Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1939 — Page 22
EDA TIE os em 1 State P.-T.A. President, Is Parent and Teacher Who Has No 1B Rearing but Keeps Bill, Jim and Susie ‘in Line’ by Suggestion N |
By ROSEMARY REDDING
PAGE 22 —— Children’s Civic Theater Play, "The Life of Stephen Foster,’ To Attract Many Young People
rs Murray, New Theory on Child
fa;
OTH parent and teacher is Mrs. James L. Mur-
IB RATA AAI AU IWR 7 reo Be
Several Parties Are Arranged for Last of Season Performances Sunday; Special Showing For Adults Included.
A number of younger people in the city will attend the performances of “The Life of Stephen Foster,” closing play of the Children’s Civic Theater tomorrow and Sunday. Performances will be at 10:30 a. m. and 2:30 p. m. tomorrow; 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon and a special showing at 8 o'clock in the evening to accomodate adults who are
not able to attend any of the other shows.
Attending the tomorrow morning showing will be a party composed of Ruth Baumeister, Monica Lennox, Ann Pritchard, Carolyn Rose, Helen Theone Iverson, Jean Ann Kendall, Sandra Krause, Drew Bayes, Donald McCallum and Harrison Marsh. Judy Abel, Franklin, will attend with Louise Dunning, Jessie May Brayton and John Richard Brayton Jr. Mrs. Horace Shonle will accompany her sons, Horace JT. and John and James Barnhill to the morning performance tomorrow. Joan, Doris and Robert McCord also will attend with their mother, Mrs. R. D. McCord. Mrs. B. W. Lodwick and her son James will attend with Joan Gibboney, Margaret and Raymond Smith and Lucy and David Rhoadarmer.
Alice Denny to Entertain
Alice Denny will entertain at a luncheon before the afternoon show tomorrow. Her guests will be Barbara Bradley, Marjorie Bain, Joan Alford, Nancy Stout, Emily Flick-
Literary Club Will Hear Talk By Dr. Milner
Program on International Relations Arranged by New Era Group.
Among discussion subjects for May Day club meetings Monday afternoon and evening will be Charles Darwin, international relations, convention reports and recently published books. Several groups will hear book reviews and another organization will hold its monthly ladies’ night. Mrs. Brandt F. Steele will read a paper on “This Life I've Loved” before members of the Irvington Woman’s Club Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. William H. Insley, 445 N. Audubon Road. :
Dr. Jean S. Milner will discuss
inger, Betty Crist, Betty Mayer, Joan Boozer and Ruth Elaine Good- | man. Jean Swaim, Ann Henshaw, | Eileen Smith and Iola Tomlinson | will attend together. Mrs. Ross M. Halgren and Mrs. | C. E. Cochrane will accompany their children, Mary Ellen Hal- | gren and Patricia Cochrane. Mrs. Merrill Esterline and her children, | John and Jane, will attend with | Mrs. John Paul Jones and her son and daughter, Nancy and John. | Rosalie and Carol McKee will be| present with their mother, Mrs. | Myron J. McKee, and grandmothers, Mrs. S. A. Wiggins and Mrs. W. E.| McKee, Bobby Criss. Larry Larsen, Louis and William Ward and Donald Morris will be together at the after- | noon performance tomorrow. Mes-| dames George Zeigler, Robert Sweeney, Raymond P. Van Camp; | Mary Helen and Jack Wells will at- | tend with Mrs. Rosamond Van Camp | Hill, coauthor of the play, and her | niece, Carol Zeigler. Tommy and Susan Atkins will be | with their grandmother, Mrs. Edna | Martin, Mrs. John Grylls, her chil- | dren, Peter and Nan; and Mrs. | Charles Adams.
Other Groups Listed Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Whetsell will |
“Sir Charles Darwin and the Social Consequences of His Influence” before members and guests of the Indianapolis Literary Club at the
ladies’ night meeting Monday eve-
ning at the D. A. R. chapter house, 824 N. Pennsylvania St.
A program on international relations will be presented before members of the New Era Club at their meeting Monday at the home of Mrs. Warren A. Hallock, 3536 N. Meridian St. Mrs. Everett A. Hunt will assist Mrs. Hallock.
Papers will include “The Far East Question” by Mrs. Thomas S. Martin and a book review, “Zero Hour” by Miss Nellie Fatout.
