Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1939 — Page 10
PAGE 10 Civic Theater Forgets Annual Summer Slump and Pushes Renewal Subscription Drive
Board and Membership Campaign Workers Will Meet at Meek Home in Carmel Wednesday Night; Workshop Group Is Active.
News of summer theaters in the East, of amateur groups in other barts of the country and of Indianapolis residents with these troupes has in the past provided summer table talk for Indianapolis Civic Theater members.
This year, in the summer, mind you, the activities of the local group are claiming a large share in the conversation. The Civic Theater members usually “close up shop” in the spring with the last production and go back to their “love” in the summer only for the annual membership drive. This year the new affairs committee and workshop members are continuing to work right on into the summer. The Children’s Theater for the first time this year had a summer troupe season. Already the renewal subscription drive for next season is under way and with its close Aug. 15, members will intensify the campaign for new memberships. The reason for all this activity may be attributed in part to the consciousness of the members that this fall they will be moving into the theater’s 25th anniversary year. :
Workers Meet Wednesday Night Mr. and Mrs. Perry Meek will entertain the Theater board and membership drive workers at 8 o'clock next Wednesday night at their home in Carmel. Wives and husbands of aids also are to attend. Besides the business on hand the party will be treated to selections from “The Life of Stephen Foster,” the recent Children’s Theater pro-
duction. Members from the following groups and their heads who are to be active In the drive include Frank Hoke, board president; Mrs. William McGregor Morris, affairs committee; Mrs. Ronald Shyrme, Worshop, and Dr. Oliver Greer, Back Stage Club. Past subscribers are being called on these days by the aids of Mrs. A. K. Scheidenhelm, head of renewal subscriptions. She will report Wednesday night. ’ A
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Tonight the Workshop will meet at the home of Mrs. H. H. Arnholter, who with Mr. Meek heads this year’s drive. The Workshop folk are rehearsing for two one-act plays to be presented in the middle of August at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Badger. Experiences in lighting, curtains, public address systems, etc., gained at the out-of-door performances of the Children’s Theater, will be utilized for these outdoor plays.
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Miss Eldena Lauter is entertaining at tea Friday afternoon for Mrs. J. F. Drake Jr. of Pittsburgh, Pa. Mr. Drake's mother, Mrs. J. F. Drake Sr, is president of the Pittsburgh Playhouse. The Drakes are staying at The Admiral. Mrs. Drake probably will be swamped with questions about Fred Burleigh, formerly director of the local theater and now at Pittsburgh, and Dick Hoover who left here about a year ago to join the Pittsburgh players.
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Mr. Meek and Mrs. Arnholter are to have five commanders to aid them in the drive. Under each of these will be captains with teams of six members each. The theater is offering a special anniversary season ticket this year. :
Garden Party to Honor Miss Taggart
Fifty invitations had been issued today for a garden party Miss Eleanor and Miss Agnes Coldwell will give Saturday afternoon at their home, 5566 Central Ave. for Miss Helen Taggart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander L. Taggart, 9400 Spring Mill Road, and Miss Patricia Taggart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Taggart, 5695 N. Delaware St. Miss Helen Taggart's marriage to Joseph William Taylor, Rochester, N. Y., will be Saturday, July 15, at the country home of her parents. Miss Patricia Taggart’s marriage to Ross C. Lyons, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Lyons,” Indianapolis, will be in September. The Edward B. Taggarts are spending much of their time at their summer home at Pinewoods Camp in Roscommon, Mich. Mrs. Taggart and Patricia are there now but will be home for the garden party Saturday.
Naomi Haworth to Be Delegate
Hospital. They are left to right)
Camp Friendly Keeps Staff of Y.W.C.A. Busy
In addition to maintaining a busy program for regular organizations the Y. W. C. A, members of the Y. W. staff are kept in a stir of activ-|
programs and events at Camp, Friendly near Spencer. Several spe- | cial features are scheduled for eve-| nings at Camp Friendly. “A Night in an Indian Village” will be presented at one of the campfire programs this week at the first junior high school period at Camp Friendly. Miss Rosalie Naranjo, Santa Fe, N. M., who also will demonstrate pottery making, will supervise the program. An evening devoted to a study of China will provide the program for another campfire period. Miss Hsui King Wang of Shanghai, camp instructor, will be in charge. Other]
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Heads of three units of the White Cross Guild are shown as they attended the final board meeting of the season recently at Methodist
Mrs. James W. Taylor, Meridian
Heights unit; Mrs. Herbert F. Sudranski, Temple Sisterhood, and Mrs.
