Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1939 — Page 17
riffit
-Drybrough
Wedding Ceremony Will Be Read Today Dr. Lewis Brown and the Rev. William Burrows
Are to Officiate at St. Paul’s Episcopal Chureh; Civie Bill Opens Tonight.
#
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON ~ The marriage of Mrs. Margot Doane Drybrough, . daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Edward F. Doane of
. Grand Rapids, Mich., and
Howard T. Griffith, was
solemnized at noon today at St. Paul's Episcopal Church.’
Dr. Lewis Brown, assisted by read the service in the . families.
the Rev. William Burrows,
presence of the immediate
The bride wore a brown wool suit with white accessories, brown felt hat and corsage of gardenias and lilies-of-the-valley, Following a wedding trip to New York the couple will be at home
April 1 at 3060 N. Meridian St.
Guests at the wedding, were Mrs. Drybrough’s son, Thomas; Mr. Griffith’s son, Samuel L. Griffith and Mrs. Griffith, and Howard T. Griffith's daughter, Mrs. Donald R. Rowles, and Mr. Rowles.
. 8 8 »
2 2 “
Assisting Mrs. Eugene C. Miller, hostess for the Indiana Vassar Club’s tea this afternoon in honor of Miss Christine Ramsey, Vassar College faculty member, will be Mrs. Miller’s sister, Mrs. Robert E.
Sweeney. Mrs. D. Laurance Chambers and Mrs. Albert L. Rabb are to pour. Miss Ramsey is spending the day here interviewing high school students. Mrs. Julius ‘Birge is club president.
4 Civic Ployers ‘Deep’ in Hobbies A quartet of Civic Theater players who will appear in “The Happy Journey” and “Up She Goes,” the double bill opening this
evening at the theater, currently are absorbed in hobbies even more exacting than their intermittent appearances before the footlights.
Harry V. Wade, in the cast of
“Up She Goes,” began building
model boats five years ago. With a pair of special knives and a razor
blade ne cuts the boats out of balsa
wood to the scale of one-thirty-
second of an inch to a foot. He has completed replicas of the Nor-
mandie, Rex, Europa, Indianapolis, working on the Queen Mary.
and Flying Cloud and now is
He has taken the Normandie to the Woodstock swimming pool
where it skims across the water and returns.
the windows.
Electric bulbs light
Earle Crooke has been collecting porcelains and pottery for 25 years. He has privately published “Crooke’s Manual of Marks on Antique Pottery and Porcelain,” widely used as a reference. The work describes 2000 marks and gives brief histories of various fedc-
tories.
> A youthful hobby rider in “The Happy Journey” is Eldon Nyhart, a candid camera addict who outside study hours at Orchard School devours magazines devoted to photography. Joan Dearmin, wha plays the younger daughter in the one-act play, is an expert at woodburning. She makes plaques by burning designs in wood with
an electric needle. Theater Parties Are Due
Tonight
In the audience tonight will be Mrs. Wade and Mr. Wade's mother, who will see the performance with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Runnels Harrell. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Green will have eight guests. Raymond Clapp will have a party for his daughter, Mary Jo.
Another group will be composed of
Messrs. and Mesdames Marvin
Lugar, LeRoy Gordner and Lewis Ott Ward. Mr. and Mrs. Victor C. Seiter. will entertain Miss Elizabeth Taylor, Mrs. Bessie Taylor, Mrs. E. J. Barnard, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Peabody and William I. Battin. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Wierback will come from Muncie for the
_show. Tomorrow night Mr. and Mrs. supper at their home before taking
E. O. Alvin will give a buffet their guests to the theater. In
the party will be Dr. ang Mrs. Marlow Manion, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bartholomew and Mr. and Mrs. Earl B. Teckmeyer. Miss Helen Os=borne will enterigin the Misses Cerene and Elizabeth Ohr and Mrs.
B. E. LaFollette:
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Over whose daughter, Mary Lou Over, will appear in “Up She Goes,” will see the show with Mrs. Harry Moore and Miss Betty McDonald. Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Weinhard’s party will include Harold Triggs, Mrs. L. H. Earle and Mr. and Mrs. B. W.