Members of the Governor Oliver P. Morton Chapter of the National Society of the Daughters of the Union are to elect officers at their meeting Monday at the Indiana World War Memorial. Delegates to the national convention last month will report during the business session. Hostesses will include Mesdames U. G. Dawson, May Neu, T. R. Ratliff, Beatrice Trusler and Mary B. Hedges.
Miss Mabel Goddard will discuss the four textbooks which she recent-
ly has published at the meeting of
members of Chaper G of the P. E.
accompany their children, Jean, |O. Sisterhood Monday evening at 7 Jack and Jeralyn, and their niece, o'clock. Miss Louise Braxton will be Joanne Witt, to the Sunday after- hostess at her home, 1434 N. Dela-
noon performance. Another group | attending Sunday afternoon will be Miss Pearl Glendenning, Macy | Glendenning, Betsy and Barbara) Cooper. In another party will be | Jeanne Smart, Betty Lynn Har-| gitt, Jean Sennhauser, Marcia Lyda, | Patricia Stevens, Peter Thompson | and Robert Auckley. { Mr. and Mrs. John Rynholm and Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Hebel will be with their daughters, Barbara Ryn- | holm and Jean Hebel. Mrs. J. L. Rainey will accompany her chil-| dren, Sarah Lee and James, Georgia | Pischer, Robert McBeth and George | Gafiney. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Car'er, par-| ents of Betty Carter, a member of | the cast, will attend with Mrs. Carter's sister, Miss Bessie Drillette, | Misses Jane and Joan Schmidt, Louisville, and Betty's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George R. Davis, | land, Ill.
Name Narcissus Show Hostesses,
Hostesses were announced today | to serve at the narcissus show the Indianapolis district of the Indiana
Garden Club will hold tomorrow |
and Sunday at John Herron Art Museum.
Members of local garden clubs]
ware St.
Mrs. Russell Sanders will review “Remember the End” (Turnbull) at the May meeting of the Young
Women’s Democratic Club of Marion
County at 6 o'clock Monday evening at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. Kathryne Clements, president, will be in charge. Robert L. Tilton, president of the Young Democrats of Indiana, will speak.
Members of the Chic Club will hold a progressive dinner this evening. Miss Joan Johnson and Miss Corinne Cox will be hostesses for
|the event, which will begin at the
Cox home, 2909 Washington Blvd.
An illustrated lecture on “Famous Gardens of America” will be presented at the meeting at 1:30 p. m. today of the Spade and Trowel Garden Club at the home of Mrs. Calvin R. Hamilton. Plans for a children’s fall flower show will be completed at the meeting.
Mrs. James L. Murray and Susie.
Elissa Landi, Actress, Novelist And Musician, to Speak Before
Contemporary
Elissa Landi, stage and screen
Club Wednesday
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON
star, is to discuss and demonstrate
“The Difference Between Stage and Screen Acting” at the Contempo-
rary Club’s guest meeting at 8:30 p.
m. Wednesday at English’s. John P.
Collett, Contemporary Club president, and Mrs. Collett will give a dinner at Woodstock Club for Miss Landi preceding the meeting. Miss Landi, who has snatched time from her acting career to write four novels, is also a talented ballet dancer. pianist, mezzo soprano and
composer of music. Born in Venice, she is reputed to be the grand-
daughter of the Empress Elizabeth of Austria.
Her first stage apearance with
several successful seasons in London plays. ing role in the Broadway production of “A Farewell to Arms.”
the Russian Ballet was followed by In 1930 she had the lead“Neil-
son,” her first book, was published in 1925. Later novels were “The Helmers.” “House for Sale” and “The Ancestor.”
Sweden, Germany and the U. S.
Her motion picture career includes films made in London, Paris,
Her most notable roles here have
been in “The Sign of the Cross,” “Body and Soul,” “The Count of Monte Cristo” and “After the Thin Man.” ILiast summer she played in
Flower ‘Clinic’ Held
The three cardinal principles
stock at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis. Mass.
8 2 =»
of flower arrangement are. good
balance, an interesting silhouette and a center of interest, according to Mrs. Dorothy Biddle of New York who conducted a flower arrangement “clinic” for the garden department of the Woman's Department Club yesterday afternoon at the clubhouse. “Balance by placement is easily achieved by moving the arrange-
ment on the block or tabie,” she
said. “The more variation in the
size and shape of the voids the more interesting the silhouette will be. The place where the lines or the composition converge should be over
the point where the stems meet.”
garden books, demonstrated quick
rangements brought in by garden department.members.
