Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1939 — Page 4
50 Little Victims of
Paralysis Treated at
Riley in Last 4 Years
Hospital Among Local Institutions to Share in. - Receipts of Eight President’s Birthday Balls Here Tonight.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON | Maurene, 14 and chubby, smiled from the green waters of the Riley Hospital physical therapy pool. Georgie, very young, and frightened, sobbed and clutched his pink-eared rubber doll as he sat in a cripple cart with his legs in splints.
Both “polio” victims, Maurene is on the road to recovery after two years’ treatment in the pool. Georgie, lonely and pessimistic, is
reluctant to have the muscle examination which determines his first -
: day’s entertainment. : : When Maurene was brought to the hospital in an ambulance two years ago, unable to move either leg, there was no. way of telling how much muscle power would return, but 20 minutes daily in the pool has worked such wonders that now she’s wearing only one brace. She goes to school at Zionsville and comes in three times a week for treatment. : : ; Half the proceeds from the eight President’s Birthday balls being given here tonight will be devoted to the treatment of these and other Indiana children stricken with infantile paralysis. The other half goes to the National Foundation for the Treatment oi Infantile Paralysis. New equipment to be installed at Riley Hospital from proceeds of last year’s birthday balls will include one or two plynths (a kind of submerged table, free at one end with arm and hand holes, which is more efficient than present equipment ior gaining maximum use of muscles), several kinds of water splints, braces and supports. Last year’s ball funds are still paying the salary of one of the five physical therapy technicians and the driver who brings in out-patients. n » z ” » »
The ways and means committee of the Cheer Broadcasters, Inc.,
. |bia Club. The dance is being held
Times Photo.
Mesdames E. L. Hays, H. P. Wetsell, Chauncey Buck and Charles
| Hostesses ~ Are Chosen
| Junior Columbians Invit-
12 to 5 p. m. Saturday, which will
* | Fae W. Patrick, John A. Royse, Con-
ed to Anniversary Fete Saturday.
Hosts and hostesses today had been named for the tea dance from
mark the opening of the Golden Anniversary program et the Colum-
for members and their wives, sons and daughters and Junior Columbians. Those appointed by Fred O. Gardner, club president, to serve on the committee are Messrs. and Mesdames William B. Anstead, William G. Sparks, Jesse French III, Dudley R. Gallahue, Henry Jennings, Howard J. Lacy Jr., J. Perry Meek,
rad Ruckelshaus, George A. Stafford, Joe Swope and LeRoy Carson. Presiding at tea tables will be
Drummond, Helen Elliott, Dorothy Pisher, Alma Freyn, Befsy Lou Knowles, Jeanne Taylor, Emily McNab, Sue ‘Stackhouse, Peggy Trusler, Betty Early, Jane Sumner, Agatha Kemper and Joan Weisenberger. * During the 10-day celebration, the clubhouse will be decorated in gold and purple, symbolic of the occasion. Two nationally known orchestras
‘Shop Etiquette’
Misses Catherine Bingham, Barbara
. Lecturer’s Topic
Miss Eunice Johnson of I. S. Ayres and Co. will lecture on “Shop Etiquette” at 2 o'clock this afternoon in the employes auditorium at Ayres to Indianapolis Junior League members who work at the Next to New Shop, sponsored by the league, Miss Johnson will talk on “Marketing” at her second lecture next Monday. Apout 30 Junior League members manage the’ shop, three being on duty each morning and afternoon.
Two O.E.S. Units Look to Events; Officers Listed
A visiting officer will be honored by an Eastern Star chapter tonight and another chapter is planning affiliation services later in the week, Recently elected officers of a Pocahontas council have assumed their duties following installation last week. Mrs. Ruth L. Miers, Greensburg, worthy grand matron of the Indiana
Grand Chapter, O. E. 8S, will be honored by the Cumberland Chapter 515 at dinner tonight in the Masonic Hall, Cumberland. Following the dinner, degrees will be conferred in the special meeting at 8 p.m. Mrs. Carrie Spilker and Christian Brinkman are worthy ma-
Thomas. Proceeds from the affair will be used to provide milk for
Grant Received for Research needy Tamilics
Recognition of the work at Riley Hospital includes the extension®
tron and patron of the chapter. Mrs. Maude Updike, prophetess, will head the Pocahontas Council
1have been booked for events.