Gillespie Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred L.
Carter Jry will attend with Mr.
and Mrs. Robert I. Blakeman Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Vandivier
will be with Mr. and Mrs. George
R. Jeffrey. Dr. and Mrs. John
Graves will go with Dr. and Mrs. Karl M. Koons.
Frances Louise Patton to Wed
George Francis Martin Today
®
Miss Frances Louise Patton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Huber
Patton, 1748 Brookside Ave. will become the bride of George Francis Martin at 4 o'clock this afternoon at the home of the bride’s parents. The Rev. C. E. Oldham will perform the ceremony before a mantel banked with greenery and lighted by white tapers in seven-branch candelabra. Mr:s. C. E. Oldham, pianist, will play bridal airs. 3 Ths bride will enter with her father in a dressmaker suit of navy wool and a navy straw sailor hat with tri-color veil of wine, navy and
chartreuse. Her accessories will be
By A, 4
Plan Dinner for
Speaker Tonight
Mrs. Clarence Merrell, Indiana League of Women Voters president, and Mr. Merrell will entertain at dinner for Dr. Quincy Wright, University of Chicago international law professor, who will lecture here tonight at Caleb Mills Hall. The Indianapolis League of Women Voters
is sponsor. The Merrells’ dinner guests with Dr. Wright will be Mrs. John K. Goodwin, Indianapolis League presidents Mrs. Leonard Smith, Indiana League chairman of the department of government and foreign policy; J. J. Daniels and Dr. and Mrs. Willis D. Gatch. Mrs. Smith will introduce the speaker at the lecture. Dr. Wright will be the third speaker in the League’s current world affairs lecture series. He has served as an expert at Congressional hearings involving foreign relations and international law and - was adviser on international law for the U. S. Navy Department. Mrs. Grosvenor Shirk will be in charge of the door committee, composed of Mesdames Addison J. Parry, William Allen Moore and Fred Gifford.
- Show Reveals Latest In Flower Fashions
Geraniums, tulips, acacias, cyclamen and calla lilies are as important for corsages this spring as the conventional roses, gardenias, violets and orchids, it was shown in the spring flower and fashion preview at the Claypool yesterday afternoon. The showing was sponsored jointly by the Florists Telegraph Delivery Association and the William H, Block Co. A bridal party in which the bride and her attendants carried floral
fans was the opening feature of the
show. Flowers worn inthe hair or on the wrist, or as ear-rings, combs nd cHps were stressed for evening ear. Evening hats made of flowers
: and pendant corsages for strapless evening
gowns are new among flower fashions. Flowers arranged to suit the casualness of the costume were recommended for street clothes and Easter parade ensembles. - : Carnations are “good” this season, according to Miss Alice Flick, Ft. Wayne, flower fashion commentator. Among rarer flowers being used are hibiscus, birds of paradise, or_pithaglum, glory of the sun, clivia
in navy and chartreuse. Mrs. Patton has chosen a dress of navy and lime crepe with which she will wear a corsage of violets. The bridegroom’s mother, Mrs. W. E. Martin, will wear a dove gray silk dress with a corsage of roses. Out-of-town guests will include Mr. and Mrs. Arron Herron, Misses Barbara Jean and Peggy Ann Herron, Miss Nannie Shrewsberry and Mr. and Mrs. Martin, all of Evansville; Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Hanna, Greencastle; and Mrs. €. E. Brown, Ft. Wayne. Indianapolis guests will be Mesdames Susie Miller, Glora Kramer and Margaret Kunkel: Mr. and Mrs. James T. Barnett; Misses Marjorie Tretton, Lenore Snethen, Eleanor Poirief, ‘Lois Moore, Jane Calvelage, Winifred Hickman, Marjory Andres and Margaret Cassidy, Mr. Earl Ruddell Patton and Mr. Chester A. James. : Sl Miss Patton is a graduate of Butler University and a member of Delta Delta Delta and Theva Sigma Phi Surorities. :
Theta Mothers Honor Ex-Heads
Past Presidents’ Day will be cbserved Tuesday by the Kappa Alpha Theta Mothers Club at a luncheon at the Butler University Chapter House. A musical program entitled “Hoo-
sier Heritage” will be presented hy Mrs. Richard C. Fielding. She will be accompanied by Mrs. C. B. Dyer. Devotions will be given by Mrs. W. G. Hennis. a Mrs. L. L. Scales, luncheon chairman, is being assisted by Mesdames M. W. Socwell, Albert Davis, Russell Bosart, Norman S. Nicolai and Mrs. Robey Smelser.
