Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1939 — Page 8

PAGE 8 Nonpartisan

School Ballot Betore P.-T. A.

Staggered Terms Urged For Trustees in Plea to Resolutions Group.

(Continued from Page One)

session if the Congress votes its approval of the move. The resolution, submitted by the Hammond P.-T. A. associations, said that codification of Indiana school laws to provide for nonpartisan elections is “not only desirable, but absolutely essential to the maintenance of good schools.” The resolution asso is directed toward the goal of staggered terms of office.

Hits at Favoritism

Mr. Wyatt, in his speech, urged parents and teachers to co-operate in removing from schools “the ageold pressure of politics and favoritism.” “So long as the members of our State Department of Education Administration have not the security of one hour in their positions,” he said, “there will be a temptation to timidity and political bartering. “We can eventually place the office of state superintendent on a}

plane of dignity and security which | §

will more often attract persons of high qualifications and courage of their convictions.” The Congress suports passage of a bill to amend the Constitution to permit the appointment rather than the election of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Other co-operative works urged for the parents an dteachers by Mr. Wyatt included the placing in schools of courses which will dignify and elevate the home. He urged more carcful thought be given to the recreational side of the school program. He recommended courses in schools which will give a wider understanding of present forms of] government and courses designed to aid young people in the occupational world.

Mrs. Hastings Speaks

Mrs. William A. Hastings, vice president of the national Region IV, also spoke at the morning session on “They Knew What They Wanted.” Mrs. Bruce Maxwell presented a memorial service. Resolutions read for the first time at this morning's session and brought up for passage tomorrow include one for a stand against gambling and “other forces which tend to destroy the home and faith in the church.” A request that the organization ask Governor Townsend to restore the attendance division of the State Department of Public Instruction was made at yesterday afternoon’s session. The division, eliminated by the last Legislature, set the standard for local attendance work. The P.-T. A supported the division since its establishment in 1921. Mrs. Murray, president of the Congress and legislative chairman, asked local legislative chairmen to contast their local attendance officers for their opinions on the need for the division. One resolution read this morning will urge the enlargement of school programs to include the use of school plants for recreation and adult education. “The Congress,” reads one resolution,” pledges its support to the de-

Mrs. W. Bernice Cowger. stalled are Mrs. Eakin Jr., president; Mrs. Carter, vice president; Neva Everman, Richard Gardner, Miss Jeanne Patridge, sergeant-at-arms.

RUG IN MAKING AT PERSIAN TEA .

Mrs. Walter S.

Kappas’ Board Meets Monday; Reports Carded

A board of directors meeting, a luncheon and book review and an

installation of officers are included in activities of several Indianapolis sororities for Friday and early next week,

The Board of Directors of Mu

Chapter Foundation of Kappa Kappa Gamma will meet at 2:30 p. m. Monday at the Dutier chapter house, 821 W. Hampton Drive. The semiannual meeting of the incorporators will be held in conjunction with the board meeting.

Members of the yard committee

will report on the landscaping project at the chapter house and a new chaperon will be approved.

Officers will be installed at a

meeting of Alpha Beta Chi, Monday at the Kopper Kettle. The ceremony will follow a dinner with Mrs. Gilbert T. Carter in charge.

Mrs. Carter will be assisted by O. Eakin Jr. and Miss Officers to be in-

Miss Mrs. and

secretary, treasurer,

Theta Tau Psi will meet for

luncheon at 1 p. m. Friday at the home of Mrs. Paul Kester, 909 N. Denny St. review “Hawk in the Wind” (Helen Topping Miller).

Mrs. Rex Haislup will

Members of Alpha Chapter, Rho

Delta Sorority, will entertain with

velopment of some plan which willja formal dinner in honor of new

offer vocational training and healthful recreation. The Congress is firmly of the opinion that all schcol programs should be under local and state control.”

