Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1939 — Page 16

PAGE pe RDEN AT HOME SHOW

ARRANGE CLUB GA

Modern gardens about the All-Indiana model home at the 18th annual Indianapolis Home Show have been arranged by local garden clubs. Mrs. Irwin Morris (right) and Mrs. Fred Fox are shown setting out plants in the vegetable garden arranged by the Spade and Trowel Garden Club.

State Music Club Federation Accepts Invitation of Purdue

To Hold '40 Conclave There

Student Section to Give Final Program of Present Convention at Severin Tonight; Board Meeting Is Set for June 9.

The 1940 convention of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs will be held at Purdue University it was decided today at the closing business session of the 1939 conclave in the

Hotel Severin.

The invitation to Lafayette was extended by President

E. C. Elliott of Purdue and

Albert Stewart, head of the

Music Department of the university, and was recommended

by members of the state boa

rd of the federation at their

breakfast meeting this morning.

The final board meeting of the year will be June 9 with Mrs. Fred Appel as hostess at her home, “The Patch,” in Noblesville. Mrs. Lloyd Billman, Shelbyville, president, will report at that time on the national convention next

month in Baltimore, In her message this morning Mrs. Billman reviewed activities of the state music clubs during the past year. Talks an Symphony

Speaking at the morning session on the work of the Indianapolis] Symphony Orchestra, Franklin | Minor, symphony manager, pre-| semted a tentative schedule of composers whose works will be stressed next season. The list includes Tschaikowsky, Brahms, Schubert, Franck, Rachmaninoff, Sibelius and Mozart. The closing program for the convention will be presented by the Student Section of the Federation tonight at the hotel. Miss Edna T. Bowles, Greencastle, is student counselor. Included on the program will be a solo by Miss Elizabeth Campbell, a DePauw University student, and winner of the voice division of the student musician contest. Jack Gillespie, another DePauw student, who won in the piano division, also will present a solo. It will be the first public appearance for the winners since the contest April 1. Selections will be given by the Madrigal Singers of Tech High School | directed by J. Russell Paxton and | the student divisions of DePauw | and Manchester College.

Cups Are Awarded

In the awards made last night at the informal dinner the Lafayette Choral Club was given permanent

possession of the cup awarded for chorus activity rating. The Cecilian Club of Union City was awarded | permanently the cup for activities and a paid membership up to 50. Permanent possession is given to an organization who wins the award three successive times. Other cups were awarded to the Philharmonic Club, Oakland City, club rating; the Central Presbyterian Choir of Lafayette, choir rating; Amateur Musicale, I.a Porte, activities and paid membership of 50 to 100, and the Musicians Club, Evansville, for activities and membership over 100. Mrs. Robert Keck, Mt. Vernon, president of District 8, received the cup for her district for its extension work. Exceptrs from Flotow’s opera, “Martha,” will be presented by members of Kappa Chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music sorority, this afternoon. Mrs. Lenore Ivey Fredericksen and the Burroughs School of Music will direct the organization members in the production.

Dean Sanders Speaks ¢The American composer is a

double victim of tragedy,” Robert |: L. Sanders, dean of the School of |;

Music at Indiana University, stated

yesterday in his address to the con- |§

vention. “He is the victim of history in that he came into existence when his country had no geographical frustration and he has no basis of nationalism to draw upon. He also is a victim of ‘unemployment,’ for there is no vital social need for a composer. It Is too easy to get masterpieces in cheap editions.” A great social need produces genius, according to Dean Sanders.