Nancy Louise Foster Chooses Attendants, Weds Saturday; Tacoma Bridal Party Named
Included on the prenuptial schedule for several brides-to-be are anof houncements of bridal attendants, one bridal dinner and a shower. One {young woman, whose marriage will be July 15, has been entertained
at several parties.
| Miss Nancy Louise Foster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. ity these days planning campfire Foster has chosen attendants for the wedding Saturday to Maurice M. | Daniels, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Daniels, 2911 N. LaSalle St.
Miss Marion Hittle will be Miss Foster's only attendant, while Robert Coast will be best man for Mr. Daniels. The bride-to-be’s arents will entertain at a bridal dinner tomorrow night at their home on the Shelbyville road. Guests with the couple's parents will include the Rev. and Mrs. H. G. Rowe, Miss Dorothy Westbay, who will sing at the wedding; Miss Hittle and Mr. Coats, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crostreet Sr, and Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Montgomery.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
White Cross Gui
ld Board Ends Season's Business
Times Photo.
L. O. Nicholson, Alpha Omicron Alpha. The guild sews throughout the year on hospital supplies and provides books for patients and scholarships for nurses from proceeds of its special projects. Guild night will
be held Sept. 17 at the Broadway
Lester C. Noerr, Madison, Wis., will be her matron-of-honor and Leon Trees, brother of the bridegroom-to-be, will act as best man.
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Miss Ruth Gross, 1134 S. Richland Ave., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | Clyde Gross, has been entertained recently at several showers precedling her marriage July 15 to Paul | Obergfell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred | Obergfell, 1330 Kappas St. The wedding will be in the Blaine Avenue Methodist Church. Miss Catherine Boothe and Miss
At Zeta Tau Alpha Convention;
events planned for the period in-|
clude a hayride, a trip to a falls| ares. Charles H. Tacoma, 1046 S.|Gross at Miss Boothe's home, 39 S.
chosen her attendants is Miss Thel- | Esther Swinford entertained recentma Tacoma, daughter of Mr. and|ly at a kitchen shower for Miss
Verus Cordis Holds Initiation
Delegates from local alumnae chapters of two college sororities are busy with national convention plans and two Indianapolis Greek letter groups have scheduled meetings for this evening. One organization is to hold informal initiation services and another recently honored new members with a dinner party. Members of the Verae Sorores Chapter of the Verus Cordis Sorority are to hold rough initiation services at 8 o'clock tonight at the Hoosier Athletic Club. Misses Edith Nord, Carol Hall, Thelma Turner, Jane Seward and Marjorie Amt are neophytes of the group.
] Kappa, college social group, will ‘start for their homes after the close of the national convention tomorrow in San Francisco. Miss Edna Katzenburger, president of the local group, is official delegate. Others who are attending the conclave are Miss Helen Spivey, | Miss Lorena Danham, Mrs. Robert | Lingle, Mrs. Horace Oldham, Greenfield, and Mrs. E. D. Taggart, na- | tional executive secretary with offices in Indianapolis. Active mem-
Miss Naomi Haworth will represent the Indianapolis Alumnae Chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha, national college sorority, at the convention opening Saturday at Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Mich. Miss Margaret Schoen will be Miss Jean Allen, Greenwood, presialternate delegate and others at-|/ dent; Miss Anne Clifford, Lapel; tending from the local group will Miss Virginia Trickey and Miss be the Misses Elizabeth Smith, Lou- Mary Betty Moldthan, Indianapolis. jean Gullett, Nelda Johnson, Mary | : Morrison, Louise Berndt and Mrs.! Mrs. E. P. Saltmarsh will enterA. R. Vestal. | tain members of Phi Gamma Rho | Sorority at a social meeting at 8:1% Several members of the Indian- tonight at her home, 5013 W. 15th apoelis Alumnae Chapter of Sigma St.