Mrs. Biddle, editor of “Garden Digest” and author of several
cures for several ailing flower arThe audience
of 200 included presidents of garden clubs in the Indianapolis district
as special guests. “Styles in flower arrangement hats,” she declared. “A trend of variety together.”
change just as styles in women’s today is to group flowers of one
She demonstrated a short-cut in handling flowers of one kind by tying them in small bunches with florist’s tape.
She said the first requirement for making a good flower arrange-
ment is a satisfactory holder. “It
flexibility and be either very inconspicuous or easy to conceal.”
exhibited the needlepoint type, for
must be heavy, rustproof, give you She heavy mass arrangements, and the
hangon type that hooks over the top of the container with wire arms to guide the flowers. An ingenious invention of her own was made of
sheet lead cut in strips which bend to fit any container.
She also
explained how to make holders from paraffin and bird gravel to fit
individual containers.
“The more simple the shape of the container the more interest you can put into the flower pattern,” she said. ‘The container should
suggest the design and influence the shape of the arrangement.”
# #* ®
Wellesley Club to Elect
® #® ®
The Indianapolis Wellesley Club will elect a vice president and
treasurer at its monthly luncheon
meeting at 1 p. m. Monday at the
home of Mrs. W. J. E. Weber. Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. Richard Jacobs and Mrs. James Gipe. The nominating committee includes Mesdames John R. Curry, John Clark and Frederick M. Hadley. Indianapolis bridge players have received invitations to the fifth
annual Wabash Valley Bridge Tournament to be held
ay 12, 13 and
14 at the Terre Haute House, Terre Haute. Indianapolis members of
the tournament committee are Mesdames A. R. Coffin, Keith Johns, and E. J. Ittenbach, Walter J. Pray and Franklin Inman.
Upstate Symphony Group Names Aids
Times Special LAFAYETTE, April 28. — Mrs. Floyd Eastwood will be chairman of the Lafayette unit of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra Women’s Committee for the ensuing year. Officers were elected at a re-
who will act as hostesses include ; Mesdames Bon Aspy, Robert Mann- SE Hoe a. feld and A. J. Shoptaugh, Neophyte win be acting vice chairman: Miss id . nS E Pitcher, Noe Lee Slayback, recording secIrvington; Mesdames Thomas Pe a Mrs. Howard Romney,
Rogers, Burke Nicholas and G. E. : u Be oer, Forest ills: Mrs.| Ihe unit has set a membership Minor S. Goulding, Mrs. A. Y. Wil-|802l of 500 for the year and is plan-
son, Miss Margaret Stevenson and DINE to sponsor again a children’s Miss Anna Hosea, North End, and COUCErt in Lafayette. Mrs. RichMesdames Charles Latham, Garvin ard Taylor is membership chair-
m, Sylvester Johnson Jr. Man; Miss Mary Bowen, publicity Ni row > chairman, and Mrs. Cable Ball and
Mrs. Alfred Gray, members of the unit board. Dr. Louise J. Meikle is chairman of the sponsor group.
and Noble Dean, Indianapolis. The show will be open to the public from 2:30 to 10:30 p. m. tomorrow and from 1 to 9 p. m. Sunday. Mrs. B. F. Orr, district chairman, is in charge of the show.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony P. Lauck, 1458 S. Meridian St, are among patrons for the Senior Ball at Notre Dame University next Friday in the
Masonic Home Visit End O. E. S. Session
A visit to the Masonic Home at Franklin today will conclude the 65th annual convention of the Order of the Eastern Star. Installation of grand chapter officers last night at
P1 Phi Will Reign At Butler Prom
Miss Doris Brown, Pi Beta Phi, will reign tonight as queen of the annual junior prom of Butler University from 10 p. m. until 2 a. m. at the Naval Armory. Music will be provided by Joe Sanders and Hal Lieber’s orchestras. Attending the queen will be Misses Barbara Day, Nancy Baker, Mary Adelaide Denton, Emily Wilson, Mary Scheidler, Mary Jane Mount, Martha Mason and Elnora Hartman. Dixie Dunbar, Hollywood actress, will be a special guest of the committee in charge and will be made a “Sweetheart of Butler University in a ceremony at the dance. About 156 reservations have been made for tables, according to Rodney Hankins, chairman.