Urges Vocational Programs

Mrs. Murray said the resolution lends the P.-T. A.’s support to adult and vocational education programs such as the one now being discussed by the National Youth Administration. A Men's Breakfast and one for City and Council Presidents were! held this morning. Dr. Lillian R.| Smith, Lansing, Mich, national] chairman of Summer Roundup for Children, will lead a conference on| the roundup this afternoon. Miss] Mary L. Matthews, state chairman| of homemaking, will preside at the| homemaking conference. Those who will participate are F. L. Reynolds, Purdue University; R. B. Linville, Lafayette; Mrs. Gertrude Myers, Ft. Wayne, and Mrs. Harry Bain.

Special Conferences Listed

Special conferences and their leaders include: Publications, Mrs. Frank Rieman; parliamentary procedure, Mrs. Homer J. Miller; high schools, Lloyd Ashby; kindergarten, Miss Ruth Patterson; safety, Miss Allegra J. Ingleright, South Bend, and student aid, Mrs. R. W. Gehres, | Shelbyville. Dr. Clifford Shaw of the Institute of Juvenile Research in Chicago will | speak at the banquet tonight on| “The Importance of the Participa- | tion of Local Residents in the Development of Programs for the Prevention of Delinquency.” Governor Townsend will extend greetings to the delegates. The Jordan Instrumental Trio under direction of Edwin Jones will present a musical) program. Honor guests are to in-| clude Dr. Smith, Miss Nellis C. Young, Messrs. and Mesdames Floyd McMurray, K. V. Ammerman, Malcolm Dunn and Mrs. Hastings. Dr. L. A. Pittenger, president of! Ball State Teachers College, Muncie, will talk on “Educating Young in a Democracy” at tomorrow merning’s session. A panel discusison on the convention theme, “Guiding Youth Toward Ideals of Democratic Living,” will foilow.

Women’s Council Renames Six Aids

Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher will head the Indianapolis Council of Women in the ensuing year following her reelection by the board of trustees. Other officers renamed are Mrs. J. H. Armington, first vice president; Mrs. Arthur S. Brown, second vice president; Mrs. E. J. Unruh, recording secretary; Mrs. Ernest B. Thompson, corresponding secretary, and Mrs, J. D. Smith, treasurer.

P.-T. A. of Parkview Sponsors Hobby Fair

The Parent-Teacher Association of Parkview School 81 will sponsor a hobby fair tonight in the school auditorium with prizes for the best hobbies displayed by both

members tomorrow evening at

Catherine’s Tearoom.

Miss Virginia White is chairman

of the committee in charge, assist-

ed by Mrs. Harry Snodgrass and Miss Ethel Jackson. Those to be initiated include the Misses Goldie Johnson, Helen Reith, Dorothy Tandy, Ruth Warringer and Ruth Young. Miss Evelyn Mead, president, will conduct the services. Mrs. Snodgrass, vice president, will make a welcoming talk and Miss Norma Schumacher, pledge captain, and Mrs. H. H. Luedemann, sorority mother, will speak. A centerpiece of sweetpeas and roses in the sorority colors of orchid and old |rose will decorate the table. Miniature corsages will be given as | favors and wooden wall plaques bearing the sorority crest will be presented to new members.

Tea, Broadcast Highlight Parley Of Alpha Delta Pi

A Panhellenic tea and a radio broadcast will highlight the Eta province convention of Alpha Delta Pi Sorority to be held this week-end at the Indianapolis Atheltic Club. The Indianapolis Alumnae Club, of which Mrs. C. H. Machamer is president, will have charge of arrangements. Active and alumnae members from Indiana University, the University of Illinois, Hanover and Lake Forest Colleges will attend. Members of the Indianapolis Panhellenic Association and presidents of Butler sororities will be guests at ‘a candlelight tea to be held at 3:30 Pp. m. Saturday in the Green Room. Alpha Delta Pi members will greet all Greek letter organizations in a radio program over WIRE at 10 a. m. Sunday. Music by the Hanover chapter sextet will be featured. Miss Maxine Blake, national first vice president, will be honor guest and speaker at a formal banquet Saturday evening. Other officers to attend are Mrs. Howard R. Peterson, Chicago, editor of the sorority publication; Miss Mary Elizabeth McKeand, Eta province president; Mrs. Richard M. Palmer, Chicago. province vice president, and Mrs. R. A. Sheppard, Cleveland Heights, O., Zeta province president. Convention committees include Miss Ruth Merrifield, general chairman; Mrs. Phil Davidson, luncheon; Mrs. Roy W. Johnson, Miss Helen Adolay and Miss Lois Ann Hodgin, Panhellenic tea; Miss Pauline Rathert, Miss Jane Fix and Mrs. L. A. Hart, banquet; Miss Naomi Tevebaugh and Mrs. William L. Frenzel, registration; Mrs. Charles Colbert, announcements; Mrs. Rosemary Brown, transportation; Mrs. Paul Edwards, Mrs. A. E. Dorsey and the Misses Lucille Kribs, Katherine Sweet and Margaret Presnall, tea hostesses, and Mrs. Dale Sare, publicity.