JANE JORDAN-
EAR JANE JORDAN—We are both nearing middle age and are to be married before fall, this being the first marriage for either. Now this is my problem. We are both very congenial and enjoy each other’s company, but by nature I don't seem tc be endowed with this so-called deep, passionate love. Could a marriage based on congeniality and friendship be successful? Any advice you might give would be very much appreciated. JANE L.
Answer—In other words, since you haven't had chills and fever and strange disturbances in the region of the breast bone, youre afraid youre not in love. A marriage does not have to start in a blaze of romance in order to be successful. Romance is probably the most over-rated emotion in the whole gamut. It is flimsy of fabric, short of life, and extremely deceptive. Even in the most ideal marriage, it disappears in time, leaving the very qualities with which you are beginning, and if they are not there to take its place, the marriage fizzles out. Middle-aged people are not as vulnerable to the delusions of romance as the young. If they have grown up emotionally as well as physically, they have learned to face reality. Their values are sounder and they've given up the fairy-tale version of life. Their judgment is mature, and they know how to pick a partner capable of good team work. After all marriage isn't a paradise in which one lives in a perpetual state of bliss, but a contract in which two people make a joint contribution to a mutual enterprise. If you value the man as much as you value yourself, if youre genuinely interested in his welfare, if what affects him affects you also, if you share many of the same loves and hates, you have a good basis for a marriage. In short, youre in love, even though you do not “swoon with delight at the sound of hic voice, and tremble with fear at his frown.”
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EAR JANE JORDAN-—We are two girls, 18 years old, and we both go steady. We really like these boys quite a lot, but how are we supposed to know if were in love or not? We are out of school and both have had other boy friends. Now we've come to the conclusion that were fickle. Do you think were just fickle, or havent we met the right fellow yet, and if we arent in love, how will we know when we are? The boys are probably thinking the same thing. X AND Y.
Answer—Perhaps the first letter in the column today will help you. I think it is normal for 18-vear-old girls to be fickle. Your job is to get acquainted with many boys. It gives ycu a background for your final choice. Girls who have had only one sweetheart have no one to compare him with and are sometimes disappointed in later life when they meet men whom they consider superior to the one whom they chose. . JANE JORDAN,
Put your problems in a letter te Jane Jordan whe will answer your questions in this column aily.
Lodge Fetes Officer Lodge Has Luncheon
Mrs. Carrie Lee Jones, supreme Mrs. Margaret Williams, 1850 deputy, will be entertained by mem- | Brookside Ave. will be hostess this pers of the Pilgrim Shrine, White afternoon at a covered dish lunchShrine of Jerusalem, at a meet- eon and card party for members of jng at 8 o'clock tonight in Castle| the Gold Mound Council, Degree Hall, a of Pocahontas,
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and a dedication service for a council circle.
“Seniors” Invited
Next week also will be open to junior high school girls and will be the first of the two-week periods for senior high school campers. Em{ployed girls may enroll at the camp (for two periods from July 22 to (Aug. 6. Members of the Rhodius Park center of the Y. W. “stay-at-home” camp will be overnight guests to- | night at Camp Freindly. The group was to leave this morning with Miss [Helen Daily, leader, and will return | tomorrow morning. | The high school girls in the athome camp are to hold their regular ‘meeting this afternoon at the Y. W. | following a morning of tennis at [Riverside Park, a hike and picnic lunch. Classes in personality and {drama are conducted for the group every Thursday by Mrs. Austin Bruce. Other program features in‘clude handicraft work and trips laround to points of interest in the city.
Randolph St, whose marriage to Kenneth Trees, son of Mrs. Edna Trees, 130 S. Butler Ave. will be Aug. 13. The
Today’s Pattern
bride-to-be’'s sister, Mrs.
Miss Jane Crawford of the Orchard School faculty is in charge of | the high school section. Later in| the season the group is planning a theater party, an evening campfire | program and an overnight trip to Woollen’s Gardens. Miss Suzan Os- | ler was in charge of a special music | session yesterday at the Y. W. for members of the Y. W. and Hawthorne centers.
