ Club was to meet at 1 p. m. at the chapter house for luncheon. Miss Daisy Park of Korea, a student at Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, was to sing and give a talk on her native land. Mesdames Louise Lorenz, A. R. Ferguson, Ray Scheidler and
W. T. Blasengym were to be hostesses.
Dr. John S. Harrison, head of the Butler University English department, will be guest speaker at a meeting Friday afternoon held by Phi Chi Nu, freshman honorary society, for 31 freshman women. Miss Betty Collins, president of the group, will be hostess at the meeting which is to be held at the Recreation Room of Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall. Those who will be honored include freshman women who have achieved a high scholastic average during their first six weeks at the university. Honor guests will be Misses Marjorie Avan, Lucretia Baimeister, Louise Berndt, Elizabeth Jane Brock, Margaret Brunson, Virginia Buckman, Katherine Cooper, Barbara Cox, Magnolia Dehart, Dorothy Evans, Maxine Fields and Maibelle Foster. Other guests will be Misses Jane Louise Goodlet, Betty Fordon, Maxine Ingold, Madeline Judd, Mary Kershner, Rose Malcolm, Lois Mathieson, Dolly Mitchell, Ellen O’Drain, LaVone Ostermeyer, Eleanor Randall, Audrey Roach, Helen Ruegamer, Eloise Schumacher, Harriet Shelhorn, Ruby Shelton, Betty Marie Starr, Betty Walsh and Marilyn Wellman.
Social service work discussions, tea talks and visits to settlement houses are being planned by Kappa Beta, Butler University religious sorority, for future organization activities. A box of toys will be sent as a Christmas gift to a group of children in India. Miss Janet Morgan was recently appointed social chairman. Assisting her are Miss Marrilee Ragle and
Miss Betty Collins. Miss Jaynet Pickerel is president.
School in Washington Township.
Shortridge P.-T For Annual
Teachers are to meet "patrons from 6:45 to 7:45 p. m, at their rooms. The home economics department will exhibit work with students as hostesses at the displays. Advanced chemistry students will present laboratory research experiments and displays will be shown also of students’ work in the physics and science departments. Patrons may observe sketching and architectural drawing classes at work and more than 50 water color paintings by Anita Willetts Burnham will be shown in the Rodda Selleck art gallery. 2
School 66 will hold open house from 7 to 8:30 p. m. tomorrow. The school orchestra will play.
School 67 will hold open house at 7 p. m. tomorrow. The regular Parent-Teacher meeting will open at 8 p. m. The children will give the program, presenting their daily work in the form of a “living movie.”
Mrs. Madie Mitchell will speak on “Handwriting in the Public School” at 3 p. m. tomorrow at School 68. A flag presentation will be made by the Hoosier Auxiliary of Post 624, American Legion. This is the first meeting in the new school.
School 69 will observe American Education Week at 7 p. m. tomorrow by holding open house. The children’s work will be on display and parents and friends are invited to visit the school. Edward O. Snethen will give a Riley program. The WPA concert band will furnish the music.
Open house will be held at 7:30 p. m. Friday at School %2. The teachers will explain work of the children, which will be on display. At 8:30 o'clock, music will be furnished in the auditorium by Charles Henzie and his South Side Orchestra.
School 73 will hold open house Thursday evening from 7 to 9 p. m. The Federal Project Band will present a program in the auditorium at 8 p. m. Parents are invited to observe the pupils’ work in the various classrooms tomorrow afternoon. Tea will be served by the Junior High School girls at 3 p. m. in the auditorium, after which a general discussion will be held.
Dr. Russell Henry will speak on “Childhood Tuberculosis” at 7:30 p. m. tcmorrow at Scheol 74. Open house will be held after the meeting. School 77 will hold open house at 6:30 p. m. Parents are invited to inspect the children’s work and meet the teachers.
Dr. John N. Greist, psychiatrist, will speak at the monthly Parent Education Group meeting of School 80 at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow. His topic will be “Emotional Growth as Related to Group Adjustment.” This program is part of the Statewide educational program of the Board of Health. Mrs. W. E. Willson, chairman, extends an invita{ion to anyone interested in parent education.
Open house will be held at Parkview School 81 at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow. Murray Dalmon, principal, will extend greetings. Features of the program will be a book review by Margaret Ruth's room, Pauline Mohlers Glee Club, music by the Mother's Chorus and safety talks by the traffic boys.