City Woman's Club ‘Go to Polls’ Today
The Indianapolis Woman's Club will meet this afternoon at the Propylaeum to elect officers.
Mrs. Samuel R. Harrell will present a paper, “Harriet Monroe.” “Folk Lore on the Wabash” 1 be discussed in a paper by Miss "Nora E. Thomas.
Postponement Mrs. Alonzo B. Chapman, entertainment chairman of Sunnyside Guild, has announced that the pro-
gram which was to have been presented Tuesday by the guild for patients at the Marion County Tuber-
culosis Sanitarium has been in-
definitely postponed.
—
EE . °
lecture by Mrs. Demarchus Brown
Alumnae Group Will Hear Talk On Decorating
A discussion of interior decoration and a tea honoring a recently elected district officer are to be week-end activities of college social sororities and alumnae. Two other Indianapolis organizations announce meetings. Mrs, Eleanor Miller, fashion coordinator of the home furnishings department of a downtown store, will speak tomorrow at a meeting of the Indianapolis Alumnae of Alpha! Chi Omega Sorority. Mrs. Robert L. Mason, president of the group, will be hostess at her home, 7979 Morningdale Drive, Williams Creek. Mrs. Miller will discuss “Interior Decoration.” : Luncheon will be served at 1 p. m. Hostesses will be Mrs. Fred Tucker, chairman, Mesdames D. C. Martin, J. M.! (Cook, Burt Dreyer, J. W. Ingles, T. M. Rybolt, J. Vorhis Tobin, Arthur Van Arendonk, E. J. Braman and J. W. Hitz, Misses Mery : Margaret Hill, Rose Louise Wald and Jean Harris Wood.
Mrs. Owen Calvert, recently elected district president of Delta Delta Delta Sorority, will be honored by the Butler University chapter at a tea this afternoon at the chapter house, 803 W. Hampton Drive. The tea will he from 3:30 p. m. until 5 p. m. Decorations will be carried out in the sorority colors of silver, gold and blue. Guests will include Busler faculty members and presidents of other campus organizations.
Members of Eta Chapter of Phi Theta Delta Sorority will be entertained at the home of Miss Mary Frances Schroeder, 458 N. State Ave., Wednesday evening.
Mrs. Virgil Grimes, 1210 Ewing St. will be hostess to members of Alpha Chapter of Alpha Beta Gamma tonight at 8:30 p. m.
Parties Planned
For D.A.R. Fete
Additional parties are being planned for the book review which the finance committee of the Caro-
line Scolt Harrison Chapter, D. A.
R., will sponsor Monday afternoon at Ayres’ auditorium. A Dutch treat group at the luncheon will include Mesdames Frederic E. Taylor, W. B. Rossetter, Frank S. Wacher and W. D. Gatch. Mrs. George H. Batchelor will entertain for Frances Kennedy Eward, Greensburg, who is to review “Dawn at Lyonesse” (Mary Ellen Chase). Mis. Albert Gall will entertain Mescames Henry Bliss, Carl Walk and Emily E. Fordice, New York. ‘Mrs. Frank PF. Hutchins is planning a party for four.
‘Rebellion’ in D. A. R.