are assisting with arrangements for the organization’s dance Saturday | In addition to the tea-dance, oth-
night at the Columbia Club. Committee aids include (left to right) the
~ Dr. Smith Wed
of a grant from last year’s funds by the National Infantile Paralysis Foundation to be used for research in after-care of the disease. Twenty-five per cent of the funds raised locally from last year’s birthday balls was allocated to the City Hospital for infantile paralysis treatment. J The James E. Roberts School for Handicapped Children also will share in proceeds of ‘the campaign which reaches a climax tonight. The school has a small physical therapy tank for use of pupils, who are not acute cases. Equipment also includes a Hubbard hydrotherapy tub for younger children who need a warmer temperature. Four hundred fifty cases of infantile paralysis have been handled in the Riley Hospital physical therapy department since 1935. Not a single applicant for treatment has been turned away. One young man who was a patient last year was sent to Warm Springs, Ga., for further treatment. Of the 25 patients who now are gradually regaining muscle power through treatment in the the pool some wear braces while others leave their braces outside the pool since the bouyancy of the water gives them enough support to permit more freedom. Exercises are given on tables submerged in the water which is heated to a temperature of 92 degrees. The children are allowed to do only as
-much as they can in proportion to their strength. The difficulty of
the movements in increased by changing their position in the water, since the strength necessary for the exercises varies according to the position. |. - > . When the pain is acute the little patients are put in the warmer water of the Hubbard tub for 20 minutes daily until all signs of soreness and tenderness are gone. Very light massage but not exercise, is given in the tub while there is-pain. . “While, sometimes, children with infantile paralysis are in braces in bed for one and one-half to two years, we usually have them walking in some way in 10 months,” Miss Charlotte Anderson, head
physical therapy technician said.
handled 241 cases; since Dec. 1 it has had 78 different cases.
8 x =»
Townsends to Attend Marott Ball
President's Birthday balls will be held here this evening oh the Msarott Hotel, Naval Armory, Antlers Hotel, Athenaeum, Murat Temple, South Side Turners’ Hall, Syrian-American Lebanon Broth-
erhood and Walker’s Casino.
Governor and Mrs. Townsend and Mayor Sullivan will be among the guests ‘dining at the Marott Hotel? They will vist other balls during the evening, returning later to the Marott party. : Mrs. Samuel Cornell Carey will be hostess at dinner at the
Marott for the hotel's W. Kern, Dr. and : Dr. and Mrs.
ball committee.
5. Jean S. Milner, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Myers, ietcher Hodges, Judge and Mrs. H. Nathan Swaim, Mrs. Carolyn Atherton, Messrs. and Mesdames Ross H. Wallace, William H. Book, Frank J. Haight, Felix T. McWhirter, George J. Marott, H. M. Tebay, A. L. Gilliom, Clayton Ridge and Mr. William Fortune,
During 1938 the department
” # ”
At her table will be Mrs. John
2 Showers Planned Tonight;
Margaret
Datebooks for one Indianapolis ried young woman show two showers
County Parents,
Teachers Put OK On 5 State Bills
———
Resolutions to support five bills before the General Assembly were passed this morning by the Marion County Council of Parents and Teachers. The group's bimonthly conference opened this morning in the Rainbow Room of the Severin Hotel and was to continue this afternoon, Bills favored by the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers were reviewed by Mrs. James L. Murray, state legislative chairman. She asked the Marion County Council's support. Plans indorsed propose restrictins sale of fireworks, repealing the old child indenture law, revising the marriage laws, removal from the ballot of the office of State Superintendent of Public Instruction, and enlargeing the merit system to include staffs of State institutions. The Council voted to oppose the House Bill providing for vending machines. Support also was voted for the Federal bill on block booking and selling of motion pictures. J. Malcolm Dunn, Marion County superintendent of schools, spoke on school film projects and urged parents’ co-operation in the child's achievement program. “Plans for a Study Club” was discussed by Mrs. Rhoda W. Bachmeister, state supervisor for home making and home living education. Mrs. A. H. Hartman, Marion County president, presided. Individual conferences of various departmental chairmen were to be held following luncheon.