Local Girl in Court Of DePauw Queen
Times Special GREENCASTLE, April 28—Miss Marjorie Raiser, 3948 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, is among 12 DePauw University senior coeds who will have places in the May Queen’s court in the annual May Day ceremony Thursday on the University campus. Miss Jean Woods, Evansville, is Queen and Miss Ruth Horine, Liouisville, maid of honor. Attendants will include Miss Vera Bundy, Zionsville; Miss Lillian Applegate, Thorntown; Miss Anne Rose, Brookville; Miss Mildred Gadient, New Albany; Miss Betty Acuff, Knoxville, Tenn.; Miss Sally Pope, Falls Church, Va.; Miss Betty Parker, Hinsdale, Iil.; Miss Helen Young, Wilmette, I11.; Misses Ruth Harrison, Esther Jacobs and June Winter,
Chicago.
Speaker and
Toastmaster
Rockne Memorial. Frank J. Lauck, the Naval Reserve Armory termitheir son, is chairman of the dance nated the business sessions of the
program committee. Miss Naomi Tevebaugh will entertain several guests this week-end who will attend the Alpha Delta Pi province convention here. Her guests will include Miss Margaret McKay, Chicago Heights; Miss Jane Dittmer, Kouts, and Miss Katherine Boggs, St. Louis. Dr. Lacey Shuler returned recently from a month's trip in Europe.
P. O. Club Entertains
New Heads Tomorrow
Members of the P. O. Club will entertain new officers at a luncheon tomorrow noon in Block's Tearoom. Officers include Miss Betty Jane Mitchell, president; Miss Marjorie Roseblock, vice president; Miss Georgia Anna Madden, treasurer,
|two-day conclave.
Mrs. Josephine Brown, Rushville, past grand matron of Indiana, presided at the installation ceremonies. Mrs. Alene Vey, Marion, succeeded Mrs. Ruth Miers, Greensburg, as worthy grand matron. Owen S. Ramsey, Switz City, was inducted as worthy grand patron.
Indorsers Will Hear Mrs. Julia Tutewiler
Mrs, Julia Belle Tutewiler will review the screen story of “Wuthering Heights” before members of the Indianapolis Indorsers of Photoplays at 11 o'clock Tuesday morning in the Claypool Hotel. The program will follow the monthly business meeting o'clock. Anyone
and Miss Carol Hawkins, secretary.
Board Selects District Heads Of State P.-T . A.
Annual Convention Closes After Meeting of Managers.
Committee chairmen amd district directors of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers were named yesterday afternoon at a meeting of the board of managers in the Claypool Hotel. The annual state convention closed yesterday after a three-day session. Mrs. Edward Watskin, Hammond, and Mrs. Glen Bowen, Ft. Wayne, were elected members of the executive board. Committee heads named include: Mrs. Carl Manthei, Indianapolis, legislation; Mrs. George L. Clark, Indianapolis, assistant editor of the Indiana Parent-Teacher magazine; Mrs. Joseph Walker, Greenfield, bulletin editor; Miss Mary L. Matthews, Lafayette, homemaking; Mrs. S. M. Myers, Indianapolis, historian; Mrs. Homer J. Miller, South Bend, parlimentarian; Mrs. R. W. Gehres, Shelbyville, student aid; Mrs. Bowen, standards of excellence, and Ralph Irons, Evansville, school education.
Others on Committees
Others are Mrs. Allegra Ingleright, South Bend, safety; Mrs. Herschell Knoll, Cloverdale,. rural service; Alex Jardine, Evansville, radio; Mrs. Wilbut Dickinson, Richmond, program; Mrs. James Kirwin, Ft. Wayne, national parent-teacher magazine; Mrs. Waldo George, Kokomo, budget; Mrs. Donald Henry, South Bend, character education; Mrs. Watskin, child hygiene; Mrs. William McCoy, Huntington, city councils, and Mrs. Frank Rieman, Indianapolis, publications. Additional heads named are Mrs. Irma Kint, Ft. Wayne, Founders’ Day; Lloyd W. Ashby, Richmond, high schools; Mrs. G. R. McGregor, South Bend, international relafions; Dr. Edna Hatfield Edmondson, Bloomington, juvenile protection; Miss Ruth Patterson, Indianapolis, kindergarten; Miss Hazel Warren, Indianapolis, libraries; Mrs. Logan G. Hughes, Indianapolis, membership; Mrs. C. J. Keasby, Terre Haute, mental hygiene; Mrs. Windsor B. Harris, Richmond, social hygiene, and Mrs. Hall Ulen, Scottsburg, music.