Revealed in Boston
BOSTON, March 10 (U. P).—A Cambridge woman who was expelled from the Daughters of the American Revolution a decade ago for disturbing the “harmony of the society.” is a sponsor of a new “rebel” patriotic organization, it was learned today. : Mrs. Helen Tufts Bailie protested vigorously ggainst the D. A. R.'s socalled “black list” of 1928. Cosponsors with her in the newly organized society, the Descendants of the American Revolution, are Stuart Chase, economist. and Dr. Sherwood Eddy; lecturer and writer.
unit of the descendants group wil be held next Thursday at the home of Mrs. E, Sohier Welch. The “rebellion” in local D. A. R. ranks: broke out soon after Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt's resignation as & member-at-large in protest against denial of the use of Constitution (Hall at Washington to Marian Anderson, Negro contralto. “This movement has been simmering under the surface for quite some time,” Mrs. Bailie said. “Because of the present confusion in people’s minds about free speech and iree assembly, it seems imperative that we should do our part to reaffirm the democratic principles. . . . There are many disturbing ideas coming up in this country. We want to see both sides. The
members, 4 1 J"
Mrs. Harold Andrew (left), president of Chi Delta Chi Sorority, discusses arrangements for a
A meeting to organize a Boston)
D. A. R. presents only one side to
with Mrs. Cline
Times Photo.
Harbison, an arrangements committee member. The talk will be sponsored at 8 p. m. March 22 at the American United Life Building.
Imaginary Cruise Around World
And Discussion
of Life in Korea
Are on Church Unit Programs
An imaginary cruise around the world and a discussion of life in
Korea are scheduled on programs of church organizations.
Future
speakers for a series of Lenten fellowship suppers at First Congrega-
tional Church had been announced today and women will hold a luncheon and prograin next week. exchange ©
J. C. McLauchlan, teacher at Shortridge High School from Scotland, will speak “at the dinner meeting of the Girls Federation of the Third Christian Church next Friday at 6:30 p. m. The dinner theme, “Around the World Cruise with the Federation,” will be carried out in the tables, which will represent various countries. - Music on the program will be furnished by the Bonnie Blue Brown Studio, the Steiner Studio and the Flanner House Quartet. Mrs. Pauline Bade will be soloist and Miss Gwendolyn Schort will present readings. :
Miss Daisy Parks, Korean student at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, will discuss her experiences in her native Korea during the musical tea of the Ladies’ Bible
Class of the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church this afternoon at the church. Miss Parks also will play several piano selections and will sing. A trio composed of Mesdames Robert Drake, Milton Lofton and Lester Meek will sing, under direction of Mrs. Fred Crosstreet. Mrs. T. H. Erbrich is chairman of arrangements.
Dr. John B. Ferguson, pastor of the Irvington Presbyterian Church, will speak tonight at the second in a series of Lenton fellowship suppers at the First Congregational Church. Members of the Bible Reading Club will be in charge of the program. John W. Claxton, president of Defiance College, will speak at the meeting next Friday evening. The event; will be Men’s Night and men of the church will be in charge.
On the following Friday, March 24, the spring thank-offering will be taken. The Philozenian Club will conduct the final dinner meeting on March 31. Friends and visitors are welcome.
Members of the Plymouth Union of the First Congregational Church will . serve a luncheon before the monthly business meeting and program Thursday at the church. All women of the church and their friends are invited to attend.
Women of Moose
Wait Grand Dean
Mrs. Martha Sterling, Erie, Pa., grand dean of the “Academy of Friendship” of the Women of the
Moose, will visit the Indianapolis chapter Thursday. Mrs. Esther Hansford is senior regent. Mrs. Sterling is on an official tour of inspection, instructing chapters in program development. The program theme is “Carry Mooseheart Standdrds into Homes and Communities.” Initiation services will be conducted at the special meeting honoring Mrs. Sterling. Miss Gertrude Bopp is committee chairman in charge of the initiation, assisted by Mesdames Clara Thompson, Ella Vice, Jean Butze, Edith Magenheimer and Faye Wilbur,
of that church
‘Club 21” Invites School Sets to Dance on April 1
Members of the high school and younger college sets of Indianapolis currently are receiving invitations to the “Qub 21” dance to be given April 1 at the Woodstock Club. Invitations were issued yesterday. Additional plans for the party will be discussed at a meeting at the home of Miss Patricia Sylvester, 2860 Washington Blvd., Sunday afternoon. A “milk bar” will be a feature at the event. The dance will be the first of the spring vacation period. Hostesses will be Misses Judy Bosson, Betty Loa Bowen, Ann Browning, Martha Jo Cantwell, Marion Donnelly, Patricia Goode, Peggy Jane Gray, Phyllis Johnson, Sue Ann Knippenberg, Patricia McKean, Evelyn Maraist, Katherine Parrish, Wilma Rothenburger, Mary Annex Samms, Sonya Schlee, Rosanne Smith, Margaret" Studebaker, Marion Sturm, Martha Lou Sunderland and Peggy Winslow.