The children will present the program with various teachers participating during open house from 6:30 to 9 p. m. tomorrow at School 82. The Mother’s Chorus will sing.
School 84 will hold open house from 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. Friday. The school orchestra will play in the au< ditorium. Parents are invited to visit class rooms during school hours tomorrow, Thursday and Friday.
Mrs. Glenn Hostess For Luncheon Party
Mrs. Hugh Glenn, 1057 W. 34th St., entertained members of the Auxiliary to Local 130, National Federation of Potoffice Clerks, today at her home. A business meeting was conducted at 11 a. m., followed by a
covered dish luncheon. A card party will £ in the afternoon.
“I'm going to vote Democratic,” announced Mrs. Samuel Ralston, widow of Indiana’s Governor of 1913-17, as she appeared at her polling place today at Crooked Creek
Likewise it was. probably no secret which side Mrs, Frank Vandivier, mother of the County Republican chairman, was favoring. Mrs. Vandivier was helping her son
at county headquarters this morning.
A, Arranges
Dinner Tonight
Members of the Shortridge High School Parent-Teacher Association today were completing arrangements for the organization’s annual fall dinner tonight as other P.-T. A. groups in Indianapolis arranged open house and programs in connection with American Education Week. Displays of students’ work will be shown at the Shortridge meeting. The High School Orchestra will present a concert at 8 p. m.
White Cross Guild to Give Card Benefit
Members of the Municipal Gardens and Temple Sisterhood units of the White Cross Guild will be hostesses at a benefit card party Tuesday afternoon, Nov. 15, at Ban-ner-Whitehill auditorium. Proceeds from the party will be used to further guild work at Methodist Hospital. Mrs. J. B. Kaufman, Temple Sisterhood president, and Mrs. Robert L. Clegg, Municipal Gardens head, are cochairmen of the committee in charge of arrangements. They will be assisted by Mrs. J. W. Walters and Mrs. J. J. Kaufman, prizes, and Mesdames Charles Graul, H. F. Sudranski and S. S. Clement, candy. Members of the Unitarian White Cross Guild, newly organized unit, will act as hostesses at the. hospital. One member is on duty at the hospital each day. Mrs. Charles Nugent is president of the group. Other members who are participating in the project include Mesdames Charles Langdon, John G. Dyer, Guy Morrison, R.-E. Throckmorton, Mark Pangborn, George Van Dyke, Delbert Eberts, C. B. Lincoln and Philip McDowell and Miss Elsa McLaughlin.
Woodruff Place Club To Give Bridge Party
A bridge party will be given tonight for residents of Woodruff
Place and their friends by members|
of the Woodruff Place Woman’s Club at the clubhouse. Hostesses
will be Mesdames Arthur E. Fischer, Laurel Fredericks, Thomas Fisher and Arthur Kelly. Hostesses at. a bridge party Wednesday, Nov. 16, for club members will be Mesdames Orris Stanfield, James E. Tucker and Clifton L. Fergason.
Fetes N. I. S. Club Unit
Miss Rita Jean Hancock, 1350 W. 31st St., will be hostess tonight to members of the Sub-Deb Chapter of the N. I. S. Club.
Music Is Theme of Book and Toy $how
Music was to be the theme of the American Association of University Women’s annual book and toy exhibit today at Ayres’ auditorium,
Miss Ada Bicking, director of Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, was to be available from 2:30 to 3:30 p. m. this afternoon for consultation on general lines of music instruction for children.
Three Conservatory teachers and members of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra were to discuss different types of instruments. Charles Munger was to describe brass instruments; Francis Fitzgerald, woodwinds, and Edwin Jones, string instruments. At 3:30 o'clock second, third and fourth grade pupils at Orchard School were to appear playing old English recorders or Duskin flutes. Many of the flutes have been constructed under the supervision of Miss Francis Wishard and Miss Mary Beaumont, music instructors; Walter Froelich, art director, and Herbert Sweet, shop director.
