Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1938 — Page 20
City Riders to Titer ‘Show at Cincinnati; Couple to Be Feted
Miss Lucy Taggart Will Entertain for Miss Evelyn Chambers and Julius Birge; Miss Janet Budd Becomes Bride in South Bend.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON
Local equestriennes will enter mounts in several _classes at the Cincinnati Horse Show, to be held at the Cincinnati Armory next Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Mrs. Clayton O. Mogg, whose Melody Gay and Primrose Princess have been ribbon winners at recent shows, and Mrs. Alfred L. Piel, © whose My Lavalier has established an enviable record, will attend the event. Others who will exhibit horses are Mrs. Alex Metzger : and her daughter, Miss Joan Metzger, Mrs. Orland A. Church, Mrs. 5 Herbert C. Piel, Mrs. Morris Rosner and Miss Janet Rosenthal. Joining the group for the week-end will be Mr. Metzger and his son, Ab, Messrs. Mogg, Church, Alfred and Herbert Piel.
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x Miss Lucy Taggart will entertain at dinner this evening in honor -of her niece, Miss Evelyn Chambers, and Julius Birge who are io be "married at 4:30 p. m. tomorrow at the home of Miss Chambers’ ‘parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Laurance Chambers. Included in the © party, which is for members of the family and out-of-town guests will be Mr. Birge’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Birge of Greenwich, Conn.; Walter W. Birge Jr., also of Greenwich, who is to be z his brother's best man; Mrs. Thomas S. Childs Jr. of Avon, Conn, - formerly Miss Melissa. Wadley of Indianapolis, and Mr. Childs Jr. ~ Miss Margaret Harrison, Boston; Mrs. Stuart Gibson and Charles - K. Woltz, both of Richmond, Va., and Donald Taylor of Louisville.
Leave for Wedding at South Bend
Several Indianapolis relatives went to South Bend yesterday to "attend the wedding of Miss Janet Budd, formerly of Indianapolis, to Guy McMichael Jr., which was celebrated at high noon today. A reception for the immediate families was to be held after the ceremony at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Budd. Among the guests were to be the bride's grandmother, Mrs. ' Charles A. Bookwalter; Messrs. and Mesdames Herbert R. Duckwall, . James Gardner Martin, John Hancock, John H. Bookwalter and Mrs. Harry Martin. Dr. and Mrs. William Niles Wishard Jr. will return the last of this week from their wedding trip to the West Indies. Mrs. Wishard Jr. is the former Caroline Louise Davis. They will be at home tempprarily with Dr. Wishard’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. William Niles Wishard. tJ FJ ® ® 2 8
With the theatrical season in full swing the doctors’ wives are planning to indulge in a few histrionics for the amusement of their husbands and families Wednesday at 8:15 p. m. in the auditorium of the American United Life Building. Rehearsals are now being held for the dozen singing, dancing and comedy acts which will eorprise the “Medical Wives’ Follies.” In charge of the skits are Mesdames Frank M. Gastineau, L. D. Bibler, Dudley A. Pfaff, Henry L. Foreman, Ralph S. Chappell, G. W. Gustafson and Mrs. J. Jerome Littell. An 8-piece orchestra directed by Mrs. Russell Spivey and composed of Marion County Medical Society Auxiliary members will provide music between acts. Special piano accompaniments will be played by Mrs. G. B. Jackson. Mrs. Russell Hippensteel is refreshments committee chairman. Members of the general arrangements committee for the party include Mrs. Byron Rust, chairman, Mesdames Harold M. Trusler, Foster J. Hudson, Wayne Carson, Roy A. Geider, Harold F. Dunlap and Mrs. A. S. Jaeger.
Miss Jones Has Lead in Tudor Hall Play
Miss Mary Elizabeth Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Ralston Jones, will play the leading role in the Tudor Hall senior class play, “Pride and Prejudice,” Dec. 2. Mrs. William B. Burford is spending a month with Miss Marguerite Kennelly at Rye, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Lieber are in Chicago for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bunch are at home after several weeks’ stay in Washington and Miami Beach, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Holman Wilson, who have been spending several months in Chicago, have returned here to live and have taken a house on Cold Springs Road. Mr. and Mrs. William R. Simpson have left for two weeks’ motor trip to Florida. Mrs. Lauretta J. Truitt of Noblesville and Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Dickson of Hammond are spending a few days with Mrs. Frank L. Truitt before leaving for Miami Beach, Fla. for
the winter.