P.-T. A. Notes
Larner Engaged
bride-to-be and one recently marplanned for tonight, while the par-
ents of one local young woman have announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter.
Mrs.
Albaugh and Mrs. Lena Stampil will entertain tonight at
Mrs. Albaugh’s home with a linen shower in honor of Miss Oleta Bil-
lingsley, whose marriage to Clee Davidson will be in the spring. Decorations will be in the bridal colors of pink and green. Guests will include Mesdames R. W. Kite, D. D. Jackson, Charles Stone, Everett Head, Max Miller, George Kirk, James Daugherty, William Wood, Alice Grubb, Harold Lindholm, A. A. Langton, Vern East, . Robert Merritt, James Billingsley, William Howland, Richard Klorsky, William Foster, Charles Livingston; Misses Doleane Billingsley, Bernice Livingston and Dessia Langton, ” 2 » Miss Leola Thome will entertain 45 guests tonight at her home, 3354 Wilcox St, at a miscellaneous shower in honor of Mrs. Elbert South. Mrs. South was Miss Bessie Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willis Thompson, 522 N. Tibbs Ave., before her recent marriage. Decorations will be carried out in blue and gold. » ” ” Mr. and Mrs. John T. Larner, | 616 N. LaSalle St., have announced | the engagement and approaching | marriage of their daughter, Mar- | garet, to Grosvenor Riley, son of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Riley, The wedding will be Feb. 18.
. To Wilma Price
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick R. Smith are on a wedding trip South-follow-
| ing their marriage at 4:30 o'clock
| yesterday afternoon at the North
| Methodist Church. They will be at
home after Feb. 1 at New Paris, O. The Rev. C. A. McPheeters offi-
. ciated at the ceremony before an
altar banked with palms and ferns and lighted with two seven-branch candelabra. The bride was Miss Wilma Price, daughter of John T. Price, Spencer, and was a graduate nurse at the Methodist Hospital. Dr. Smith is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Smith, Columbus, O. Mrs. Price chose for her bridal outfit a navy blue silk costume suit with which she wore matching hat
~ and shoes and pink accessories, Her
shoulder corsage was of pink camelias. Mrs. William N. Wishard Jr. was her matron of honor. Dr. Norman D. Hines acted as best man and ushers were Dr. William N. Wishard Jr. and James Nokes.
Light Colors Are Best
Bathrooms should be decorated in light colors but not, necessarily, in white. With a tiled floor and tiled wainscoting, tint paper pale pink,
a 2
apolis
Mrs. Cunningham Fetes Chairmen
* Division chairmen for the IndianDay Nursery membership drive were entertained today at luncheon at the home of Mrs. James T. Cunningham, drive general chairman, The subcommittee members and Felix T. McWhirter, only man subcommittee member, met this morning at the nursery to plan for the membership campaign, which will open officially on Wednesday. Guests at the luncheon included the Mesdames Hal T. Benham, Albert Seaton, Marvin Lugar, Thomas A. Hendricks, Oliver Stout, Ray F. Mulvihill, Harper Ransburg and P.C. Pierson.