Garden Club Aids Take Over Today
Mrs. Orville De Motte was to be installed as president of the North
End Garden Club this afternoon at a President's Day luncheon and guest meeting at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Other officers who will be inducted include Mrs. Foster V. Smith, vice
president; Mrs. J. R. Spalding, re-
cording secretary; . Miss Margaret Stevenson, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Walter R. Sanders, treasurer, and Mrs. Minor S. Goulding, historian. : | H. J. Schnitzius, member of the Indiana State Highway Coramission. vl talk on “Roadside Conservation.”
Duncans to Make Home at Gosport
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, March 10.—Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Duncan will make their home in Gosport following a wedding trip through North Carolina and Virginia. Mrs. Duncan, before her marriage in Indianapolis, was Miss Bess Newkirk, daughter of Mrs. James Newkirk of this city and a secretary in the office of the Indiana University comptroller. The couple was married by the Rev. Joel Lee Jones of his home in Indianapolis. Mrs. Duncan, a former resident of Indianapolis and Bedford, has been in charge of university student loans. She is a member of the O. E. S., Delta Theta Tau Sorority and the Business and Proiessional Women’s Club. Mr. Duncan is a past president of the Indiana Hardwood Retailers’ Association and past deputy district governor of the Lions’ Club. Lo
meeting. Mrs. E. J. Soland, 4142 5120 W. 15th, hostess.
Over the Teacups. Today. Mrs.
‘EVENTS
SORORITIES Indianapolis Alumnae, Alpha Sigma Alpha. 2:30 p. m. Sat. Business
Beta Chapter, Theta Nu Chi. Mon. evening. Miss Doris Richardson,
CLUBS
‘Woman's Lecture. 2 p. m. today. Woman’s Department Club. “A Trip Through Virginia,” illustrated lecture by Philip Brown, Inter Libros. 8 p. m. tonight. Mrs Clara VanMeter, 3358 Central Ave., hostess. Program, “Early Indiana History.” . Eleanor Gerrard, 3510 N. Penasylvania, hostess. Election of officers. i a i LODGE
Monument Chapter, O. E. 8. 8 p. and Illinois. Election of officers. Mrs, Florence Herrman and
J. Askren, worthy matron and patron.
Rookwood Ave., hostess.
m. Mon. Masonic Temple, North : Iarl
To Heavy Schedules
Monday Society to Elect Officers; Mrs. Pratt to Talk on Irish.
Included in a variety of discussion subjects for club meetings Monday afternoon and evening will be parliamentary “law, interesting personalities, conservations, music and Indiana banking. Two groups will elect officers and another will hear an Irish program. Naming of officers and a business meeting will precede the program at the meeting of the Monday Club Monday afternoon in the American United Life Building, 30 W. Fall Creek Blvd. ‘Mrs. Paul Pratt will talk on “A Bit O’ Blarney” and Irish music selections will be presented. Mrs. John Downing Johnson will conduct a questionnaire on parliamentary law. ‘
Mrs. Charles F. Voyles will discuss “Conservation of Natural Resources” at a meeting of the Present Day Club Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. O. Dunlavy, 2859 Sutherland Ave. Mrs. Ira M. Holmes will
| be assistant hostess.