EVENTS
SORORITIES
Beta Chapter, Phi Gamma Tau. Mon. eve. Mrs. Edwin D. Green, 1708 N. Alton Ave., hostess. Iota Kappa. 8 p. m. Fri. Miss Mildred Eckard, 2841 N. Delaware, hostess. Alpha Chapter, Alpha Gamma. 7:30 p. m. tonight. Miss Mary Elizabeth Barrett, 5896 Guilford Ave., hostess. Alpha Pi Omega. 8 p. m. tonight. "Miss Georgia Carleton, 3706 Northwestern Ave., hostess. 5 LU
War Mothers. Concert at Indiana War Memorial Fri. eve. by Mary Traub Bush postponed. LODGE
Golden Rule Chapter, O. E. 8S. 8 p. m. Fri. Masonic Temple, North and Hlinois. Bethel 1, Jobs Daughters, exemplification of degrees. Miss May Jones, honored queen. Miss Lois Booker and Oscar Dickinson, worthy matron and patron.
CARD PARTIES
Alfaratta Council 5, Degree of Pocahontas. 5:30 to 7 p. m. Fri. Red Man’s Hall, 137 W. North. Chicken supper. Committee, Mesdames Sue M. Reynolds, Alice Seigle, Angela Perry, Minnie L. * Smith and Hattie M. Hopkins. Brookside Mothers Club. 8 p. m. Fri. Brookside Community House. Door and table prizes. Mrs. Charles Shubert, chairman.
Alumnae of Zeta Tau Alpha ‘To Hold Benefit Party Tonight
The Indianapolis Alumnae Chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority will hold its annual philanthropic benefit party tonight at the home of Mrs. Jack C. Greig, 643 Woodlawn Ave. The organization’s national alumnae philanthropic work is the support of a health center and social service at Currin Valley, Va. Mrs. H. B. Smith, health center chairman, will discuss current needs and outline the enlarged educational and® vocational program initiated there
500 Are Expected to Attend Latreian Card Party Tuesday
About 500 are expected at the eighth annual Alpha Gamma Latreian bridge party next Tuesday evening at the Columbia Club, proceeds from which will go to the Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp at Bridgeport.
Mrs. John Cromie is chairman of the party and will be assisted by Mesdames A. Frank Malott, E. M. Costin; Misses Lucille Pryor, Elizabeth Matthis, Zona Brindie, Mary Helen Borcherding and Mary Louise Mann. Among patrons and patronesses for the benefit. are Dr. and Mrs. Harry Ware, Messrs. and Mesdames' Bert S. Gadd, Frank Luebking, Robert Richey, Dan V. White, W. T. Steele, E. G. Driftmeyer, C. A. Berry, M. J, Marks, Gordon Bringle, Omer Bradley; Mrs. Ralph Lytel; Mesdames Paul Piper, Byron D. Bowers, Clayton Adams, Dan Bernd, Edna Swift, Juanita Hays, Laurence Faller, Taylor Sanders, Nina Freitas, Clark W. Day, Harry Coleman ~ Moore, Blanche Anderegg, Veldon Montgomery, - Ezra Knopp, Alonzo McConahay, Eugene Sonderman, Cecil Clements and Ralph Mason. Other patronesses include the ' Misses Lela Hufford, Mary Bigson, Pzuline Frazier, Rose Hennis, Mary McConahay, Dorothy Moore, Kath- . erine Schmidt, Mayme Murphy, Louise Williams, Catherine Murphy, Mildred Fowler, Margaret Huddlin, Lue Meyers, Vee Secrest, Loretta Guederhoffer, Henrietta Van Camp, : Ruby Bell, Charlotte Engle, Esther J Simon, Nancy Davis, Elizabeth H. Green, Marie Atchison, Irene Gunter, Mildred Cook and Chella Tisron. ; Others who will attend are Misses ‘ Helen Finney, Edith Roach, Ger- ; trude Whitmore, Helen Whitmore, - Florence Whitmore, Ruth Sparks, ' Martha Waggoner, Elizabeth Lahrman, Laura Van Remmen, Margaret Joslin, Esther Rains, Mary Ken- . nedy and Gladys Watson. mime Reo mnci
Mrs. F. G. Balz Heads Federation Gift Fund
Mrs. Frederick G. Balz will have «charge of promoting a golden jubi- : lee birthday gift fund for the Gen- * eral Federation of Clubs at a council meeting of the organization May - 8-14 at San Francisco. Mrs. Balz / has been appointed program chairman for the meeting. Mrs. Balz, general Federation di- . rector for the Indiana Federation of Clubs, will confer with Mrs. Saidie Orr Dunbar, president of the general federation, when Mrs. Dunbar will speak Friday, Nov. 18, at a luncheon here.