Musical Clubs Sponsor Recital By Miss Bowles
Miss Edna Tyne Bowles, contralto, and Edward Shadbolt, pianist, will present a benefit recital at 8 o’clock Tuesday evening, Feb. 14, in the American United Auditorium. The program will be given under the auspices of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs. A graduate of Oberlin College, Miss Bowles is professor of voice at DePauw University and soloist at the North Methodist Church. She has studied in Chicago, in Paris and under Horatio Connell in Chautauqua, N. Y. Mr. Shadbolt was graduated from Grinnell College and studied for two years under a fellowship at Royal Academy in Budapest. He is also a. DePauw faculty member. Included in the recital program will be the best-known songs of Brahms, Wolf and Schubert. Tickets will be available at the Alwes Music Shop on Monument Circle. Proceeds from the recital program will be used to benefit the new student division of the federation, which was organized this year. A state contest will be held April 1, with winners to be announced at the convention of the Federated Music Clubs of Indiana April 21 in Indianapolis. A massed chorus representing all groups in the Student Division: will g the cor 0
ng. a 1 100
Programs in honor of Founder's Day, lectures on children’s problems and parties to welcome parents of new pupils are included on the calendar for meetings of Parent-Teach-er Associations on Wednesday at the respective schools. Mrs. Clayton Ridge will speak on “Parents and Teachers’ Place in the Developments of Citizenship” at the Founder's Day meeting at School 1 Wednesday afternoon. Ralph W. Wright, director of music in the public schools, will sing, and a reception will be held for past presidents. The meeting will begin at 2:30 p. m.
Dr. Alberta Jones, psychiatrist of the Social Service Department of the public schools, will discuss “Habits of Children” at the Parent’s Forum of the School 3 association Wednesday. The forum will open at 1:30 p. m. at the school,
A playlet will be presented by the mothers at the Founder's Day program of School 8 F-T. A, at 3:10 bp. m. Wednesday. C. W. Youngman, principal, and Mrs. Frank Kattau, president, will extend greetings to parents of new pupils. \Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schwartz will furnish music,
Randall Shake, probation officer of the Juvenile Court, will speak on “Juvenile Delinquency” at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at School 10,
Mrs. Ethel Crawford will discuss “Juvenile Delinquency” at the meeting at 3:15 p. m. at School 17. Mrs. Nettie Hightower will be in charge of program by the Aviation Club, and the Mothers’ Chorus will :ing. The Rev. C. M. Bledsoe will deliver the invocation.
A Founder’s Day program, titled “As Told-by Candles,” will be presented at 3:15 p. m. at School 20. Members of the Parent Education Class are to meet this afternoon in Room 13, and the executive board meeting is to be at 3:15 p. m. today.
Newly Formed Club Draws Up By-Laws
Miss Margaret Glennon will head the committee appointed to draw up by-laws for the newly. organized Y. P. 8. O. Club. The group was founded at a recent meeting at the home of Miss Catherine Glennon.
of University Women and proceeds
‘Before-After’ Parties Set For Barrymore Play Friday, Backed by University Women| To Be on Feb, 11
Among parties being arranged for the opening night of “Whiteoaks,” starring Ethel Barrymore next Friday night at English’s, are a number of box parties and entertainments both before and after the performance. The opening night is being sponsored by the American Association
will go to the Kathryn McHale fel-
lowship fund. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McHale will entertain at a box party Friday night. Dr. McHale, for whom the fellowship fund is named, is a sister of Mr. McHale. In another box will he President and Mrs. J. W. Putnam of Butler University, Dr. and Mrs. Henry Lane Bruner, Prof. and Mrs. Charles E. Stevens and Dean and Mrs. W. L. Richardson. Mr. and Mrs. Q. G. Noblitt will entertain with a box party including Mr. and Mrs. John C. Carr and Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Jacquart. The box party of Mr. and Mrs. George Scheley will be Mr. and Mrs. Verne Trask, Mrs. John Huff and Miss Betty Lindop. Other boxholders who are patrons of the benefit performance are Messrs, and Mesdames J. K. Lilly, Eli Lilly, Wallace O. Lee, Nicholas Noes, Frederie M. Ayres, Harry V. Wade, William Higgins, Birney Spradling, R. Hartley Sherwood, E. M. Schofield, Fermor S. Cannon, accompanied by Miss Minette Yeoman; Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Booser, accompanied by their daughters; Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Hippensteel, accompanied by their niece, Miss Jeanette Patlock of Dayton; Dr. and Mrs. Louise Belden, Dr. and Mrs. K. K. .Chen, Dr. and Mrs. John T. Wheeler and Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Holmes. Greens Plan Dinner Mr. and Mrs. C. Norman Green will entertain with a precurtain dinner. Guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Blayne McCurry and Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Robinson. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lingle at the Columbia Club will include Mr. and Mrs. William Higburg, Senator and Mrs. William E. Jenner, Paoli, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher will be hosts at a buffet supper at their home following the performance. : Their box guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Harvey F. Antibus and Mr. and Mrs. Blair Hartley, Hagerstown, Mr. and Mrs. Fischer and their guests will attend a party before the show with Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Brier, Mrs, Lewis Skinner, Miss Edith Ann Ulmer and Albert Strate. ; Dining together before going on to the play will be Messrs. and Mesdames Herbert Russell, William Rogers, Edmund Hebel, R. C. Maley, W. O. Webster, T. W. Ayton, Malcolm Sewell, James A. Baird and A. C. Johnson of Greenfield. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Hamilton will entertain with a supper at their home following the performance. Guests will include Messrs. and Mesdames Paul Lahr, J. Edwin Hutchman, George Badger and Ross C. Lyons. : Buffet Supper Arranged Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Baker will serve a buffet supper after the theater for the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. J. Malcolm Dunn, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Donnell, Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Boggs and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kortepeter. Miss Lillian Clark will serve dinner after the show for Miss Floy Caldwell, Miss Frieda Herbst and Miss Alma Herbst. A number of. Dutch treat parties are being formed. In one group will be Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hopping, Miss Iva Britton, Ed Horswill, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dawson and Mr. and ‘Mrs. Robert Price. Another group will include Miss Jane Hoeper, Miss Anne Theising and Mr. and Mrs. Enoch Clements. Mesdames Roy Geider, Otto Bakemeier, George Lawler, Herman Kuntz and John Graves make up another party. A Dutch treat party is being planned by the Misses Mary Birmingham, Mary Cowger, Margaret Covey, Helen © Million, Katherine Bailey, Kathryn Antibus and Mary Boston. Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Steele and Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Rankin will make up another party. : : A number of Butler University professors and their wives will attend the play together. In the party
819 N. Bradley, hostess.
Woman's Rotary. 12:30 ‘Hunt, speaker.
New England. 1 34th, hostess.,
; . SORORITY Phi Chapter, Delta Chi Sigma. 8 p. m. Wed. Mrs. John Somsen, CLUBS hu : p. m. today. Columbia Club. Miss Mabe
Indianapolis Literary. ' Tonight. D. A. R. Chapter Ellis W. Hay will speak on “A Typical American.” Pp. m, tomorrow. Mrs. W. J. E. Webber, 950 E.
PARTY
d house. The Rev.
will be Prof. and Mrs. Charles V. Kinter, Prof. and Mrs. Glen Maynard, Dr. and. Mrs. James H. Peeling, Dr. and Mrs. Amos B. Carlisle, Dr. and Mrs. Thor Wesenberg, Dean and Mrs. Gino Ratti, Dr. and Mrs. Milton D. Baumgartner, Miss Corinne - Welling and Miss Florence Morrison. Theater Party Set Miss Phyllis Behringer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claude A. Behringer, will have a theater party for her friends, Misses Mary Johnson, Martha Lois Adams and Eleanor Frenzel. Mr. and Mrs. Behringer will ‘attend with them. Dr. and Mrs. B. E. Ellis will attend with Mr. and Mrs. Frank X. Kern and Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kohlstaedt and
Dr. and Mrs. R. J. McQuiston will go together. . | Another party attending the play will include Dr, and Mrs. P. E. McCown, Dr. and Mrs. Robert M. Moore, Dr. and Mrs. H. A. Van’ Osdol and Dr. and Mrs. Walter P. Morton. Mr. and Mrs. Myron McKee will have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Earle, Mr. and Mrs. Bryant Gillespie and Harold Triggs. A group that will attend together includes Mr. and Mrs. John M. Smith and their daughter, Polly. Messrs. and Mesdames Carl Reifsteck, Thomas Massoth, Thomas Scanlon, Arthur N. Curtis and Edgar Hauser. ! Mrs. J. B. McCoy, Miss Ginevra McCoy, Miss Anna Reade, Mrs. L. J. Ramey and Miss Belle Ramey
W. Donald Wright will go with Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Newman. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie M. DeVoe will have as
Dawson, Kokomo. Mr, and Mrs. A. B. Simmons; Danville, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wyatt will attend together. Rothenbergers Are Hosts In one party will be Dr. Frank Ramsey, Dr. Russell Sage, Dr. Paul Beard, Dr. Byron Rust, Dr. Marlow Manion and Dr, James Balch. Another group who will see the play
Oren Pritchard, Leland Ridgeway,
ard and Frederick Hunt. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hilgedag and Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Wicklund will at-
J. Thayer Waldo and Dr. and Mrs. Clifford Taylor. Dr. and Mrs. William Rothenberger will be hosts at a party for Mrs. W. R. Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Parris, Prof. and Mrs. Ross J. Grif-
Pickett, Miss Mary C. Wilson, Mrs.