District Governors Named
District governors named include: Mrs. O. H. Umbaugh, Hammond, 3A; Mrs. M. E. Johnson, Peru, 3C; Mrs. Claude Hudson, Lafayette, 3D; Mrs. Iiee Mason, Elkhart, 4A; Mrs. Lawrence Goble, Ft. Wayne, 4B; Mrs. P. A. McGinn, Terre Haute, 5A; Mrs. Walter Boyd, Thorntown, 5B; Mrs. John K. Burns, Gosport, 5C, and Mrs. Clyde Fisch, Bedford, 5D. Mrs. Alfred Johnson, Princeton, is the new director of 6A; Mrs. Lafayette O’Haver, 6B; Mrs. Edward Holft, 6C; Mrs. P. J. Coutas, Tell City, 6D; Mrs. Henry Goll, Indianapolis, 7A, and Mrs. O. H. Wilson, Richmond, 7B. Additional appointments are to be made later.
Alpha Chi Mothers Will Install Monday
Officers will be installed at the meeting Monday of the Alpha Chi Omega Mothers’ Club following a 1 o’clock luncheon at the Pleasant View Lutheran Church. Those to be installed include Mrs.
.|Jean Lansley, president; Mrs. R. F.
Benham, vice president; Mrs. G. P. Schultz, secretary; Mrs. C. W. Gilkinson, treasurer, and Mrs. A. R. Chapman, corresponding secretary. Ladies of the church will serve luncheon at the concluding meeting of the club year. Mrs. Harold Irelan, out-going president, will conduct installation services.
Prepare for Session
Delegates will be appointed to the state convention of Service Star Legion at a meeting at 2 p. m. Tuesday of the Hamilton-Berry
Indiana World War Memorial. The convention will be held May 16th and 17th in La Porte.
Baxters Wed 25 Years
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Baxter, 1133 N. Kealing Ave, will entertain from
ray, new president of the Indiana Congress of
Parents and Teachers.
She’s mother to Bill, a junior at Purdue University; Jim, a Shortridge High School junior, and
Susie, a sixth grader.
Residents of Shirley and Eden may recall her as the vivacious Miss Lucy Hughes who taught their youngsters their three R’s. That was before she became the Mrs. to James L. Murray. local attorney. To P.-T. A. members she is best known as a chairman who has done much to make local P.-T. A. agsociations and the state group “legislative conscious.” Last night she dashed home after a strenuous three-day state convention, where delegates representing 66,000 members elected their leader. morning she was off for Cincinnati to attend the convention of the National Congress of P.-T. A. At home at 64 E. 73d St. yesterday evening Jim rode his bike and Susie played catch in the backyard with a friend while their father perused the evening paper. Jim's reaction to his mother’s election was “Well, Dad, now you'll have to buy mother a bigger
mail box.”
Mrs. Murray’s theory on rearing children? She doesn’t have any. It appears that Jim and Susie and probably Bill, too, haven’t been saddled by formal discipline but have been “brought into line” by suggestion rather than mandate. One cancamaraderie pervading ’
not remain immune too the the group. 8
E new leader of the state P.-T. A. is tall, trim and lively. A ready smile and a pair of twinkling eyes are outward expressions of a keen sense of humor. Some white appears to have crept prematurely into her shock of black, curly bobbed hair. She is one of the “Hughes girls” to oldtimers in Greenfield where her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. William G. Hughes, have lived for many years.
Mr. Hughes is an attorney.
Her sister, Mrs. Joseph W. Walker, Greenfield,
political circles.
Purdue.
Murray recalls.
This
the session.
“all I've got.”
Friends Will Entertain Tonight
marriages will be soon.
a miscellaneous shower for Miss Dorothy Greenen, whose marriage to Francis A. Deery will be May 6. The party will be held at the Spink Arms Hotel, with the hostesses’ mothers, Mrs. John Custard and Mrs. Frank Cuhl, assisting. Out-of-town guests at the party will be Mrs. Michael J. Burke, Chicago; Miss Virginia Rich, Terre Haute, and Miss June and Miss Arleen Bell, St. Louis.