“What Is Japan’s Ultimate Object?” will be discussed by Mrs. De Witt Morgan before members of the Monday Afternoon Reading Club Monday afternoon. A review of “Journalist's Wife” will be given by Mrs. R. B. Stokes. The group will meet at the home of Mrs. Eli E. Thompson, 912 N. Rural St.
A review of “Our Nation’s War on Disease” will be presented by Mors. Clifton Donnell at the meeting of the Irvington Coterie Club Monday ‘afternoon at the home of Mrs. Seward S. Craig, 5340 Julian Ave. Assisting hostesses will be Mesdames Willard Gates, Arthur R. Robinson and Charles Smith,
Mrs. Frank Olson and Mrs. Russell Justice will speak before members of the Irvington Circle of the Child Conservation League of America at their meeting Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. E. J. Rennoe, 34 Layman Ave, Mrs. Arl Garrett will be assistant hostess. Mrs. Olson’s subject will be “Music in’ the Home” and Mrs. Justice will discuss “The Child and His Garden.”
~ William B. Schiltges will talk on “The State Bank of Indiana” before members of the Indianapolis Literary: Club Monday evening at the D. A. R. chapter house, 824 N. Pennsylvania St.
Members of Chapter P of the P. E. O. Sisterhood will elect officers at their meeting Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. C. B. Agness, 5356 Central Ave. Mrs. C. W. Sweet will be assistant hostess.
Tenor to Sing At Musicale’s Last Concert
Edward Dudley, tenor, New York, will appear this afternoon at Ayres’ auditorium in the last of a series of artists’ concerts sponsored by the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale this season. :
A board meeting at 11 a. m. and a “Corner Luncheon” in the tearoom will precede the program at 3 p. m. Mr. Dudley will be accompanied by Franz Allers, Czechoslovakian conductor. His program is to include “Invocazione de Orfee’ from “Eurydice,” by Jacob Peri; “Come to Me Soothing Sleep” from Handel's “Otho,” and “Call Forth Thy Powers” from ' Handel's = “Judas Maccabeus” Part IL of the program will be devoted to Schumann's “Der Hildalgo,” “Lorelei” and “Die Lotoshlume,” and Strauss’ “Wintermeihe,” “Gluckes Gening” and “Heimliche Aufforderung.” Other selections will be “Walthers Preislied” from Wagner's “Der Meistersinger,” “The Sleigh,” by Kountz; “Pleading,” Kramer; Nocturne, by Head, and “Mountains,” by Rashach.
Ladywood Tea Groups Chosen
Committees to assist with arrangements for the tea of the Lady-. wood School Athletic Association on Sunday, March 19, were announced
today. Miss Bette Ellis, reception chairman, will be assisted by Misses Barbara Toobin, Divine Enright, Sue Harty, Mary Ellen Kennedy and
orations committee will be Miss Margaret Dingley, chairman, Misses Harriet Garvin, Jane Yater, Mary K. Shaw and Kathleen Meyer. Invitation committee members are Misses Mary Helen Madden, Barbara Hamlin, Helen Schumaker, Carolyn Madden. Miss Florence Madden is chairman of the entertainment committee, assisted by Misses Frances Dingley, Jane Kernel and Kathleen Munger. Miss Florence Madden also is publicity chairman and members of her committee are Miss Eloise Boyle and Miss Mary Ellen McDermott.
Mrs. William H. Remy To Be Hostess Today
Mrs. William H. Remy will be hostess to members of the Government Science Club this afternoon. Mrs. Russel Willson will review “The Coming Struggle for Latin America” (Beals).
Mrs. Tope Is Hostess The Fortnightly Study Club will meet Monday at the home of Mrs.