Mrs. R. P. Burkle, Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Hyde and Dr. and Mrs. Emmett B. Lamb. : Attend as Group
will be Messrs. and Mesdames J. A. Cegnar, Edward McGrail,
Dixon, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Mohr and the Misses Ruth Truex, Neola Decker, Alice Bruner,
Dollens, Mary Wilson and Nedora Price will ‘attend together. Additional reservations include a party with Miss Charlotte Pearson, Miss Essie L. Maguire, Mrs. Anella Gore, Mrs. B. S. Goodwin and Mrs. Robert Swinford. Miss Edna Johnson, Miss Alice. Carter, Miss Mary Wilson, Miss Vera Morgan, Mrs. Pierre DeMiller and -Mr. and Mrs. Jack Killen form another party. Others who will attend are Dr. and Mrs. A. K. Harcourt, Dr. and Mrs. David L. Smith, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Foreman, Dr. and Mrs. Edgar T. Haynes and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brant.
W. C. T. U. to Hear Effect of Alcohol
Mrs. O. S. Jaquith will speak on “Effects of Alcohol on the Unborn” at the meeting of the Meridian| W. C. T. U. Wednesday morning at the home of Mrs. H. C. Gemmer, 5765 Washington Blvd. Mrs. S. C. Fulmer, president, will open | the meeting at 10:30 a. m. Others who will address the union will be Mrs. Joel Lee Jones, ‘who will speak on “Childhood of Frances E. Willard”; Mrs. Bloom- | field H. Moore, who will talk of her| work as Dean of Women \
of North-| western Uni Mrs. H. C.
A
man, assisted by Mrs.
feth, Mrs. Ruth Estes and Miss Jan- | nette Rutherford. One party who! will go together includes Miss Jean |fs
George Wesendonk, Mrs. N. V, Mor- | [fi gan, Miss Eleanor Sargent, Mr, and | Et Mrs. George Talmadge, Mr. and|fiH
Democratic Club Tea for Women
Wives of Democratic rditors, Democratic members of the State Assembly Women’s Club and other Democratic women will be guests at the tea and reception of the Marion County Democratic Women’s Club on Saturday afternoon, Feb. 11. The tea, to be held in the Louis 1X, Empire and English parlors of the Claypcol Hotel, will be in connection with the. banquet of the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association, Mrs. John E. Hollett will hie chairIra -Haymaker. Mrs. Tilden F. Greer is president of the organization. A special invitation has been sent to Mrs. A. B. Chandler, wifé of the Kentucky Governor. Covernor Chandler will be the principal speaker at the association banquet in the evening.
Voice Club’s Dance To Note Anniversary
Elmer Neiten is general chairman of a dance 'to be given soon hy members of the Edith Jane Fish Voice Club in celebration of the first anniversary. of the group’s founding. Assisting Mr.: Neiten will be Robert Long, president; Miss Mary Margarett Glenn, Miss Mary Hungerford, Miss Mary Susan Singer and Miss Fish. : Plans for the event were discussed by the arrangements committee at a recent meeting. The committee also discussed sponsoring another dance in six months.
will dttend in a party. Mr. and Mrs. | §
their guests Mr. and Mrs. Francis (ft
er entertainment planned includes a reception and open house. for vetiring officers on Friday, a tea-musi-cale and book review for women of the club Wednesday afternoon, Feb. 8; a bridge-tea and palmistry talk for women on Thursday, Feb. 9; the Golden Anniversary buffet din-ner-dance Friday night, Feb. 10, and the 50th annual Beefsteak Dinner on Monday night, Feb. 13." All events are restricted to members with the exception of the reception and open house Friday.