T. O. Club Will Take Guests on Hay Ride

Members and guests of the T. O. Club will meet tomorrow afternoon at 445¢ Washington Blvd. before their hayrack ride to New Augusta. Members of the club, an organization of Shortridge High School girls, are Misses Betty Jane Mitchell, Jean Arnott, Georgeanna Madden, Betty Walker, Jane Whipple, Kath-

Tri Delt Group To Offer Review By Mrs. Garten

Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review “Reaching for the Stars” (Nora Waln) at 8 p. m. Wednesday in the auditorium of the American United Life Building under auspices of the Indianapolis Alliance of Delta Delta Delta. This will be the sixth annual benefit of the Indian-

‘apolis Alliance for the Indianapolis

Day Nursery. The committee in charge of the Day Nursery projects includes Mrs. Robert Renick, chairman, assisted by Mesdames James E. Allen, Marvin L. Lugar, G. William Raffensperger, Wendell Hicks and Elbert R. Gilliom. Members of committees who will assist in arrangements are Mrs. Raffensperger, ticket chairman; Mrs. Fred Howenstine, Mrs. Owen Calvert, Miss Frances Stalker and Miss Elizabeth Johnson; Mrs. Marvin L. Lugar and Mrs. Gilliom, publicity; Mrs. Garrett W. Olds, ushers’ chairman, Mesdames Robert W. Garten, John A, Bruhn, M. Speers MacCollum and Miss Jean Sullivan; Mrs. M. L. Thompson, arrangements chairman, Mrs. E. Carl Watson, Mrs. James A. Baird, Miss Elizabeth Moore and Miss Narcie Pollitt; Mrs. Murray DeArmond, hostess chairman, Mesdames Bernard Lacy, Harry Hooley, Kenneth Adair, Miss Helen Coffey and Miss Alice Evans.

Bird Lovers’ Club Leader to Speak

Parents of members of the hobby clubs at the Children’s Museum will hear reports of the members’ activities at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the museum.

Miss Estelle Preston, leader of the Bird Lovers’ Club, will give an illustrated talk on “The Migration of Birds” and William Dinwiddie, leader of the Mineralogy Club, will report on the club’s activities. Tea will be served following the program and a tour of the bird and mineral gardens conducted. Mrs. Donald Drake and Mrs. Louis Markun, patronesses, will be special guests.

W.C. T. U. Unit to Meet Mrs. H. D. O'Brien will speak at

|2 Pp. m. today at the meeting of | Bay Laurel W. C. T. U. at the home of Mrs. Mary Cox, 702 Luett St.

Play Chairman

Fitch Photo. Mrs. John Ebner is general chairman of the musical comedy, “Guns, Gowns and Girls,” which the Broadway Workers Class of the Broadway Methodist Church will give tonight at the church. Proceeds will purchase scenery,

ryn Jackson, Marjorie Rosebrock and Caroline Hawkins.

/

&

lighting and sound equipment for the stage.

£

Checking up on blue print details of the summer house are (left to right) the Mesdames William A. Myers, W. R. Sanders and Foster V. Smith, North End Garden Club members.

Hurty Dinner Party to Precede Park School Varsity Club's Spring Dance at Woodstock

By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON

Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Hurty will give a dinner party for Mrs. Hurty’s son, David Craig, tomorrow evening at Woodstock Club pre-

ceding the Park School Varsity Club's spring dance.

Guests will in-

clude the Misses Ann Sayles, Georgianna Dedaker, Patty Peterson, Ronney Noble, Patty Smith, Betty Jane Mosiman, Doris Wilson, Caroline Lieber, Elizabeth Harding, Elizabeth Maynard and Margaret Curle; Mike Keene, Si Sheerin, William Hanley, William Umphrey, William Fisher, William Failey, William Higgins Jr., Elias Atkins Jr., Edward Weist, John Gould Jr., Harvey Bradley Jr., Peter Hackleman, David Moxley, Robert Marschke, Fred Rassman and

William Evans.

Members of the Indiana League of Women Voters who will at tend the Council meeting of the National League of Women Voters April 25 to 27 in Washington are Mrs. Clarence F. Merrell, Indiana League president; Mrs. John K. Goodwin, Indianapolis League president; Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin who will visit her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Bennett, and Mrs. Charles N.

Teetor, Hagerstown.

Mrs. Henry L. Browning will give a tea this afternoon for her sister, Mrs. Alfred di Caprio, who is here from New York for sev-

eral days.

The third Arlington junior riding tournament is to be

held this evening at the Robert H. Brown stables.