Murray Dalman will be in charge of a program on “Forty Thousand Against the Arctic.” A discussion of the topic will be held by members. : 2
Mrs, Titus Leads Forum Mrs. Irene McDaniel Titus will lead a discussion of “The Home-
the Business and Professional
Mary Mowat. Members of the dec- |
H. C. Tope, €281 Central Ave. Mrs. |
maker's Responsibilities as a Con-| sumer” after a dinner meeting of the Pi Lambda Theta Sorority at|
! Ayres Photo. Mrs. Max Farb (above) and Mrs. Richard Efroymson are entertainment committee cochairmen off the 27th annual Purim Ball which will be held Sunday evening at the Kirshbaum Center. Other committee members are Mesdames Arthur E, Rose, Harold I. Platt, Irving Ruben, Jacob Weiss, Jack Kammins, S. B. Friedland, Aaron Glick, Sidney Weinstein, Max Selig, Meyer Eroymson and Edgar Blay. : Program features will be danc ing numbers by the Junior Council, a puppet show by the Junior Hadassah, a beauty contest satire by the A. Z. A. youth group; and special numbers .by Mrs. Jacob Weiss and Jerome Wachter, master of ceremonies. The Misses Annette Herman, vocalist, Virginia Schwartz and Sylvia Epstein, dancers, also are to entertain. Mrs. Rudolph Domont is honorary chairman and Mesdames Farb, Platt and Jules Medias are cochairmen of the ball which issponsored each year by the Jewish Educational Association.
pr
Industry Institute Will Be Held by Woman’s Group
Z
An institute on industry and a number of talks have been arranged for the meeting Monday of the Municipal Gardens Woman’s Department Club at the clubhouse. A business meeting has been scheduled for 10:30 a. m.
Mrs. J. R. Horn will conduct an institute on industry, assisted by Mrs. Clayton Ridge, whose subject will be “The High and Low of Women in Industry.” Dr. Louis W. Spolyar will talk on “Their Health? and Safety” and Mrs. Mary L. Garners topic will be “Industrial Homework.”
Mrs. C. D.” Gray, chairman of the Red Cross Home Hygiene committee, will talk on the hygiene classes. Luncheon will be served at noon. Miss Helen Ferrell will play during
‘| the luncheon ang, Miss Mame Jacobs
will give the invocation. A hobby and heirloom show has been planned for the afternoon program. Mrs. Colin Lett, collector of gems, will be principal speaker. Mrs. Letts interest in precious stones. first started when she found a moss agate in Wyoming. She now has more than 500 gems in her collection including black opals from Australia, Brazilian emeralds, zircons from Ceylon, rubies from Siam and many kinds of agates. One of the most valued pieces of her collection is an Egyptian scarab 3000
back telling the dynasty to which it belongs.
Music on Program
Honor guests at the meeting will include Mrs. Chic Jackson, chairman of fine arts of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs; Mrs. A. L. Duncan, fine arts cochairman; Mrs. Ridge, president of the Woman’s Department Club; Mrs. Horn and Mrs. Garner, director of the Bureau of Women and Children, Division of Labor. Louis Mader Jr. will play violin selections and Gordon Grow will present a program of accordion music. Hostess chairmen for the afternoon will be Mrs. Ernest Millholland and Mrs. Theodore Petranoff, cochairmen assisted by Mesdames W. R. Burcham, S. J. Bardsley, William Emrich, William Peek, Clem Church and Cadman Starr. The program. is under auspices of the Fine Arts Section chairman, Mrs. Clyde Johnson, assisted by Mrs. Millholland, program chairman. Members of the nominating committee, appointed recently by the executive board, include Mrs. William Hodgson, chairman, and Mesdames Thomas Maley, Starr, Charles Everett and Peek. Table decorations will be carried out in green and white.
new pump with the out and the toe sni
Patent Leather | Fresh Earth Calf |
Women's Club Monday night. Dinner will be at 6 o'clock. ad
years old with hieroglyphics on the|
egion nits Plan Round Of Parties
Bruce P. Robison Auxiliary to Join in Celebration of Post Birthday.
Dinner meetings and card parties tonight and in the near future will keep American Legion Auxiliary
members busy tonight and next week. One auxiliary unit will assist in the celebration of its post anniversary. on Thursday.
