Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1939 — Page 11
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1989
Zeta Tau Alpha Alumnae Unit Election Is Tomorrow Night; Alpha Xi Delta Meets Sunday
Kappa ‘Grads’ Will Choose Officers Tonight at Home Of Mrs. David L. Smith; Helen Hartinger Will Speak on Vienna.
A Founders’ Day meeting, two elections and a number of dinner meetings are included in activities of Indianapolis sororities for the next few days. A number of organizations will hold regular business and social meetings and one group will conduct initiation services. ] Officers will be elected at the; : meeting at 8 o'clock tomorrow night |r: hostess, will be assisted by Miss of the Indianapolis Alumnae Chap- Elsie Shelley and: Miss Adelaide ter of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority at|Gastineau.
the home of Miss Bernice Living-| ; ; stone, 301 N. Temple Ave. | A dinner meeting of the Beta Tau
Miss Naomi Haworth has been | Sigma Sorority will be held at 6:30 named delegate to the international jo'clock this evening at Catherine's convention in July at the Grand Tearoom, 1435 N. Meridian St. Hotel, Mackinac Island, Mich. Miss Margaret Schoen will be alternate] Members of Alpha Chapter, Alpha delegate and Miss Faye Mendenhall | Beta Phi Sorority, will meet tonight will represent the Butler University jat the home of Mrs. A. N. Haag, chapter. {1646 Union St. Miss Ethel Merrick, president of | the alumnae organization, will announce installation of Gamma Delta, 77th college chapter of the sorority, at the University of Mississippi.
Initiation services will be conducted by Sigma Phi Delta Sorority | {tonight at the home of Mrs. Bryan |J. Hiner, 4618 E. New York St. Miss|
{ hostess. | National Founders’ Day of Alpha] 1 . | Xi Delta Sorority will be celebrated! Miss Delight Ott, 3210 N. Capitol] 5 |Ave., will be hostess tonight for Zeta Sunday afternoon with a tea at the | 00 5 ob Aon Le oe Indianapolis Athletic Club. The In- “napter, Thi The Ita Sorority.
dianapolis alumnae chapter will be! Mrs Charles Lawrence, 4246 hostess to the Purdue chapter and gangster Ave, will entertain at her all Indiana alumnae. {home tonight for members of Beta Mrs. H. C. Mahin] Miss Martha chapter, Omego Phi Tan Sorority.
Engle, Mrs. Lewis Meier and Mrs. J.| M. Smith will be in the receiving! Miss Selma Meinzen, 1224 Laurel line. A candlelight service recogniz- St. will entertain tonight for mem-
ing the 10 chapters represented in bers of Sigma Phi Kappa Sorority.
She local ar Ply i | The Verae Sorores Chapter, Verus James C. McLauchlan, exchange Cordis Sorority, will entertain toteacher from Scotland, now at|MOrrow night with a pitch-in supShortridge High Scheol, will talk on [Per at the home of Mrs. Russell “Scotch Music.” Miss Ida B. Wilhite |Eden, 521 N. Gray St.
and Miss Mary Jo Harvey will pre-| mrs. Theodore Losche. 609 Terside at the tea table. During thel.ace Ave. will be hostess to Alpha tea, a string trio composed of Chapter, Theta Mu Rho Sororifity, Richard Scales, Reginald Smith and tgnjoht at her home. Louis Mater, accompanied by Miss 5 Charlotte Crist, will provide music. Members of the Alumnae Club, Mrs, Lewis Meier is chairman of Beta Chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta | the committee in charge, assisted by | Serority, will hold a covered dish Mrs. J. M. Smith, Miss Mary Ar- luncheon and card party this aftermington and Miss Catherine Lewis. noon at the home of Mrs. W, P.|
Ray, 5442 Lowell Ave. Officers will be elected at the supper meeting at 6:30 o'clock tonight of the Kappa Kappa Gamma ley and H. G. Harms and Miss] Alumnae Association at the home of Maurine Murray will entertain,
{
Deanna Displays the Halo Hat
{Agnes Wagener will be assistant §§8
Mesdames H. M. Venis, D. C. Had- |
Mrs. David L. Smith, 4704 N. Penn- members of Beta Chapter, Delta Phi| §
Beta Sorority, with a dinner party] jscuss at 8:30 o'clock this evening at the 1 Indianapolis Business and Profes- | sional Woman's clubhouse, 1101 N.! Delaware St.
sylvania St. Miss Helen Hartinger will d “Viennese Viewpoints” and annua organization reports will be made. Mrs. Ralph W. Hook is in charge of reservations and Mrs. Ralph L.| Miss Mary Eloise Bolander will Jacobs and Mrs. Smith are assisting. | pe hostess to members of Eta Chap-| ‘ter, Phi Theta Delta Sorority, a
Members of the Indianapolis oii ot her home, 503 N. Emerson
Alvmnae organization of Alpha Ave Delta Theta Sorority will hold a business meeting tonight at the Members of Delta Zeta Psi Soror-|
Summer ermine fashions the smart bolero jacket, muff and halo hat of Deanna Durbin. They are in soft tawny shades of tan. Velvet is used for the tiny buttons, belt and revers of the frock of rust angora wool. The gloves and shoes are of brown suede to match the velvet trim.
Fire Department will hold a dance | at 6 p. m. Friday at the Band Erba Rubush, Myron Sears, Theo
Auxiliary Plans Dance |dames Fred Kennedy, Jack Stanley,
The Auxiliary to the Indianapolis|John R. Miller, Ezra Huff, John Ward, Joe Todd, Earl Milander,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 11
Mission Guild ‘Will Hear Talk By Dr. Yocum
‘India Today’ to Be Topic; Methodist Group Plans Needlework Review.