Pupils Will Play
A group of seventh and eighth grade girls also were to play. They include Martha Ann Scott, Betty Lee Washburn, Marjorie Home, Ann Atkins, Lucy Holliday, Lillian Fletcher and Jane Sewall. J. C. Courtney, head of the lower school at Park School for Boys, will talk on “Today’s Radio Children” tomorrow afternoon and Mrs. Arthur Woodward, artist, will give an illustrated talk on “Imaginative and Creative Art for the Pre-School Child” Thursday. Miss Vera Morgan of the Indiana Public Library is scheduled for a talk on the various foreign groups in Indianapolis Friday. Children under the direction of Miss Mary Rigg of the American Settlement will appear in costumes of foreign countries. Miss Bicking will also be available for music consultation the same afternoon. A style show will be presented as a concluding feature Saturday afternoon.
Moose Group Collects Books for Hospitals
Members of the library committee of the Women of the Moose are collecting books for distribution to Indianapolis hospitals and homes for the aged. The collection is made in observance of Book Week. Mrs. Mildred Beck, chairman, is assisted by Mesdames Cleo Moore, Helen Wolsifer, Thelma Holder, Alberta Zorman and Alvina Nagley. Mrs. Esther Hansford, senior regent of the Women of the Moagse, will preside at a dinner for chairmen at 6 p. m. Thursday at the Moose Temple. Plans for holiday activities will be made.
Demonstra
k
te Student Sewing
E | ter,
Times Photos.
Daily classroom work will be demonstrated for parents and patrons visiting Shortridge High School this week. Left to right, Miss Joann Kroetz, senior; Miss Patty Crimans, post-graduate student, and Miss Ruth Milligan, junior, are shown sewing in the home economics department. The open house at the school is an observance of American
Education Week,
-| field,
booth at her precinct
Times Photos.
Mrs. Evans Woollen as she came out of the voting
at 62d St. and Keystone Ave. Her
husband, chairman of the board of the Fletcher Trust Co.,
long has been prominent in national Democratic circles.
Friends and Relatives Pay Honor to Many Future Brides
Friends and relatives of several Indianapolis brides-to-be are busy this week attending prenuptial parties in their honor. young women today named attendants for their approaching marriages. Miss Carol Fenner, 3460 Winthrop Ave. will entertain Friday night
Three of the
with a linen shower for Miss Kathryn Grace Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Lewis, 5684 College
Ave. Announcement of Miss Lewis’ en-
Lincoln, Neb., was made over the week-end. The wedding will take place Dec. 18 at the McKee Chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Miss Grace Taylor, 205 E. 33d St., will be hostess at a fiesta shower for her Nov. 17. On Nov. 22, Miss Lucille Jackson will entertain at her home, 5354 N. Delaware St. with a personal shower. Miss Marian Gearen, 4160 Guilford Ave., will be hostess at a kitchen shower Nov. 25.
The date for a hosiery and handkerchief shower to be given by Miss Janet Shuman, 623 E. 53d St, scheduled for the first week in December, has not been announced.
Miss Fenner and Miss Jackson will be bridesmaids at the wedding and Ralph Taylor will be best man. Winston Griffith and Clyde Norman will usher. 2 2 » Miss Kathryn Jean Banister, whose engagement to Richard Andrew Ferguson has just been announced, today named Miss Louise Fenner as her only attendant.’ She is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. R. F. Banister, 2058 Central Ave. Mr. Ferguson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ferguson, 1135 Fairfield Ave. The wedding is to be Dec. 28 at the Central Christian Church. : Earl Taylor is to be best man. Miss Joan Ferguson, a sister of the bridegroom-to-be, will entertain with a fiesta shower at her home Nov. 29. i : 8 8 = Misses Sue Merrill, Helen Eldridge and Jo Jackson entertained with a tea and personal shower recently in honor of Miss Elizabeth Ann Nichols,
whose marriage to Frederick Scott Engelking, Peoria, Ill, will take place Nov. 27 at the McKee Chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. The tea was held at the Delta Gamma Sorority house, 737 Hampton Drive. Mrs. Fred Nichols, mother of the bride-to-be, poured. Table and house decorations were carried out in the bridal colors of dusty blue and American beauty. Guests included Mrs. Ed Engelking, mother of the bridegroom-to-be; Mesdames Lee Merrill, Arthur B. Eldridge, Raleigh Fisher, Fred Nichols Jr., George Chandler, Robert Gilkison, Dana Hannan, Robert Horst, Ralph Husted, Lee CarClarence Wacker, Richard Disher, Walter Witt, James Potter and J. Lawrence Sims and Misses Dorothy Dauner, Wilma Aulenbacher, Louise Troy, Helen Carver, Martha Shepperd, Margaret Koesters, Rebecca Blackley, Hazel Guio, Barbara Swain and Edna Nowland. : ” 8 8.