Mary Aldea Is Hostess

Miss Mary Aldea will be hostess at the meeting of Delta Chapter, Xi

Grow watched a weaver at work on a rug at the Persian Tea, which was held yesterday afternoon at John Herron Art Museum in conjunction with an exhibit of antique Persian rugs.

Parties Are Arranged Among 400 Expected at Filmarte Guild's

Third Theater-Supper Tonight

By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON

Beside giving their French a brace Filinarte Guild subscribers who see “Coeur de Paris” tonight will be entertained witli a foreign film that blends comedy with near tragedy. The picture stars Raimu, known as France's greatest character comedian, in the role of a Parisian shopkeeper whose heart runs away with his head. Michele Morgan, talented French beauty who played opposite Charles Boyer in “Orage,” is feminine lead. Among the limited group of 400 attending the guild’s third theatersupper at 8:30 p. m. at the Indianapolis Athletic Club several parties have been arranged. With Miss Helen Coffey, supper chairman, wiil be her mother, Mrs. J. W. Coffey, Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey H. Eno, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice T. Harrell and Mrs. Harold Morgan. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Runnels Harrell’s guests will include Mr. and Mrs. Philip Boyd of Palm Springs, Cal.; Messrs. and Mesdames Fisk Landers, Frank J. Hoke and Orland A. Church. With Mrs. Kurt F. Pantzer, a member of the organization committee, and Mr. Pantzer are to be Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Gallahue and Edward Gallahue. Mesdames Samuel Reid, Samuel B. Sutphin and Frank D. Stalnaker will be together. Another group will include Messrs. and Medames Carl H. Wallerich, Uz McMurtrie, Clemens O. Mueller and Russell Willson. At one table will be Messrs. and Mesdames A. D. Lange, A. J. Wohlgemuth and C. A. Behringer.

8 8 # # # #

Others Make Reservations

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bates Johnson's party will include Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Efroymson, Mrs. F. C. Wagner and E. Mark Ferree. Mme. Marie Henry, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Gallagher and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Rynerson will be together. With Mrs. Irving M. Fauvre will be Mr. and Mrs. Elijah B. Martindale. Mr. and Mrs. Piatt F. Searle will attend with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest H. Krutzsch. Julian Kiser, Robert Marks and William M. Meyers have arranged a party and Mr. and Mrs. Horace E. Storer and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Lugar will be together. Other reservations have been made by the Misses Anne Ayres, Beatrice: Gerrin and Anna Simon, Dr. and Mrs. P. E. McCown, Dr. and Mrs. George Garceau, Messrs. and Mesdames William D. Guyton, Leo X. Smith, Harry S. Glickman, Richard Bunch, Paul E. Crane, Mesdames A. W. Herrington, Albert Shouse, Bert McCammon, Blaine H. Miller, F. Neal Thurston, Hortense Rauh Burpee, Fannie T. Bryson, R. D. Bomgardner and Samuel Freeman, Dr. Alan Sparks, Clarence F. Merrell, Norman E. Titus, Kenneth Woolling Jr. and Max de Vietien.