Luncheon Monday For Welfare Club
Mrs. W. R. Hatton and Mrs. Olin Hatton Sr. will entertain the Welfare Club with a 12:30 p. m. luncheon Monday at their country home near Fortville. Mrs. Olin Hatton Jr. is chairman of the program assisted by Mes~dames Paul Goldrick, Ray Holcomb, ‘Ralph Middleton and George S. Stalker. A business meeting will “follow. :
Bag Has 3-Way Mirror A new fitted bag of calfskin, not too large, but containing perfume phial, powder compact and lipstick, ‘has a three-way mirror so that every aspect of the renewed makevisible. ,
co,
general®-
Woman Official Holds Sway Over Nation’s Larder
By GERRY DICK WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.—She might be called the nation’s No. 1 Housewife for no food problem of the family market basket is ,unknown to her. Yet she thinks of peas and carrots in terms of charts and graphs. Bread-making means millions of bushels of wheat to her.
| Breakfast brings her visions of fields
of corn and oats. She is quiet and retiring, yet she
is senior economist of the United States Bureau of Home Economics— Dr. Hazel K. Stiebling. Two similar problems claim most of her waking hours. How much food is needed toc give every American an adequate diet, is the first problem. How can agriculture supply this need, is the second. These problems are geared together, she believes, and the solution of one means much toward the solution of the other. ‘From her office in the building of the Department of Agriculture she began her research on the question of adequate diet. In a study of tremendous value to millions of housewives as well as to the whole field of nutrition study and home economics, she worked out charts and tables to show what foods could and should be purchased to get the greatest possible food value out of the weekly budget. Today anyone who wants to know how to stretch the food dollar farthest need only write to the Bureau of Home Economics for the series of four standard diets devised by Dr. Stiebling. These “Diets at Four Levels of Nutritive Content and Cost” are: 1. The liberal diet. 2. The adequate diet at moderate cost. 3. The adequate diet at minimum cost. 4. The restricted diet for emergency use. When Secretary Henry A. Wallace, who has declared that an adequate diet for every American must be the goal of any farm program; wants to know how much of each kind of food farmers should raise to give the nation an adequate diet, Dr. Stiebling tells him. Today, Dr. Stiebling is engaged in a great new experiment. A survey of consumer purchase and consumer income, carried on by the Bureau of Home Economics and Bureau of Labor Statistics in cooperation with the National Resources Committee has yielded an unprecedented mass of data on hundreds of thousands of families. Dr. Stiebling is comparing the food expenditures of these families with her diets and at last will know
what proportion of families are getting them, or are able to get them.
during the summer. She will be assisted in the discussion to follow by Miss Louise Berndt, Miss Edna Garwood, Mrs. R. W. Hilgedag and N.D.
Warren. Mrs. Charles D. Smuck will announce Dec. 2 as the date for the sorority’s annual benefit bridge party which will be held at the Columbia Club. Mrs. B. A. Sutton, prizes chairman, and Mrs. G. W. Cline, refreshments chairman, are assisting with plans. Mrs. Greig will be assisted by Miss Panoria Apostol and Mesdames Milton C. Loftin, John G. Leech and N. R. Bailey.
Alpha Chapter, Phi Delta Pi Sorority will hold its annual card parly at 8 o'clock tonight at the Columbia Club. Miss Frances Mae Patterson is general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Ina Mae May and Miss Genevieve Uhl, cochairmen.