Skating Party July 17
All members of the “stay-at-home” camp centers will join in a} skating party Monday ‘morning, July 17, at Hawthorne Center. Miss Charlotte Pearson, associate Girl Reserve secretary, is in charge of! the camp p m. | Members of the Adult Education| Class of the regular Y. W. groups! are to tour three local buildings | during their meeting today. Their first stop will be at Marian College and their other visits will be made at the Naval Armory and the United States Veterans’ Hospital. Mrs. Katherine Pierce will be in charge. The trip planned this evening for
It’s very important to have on
; | Ramsey is a son of Mrs. | Ramsey, 515 Rochester Ave.
Dearborn St. Miss Annabelle Obergfell, the bridegroom-to-be’s sister gave a miscellaneous shower for the bride-to-be at her parents’ home.
2 8 2 Mrs. Elmer Von Pein will be hostess at a crystal shower Monday evening at her home, 2177 S. Delaware St. for Miss Marion Dausch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Dausch, 202 N. Beile Vieu Place. Members of Sigma Delta Zeta Sorority will assist the hostess. Miss Dausch’s wedding to Charles Ramsey will be July 23 in the Blaine Avenue Methodist Church. Mr. Maude
Guests at the shower will inciude | Mesdames Fred Clements, Paul Dausch, Charles French, John Polk-| er, James Gray, Gene True, Ware Walker and the Misses Melba Woolery, Clarabelle Woolery, Betty Bloom, Phyllis Bertram, Dorothy Rearick, Esther Hanson, Louella Young, Virginia Foudray, Dorothy
Cochran and Wilma Donald. Miss Hanson will be assistant hostess.
EVENTS
SORORITIES Lambda Chapter, Omega Nu Tau. Fri. eve. Miss Iola Grable, 209 N. Randolph. Mrs. Margaret Fly and Miss Pat Jones, assistants. . Phi Gamma Rho. Tonight. Mrs. Eugene Saltmarsh, 5013 W. 15th, hostess. CLUBS
Y. A. M. 7 p. m. today. Miss Betty Markey, 420 E. 33d, hostess. Discussion of plans for pitch-in dinner Tuesday. On-Eta-Ota. 1 p. m. today. Mrs. A. J. Cooley, 518 N. Emerson, hostess. Luncheon, bridge. Baraca Club of Riley Cheer Guild. 1:30 p. m. today. Mrs. Lyda Fritz, 843 N. Oxford, hostess. Plans for remainder of year.
ler, 3046 Kenwood Ave, Round table forum.
LODGES
business meeting and |}
Story-of-Month. Tonight. Carl Ful- |} host. |}
Methodist Church.
D.A.R. Will Hold State Conclave Here Oct. 11-13
The annual state conference of the Daughters of American Revolution will be open Oct. 11 in the Claypool Hotel in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the organization's founding. The convention will close Oct. 13. A reception will be held the afternoon of Founders’ Day, Oct. 11, in| the Benjamin Harrison mansion, the! home of Caroline Scott Harrison, first president general of the national society. Mrs. Henry H. Robert Jr, present president general, will present a portrait of Caroline Scott Harrison as a gift of the national group. Randolph Coats, Indiana artist, is doing the portrait from the original which hangs in the White House. A bronze tablet, placed by Indiana Daughters of the American Revolution at the Harrison mansion, will be unveiled on the same afternoon, preceding the reception. That night the Junior Assembly banquet, the Officers Club banquet and a dinner for members and delegates will be held separately at the hotel. On Wednesday, Oct. 12, all members and guests will dine together.
Lo-Sin-Loy Club Looks to Outing
Members of the Lo-Sin-Loy Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. tonight at the home of Miss Helen Marie Flaherty, 2449 N. Illinois St. to discuss plans for a house party at Lake Wawasee early in August. Young women who plan to attend the lake cuting include the Misses Florence Carlson, Harriet Kinnimen, Martha Jane Heiny, Betty Jane Ewen, Dorothy Shafer, Betty Homsher, June Barrow, Jo Forrest, Betty Stevens, Carolyn Creek, Virginia Creek, Doris Crane and Helen Marie
Church Group Gives Hanover Session Plans
Evangelical and Reformed Conference to Open Next Sunday.