= #" = : 8 = ”

Lecture on Persian Rugs

Sculpture Court at the John Herron Art Museum assumed the aspect of a shah’s palace yesterday afternoon when the Art Association’s activities and membership committees gave a Persian tea preceding A. T. Peara’s talk on Persian rugs. In Persian costumes Mesdames Noble Dean, Charles R. Weiss, Walter S. Grow, Julia Bretzman Shields and Henrik Mayer served tea and sweetmeats against a background of antique oriental rugs being currently exhibited by Mr. Peara of Davenport, Iowa, and several local collectors. Mr. Peara’s nieces, the Misses Kathaleen Peara and Virginia Matlob of Chicago, presided at the brass samovars. The tea table was laid with a handmade cloth of Persian design with a brass bowl of pear blossoms and calendulas in the center. Mr. Peara, who addressed the 150 guests in Persian costume, stressed the importance of the purifying process and the use of distilled vegetable dyes in producing the soft, subdued tones of fine Persian rugs. He said blue, “the richest color of Persia,” is produced from the grape hyancinth; yellow is achieved by combining saffron and sumach roots; green is attained from the shoots of young apple trees mixed with tulips; purple is a combination of pomegranates, beets and lilac blossoms, and brown comes from the bark of trees and the shells of insects. “There are 72 different designs of prayer rugs since each of the 72 different denominations of the Mohammedan religion has a different form of prayer design,” he explained. “In most prayer rugs with the tree of life design the cypress is used as a model.” Among the outstanding rugs in the exhibition is a Fereghan exactly 12 feet one inch by 12 feet one inch, “the most perfect square rug ever made in Persia.” The lotus flower forms the design of an exquisite blue Ispahan. Rugs lent by local collectors include a Kerman, a Princess Bokhara and a Persian rug with Chinese influence belonging to Mrs. Frank A. Hamilton; a Ganza sent by Mrs. Elizabeth Marmon and a late 18th Century Senna sent by Mrs. James W. Fesler. William G. Irwin of Columbus has lent a 16th Century Senna; there’s a Fereghan belonging to Will Sears and J. R. Benjamin has sent a Heraki and a Keshan.

W. C. T. U. Group to Plant Tree

In Memory of Frances Willard|

An all-day meeting tomorrow, a luncheon and talk, a book review next month and two temperance meetings are included in activities planned by Indianapolis churchwomen’s organizations and related groups. Officers will be elected at the luncheon tomorrow at 12:30 p. m. of the Alice Meier Circle of the Broadway Methodist Church, at the

pianist and Mrs. Elbert Moore, pres-| | ident, will preside. Mrs. Mildred Sullivan will talk | \

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | REFRESHMENTS IN

home of Mrs. J. Lowell Craig, 4466 Central Ave. Mrs. J. L. Robertson will present a paper on “Highlights in the Life of Benjamin Harrison,” to be read by Mrs. Adolph Schernekau. Recognition services for past presidents will be conducted and a general meeting will be held. Members of the committee in charge of the meeting are Mesdames Dallas H. Pierce, Neil E. Crull, W. N. Knowles, J. Hugh Shimp and E. C. Zaring. Members of the Martha Hawkins Society of the First Baptist Church will have an all-day meeting tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Herbert Johnson, 517 Blue Ridge Road. Dr. Mavis L. Holmes will speak and Mrs. W. O. Cheeseman will give the devotions. A tree planting will be conducted Friday afternoon on the Church of God lawn by the Mary E. Balch Women’s Christian Temperance Union. The planting will be in observance of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Frances E. Willard. The Rev. P. B. Turner, pastor of the church, and Mrs. C. W. Ackman, County W. C. T. U. president, will speak. Mrs. A. A. Arnold will have

a ons and Mrs. Paull Delta Xi Soran: at 3 Belock to- {Du ect a m

at the meeting Monday evening of the New Crusade Youth's Temper- © ance Council at the home of Miss | Thelma and Miss Mary Ellen mun | miller, 1056 Castle Ave.

Miss Helen Bishop, vice president, | A) will have charge of the meeting and Miss Mary Gross will give the and | | votions. Miss Mary Ellen Buhmiller will have charge of a program of special music.