Mrs. Rubsamen on Visit Here

“The average American businessman finds to his great delight he can do a beautiful tango very easily,” says Mrs. Herbert Rubsa« men, who nightly cajoles several T. B. M.’s into dancing the tango, rumba and Viennese waltz at the Minnesota Terrace of the Hotel

Nicollet in Minneapolis.

Mrs. Rubsamen, who is here for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Foltz, is giving a dozen pairs of dancing slippers a rest while she recovers from a broken ankle received in a tangle

with a pair of skis.

As representatives of Arthur Murray, famous

New York exponent of ballroom dancing, Mr. and Mrs. Rubsamen are now managers of his Minneapolis studio and next week are to

open a branch at St. Paul.

James Roosevelt, says Mrs. Rubsamen who tutored the President's

eldest son in the rumba last year

at Palm Beach, “is an excellent

dancer with a good sense of rhythm.” The first lesson in the rumba is “most discouraging,” she explained, but one great reason for its popularity is that “it can be danced on a dime.” The nightly “stunt” at the Nicollet begins with a tango by Mr. and Mrs. Rubsamen, who next choose two or three partners each from

the guests at the tables.

They follow the same procedure for the

rumba and Viennese waltz, “use no stooges but try to pick people

who know their right foot from their left.”

At the end of the hour

prizes are awarded the dancers who receive most applause. On Saturdays they give luncheon exhibitions of the “Swinguet,” a dance created by Mr. Murray, which begins with a few stately bars of the minuet and shifts to a swing version. They coached the Mirneapolis Junior League's benefit this winter, “a cotillion with real figures and favors and distinctly a white tie and white glove affair.”

Selecting a Dance Frock

Mrs. Rubsamen says there's a definite connection between the

Viennese waltz and picturesque dancing dresses.

Her advice about

selecting a dance frock is: “Do everything but stand on your hands

in it to see how it looks in action.

And be sure,” she adds, “that the

back is as effective as the front.” She designs her own evening gowns. In summer, she contends, it’s more fun to have a half dozen

full-skirted cotton dresses to send

tennis shorts than one or two fragile chiffons.

to the laundry along with your The natural waistline

or higher is best, she says, and she advocates wearing “things” in your

hair in the evening.

“If you have to wear flowers on the shoulder,”

she said, “better wear them at the back than the front and never

wear them on the left shoulder to

be crushed.”

The caliber of ballroom dancing in New York has improved more in the last six years than at any time since the Castle craze, she says. Mr. and Mrs. Rubsamen coached a group of debutantes in “The Waltz in Swingtime” for New York’s fashionable Velvet Ball. The former Barbara Foltz learned her first dancing steps here

from Miss Anna Stanton, now Mrs. Frank S. Ruddell.

Her only

“experience” before going into dancing professionally under Mr. Murray's direction was “in a couple of ballets at Vassar.” She recalls

that in one she was the East Wind of the Four Winds.

As to who is

learning to dance nowadays: “Just everyone!”

Series of Parties Will Honor

Elizabeth Conder,

Soon to Wed

An engagement announcement, a series of parties and showers for an April bride-to-be and two prenuptial events for a young woman who will be married tomorrow are included in social events for a number of Indianapolis young women who will be married soon. Mrs. Lida B. Allen, 615 Congress Ave. has announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Viola Grace Allen, to S. Curtis Astley, son

of Mr. and Mrs. Myron V. Astley. The wedding will be April 22.

» ” =»

Miss Elizabeth Conder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Croel P. Conder, whose marriage to George Q. Biegler Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. George Q. Biegler, will be Saturday, April 22, is being entertained at a number of prenuptial showers and parties. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Conder will entertain at a dinner party tonight at Hollyhock Hill for their niece and Mr. Biegler. Mrs. E. P. Ervin will fete the bride-to-be tomorrow afternoon at the home of her mother, Mrs. Ransom Griffin, 5858 Central Ave., with a personal shower. Sunday afternoon Mrs. Harry Harlan and Miss Martine Karns, who will be Miss

Conder’s attendants, wili entertain with a kitchen shower at the former’s home, 6202 Broadway. Mrs. Crawford, another aunt of the bride-to-be, will entertain Tuesday night and Miss Virginia Fosler will be hostess Wednesday evening at a crystal shower at the Indianapolis Athletic Club for Miss Conder. Miss Dorothy and Miss Helen Behmer entertained last night at their home, 2210 Brvadway, for the future bride. ” 2 2

Miss Mary Lamar entertained recently at the home of her aunt, Mrs. W. H. Willcox, 2234 N. Delaware St., with a crystal shower in honor of Miss Lois Freeman Young, whose marriage to Anson Richard Shireman, Martinsville, will be Saturday.