Miss Dorothy Brown and Miss Doris Gray entertained with a miscellaneous shower last night at the latter's home, 230 Hendricks Place, for Miss Martha Graves, whose marriage to Frank Conar will take place Thanksgiving Day. Guests with the bride-to-be included Misses Betty Bloom, Gertrude Fox, Florence Hunt, Virginia Hurtt and Martha Mosier. 8 2 8
Mrs. Alfred Pieper entertained with a miscellaneous shower last night at the home of her parents for her sister, Miss Marjorie Gray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gray, 3042 Graceland Ave. Miss Gray will be married Saturday to Harry Adkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Adkins. She is to be her sister's only attendant and Robert Hubbard is to be best man. : Guests at the party included Mesdames James Cook, Robert HolliFrank ' Barnhart, Edward Bryce, Eva Davis, Clarence Bunge, Devon Wicks, George Rotroff; Misses Mary Jean Raub, Jean Koler, Virginia Ward, Margaret McCona~
hay, Roslyn Basler and Helen Mac-
gagement to Ralph Waldo Stout, |
Dickson-Pearson Marriage Rite
Set for Dec. 10
Miss Peggy Ann Pearson today. had announced the date of her marriage to Henry Dickson Jr. as Dec. 10. The ceremony will be read at 4:30 o'clock at the home of the bride-to-be’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Shoemaker Pearson, 5520 N. Meridian St. Mr. Dickson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Henry Dickson. Mrs. Albert Tietig, Cincinnati, O, will be matron of honor and the bridesmaids will include Mrs. William S. Pocock, Flint, Mich.; Miss Mary Jane Barrett, Detroit, Mich.; and’ the Misses Jane Rauch and Katherine Fulton of Indianapolis. Mr. Dickson has chosen Frederick Dickson, Atlanta, Ga., as his best man and the ushers will be John S. Pearson Jr. and Edwin Albert Pearson, brothers of the bride-to-be, and Richard Jamieson Williams, Detroit, Mich.,, and John Elam of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Pearson will entertain Dec. 9 at the Woodstock Club with a bridal dinner in the be=~ trothed couple’s honor. :
Haramy to Talk On Foreign Setup
Dr. John J. Haramy will lecture at 8:15 p. m. next Monday at the World War Memorial under auspices of the Indianapolis Council of P. E. O. Dr. Haramy will discuss “Behind the Scenes in Europe.” Proceeds will go toward maintenance of the Sisterhood’s two projects, the educational fund and Cottey College at Nevada, Mo. Mrs. Hiram E. Cunningham is general chairman. Mrs, © Harry Rogers is ticketé chairman, assisted bv Mesdames W. R. Craigle, E. B. Crowell, V. C. Daugherty, W. H. Frosch, E. C. Hall, John L. Stuart and Frank J. Wise. Mrs. J. R. Kuebler is publicity chairman, assisted by Mesdames Guy Carpenter, Harry Nichols, P. T. Schaeffer, S. T. Jackson and Ward Holaday. Mrs. Max Critchfield is in charge of music.
Prexy Club of Butler to Meet
The Prexy Club of Butler University will hold its first meeting of the year at 7:30 p. m. Thursday at
the recreation room of Arthur Jordan Memorial hall, Miss Geraldine Johnson, meeting chairman, announced today. The Prexy Club is composed of present and past sorority presidents at Butler. Hostesses for the meeting are to include Misses Aline Bailey, Marie Schubert, Charlene Richardson, Johnson, Lucille Broich, Mary Evelyn Daniel and Helen Eldridge. Miss Chloris Bell, Butler Panhellenic Association president, will talk on fall rush activities. Mrs. Alice B. Wesenberg, women’s council head, will be a special ‘guest. Prexy Club officers who will be serving for the first time are Mrs. James Zoercher, president; Miss Johnson, vice president; Mrs, Arthur Loftin, secretary, and Miss Margaret Ensley, treasurer.
0. E. S. Unit to Entertain
Nettie Ransford Chapter 464, O.E. S., will entertain Mooreland chapter with a pitchin dinner at 6:30 p. m, tomorrow. Degrees will be conferred at the stated meeting at 8 p. m; Mrs. Kathryn King and George Oshome are worthy matron and pa-
ub Event
“Abundant. |
Despite Vote
1 Mrs. Chic Jackson Speaks
‘To Women’s Retail ‘Drug Group.