Program plans for the annual Evangelical and Reformed Conference July 9-15 at Hanover College have been outlined, while a junior temperance group will make
plans for a supper July 14 at their meeting Monday.
About 250 Indianapolis young people are expected to attend the annual Evangelical and Reformed Conference at Hanover. Dr. Ralph L. Holland, Indianapolis, pastor of Carrollton Avenue Evangelical and Reformed Church, will conduct a course in “Christian Youth Building a New World” in the third period of
| the conference.
Lectures will be divided into four periods for the conclave which is a part of the program of summer schools, conferences and camps conducted by or with co-operation of the Board of Christian Education of the Evangelical and ° Reformed Church. Staff members and instructors include the Rev. H. W. Baumer, Cleveland, conference director; the Rev. Fred Fahrenkamp, Cannelton, registrar; the Rev. George A. Shults, Hamilton, O., recreational director; Bertrand Anz, bugler; Mrs. Robert Corbin, nurse; the Rev. Purd E. Deitz, Webster Grove, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Engelmann, Cincinnati; Miss Ruth Heinmiller, Cleveland; Miss Amelia Kriete, Louisville; Miss Sara Jo Schilling, Cleveland; A. A. Susott, Evansville, and W., H. Zinke, Louisville. Students will assemble at Hanover Sunday to register and receive room and class assignments. Classwork will begin Monday and will be conducted daily.
Plans for a supper July 14 will be made at the New Crusade Youths’ Temperance Council Monday evening at the home of Mrs. William LaRoche, 1514 Samoa St. Miss Esther Swinford will have charge of tickets for the supper. Miss Maryellen Mendenhall, president, will preside atthe meeting and Mrs. Mildred Sullivan will give devotions. Special music will be directed by Miss Thelma Buhmiller.
Miss Elsie Ragan will entertain members of the Happy Builders Class of the Immanuel Evangelical and Reformed Church at 7:30 p. m. today at her home, 122 S. East St. Miss LaVern Towns will assist Miss Ragan,
Several members of the Indianapolis Council of Federated Church Women are attending the National Convention of Church Women which opened this morning at Lake Geneva, Wis. The first session of the convention began at 7:30 a. 1. Local delegates are Mrs. Asa Hoy, council vice president; Mrs. Lionel Artis, race relations chairman; Mrs. C. A. Childers, promotional chairman, and Mrs. J. H. Smiley, time and place chairman. Others attending are Mrs. Ralph Hudelson, vice president of the national council, and Mrs. C. W. Roller. Mrs. Hoy is to lead a discussion on ‘Personal Faith and Experience.” Miss Daisy June Trout, retiring president, will preside at the convention.
Catholic Daughters To Attend Conclave
Several Indianapolis women will attend the national convention of the Catholic Daughters of America, July 10-15, at the Hotel Statler, Detroit, Mich. They are Miss Elizabeth O’Hara, state regent; Mrs. Helen Zapp, state publicity chairman; Miss Winifred Galvin, grand regent of the Indianapolis Court Chartrand; Miss Dorothy Rail, junior chairman; Miss Catherine Duffy, camp chairman; Miss Charlotte Heck, secretary, and Miss Adele Rababa, counsellor.
Bible School Closes
The closing exercises of the Daily Vacation Bible School at the First Moravian Church will be held at 7:30 p. m, tonight at the church.
