Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1939 — Page 23
THURSDAY, APRIL 6, Musical Event At Clubhouse
Built on Opera
Pauline Schellschmidt Unit Will Give Program At 2:30 Wednesday.
“An Earful of Operas” will be the title of a musical program to be presented Wednesday by the Pauline Schellschmidt Ensemble at a meeting of the general ciub of the Woman’s Department Club at the clubhouse. The program will begin at 2:30 p. m. Members of the ensemble include Mrs. William Devin and Mrs. Otto Heppner, sopranos; Mrs. Robert Blake, contralto; Mrs. Frank Edenharter, pianist, and Mrs. Louise Schellschmidt Koehne, harpist. Miss Schellschmidt will relate interesting phases of various types of opera illustrated by excerpts from light and grand operas. Ensemble and solo arias will make up the program. Mrs. Clayton S. Ridge will preside at a business meeting at 2 p. m. " Mrs. Lewis Ferguson will serve as chairman of ushers, assisted by members of her committee. Mrs. Ira Holmes will be general chairman for the social hour following the program. Mesdames Malcolm Lucas, George A. Bowen, Frank Walker and O. IL. Watkins will preside at the tea table. Members of the promotion committee, under the direction of Mrs. Leonidas Smith, and the Little Club committee, with Miss Pearl Kiefer, chairman, will sponsor a bridge tea at 2 p. m. Monday. Mrs. John Berns will entertain members of the Woman's Department Club Auxiliary to the P. H. N. A. teaching center for luncheon on Tuesday.
Second
Daughter of Howard Finds Main Talk About Father.
By RUTH MILLETT EW YORK, April 6—Most women suspect that being a Hollywood wife—playing “little woman” to a star whose salary is in direct proportion to his ability to stir feminine emotions—isn't the easiest job in the world. But what about the dating-aged daughter of such a man? Is having her Dad a movie lover and Hollywood for a home town more satisfactory than being a small town girl with a father who runs the bank or drugstore?
HE movie star’s daughter has a harder time putting herself across, if you'll believe Leslie Howard, daughter of Leslie Howard, who is busy right now playing the romantic Ashley in the filming of “Gone With the Wind.” To prove that being the daughter of, and bearing the name of a celebrity, is pretty tough on a young girl, Miss Howard, who is 15, blond and fuil of pep, sat,on the edge of her chair in New York's Ambassador Hotel and acted out a little skit to me, while her mother listened, amused.
A Ld #”
N it a young man cuts in on her at a dance. He introduces himself and asks her name, which, knowing all that she does, she tries to mumble. But he gets it. And from that moment on the talk is all about Mr. Leslie Howard. no matter how she tries to switch it to Miss Leslie Howard. It’s even worse when she meets another girl or woman. They always say, “I just love your father,” and go on from there, never even seeing her. She declares the only part she ever gets to play in a conversation is to say, ‘That's nice” to “mush” (her word) about her Dad, and answer questions—still about her Dad.
Personals
Miss Norma Overbay, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Overbay, 5768]
Washington Blvd, was crowned
athletic queen at Christian College, | Columbia, Mo., at a recent carnival |§
held by the Women's Athletic Association. Miss Overbay, a freshman, dire-ted the swimming pageant following the carnival. Miss Mary Catherine Sexton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Sexton, 4444 Washington Blvd, arrived yesterday from St. Mary's of the Lake, Notre Dame, to spend the Easter holiday with her parents. Among Western College students, Oxford, O, who are spending the spring vacation with their parents here are Miss Betty Spickelmeier, 5502 Central Ave.; Miss Ann Hereth, 402 E. 37th St.; Miss Jean M. Smith, 53 N. Audubon Rd.; Miss Jean L. Smith, 5808 Julian Ave.; Miss Ruth Harry, 4720 Park Ave.; Miss Dorothy Chapin, 5703 Central Ave.; Miss Helen Elliott, 5253 N. Michigan Road; Miss Constance Lewis, Brendonwood; Miss Ruth Bertsch, 4819 Park Ave, and Miss Doris Belzer, 3314 Kenwood Ave. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Birr, 5753 College Ave. their son, James, and Mrs. Birr's mother, Mrs. George O. Hutsell, have returned home after spending the winter in Miami Beach, Fla. Miss Barbara Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Moore, 922 E. 40th St, has as her house guest for the Easter holidays Miss Dorothy Jean Price, Terre Haute. Sevol parties have been planned for er.