Club meetings and luncheons are being held today: and tomorrow despite the interest in the election, Lectures and discussions are program features, although election predictions and returns are certain conversation topics.
Mrs. Chic Jackson was to be speaker at the Guest Day program and. dessert luncheon of the Woman’s Organization of Retail Druggists 20 at 1 p. m. today at the Indianapolis College of
‘| Pharmacy.
Hostegses were to be Mesdames W. F. Holmes, Wayne Gill, J. A, Simmons, O. A. Deloste, F. R. Keis= er, J. 1. Gelly, FP. R. Fisher and R. C. Snoddy.
Mrs. William Emrich, 2359 W, 16th St., will entertain the Wednese day Afternoon Club assisted by Mrs, C. C. Rothman. > Mrs. Lewis Shott will review Dr.
|Henry Link’s “Return to Religion.”
Musie will be provided by William
A’ program on Mexico and Spain will be presented at the Ephamar Literary Club luncheon at 12:30 p. m, tomorrow at the BannerWhitehill auditorium. Mrs. Arthur Brown will be hosts ess, assisted by Mrs. R. E. Coleman and Miss Effie Fern Harris. Mrs. H. H. Esky and Mrs. F. H. Dedert
‘are program cochairmen.
Mrs. E. W. Stockdale will speak on the “Origin and History of Silk and Velvet” at the Minerva Club program tomorrow at the home of Mrs. C. F, McDaniel, 3761 N. Capitol Ave. / :
A round-table discussion on “Choosing Books and Toys Wisely” will be presented at a meeting of the Fall Creek Kindergarten Moth ers’ Club of Indianapolis Free Kine dergarten Society at 2 p. m. tomore row at the kindergarten. Mrs. John
Ranes is chairman assisted by Mrs. Carl Berbury and Mrs. Richard Cushwa.
Mrs. Albert Suhr, 2412 Plymouth
St., will be hostess at a luncheon
for the Indianapolis Educational Council at 12:30 p. m. tomorrow.
The Mandalay Chapter, International Travel-Study Club, will hold a 12:30 p. m. dessert luncheon tomorrow at the home of Mrs. E. F, Marburger, 817 E. 42d St. Assisting her as hostess will be Mrs. J. O. Dunn-and Mrs. E. D. Gamble. Miss Nellie Crawford will talk on “Handi= crafts of Yesterday and Today.”
At a meeting of the Current Literature Club at 2 p. m. tomorrow, Mrs. A. D. Weyl will talk on “Antiques and Heirlooms.” The meeting will be held at the William Conner homestead. :
Watches for Lapel Attractive Gifts
An efficient little timepiece set in a frivolous case makes an excellent gift for the “first lady” of your life.
If. she likes tailored suits, look at the clever lapel watches smart shops are showing. They detract just enough from the severity of the tailored costume. One is merely a diminutive dial set in a metal skeleton framework: another is key-shaped, the dial forming the broad end of the key, More feminine is a tiny locket watch pendant from a slender linked gold bracelet, or a small clip watch brilliantly set with diamonds. All unusual in design, and definitely created to please feminine fancy.
Hadassah Sets Aside Sabbath for Study
The first autumn Oneg Shabbat (joyous Sabbath) meeting of the Indianapolis Hadassah Chapter will be held Saturday at the residence of Mrs. Harold Platt, Mrs. Clarence L. Budd is chapter president and Mrs. Ralph Kroot is Oneg Shabbat committee chairman. Hadassah is following a current Palestine custom in setting aside one Saturday out of each month as a time for the study of Jewish cultural subjects and for sociability, Saturday afternoon Miss Frieda Brill will give a book review; current events will be discussed, and Palestine songs will be sung, Mesdames Bailey Brown and S. A, Silberman will pour the tea.
Blocks COOKING SCHOOL
Wednesday at 1:30
f‘Let’s Talk Turkey”
by Dorothea Polis
New ideas for your Thanksgiving dinner! Mrs. Potts will prepare California turkey with ~ four different kinds of dressing. She will show you how to make several salads, snow peak potatoes, pumpkin ice cream and cranberry ice. Don't miss Cook ing School Wednesday!
Auditorium, Sixth Floor