Mrs. Herbert A. Luckey is general chairman of the card party which will be held tomorrow afternoon at Block’s auditorium by the Kappa Alpha Theta Mothers’ Club of Butler University. Assisting Mrs. Luckey are Mesdames Thomas Quinn, C. H. Over, K. K. Woolling and H. H. Schissel, tickets; Mrs. Edith Berry Alexander, Rushville, Mesdames Norman Nicolai, Tib Dreiss and Herbert Sawyer, cards; Mesdames B. J. Smith, Maude Smith, A. L. Ballinger and A, C. Schrader, candy; Mesdames Albert Davis, A. J. Pfeiffer, L. J. Foley and O. L. Scales, dbor prizes, and Mrs. Walter Mayer, chairman of out-of-town mothers.
Mrs. Georgia Bonefield, 1325 Gladstone, entertained Sigma Delta Tau last night and Mrs. Donald E. Herrin was hostess last evening to Delta Chapter, Xi Delta Xi.
Invitations have been issued by the Indianapolis Alumnae of Chi Omega to the Indianapolis Panhellenic Council members, their husbands and presidents of the various sorority alumnae organizations to attend a guest day program at 8 p. m. Tuesday at the World War Memorial. A buffet supper will follow the program. Mrs. J. Howard Alltop, Chi Omega Panhellenic representative, is in charge of arrangements, assisted by Mesdames Don E. Kelly, Maurice Cravens and J. E. Kiefer.
War Mothers Book
Concert for Dec. 4
Mrs. Sarah H. Wager, 712 E. 40th St., will be in charge of tickets for the benefit concert Dec. 4 sponsored by the Marion County Chapter of American Wa? Mothers at the Indiana War Memorial auditorium. The Malleable Glee Club, a group of 42 women, will present a concert of Negro spirituals. Mrs. Ww. Harvey, 2546 College Ave., is president of the Marion County unit. Mrs. Harvey is a charter member of the organization and a Gold Star Mother.
Mrs. Rogers to Lead
Bay Laurel Service |-
Mrs. James Rogers will conduct a White Cross Recruit service at 2 p. m. tomorrow at a meeting of the Bay Laurel W. C. T. U. Mrs. Edith Carroll will be hostess. Mrs. Murray Cox will conduct the
devotions and Mrs, Claude H. Faulkner will preside.
Pearl M. Aust Becomes Bride Of Mel Olvey
Miss Pearl Marie Aust, daughter of Mrs. William Aust, became the bride of Mel A. Olvey, Kokomo, and Mrs. Walter Olvey, Kokomo, this morning in a ceremony read at the Holy Cross Catholic Church.
The Rt. Rev. Msgr. William: F. Keefe officiated. A wedding breakfast followed at Cifaldi’s for the immediate families and an informal reception was held at the home of the bride’s mother. The couple will be at home in Muncie following a wedding trip. Miss Aust’s bridal gown was of ivory satin fashioned on princess lines with lace trim at the neck. Her three-quarter veil was bound in white satin and fell from a heartshaped headdress of seed pearls. Her bouquet was of white roses and lilies of the valley and she wore a gold cross belonging to her greatgrandmother. Her attendants were Miss Erma Aust and Miss Mary Margaret Aust. Miss Erma Aust’s ensemble included a moire taffeta gown in rambler rose shade with a heart-shaped doll hat of the same material. The dress was cut on princess lines and with it she wore a bolero. Her bouquet was of Johanna Hill roses. Miss Mary Margaret Aust chose a firmament blue dress and hat styled like that of the other attendant. She carried a colonial bouquet of Briar Cliff roses. Leo F. Gallagher was best man and William and Robert Aust were ushers. The bride’s traveling ensemble included a costume suit of stone blue with dark squirrel trim and ‘a small fur-trimmed hat. With the suit she wore black accessories and a corsage of roses.