Miss Jane Rauch Is Guest at Dinner
Miss Jane Rauch, whose marriage to John Milton Kitchen will be Saturday, was honored guest at a spinster dinner last night at the home of Miss Helene Petri, 5306 N. Pennsylvania St. Guests included Mrs. B. F. Winslow, Brookline, Mass, who will be a member of the bridal party; Mesdames Norman Rauh Kevers, William H. Thompson, Richard H. Dickson Jr, Ronald B. Woodard, Paul B. Payne; Misses Katharine Fulton, Jane Throckmorton, Ruth Zinn and Louise Vonnegut. Miss Rauch's will be married at 6:30 p. m. Saturday in the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. gor Meridian St.
G. Rauch, 3050 N.
1939
Perfect for traveling (plaids don’t show spots!) and ideal for country or suburbs, this smart little suit in brown and chartreuse plaid wool has a full skirt and a short, fitted jacket. The blouse is in string colored jersey.
Country Club junior dance tonight school holiday.
A Ferdinand the Bull milk bar will be set up for the evening and balloons will be used in carrying out the decorations.
Miss Jo Ann Binkley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Binkley, will entertain with a dinner party at the club for the Misses Mary Jane McGuire, Mary Ellen Leckie, Nell Nickell, Cordelia Hayes, Chicago; Misses Jane Shook, Mary Ann Pearce, Jean Stackhouse, Constance Miller, Martha Haverstick and Martha Armstrong; Messrs. Gordon Stevens, James Bingham, Ted Corpin, Robert McIntire, Richard ana Robert Stackhouse, Charles Arensman Jr, Jack Weber, Leroy Ford, Douglas White Jr. and Robert Weedon.
Richard Lochry, a student at Northwestern University, who is visiting his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Lochry, will have as his dinner guests the Misses Clara Jane Bosson, Dorothy Jansen, Dor. othy Street and Mary Lou Mitchell; Messrs. Vance and Richard Wilkinson and Ralph McCoy. Miss Mary Ann Zinn's dinner at her home will be for members of the Double Dozen Club including the Misses Martha Bales, Marilyn Shaw, Susanne Smith, Phyllis Barnhill, Jean Hixon, Barbara Ann Jackson, Suzanne Cohen, Barbara Spawn, Dana DeWitt, Esther Evans and Martha Eisert; Messrs. Jack Strickland, Edward Dunn, Bruce Christy, Harold Morgan, Edward Porter, James Enzor, William Mills, William Snyder, Carl Lieber, Jack Sarsfiela, George Finney and William Lochry. Mr. Lochry will entertain the group at the dance.
Dinner guests of Russel S. Williams Jr, will be the Misses Joan Bartley, Patty Casler and Betsy Stanley; James Carline and William Conner.
Members of the adult committee will have dinner at the club pre- | ceding the dance.
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Many on Holiday From School Will Attend Meridian Hills Country Club Dance Tonight
Many college and high school students will attend the Meridian Hills
as one of the high points of their
Bake Sale, Card Parties, Easter
Dance Arranged
A covered dish luncheon, card parties, a bake sale, dinner and routine business are scheduled for meetings of women’s lodge groups today and Saturday. Members of the Pilgrim Shrine 12, White Shrine of Jerusalem, will meet at 8 o'clock tonight in Castle Hall. A social hour will follow the business session. Mrs. Grace Cottingham is worthy high priestess and Henry O. Hummel is watchman of shepherds.
Mrs. Viola Harbaugh, 649 S. Alabama St., will entertain members of Gold Mound Council 445, Degree of Pocahontas, with a covered dish supper and card party at 6:30 p. m. Saturday at her home. Mrs. Fannie Wicker and Mrs. Chattie Carleton are in charge of arrangements.
Members of the Myrtle Temple Sewing Circle, the Pythian Sisters, are to meet this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Lula Gunsett, 649 S. New Jersey St. The meeting is to follow a luncheon.
The Irvington Rebekah Lodge 608 will sponsor a public card party at 8:30 p. m. Saturday at the hall, 5420 E. Washington St.
Members of the Ladies Auxiliary
to the Indianapolis Firemen's Asso-
ciation will hold their April meeting at 7:30 p. m. tonight in the Hotel Lincoln. A card party will follow the business discussion.
Mrs. Mary Short will preside at the meeting this afternoon of the T. W. Bennett Circle of the Ladies
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Wash rayons and acetates exactly according to directions marked on the label. Generally speaking, these fabrics need only the mildest of soaps, lukewarm water, and thorough rinsing in clear water of the same temperature. Don’t ever wring with a twisting motion. Press out the water gently and then absorb the excess by wrapping in heavy turkish towels. Press on the wrong side or under a cloth with a warm iron.
NAPOLIS
23
Columbia Club Lists Easter Dinner Dance
Breakfast to Be Served Members Attending Sunrise Service.