Indianapolis Alumnae, Delta Psi

officers.

hostess.

Dewey, hostess. zio Bruno, hostess.

Jersey, hostess.

B. Bosson.

EVENTS

SORORITIES

Metzger, 2435 N. Pennsylvania, hostess. Luncheon. Alpha Chapter, Alpha Beta Gamma. 8:30 p. m. tonight. Mrs. Maurice Johnson, 414 E. Sumner Ave, hostess. Installation of

CLUBS K. P. 7 p. m. tonight. Miss Margaret Garrett, 3350 Central Ave,

Cleanerettes. 12:30 p. m. Mon. Catherine’s Tearoom. Luncheon. Irvington Homemakers. 1:30 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Albert Kelly, 6017

Queen Margherita Society. 2 p. m. Sun. Hotel Lincoln. Mrs. Nun= C. H. I. C. 7:30 p. m. tonight. Miss Vivian L. Johnson, 3266 N. New

CARD PARTY

Broad Ripple High School P.-T. A. 2 p. m. Tues. Block’s auditorium. Mrs. James L. Millican, general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Robert

Kappa. 1 p. m. Sat. Mrs. A. E.

#

Aids Chosen For Butler's Senior Dance

Sheriff Feeney to Address Newman Club Sunday Morning.

Committees in charge of the annual senior ball at Butler University have been named by the class president. Included in next week's activities for Butler students and faculty members will be a talk by Sheriff Feeney, a lecture on astronomy and

a traditional “kid” party sponsored by a campus organization. Miss Betty Wangelin and John Crawford will be cochairmen of the Senior Class Ball on June 7. The event will be held at one of the Indianapolis country clubs. Byron Reed is president of the class. Other committees for the dance will include William Mitchell and James Hanna, publicity; Miss Betty Ann Schroeder, Arthur Gosman and Rolla Burghard, band; Miss Mary Hanna Sailors, Miss Mary Anna Butz and James Comstock, hall; Misses Jeane Wintz, Marjorie Kaser and Betty Lou Wright, chaperons; Miss Mildred Haag, David Thompson and William Robinson, programs, and Miss Betty Pringler, Miss Jeanne Rettig and George Hoffman, decorations.

Sheriff to Talk

Sheriff Al Feeney of Marion County will address members of the Newman Club of Butler University following a communion breakfast at 10 o’clock Sunday morning in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The breakfast is sponsored each year by the Newman Club, Catholic student organization. Guests of honor at the breakfast will be the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond R. Noll, rector of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral and representative of the Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, bishop of Indianapolis, and J. P. Rooney, executive secretary of the Catholic Youth Organization of the diocese. Miss Jane Owen, Kokomo, will be general chairman of arrangements for the Kid Kaper party Wednesday afternoon at the Butler University Campus Club. The party is being sponsored by Spurs, sophomore women’s honorary organization. Members of assisting committees include: Games, Miss Mary Haynes, chairman; Misses Jane Day Pierce, Cornelia Conner and Eleanor Cook; refreshments, Miss Mary Clay, chairman; Misses Evelyn Fosgate, Florence McBride and Margaret Smith; favors and decorations, Miss Sue Janet Guthridge, chairman; Misses Barbara Keiser, Betty Rose Martin and Janet Thomas, and tickets, Miss Dina Barkun.