Today's Pattern
A church dinner, annual meeting and annual conference at Bloomington are included in activities for Indianapolis church women this week. One group is planning a needlework review for Tuesday. Dr. Cyrus M. Yocum, United Christian Missionary Society foreign missionary department secretary, will speak tonight at a dinner at the Third Christian Church. “India Today” will be his subject. Dr. Yocum recently returned from Madras, India, where he attended the International Missionary Council meeting. The Helen Dungan Mission Guild is sponsoring tonight's dinner. Dr. Yocum also will talk Friday at the annual meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Federated Church/ } Women at the Irvington Methodist | Church. “Missions Today” will be! his topic.
Section 3 of the Woman's Association of the Meridian Street Methodist Church will present a needlework review Tuesday afternoon at the church. There will be an exhibit of old and new quilts, rugs and linens loaned by members and friends. A collection of old textiles from Herron Art Museum will be on display. Mrs. James H. Drill heads the ar-
= row. : includes Mesdames Chris
rangements committee. “A Needle in Her Hand” will be the topic of Miss Nellie R. Crawford. She will discuss the history of needlework with special emphasis on the colonial period. Her collection of calico quilt blocks will be displayed.
‘The 64th annual Indianapolis Presbyterial Society meeting to be held by the Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Society at Bloomington tomorrow and Friday will be attended by about 106 Indianapolis women. ‘The Challenge of Change” is the conference theme. Indianapolis women who will speak include Mesdames Fred Stilz, Edward H. Mayo, C. W. Dicks and George Arthur Frantz.
The Christian Mothers’ Society of Sacred Heart Church will sponsor a parish social and dance at the high school at 8:30 p. m. tomorThe arrangements committee Kunkel, Pred Sauer, Leo Goebes, Frank Felske and John Moriarty.
Democrats Hear Shake Randel Shake, juvenile court probation officer, was guest speaker last night at the meeting of the Seventh Ward Women’s Democratic Club. Miss Helen Sharkey entertained the group at her home, 2030
Here's an inspired design, in Pattern No. 8456, for a house dress that you'll make up time after time, if vou have a slenderizing effect to consider, as well as complete comfort for busy working hours.
It's such a pretty dress, too, with its irregular neckline, unusual closing, and braid used in a new way. The simplicity of line, smooth shoulders and plain skirt all subtract pounds from your appearance. Make this of calico, percale or gingham. Pattern No. 8456 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 land 52. Size 38 requires 5's yards lof 35-inch material; 2'i yards of [braid to trim front and neck as pictured. 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 above pattern number and your size, your name and address and mail to
Music Speech Is on Schedule For A. A.UW.
Four Panel Discussion to Be Held at State Convention.
Times Special RICHMOND, April 12.—A talk on music and four panel discussions will be included on the program for the 17th annual convention of the Indiana Division, American Association of University Women, May 5 and 6 in Richmond. Miss Ebba Sundstrom, director of the Chicago Women’s Symphony, will talk on music at the opening banquet meeting on Friday evening, May 5. Panel discussions on activities of the organization will be presented the following morning. Dr. Mary Turgi, South Bend, will speak at the luncheon. A fellowship brochure prepared by the Indiana Fellowship committee in honor of Dr. Kathryn McHale will be presented at the meeting. Dr. McHale, an Indiana woman, js national director of A. A. U. Ww. A series of exhibits arranged by local branches will be a feature of the convention. The exhibit judged as best will be sent to represent Indiana at the national convention. A tea at Earlham College Saturday afternoon will close the convention. Newly elected officers will be honored at the closing tea.
Women Voters To See Housing Project Films
Motion pictures of the Ft. Wayne housing pruject and three talks on. housing problems were to be features of a meeting sponsored by the Indianapolis League of Women Voters today in the American United Lifc Building auditorium. A study of housing made recently by the organization was to be outlined. R. Earl Peters, state director of FHA, was to describe the Ft. Wayne project and exhibit motion pictures of the work which provides homes for as low as $9 a month. Mrs. James Wason was to outline the evolution of the housing movee ment in England from 1816 when in= dustrialists built homes for their workers to raise their morale. She was to describe housing projects in Europe and mention the co-opera-tive housing in Sweden, in which persons help build the homes provided for them. Mrs. Addison Parry’s report on housing in Indianapolis was to be based on a survey made in 1933 by the community plan committee of the Chamber of Commerce, assisted by the Bureau of Social Research of Indiana University. She was to illustrate her talk with maps and report that the findings disclosed that in the slum areas the cost to the city, figuring expenses in public organization, was far greater than the possibile income from taxes. Mrs. William Allen Moore was to trace housing legislation in the United States from the temporary experiment during the World War to the Wagner-Steagall Bill setting up the U. S. Housing Authority. The program was arranged and sponsored by the League's department of government and economic welfare. Mrs. Stanley Hayes is chairman of the department.
and Associates
Alabama at
Free Bus
Dr. W. B. Coleman, O. D.
Sears, Roebuck and Co. Open Every Thurs. and Sat. Night Until 9 o’Clock
Employers know that you must see well to do your work well. Let us help you with that job with properly fitted glasses.
Offices, Main Floor
Vermont St. Free Parking
N. Talbott Ave. Mrs. Julia Perkins is president of the organization.
Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St.
home of Mrs. Arthur Orr, 3422 N. ity will be entertained at dinner to-| Wagon, Southeastern and Emerson Clements, Earnest Schaeffer Fred Colorado Ave. | Aves.
} t i t } € t f r $4 x
-
Cah pg A Cte "]
Miss Margaret Pick- night at the Naval Armory.
The committee includes Mes-! Pierson and James Pope.
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