The Auxiliary of Broad Ripple Post 312 of the American Legion will sponsor a card party in the Banner-Whitehill auditorium Monday at 2 p. m. Mrs. Goldie Strickland, ways and means chairman, is in charge of arrangements. Mrs, Mable Fuller is president of the unit. Mothers of Boy Scout Troop 56, sponsored by the post, will be in charge of the Father and Son banquet tonight at the Legion hall, 61st St. and College Ave.
lbert Stump will speak and an athletic demonstration will be presented by representatives of the North American Gymnastic Union. Members of the committee in charge nclude Mrs. Austin Laycock, chairlan; Mesdames C. C. Zintel, C. C, Stump, Fred Whicker, Robert Gardner and Norwin Strickland.
Members of the Broad Ripple Junior Auxiliary are conducting a membership drive which they will close soon with a “pitch-in” supper, Parents and Mrs Gladys Ross, disw trict junior chairman, will be guests at the supper. Mrs. Martha Coull is sponsor of the juniors.
Mrs. G. I. Seybert, department parliamentarian, will discuss “The Auxiliary’s Side of the Legion's Birthday’’ at the dinner meeting of the Hilton U. Brown Jr. Post 85 Auxiliary tonight. Dinner will be served at 6:30 p. m. at the D. A. R. Spapier house, 824 N. Pennsylvania Guests are to include Mr. and Mrs. Hilton U. Brown, Mrs. Roy Huckleberry, Clinton, department -president; Mrs. Josephine Kimberling, department secretary; Mrs. Charles Combs, Bloomfield, department chaplain; Mrs. Seybert; Mrs. G. O. Swaim, 12th District president; Mrs. A. H. Mitchell, 12th District secre= tary, and Mrs. Gladys Pribble, district treasurer. Arrangements for the dinner have been made by Mrs. Hannibal Peabody, community service chairman of the auxiliary, assisted by Mrs. H. S. Teitel, cochairman, Mesdames Ruth Bess, W. B. Cannaday, Ruth Connelly; Misses Enid Farlow, Mary Ages Sullivan and Eleanor Hig gins,
Auxiliary 133. of the American Legion will take part in the anniversary celebration of the Legion Post at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in the Brookside «Community House. Plans for the anniversary, the annual sale of poppies, an illustrated lecture next month and the yearly dinner dance were discussed at a recent meeting of the auxiliary. Preceding the business meeting, auxiliary members were hostesses to the post and junior auxiliary at a
of the Central Christian Church, Mrs. Frank Collman, president, was in charge of the business discussion. Dr. C. O. McCormick will present an illustrated lecture Friday, April 21, in the World War Memorial Building. The annual dinner dance of the post and auxiliary will be April 29 with Mrs. Ellis McCammon, chairman. Mrs. William H. Long will be cochairman., = The unit will purchase 3500 pop-
erans Hospital at Marion for sale on Poppy Day in May. Mrs. P. A. Johnson will be chairman of the poppy sale. . : The unit will give its annual party at the Juyenile Detention Home this month and also has purchased books for the library of the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Chile dren. Mrs. Donald. H. Smith, coms munity service chairman, is in charge of these projects. Members of the Junior Auxiliary of the post will participate in the Easter sunrise service on Monument Circle this year. Mrs. Ralph Lynch is sponsor of the group. i Members of Service Post 28 of the American Legion will sponsor a benefit euchre and ¢ard party at their hall in Oaklandon tonight.
Busy Bees to Meet
Members of the Busy Bee Club of Druids will hold a card party toe
Bessie Dumas, 1641 Bradbury St.
| 1%. | : Mext thing to no shoe at all is our smart
hole heel scooped pped off. Scanty in
* everything but fashion news with which it is packed and jammed.
Cranberry Calf Blue Calf
Other Paragon Shoes ..3.96 and 4.96 : |
Paragon Shqe Shop,
Fourth Floor.
- yi |
RR RE RA nro i i — hn 2 i % i LX RR
Members of the Bruce P. Robison
dinner in the Educational Building .
pies from the United States Vete"
morrow evening at the home of Mrs,
5
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