Officers to Be Introduced

Dr. Bassford C. Getchell of the Butler mathematics department will speak on “Astronomy” at the meeting of the Butler Women’s Faculty Club at 3 p. m. Wednesday. The meeting will be in the Recreation room of the Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall. Newly elected officers will be introduced during the meeting. Mrs. Juna IL. Beal is the new president, and others are Mrs. Charles E. Stevens, first vice president; Mrs. George F. Leonard, second vice president; Mrs. C. Mervin Palmer, recording secretary; Mrs. Warren R. Isom, treasurer; Mrs. C. L. Clark, corresponding secetary, and Mrs. Bruce L. Kershner, keeper of the archives.

Due to Preside

Bretzman Photo. Mrs. Adelia M. Brier, president of the Indianapolis Grade Teachers’ Association, will preside at the mass meeting of the group to be held April 21 at the War Memorial. The annual card party will be tomorrow at Ayres’ auditorium. Mrs. Kathryn Tur-

ney Garten will speak at the April 21 session.

| Lawrence Collins,

The Brookside Garden Club arranged the colorful flowers which decorate the house terrace.

EE

E

4 he

Times Photos. Mrs,

Charles E. Lucas (left) and Mrs. Harold Hayes are shown working on a border. Mrs. Robert H. Miles has headed the garden club’s participation in this year’s show.

Saddle Shoe Shuffle at 1. A.C. And Juniors’ Spring Formal at Columbia Club Slated Tonight

The Junior Columbians and Indac Juniors are to dance tonight at

spring parties.

A Saddle Shoe Shuffle will be held at the Indianapolis

Athletic Club and the Columbia Club will be the scene of the juniors’

annual spring formal. A floor show is planned for the intermission at the Columbians dance. Edward Mitchell II and Helen Shumaker are cochairmen of arrangements, assisted by the Misses Peg Trusler, Jeanne Taylor, Peggy Jane Gray, Mary Kay Weedon, John Beeler, Dick Carson, Paul Havens and Bob Weedon. Appearing in the floor show will be Tommy Wright, pianist; Gilmore Johnson, dancer; Paul Havens, vocalist, and Dick Pierce and George Douglass, pianists. Dancing at the Saddle Shoe Shuffle will be from 8 p. m. until midnight in the ballroom of the I. A. C. Louie Lowe and his orchestra will play. Officers assisting with arrangements include Harry Scott and the Misses Lillian Hirschfelder, Josephine Welch and Nancy Scott.

May-Doebber Ceremony Set At 8:30 Tonight

Miss © Barbara June Doebber, daughter of Frederick A. Doebber, 3918 N. New Jersey St, will become the bride of Thomas B. May, son of Mr. and Mrs. Olney D. May, 316 Layman Ave. in a ceremony at 8:30 o'clock tonight at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel will officiate at the single ring service before an altar banked with palms and ferns and lighted with four stands of seven-branch candelabra. Miss Donna Ales will play bridal selections at the organ preceding and during the ceremony. The bride will be given in marriage by her father, She has chosen a white gown of bridal satin fashioned princess style, shirred at the shoulders with long, fitted sleeves. The bodice is fitted and cut with a V neckline and the skirt sweeps into a long train. Her blush veil will hang to the waist in front and extend the length of the train in the back. She will wear a cap of hand-made lace loaned to her by Mrs. Arthur Brown, and a strand of pearls, the gift of her grandmother, Mrs. Ada Lee. Her bridal bouquet will be of calla lilies tied with a white satin bow. Mrs. Bert Ferrara, Terre Haute, a sister of the bride, will be gowned in chartreuse moline made on Colonial lines with fitted bodices and hoop skirts. She will carry an arm bouquet of purple iris tied with a bow of chartreufe moline and will wear purple and chartreuse bows in her hair. The bridesmaids, Miss Jane Norton, Miss Mary Aughinbaugh and Mrs. J. C. Daugherty, will wear dresses like the matron of honor’s. They will carry small French bouquets of violets and Talisman roses. After a short wedding trip East, the couple will be at home after April 24 at 5822 E. Washington St.