To Have Roundtable

The Story-of-the-Month Club will conduct a roundtable meeting | \ at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the clubroom in the Indiana World all Memorial. A number of special | \ guests will attend. Carl Fuller, secretary, will submit applicants’ names for membership. Members of the membership committee are Miss Kate Gamboldt Dyer, Mrs. Marvel Johnson and Miss Edith Lott. An open forum meeting for members will be hy: May LS Mr.

Story-Of-Month Club|\

SAME MOTIF ,

Mrs. John Eric Dalton is served Persian tea by Miss Kathaleen Peara, Chicago, who presided at the samovar. Towa, collector and authority on Persian rugs, spoke at the tea.

A. T. Peara, Davenport,

Miss Greenen To Be Honored; Weds May

Bridal showers#tonight for three Indianapolis young women Whose marriages will be next month are included in the calendar of prenuptial events. One young woman was feted last night. Members of the Wednesday Bridge Club will honor Miss Dorothy Greenen at a Fiesta shower and dinner at 7 o'clock this evening at the Marott Hotel. Miss Greenen, s member of the club, is to be married May 6 to Francis X. Deery in the Holy Cross Catholic Church.

Guests at the shower will be Mrs. Joseph Greenen, mother of the bride-to-be, and Mrs. Bert Deery, Mr. Deery’s mother. Club members include Mesdames Kenneth O'Neil, Walter Oliver, Leo J. Martin; the Misses Mary Naughton, Katherine Houppert, Leona Gorman, Aileen Gillespie, Mary Cuhl, Grace and Mary Greenen. The bride-to-be was feted recently at a miscellaneous shower at the home of Mrs. B. F. Deery. Decorations were carried out in the bridal colors of orchid and white.

” ” #

The Misses Hermine Ritter, Anne Lohman and Mrs. John A. Lawrie will entertain at Mrs. Lawrie’s home with a personal shower tonight in honor of Miss Mary Lou Sauer. Guests will include the Misses Marie Lauck, Adelaide Pierle, Florence Lucy Lavelle, Ruth Day, Mary Kraeszig, Mathilde Gasper and Mesdames Louise Schnippel, Charlotte Palmer, Helen Owens, Dot Field, Lee Annee, Marie Leppert, Thelma Kriner, Clara Shannon and Delores Hosey. » tJ ”

Miss Bernice Fogleman will entertain tonight with a bridal shower in honor of Miss Lottie Mae Pearson, daughter of Mrs. Harry Pearson, 1219 N. Ewing St., whose marriage to Richard Petty, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Petty, 2715 N. Gale St., will be the latter part of next month. Thirty-five guests will be entertained. The hostess will be assisted by her aunt. Mrs. P. A. Hockett.

2 ” »

Miss Rosemary Pearce, whose marriage to Robert Williams will be May '6, was honored at a kitchen shower last night at the home of Misses Patricia and Ruth Hurley, 1936 N. New Jersey St. The Misses Hurley were assisted by Miss Betty Bell. Guests included Mesdames Ernest Pearce, Asbury Williams, D. A. Hurley, James Bell, Robert Bell, Fred Bordenkecker, Stanley Lucasik, Eugene Krackenfels, James Burke, John McCreary; the Misses Betty Hindel, Margaret Johnson, Helen Baskerville, Cecilia George, Julia George, Margaret Elliott, Rose Lauber, Lucy Hutzler, Marjorie Ferree and Catherine Yenton.

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Times Photos. Several members of the Art Association’s activities and memberyship committees were hostesses. Mrs. Noble Dean (left) and Mrs. Charles R. Weiss are shown inspecting a 16th Century rug.

State Eastern Star Delegates Will Vote on Grand Chapter Officers at Convention Today

Officers of the Indiana Grand Chapter of the Order of Eastern Star will be elected at this aftéernoon’s session of the state conclave at the Naval Armory. More than 1400 delegates are attending sessions which will continue through tomorrow. A grand ball tonight at the armory will be the outstanding social event of the conference. Matrons and patrons of the 11th District will be in charge. A breakfast was given this morning at the Claypool Hotel in honor of the Most Worthy Grand Matron, Mrs. Anna Smalley of Butte, Mont.