Woodrow Lyons Weds Miss Kuhn
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Lyons will be at home after Feb. 7 at 1240 Wright St., following their marriage Saturday morning in Sacred Heart Church. The Rev. Fr. Servace Ritter read the single ring service preceding the nuptial mass at 9 a. m. The bride is the former Miss Marjorie Kuhn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Kuhn, and Mr. Lyons is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lyons, 519 Parkway Ave. Mrs. Lyons who was given in marriage by her father, was attended by Miss Lucille Fritz, maid of honor, and Miss Therese Lipp, bridesmaid. Mercedes and Marianne Kuhn were junior bridesmaids. William Lynch
350 for the ensuing year. Mrs, Mayme Ray, deputy great prophet ess and her installing staff, were in charge of the induction = services held recently at the Redmen’s Wigwam, 137 W. North St. Other officers will be Mrs. Mary Stoher, Pocahontas; Mrs. Tillie Liehr,. Wenonah; Zeiner Ploughe, Powhatan; Mrs. Bertha Green, keeper of rece ords; Mrs. Pearl Cavanaugh, collector of wampum; Mrs; Wilma Higdon, keeper of wampum; Mrs. Clovie Nicholas, degree mistress; Mrs. Hazel - Swego, musician; Mrs. Louise Bogue, first scout; Mrs. Laura Ammerman, second scout; Mrs. Mary Teter, first runner; Mrs. Nellie Ploughe, second runner; Mesdames Oma Love, Blanche Eades, Gertrude Campbell, Jessie Voyles, Swego, Ruth Market, Vivian, Mann and Emma Pruitt, warriors and braves; Mesdames Ray, Lucille Johnson, Mary Doyle and Clara Dusing, councilors and prophetess supports; Mrs. Leora Richardson, guard of the tepee; Joe Doyle, guard of the forest, and Mesdames Love, Campbell and Johnson, trustees. :
Members of the Queen Esther Chapter, O. E. S., will conduct affiliation services at 7:45 p. m. Friday at the Masonic Temple, North and Illinois Sts.: During the services all women who have joised the group in the last year will be affiliated officially. Mrs. Rose Ella Albertson and Walter C. Myers are worthy matron and patron. ]
was best man, and the ushers were Charles Carpenter and John Kuhn, brother of the bride. :
Sing After Luncheon
Mrs. Roy Myers and Mrs. Robert Barnes will sing and Mrs. Ellen Woody will present several -accordion numbers following a luncheon tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Ralph Murphy, 44 S. Dearborn St. Other guests will include Mrs. Edward’ Dorey and Mrs. Lawrence
Turner.
FINAL DRASTIC CLEARANCE
together are Messrs. and Mesdames |fE
George Schumacher, Robert Pritch- | fi
tend together as will Dr. and Mrs. fi
SUCH “URS
. Another group attending together |f
Glen | Crawford, Miss Corrine Frye and Miss Nadine Frye. Mrs. Bertha |i
Gretna | fits Brown, Elizabeth Waggoner, Lola |EH
AS
SILVER FOX— A PERSIAN LAMB— PRECIOUS MINK — ON
Originally 59.95 to 89.95. Warmth and beauty
you're craving right now! nomical soul should reli
plastrons of
At savings your ecopanels and ing collars—big made fash-
Furniture’ Dry Cleaner
Upholstered furniture which can not be cleaned with a lather of mild soapsuds or a commercial furniture shampoo should be cleaned with a reliable: dry-cleaner. First, go over the piece thoroughly with a vacuum cleaner to remove all dust, then clean with a soft clean cloth dampened with the dry-cleaner, working with even, over-lapping strokes over small sections until the entire-piece
is cleaned.