Wedding Date of Dr. Harrison Set

Times Special BALTIMORE, April 14—Miss Anna Goldsborough Collins, Cambridge, Md., has announced the engagement of her niece, Miss Katharine Thomas Collins, daughter of the late Lieut. and Mrs. James Thomas Collins, and granddaughter of Judge James Collins, to Dr. Thurston Harrison, son of Prof. and Mrs. John Smith Harrison, Indianapolis. Dr. Harrison, who is a member of the house staff of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, is a graduate of Amherst College and the Indiana University School of Medicine. The wedding will be July 15 at Grace Methodist Church. Edward Woodberry Harrison, Indianapolis, a brother of the bridegroom-to-be, will be best man. Ushers will include Baltimore; Dr. Thomas Conder, Baltimore; James Donald Pierce, Indianapolis, and Thomas Southworth Harrison, Indianapolis.

Miss Doran Hostess

Miss ‘Connie Doran, 433 W. 43d 8t., will be hostess to members of

the I. G. W. A. Club of Shortridge | High Schoel this evening at her

home. f

Miss Hudson to Entertain |

Dance Class of Y. W.00 Sponsor Group From I. U.

The Modern Dance Class of the Y. W. C. A. will sponsor a program by a dance group from Indiana University tonight at Hollenbeck Hall

of the Y. W. Miss Jane Fox, physical education instructor at the school, group. The patrons include Messrs. and Mesdames Walter Krull, James L. Murray, H. H. Arnholter, B. Scott Goodwin, Boyd Miller, William Bridges, W. W. Drake, Paul Richardt, O. F. Hands, A. O. Mason, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Osborne, Dr. Martha Souter, Miss Pearl Leonard and Mrs. Frieda Robinson. Dancers will include the Misses Ann Abbett, Marian Combs, Virginia Howard, Caroline Imel, Madylon O'Dowd, Betty Stilwell, Peggy Smith, Betty Lichtenberger and Edythe Thompson. The program will include technical demonstrations, a preclassical dance suite, a dance for two in Canon Form and current commentaries. Miss Elmira Holmdohl will be accompanist and Miss Alma Waldman

will have charge of the program.

Assisting her are the Misses Elzora Cring, Betty Rugh, Mary Risk, Beatrice Sykes, Thelma Alford, Betty Williams, Gwendolyn Phillips, Juliana Schlanzer, Esther Gardner, Mrs. iv C. Cory and Mrs. Clyde Wilan,

Board Meeting Monday

Members of the Federation of Mothers’ Choruses will conduct a board meeting at 10 a. m. Monday at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium. They will vote on the place of the annual spring luncheon.

is director of the dance|

H. M. Dowling Will Speak on’ ‘New Albany’,

P. E. O. Will Hear Speech On Monday; Irvington Club Will Meet.

Two guest days, an election, "§ presentation of a comic opera exe cerpts and discussions of New Ale bany, athletics, parliamentary proe cedure and present-day China, are scheduled for club meetings Mone day afternoon and evening. Henry M. Dowling will talk om “New Albany” following the dinner meeting of Chapter G of the P. E. O. Sisterhood Monday evening at the Irvington Methodist Church.

Mrs. George H.. Kingsbury will discuss “Chiang Kai-shek” before members of the Irvington Woman’s Club Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Thomas Carr Howe, 4226 N, Meridian St.

Mrs. John F. Engelke, will be hostess to the Carnelian Club at a luncheon and bridge meeting Mone day at her home, 2818 N. Talbott St. She will be assisted by Mrs, Russell H. Gilmore and Mrs. Horace M. Chadwick. John A. Bruhn will discuss “Athe letics” before members of the Ine dianapolis Literary Club Monday evening at the D. A. R. chapter house, 824 N. Pennsylvania St, 12:30 p. m,

“Rescind and Annual” will be the study topic for the meeting of the Indianapolis Parliamentary Law Club Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. P. Scott, 525 Buckingham Drive. The program and election will follow a luncheon.

Miss Myrtle Mize, 958 N. Penne sylvania St., will entertain members of the La Phyllis Club Monday at her home.

Pupils of the Burroughs School of Music will present sketches from “The Pirates of Penzance,” Gilbert and Sullivan opera, following the luncheon meeting of the Women’s Rotary Club at 12:30 p. m. Monday

at the Columbia Club.

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