A concert by the Masonic Home Band from Franklin will open tomorrow’s sessions. Reports by Elmer F. Gay, superintendent of the Home and Mrs. Marguerite Fisher, O.E. S. representative on the home’s board will be made. A business session is set for tomorrow afternoon and officers will be installed and standing committees named at the closing session tomorow evening. Members will visit the Masonic Home at Franklin on Friday.

The Past Matrons Club of 1937 will give a luncheon tomorrow in honor of Mrs. Fisher, Nabb, Ind, Past Worthy Grand Matron of Indiana O. E. S. Other guests will include Mrs. Mary Frances Price, Vincennes, another Past Grand Matron, and Mrs. Nellie Riffle and Mrs. Lillian Demars, past grand deputies. Prof. Truman G. Yuncker, DePauw University, will give an illustrated lecture on the Hawaiian Islands before members of the Day-

light Chapter 553, O. E. S, at 1:30 p. m. Friday at the Masonic Temple, North and Illinois Sts. Miss Melvis Balfour and Mrs. Agnes Singer will present Hawaiian music. An Hawaiian tea will follow.

Fresh Air Guild Will Give Silver Tea on Monday

The Theodore Potter Fresh Air School Guild will give a silver tea from 2:30 to 4:30 p. m. Monday at the school, 1600 E. 10th St. Mrs. Grace Golden, executive secretary of the Children’s Museum, will talk on her recent European trip. Miss Thelma Hunter will present readings and the Mardi Gras Singers from Tech High School will offer several selections. Mrs. William Johnston is tea chairman. Mrs. J. A. Meister, president, will preside.

‘WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1987" INSPECTING 16TH CENTURY RUG otis

Nominee Slate Awaited Today By Indorsers

Mrs. B. J. Roberts of Ft. Wayne Is Candidate ! For President.

Mrs. H. C. Tutewiler. chairman of the nominating committee of the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays, was to present a slate of nominees today at the organization's 24th

|annual convention at the Spink

Arms Hotel. The report probably will be adopted. Mrs. B. J. Roberts, Ft. Wayne, is a candidate for president. Others on the slate for. election include

Mrs. Ferd Lucas, Greencastle, first vice president; Mrs. A. J. Hueber, Indianapolis, second vice president; Mrs. E. L. Burnert, Indianapolis, third vice president; Mrs. C. J, Finch, Indianapolis, fourth vice president; Mrs. E. B. Campbell, Ft, Wayne, recording secretary; Mrs, A. L. Fonner, Ft. Wayne, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Joe Mce Cord, Greencastle, treasurer; Mrs, Tutewiler, Indianapolis, auditor. A resolution to bring attention to the “need for a more extensive showing of world events in their true light, particularly at this time when world conditions are distressingly disturbed,” was to be present ed. Mrs. Isaac Born, chairman of the resolutions committee, read the resolutions to the group.

Other resolutions expressed appre ciation to the motion picture proe ducers for the historical and biographical films and the musical and technicolor pictures of the last year and urged that crime not be extolled in any future films. Mrs. David Ross, founder of the organization and state president for many years, will be in charge of the luncheon program. Music will be provided by a string trio from Washington High School.

Dorothy Biddle Will Address Garden Club

Dorothy Biddle, editor of Garden Digest, will speak tomorrow after noon at the Woman's Department Club under auspices of the Gar= den Department. Presidents of Indianapolis garden clubs are to be guests. Mrs. Biddle will conduct a flower arrangement clinic. Mrs. Merritt E. Woolf heads the department. The American Home Department will hold a Home Show and Hobby Fair this afternoon at the clubhouse. O. H. Greist, state secretary of the Teachers’ Retirement Fund, will speak on “Mothers I Have Known.” Brief comments on hobbies will be made by Mesdames Felix McWhirter, J. R. Farrell, Clayton Ridge, M. Speers McCollum, Dr, Lenn L. Latham and Dr, Ben D. Moore. Mrs. William T. Randall

will give a dramatic reading.

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