String Quartet On Air Saturday
A string quartet of members of Mu Phi Epsilon, national music honor sorority, will broadcast at 9
a. m. Saturday over Station WFBM in honor of the organization's founding. 7 The quartet will include Miss Charlotte Reeves, first violin; Mrs. Martha Rundell Schnaiter, second violin; Miss Harriet Payne, viola, and Miss Virginia Leyenberger, cello. They will play “Pieces for String Quartette,” Opus 44, by Hindemuth. The quartet plays with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. The sorority was founded Nov, 13, 1903, at the Metropolitan College of Music, Cincinnati. The local chapter was chartered Nov. 3, 1906, at the Metropolitan School of Music, now the Arthur Jordan Conservatory. Miss Reeves will be in charge of the program.
Rev. Mr. Waldon to Speak
The Rev. John Waldon, Leitersford, will lecture on “The Beneficent Reprobate and the Tail” at a meeting of the Washington W. C. T. U. at 7:30 p. m. today at the Lynhurst Baptist Church. A free-will emering will be taken.
Girl Reserves: To Give Dance; Tea Is Planne
Senior High School Girl Reserves
gym. Bob Dennis and his orchestra will play. The arrangements committee includes Miss Betty Stone, Miss Ella-
mae Spaulding and Ralph Canter, Washington; Misses Margaret Ewing, Barbara Crofts, Ruth Wide, Marjorie Wise, Martha Holt and Jack Cooper and Bill Hirst, Tech;
and Miss Mary Jane Glass, Manual. Chaperons will be Messrs. and Mesdames W. E. Wise, Clarence Anderson and William Drake.
Tea Planned
The Senior Interclub Council of Girl Reserves will hold a tea at 4 p. m. next Thursday in honor of Miss vanAsch vanWijck, past pros dent of the World Y. W. C. A. party will be at the Central Wy
Miss Betty Stone, president of the Washington High School Club, will introduce the guest. She is a native of Holland and is visiting groups in the United States after attending the council meeting of the World Y. W. C. A. held in Canada the past summer. An invitation has been issued to the Girl Reserve Council and the members from Greencastle to ate tend. Miss Betty Wagener, Washington High School, is in charge of refreshments. The hostess committee includes Miss Mildred Ott, Manual; Miss Frances Lee, American Settlement; Miss Emily Jean Lewis and Miss Joan Campkell, Shortridge; Miss Elizabeth Ross, Technical, and Miss Spaulding.
P. T. A. Notes
The Southport Grade School P.T. A, will hear Ralph Krale of the American Legion speak at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the school. Appearing on a musical program will be Miss Rosemary Gaffney, vocalist, and the “Harlin Brothers.”
Mrs. H. F. Goll will preside at the Wayne Township High School Association meeting at 7:45 p. m. Wednesday at the Ben Davis High School gymnasium. Freshmen girls, under the direction of Mrs. Elsie Eastburn, will present an operetta. Mrs. Esther Fohl, home economics instructor, and students from her
social hour.
Believe in the School” at 7:30 p. m.
H. E. Fillinger is chairman of the men’s program arranged for that night. Cub Scouts of Troop 11 will present a playlet under the direction of John McWethey, scoutmaster. Herschel E. Hadley wili preside. A representative. from Scout headquarters will talk on Scout aims.
Miss Jessie Henderson, director of the County Accident Prevention Bureau, will talk at 7:45 p. m. Monday to the Shadeland P.-T. A, A round table discussion on safety will follow. Sixth grade pupils will provide the music.
William R. Moore will direct a speech class at Warren Central High School in a one-act play, “The Valiant,” at 7:45 p. m. Wednesday at the Warren Central P.-T. A. meeting. A facility quartet, including C. E. Easch, Paul Hamilton, William Moore and Frank Noffke, will sing.
A patriotic program will be. presented at’ the Edgewood P.-T. A. meeting at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow. School pupils will provide the music. “Family Fireworks” is to be discussed by Mrs. George Arndt for Pe Edgewood Study Club meeting ov. 18. -
Crooked Creek P.-T. A. will meet at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at the school. Dr. E. E. Padgett will speak on “Cancer.”
serve its 20th anniversary Nov. 18 at
A trio, including Mrs. Marion Haverstick, Mrs. Harold Emmett and Miss Louise Dressler, will sing, ac-
H. A. C. Sets Armistice Eve Dance Tonight
Doc Grayson’s Orchestra will play for the Armistice Eve dance tonight at the Hoosier Athletic Club. J. PF. Davis and O. R. Roos are cochairmen of arrangements. The H. A. ©. Bowling: League is pon
; PEE A : 9 Lecturers
On Program For Tuesday
Hoosier Bureau to Give First Salon Event | Of Season.