Miss Patsy Boggs will entertain a miscellaneous shower and luncheon-bridge tomorrow at her home, 5320 Central Ave. in honor of Miss Thalia Eby, whose marriage to Edward Dunnington will be June 3. 2 2 2
Miss Traber Guthrie entertained last night at her home, 1433 N. Pennsylvania St. for Miss Beatrice Roehm, whose marriage to Donald E. Miller, Chicago, will be at 4 p. m. Saturday at the New Jersey Street Methodist Church. Guests with Miss Roehm, her mother, Mrs. Carl Roehm, and her sister, Miss Pauline Roehm, will be Miss Farrell Hoesel, Winamaec; Miss Sara Brisco, Edinburg; Miss Mary Ritz, Franklin; Mrs. John E. Ed-
In Honor of Dorothy Greenen; Miss Boggs to Fete Thalia Eby
April is still bringing showers to a number of Indianapolis brides-to-be, with one arranged for tonight and another for tomorrow afternoon. A personal shower last night and another shower held recently are included in prenuptial events for two of the young women whose
Mrs. Kenneth O'Neil and Miss Mary Cuhl will entertain tonight at
wards, the Misses Helen Hermon, Alice Hurd, Josephine Miller, Rita Johnson, Elizabeth Warren, Dorothy Williams and Jessie Moore,
Miss Josephine Wolfe, whose marriage to F. S. Stephenson Jr. will be May 6, was honored recently at a bridal shower by Miss Joanna Hinman. Guests included the Misses Ethel Wolfe, Florence Houze, Sally Butler, Lois Kelly, Mary Beale, Helen Rasn, Maebelle Gordon and Lucille Hinman.
n ad »
E. J. Meunier, 1624 N. Alabama St., is en route to Wilmington, Del., cacompanied by his daughter, Mrs. Joseph P, Gallagher, to attend the wedding tomorrow of Mr. Meunier’s son and Mrs. (Gallagher's brother, Dr. Paul L. Meunier. Miss Mary Lassey, daughter of Thomas J. Lassey, Wilmington, will become the bride of Dr. Meunier in the St. Anne’s Catholic Church in Wilmington. Dr. Meunier and Miss Lassey will live in Wilmington where he is a research chemist with DuPont. He was graduated from Butler University and Pennsylvania State University.
is state Congress publicity chairman and active in
Another sister, Mrs. G. N. Staf-
ford, is active in Federated club work. Sunday jaunts “home” to Greenfield are almost a ritual with the new president, her husband and children. Bill is engrossed in an electrical engineering course at
Mrs. Murray attended Bulter University where she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. Mr, Murray attended that school too and later Indiana Law School.” Horse and buggy trips were long be= tween Indianapolis and Eden and Shirley, Mr,
After about two years of teach
ing, the “schoolmarm” decided teaching was fine, len promising young lawyer was mighty fine
Swimming ix a favorite sport with the Murray family at their summer home in Pentwater, Mich., you may spy them in the pool at Meridian Hills, too, or Mrs, Murray turning in a neat score after a round of golf. Opponents report that several years ago she played 3 “smashing game of tennis.”
» # #
HE is a familiar figure at the State House during sessions of the General Assembly where she works for health education and children welfare legislation indorsed by the P.-T. A. and the League of Women Voters. Two hundred legislative chairmen of the Congress aided her at the past sessions through contacts in their local communities and at
At a convention informal dinner of the P.-T. A. she served as president of the Senate in a “takeoff” on the past legislative session. Members saw her ad libbing in the unrehearsed skit. She is known even better for her platform presence. Mrs. Murray is happy that she has been chosen to lead the Parent-Teacher organization. She conceives the job as a major civic contribution. And, like everything else she does, she intends to give it
Mothers’ Clubs Of Kindergarten
Set Yearly Fete =
b!
Mothers’ Clubs of the Indianape e olis Free Kindergarten Society will | hold their fifth annual spring luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Thursday at the North Methodist Church. Mrs. Walter S. Stockton, general chaire man, will preside. Other members of the generat committee are Mrs. Henry Brink man, hostess chairman; Mrs. Louis Krumb, table arrangements; Mrs, Charles J. Jones, publicity chaire man; Mrs. John Q. Kirkpatrick, ene tertainment, and Mrs. Clifford C, Reed, ticket chairman. Assisting Mrs. Brinkman will be Mesdames Harold Boese, Edward Bond, Raymon ¥reeman, John R. Jones, Harold Laut, Larkin Z. Shaffer and Carl G. Simon.
Mrs. Gartin Heads Rush County Group
T'imes Special
RUSHVILLE, April 28. — Mrs.
Lowell Gartin will be president of *
the Rush County Federated Cl for the next two years. She elected at the 14th annual conv
tion recently at the Main Street's
Christian Church. Mrs. Bayard Baker, Carthage, is retiring president.
Other officers will be Miss Chare _
Noa
lotte Holman, vice president; Mrs, Charles Newhouse, secretary; Mrs, Thomas Martin, treasurer, and Mrs./ Baker, director. Milroy will be host city for the 1940 convention.
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