Easter activities for members of the Columbia Club and their friends will include breakfast, dinner, a concert and dinner dancing. A spring formal dance and a breakfast bridge party ‘on Monay are among other
club events scheduled for next week. Breakfast will be served beginning at 6 o'clock Easter morning in the main dining room for members and their friends who attend the Sunrise services. Several groups have planned to gather at the club to take part in the annual services on Monument Circle. During Easter day, dinner will be served in the dining room from noon until 9 p. m. A concert of Easter music will be provided by Denny Dutton and his Columbia Club orchestra during the evening dinner hour. Dancing also will be held during dinner. Junior Columbians will be entertained at a spring formal dance Friday evening, April 14. Ed
Mitchell and Miss Helen Shumaker.
are cochairmen of arrangements, assisted by Misses Peggy Trusler, Jeanne Taylor, Mary Kay Wedon, Peggy Jane Gray; Messrs. Dick Carson, John Beeler, Paul Havens and Bob Wedon. A feature of the dance will be a floor show presented by the Junior Columbians. The final bridge party of the current season will be a breakfastbridge Monday at 11:30 a. m. at the club. A spring style show by a downtown store will follow the breakfast. Spring flowers will decorate the individual tables. Mrs. Charles A. Seidensticker will be chairman of hostesses, assisted by Mesdames Lewis C. Burnett, Roy E. Hickman, Hal B. Brayant, J. H. Kemper, Blake Stone, Otto Deluse, E. Park Akin, Frank Binford, Albert Stearns, John F. Frazier, Thomas P. Carson, L. G. Ferguson, Oscar B. Perine, L. W. Mohlenkamp, W. D. Vogel and James M. Drake. Mrs. J. Hart Laird is club hostess.
Cleaning Bed Springs A convenient time to clean the bedspring is when the mattress is turned each week. It's easy to blow the dust off the coils with the attachment, then dust with clean cloth. Use the upholstery attachment or the end of the hose itself to go over the mattress, after a thorough brushing with a whisk broom.
Today's Pattern
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There’s nothing like a frill to make you look pretty and springlike. Pattern 8444 uses them lavishly—around the sleeves and neck, over the shoulders, and all down the front. It’s the easiest possible way to keep a day frock looking always new and fresh. Pattern No. 8444 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 requires 4% yards of 39-inch material, with short sleeves; 43% yards for long sleeves; 5 yards of pleating or ruffling. The new spring and summer Pattern Book, 32 pages of attractive designs for every size and every occasion, is ready now. Photographs show dresses made from these patterns being worn, a feature you will enjoy. Let the charming designs in this new book help you in your sewing. One pattern and the new Spring and Summer Pattern Book —25 cents. Pattern or book alone— 15 cents. To obtain a pattern and step-by-step sewing instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with the
Riding Clubs of City Heed Call Of Spring Days
The first hints of spring bring a “call to horse” for members of riding clubs in Indianapolis. Program committees at the local saddle organizations are busy thinking up new things for members to do. The Paddock Saddle Club will have an Easter egg hunt at 2 p. m. Sunday, while the Algonquin Riding Club is making plans for a breakfast ride and a trail ride later this month.
Howard Jessup, chairman of the Paddock events committee, is in charge of the egg hunt. A group ride was held recently over the trails around Laurel Hall, the club’s new headquarters. Riders included Messrs. and Mesdames Kyle G. Herder, Harold A. Martyn, Robert Burrows, R. S. Blocker, George Pattison, Roy C. Pedigo, James Blacklidge, Mrs. Helen York, Misses Mary E. Cummings, Dorothy & Shepard, |
Mildred Christensen, Madelyn Ul rich, Mary Bowland, Peggy MacLucas, Diane Pattison, Mildred Bacon and Retha Hogue; Clyde Ford, Hal York, Kenneth Weghorst, Blake Wilson, Bon O. Aspy, Gordon B. Sutton, Howard Jessup, Glenn Wiese, Judson Moschelle, Wilford Wilson, Harry Claffey Jr, PF. A, Bridwell and Charles Wenz. Algonquin Riding Club members will hold a breakfast ride on April 16. The group will leave the stables at 9 a. m. with breakfast served from a chuck wagon at the lodge on Kernel Lake. Members of all riding clubs in Marion County and vicinity are invited to participate in a trail ride April 22 and 23. J. J. Ronayne is in charge of reservations.
Mission to Entertain Members of the Indiana Flower Mission were toc discuss plans for their annual Easter entertainment for tuberculosis patients today. Mrs,
David Ross was to preside at the meeting in the directors’ room of the Fletcher Trust Co. Monthly ree ports also were to be presented.
In the
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