The Hoosier Program Bureau will present the first salon program of its ninth seasom at Ayres’ Auditorium Tuesday at 10:30 a. m. Officers ‘of the Indiana Federation of Clubs will be hostesses. Nine lecturers are to appear on the program. Seven of them are Indianapolis residents. Of the other
two, Mrs. Eugene Schlemmer lives
in Bremen and Miss Mary A. Gib-
E | bard, in Mishawaka.
Mrs. Lillian Wye Pike, a Wellesley College graduate, who presents book
¢| reviews before clubs and organiza-
tions, will appear... Mrs. Schlemmer is a teacher and writes poetry. She
i | lectures before clubs and church
groups. Mrs. Lois Compton Fuller, who lectures on current affairs and
| requested subjects and is author of | several plays and a book: of verse,
- Above, left to right: Mrs. Robert D. Cheesman was Miss Marjorie Ellen Horne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Horne, before her mar-
riage Oct. 1. Cheesman. (Bretzman Photo.)
Mr. Cheesman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William O.
Miss Eleanor Jane Beasley, daugliter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Beasley, became the bride of John B. Lookabill in a recent ceremony at. the
McKee Chapel of the Tabefnacle Photo.)
Presbyterian Church. (Bretzman
An Oct. 15 marriage was that of Miss Rosemary Bach, daughter of
Mrs. Charles H. Bach, to Edward J. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Davis Creek
McDermott. (Bretzman Photo.) are to be at home at 526 E. Fall
) Blvd. after Nov. 15. Mrs. Davis was Miss Nina Ruth Sherman, will entertain with a Thanksgiving| daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carroll J. Sherman, before her marriage dance Nov. 18 at the Y. W. C. A.| Friday at the Irvington Methodist Church.
(Photo-Craft Photo.)
Parties Set for Ruth Long;
- Margaret Bartholomew Wed|
Several parties were being planned today for Miss Ruth Long as
Miss Ruth Ann Quick, Shortridge,|an affair in honor of Miss Charlotte Phillips was announced. Miss
Margaret Louise Bartholomew’s marriage yesterday is among the news
Sot brides and brides-to-be.
2.p. m. Herbert Curtis, principal of Southport High School, will speak.|
Women’s Unit of]
Retail Druggists To Hold Benefit
Mrs. J. L. Simmons and Mrs. R. C. Snoddy are cochairmen of the henefit bridge party which the Women’s Organization of Retail Druggists will sponsor at 2 p. m. Nov. 19 at Ayres’ auditorium. Committees named today to assist with arrangements include: Door Prizes—Mesdames “William Spanagel, Will Rossiter, A. E. Johnson, William Oren, J. O. Gslly and L. C. Heustis. Cards and Tallies—Mesdames J. P. McKowan, S. R. Fisher, J. B. Wade, Victor Pfau, Charles Watkins and A. Hoffman. * Candy—Mesdames - Rex Rudicel,
Ed Hall, F. R. Keiser, Fred Dunnington, A. G. Stevenson, E., A. Reich and J. L. Wilson. Tickets — Mesdames T, Wayne Gill, E. H. Niles, W. F. Holmes, Bernard Keene, E. H. Enners and Mont Huff. Table Prizes--Mesdaimes O. A. DeLoste. Walter Stedfield, G. P. Stockton, William Freund, Albert Fritz and George Maxwell. Hostesses — Mesdames Harry Borst, J. G. Pantzer, W. L. Baker, B. M. Ralston and C. C. Jackson. Mrs. James Mead and Mrs. Gill are in charge of finance and Mrs. Rossiter is publicity chairman.
classes will be in charge of the
H. E. Whitaker, principal of Gar- |} den City School, will speak on “We |}
Wednesday at the P.-T. A. meeting. ||
Glenn’s Valley P.-T. A. will ob-|
companied by Mrs. William Kloess. |
Mr. and Mrs. Howard O. Dodson will entertain Sunday at their home with a Yea and, kitchen shower for Miss Long and her fiance, Clifton L. Bradley. The couple is to be married Nov. 20 at the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church. Miss t| Long is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Long Miss Barbara Zeichiel entertained last night in the bride-to-be’s honor and Mrs, Robert Jones will be host-
Jess at the linen shower next
Wednesday. A buffet supper for the families and members of the bridal party will be held Nov. 19 at the couple’s new home at 5918 Rosslyn Ave. following the ho re= hearsal. 2 ”» 2 “Mrs; ‘Harry -Shutt will entertain next Tuesday evening at her home, 3036 English Ave., in honor of Miss Phillips, whose marriage to Earl E. Snyder will be-a Thanksgiving Day event. Guests will include Miss Mildred Phillips and the Mesdames Vera Weber, Mame Dietz, Walter Dailey,
1Garland Burris, Edward Aumann,
Martin Pavy, Lawrence Busenbark, Frank Wheeler, Leonard Hemmelgarn, Herben Leppky, William Stader, Louis Vollrath and Margaret
Fahey.
” ® 8 Mr. and Mrs. Otis E. Bartholomew announce the marriage of ‘their daughter, Margaret Louise, to Stephen W. Burres, son of Mrs. Amelia Burres. The ceremony was read yesterday at the Frieden’s Evangelical Church by the Rev. R. C. Kuebler. ) Miss Lilly Burres, sister of the bridegroom, and Clayton Burres were attendants. The couple is to be at home after Dec. 1 at 5116 Ellenberger Drive.
a -
also will be on Tuesday's program. Dramatist- Included
Victor Griffin will appear as a lece turer and dramatist. He was born and educated in Australia. Mrs. Charles Wells Compton is a book reviewer and Charles Bruce Millholland, a playwright and lecturer. Miss Daisy Park, a student at Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, is available for lectures and musical programs. Others on the program are Mrs. Cecil Chittenden, who reviews books and talks on “Hawaii, Guam and Wake Island,” and Miss Gibbard, who has done special work in psychology dealing with child training, and will speak on that subject and mental hygiene, Mesdames J. D. Johnson, Clair McTurnan, Gurtis Hodges, Albert Reep and Miss Mary Beatrice Whiteman are assisting with are rangements. Mrs. E. C. Rumpler is executive chairman of the program.
Winners in Bridge Forum Announced
Mrs. Dorothy Ellis today announced winners of Tuesday's .duplicate game in Blook’s Bridge Forum. 2 They are: Section one, north and south, Mrs. Keith Johns and Mrs. Arthur Pratt, first; Mrs. V. A. Newcomer and Mrs. Murice Ent, second: east and west, Mrs. Verna Ittenbach and Mrs. C, C. Mathews, first; Mrs. PF. C. Lewis and Mrs. W. E. Smith, second. j Section two: North and south, Mrs. A. G. Hendricks and Mrs. N. P. Comtois, first; Jan Crawford. and Mrs. R. C, Crawford, second; . edst and west, Mrs. H. 8S. French: and Mrs. J. T. Cracraft, first; Mrs. John Kelly and Mrs. J. C. Porter, seeond. Section three: North and south, Mrs. W. S. Peele and Mrs. William PF. Krieg, first; Mrs. Florence Boyer and Mrs. Irene McCormack, second; east and west, Mrs. E. C. Ball and Mrs. R.-A. Schakel, first; Mrs. Ellen Demree and Mrs. William Ecke haz, seeend. . :
Junior Musicale Sets First Meeting Sunday The Camille Fleig junior section, Indianapolis Matinee Musicale, will have its first meeting of the season 26-3:30 p. m, Sunday in the Hotel Washington. - Mrs. ‘Albert ‘Reep is the section's sponsor, and her assistants are Mesdames Asel Spellman. Stitt, Ruth Gentry Edwards, Leah Marks’ ‘and Miss Imogene Pierson. : There will be a program of plano and vocal solos, readings, whistling and music by an instrumental trio.
D. A. R. to Meet -
Miss Ethel May Moore is in charge of arrangements for the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, D. A. R, participation in the Are mistice Day parade Friday. Meme
bers are asked to meet at the £hape ter house at 10 a.m, 7
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