Flaherty.
members of the group visiting vari-|Just the right kind of a slip, In ous local industries, will be to the|Order to give your dresses exactly Continental Baking Co. The group the smooth, suave line you want. will leave at 7 o'clock. An inspec-| This design, Pattern 8334, is tion of the police radio station was Planned to be definitely slenderizing. made last night. | It melts in at the waist with a true Weekly sports activities for Y. W. princess Slimness, and flows gently, members include archery from 5 Without a line or wrinkle, to a until 7 o'clock every Tuesday and slightly widened hem. Thursday evening at Riverside| It has a placket closing, which Park; tennis from 5 p. m. until fits around the middle with otherdark at Broad Ripple and Garfield wise impossible snugness. The braParks; swimming from 4:30 until top is darted, so that it fits com-
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7:30 p. m. every evening at the Y. W. pool, and sunbathing from noon | um 1 = p. ie. og Tuesdays and | urdays at the Blue Triangle Residence Hall. Re
H. E. N. Club to Plan State Park Outing
. Plans for an all-day outing Sunday, July 16, will be discussed by members of the H. E. N. Club at a meeting tonight at the home of Miss Margarette Cross, 1756 Brookside Ave. Club members and their guests will travel in a chartered bus to McCormick's Creek State Park for the outing. Members of the group include the Misses Jeanne Snyder, Annabelle Johns, Margaret Antibus, Kathleen Bradley, Marilyn Demaree, Mary Jane Van Treese, Mary Ellen Katzenberger, Jayne Schmalholz, Christine Tucker, Marie Love and Cross.
fortably over the bosom. Make just one slip like this, and you'll never be satisfied with anything less perfect than its made-to-order fit, and will want a whole wardrobe of slips like it. Best slip fabrics, of course, are satin, lingerie crepe and—to wear under tub dresses—smooth linen. Pattern 8334 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires 37% yards of 39-inch material; 1 yard ribbon for straps. The new 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. 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 Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 21¢ W. rylanc
fof the Grace Methodist Church. |.
Welfare Committee, Sahara Grotto |} Auxiliary. 12:30 p. m. Fri. Brook- |} side Park. Picnic. i Lawrence Chapter, O. E. S. 7:30 Pp. m. today. Hall. Stated meet- |} ing. Mrs. Henrietta Cobb and Martin McDaniel, worthy matron and patron.
Kiesers Are Guests At Farewell Party
The Rev. and Mrs. Harvey J.|. Kieser will be entertained at a] farewell party by members of the]. Riverside Methodist Church this |; evening in the church recreational room. Mrs. Glen Nichols is chair- | man of arrangements, assisted by Mrs. William M. Taylor. 3 The Rev. Mr. Kieser will go to! South Bend to become minister |:
He has been pastor here for six || years. : §
Robert Anderson, ] Ruth Finchum Wed
Mr, and Mrs. Charles E. Finchum have announced the marriage of their daughter, Ruth E., to Robert W. Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Levi Anderson, Brownsburg. The wedding was held July 1 in
St. their home in Ind
Jeffersonville. The couple will make Indianapolis,
The public is invited.
THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1939
Wins Award
Miss Betty Ward has been awarded a scholarship to MacMurray College, Jacksonville, Ill. She is a recent graduate of Teche nical High School.
Moose Women To Honor Aids At Summer Party
Members of Women of the Moose will honor their new officers at a dinner party tonight at Moose Hall, 135 N. Delaware St. Mrs. Kathryn Hansford is in charge of entertainment. Mrs. Hansford will be assisted by Mrs. Pearl Hull, retiring homemak=ing chairman, and members of the entertainment and homemaking committees. Those to be honored include Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, senior regent; Mrs. Dorville Wise, junior regent; Mrs. Edna Mershon, chaplain; Mrs. Esther Hansford, graduate regent; Mrs. Beulah Anderson, recorder; Mrs. Anna Cornell, treasurer; Mrs. Betty Klemm, argus; Mrs. Pearl Beck, sentinel; Mrs. Bertha Wilner, guide; Mrs. A. B. Matillo, assistant guide, and Mrs. Phoebe Hart, pianist. New committee heads and escorts were announced at a recent meeting.
Personals
Five Indianapolis young women left by auto this morning for a month’s tour of the West. They will visit among other points Yellowstone National Park and the Golden Gate Exposition. The party includes the Misses Eileen Johnson, Katherine Weiss, Melba Shull, Mary Frederick and Daphne Appleman. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hamm of Dayton, O., have returned home after a week-end visit with Mr. and Mrs. A. F, Sutton Jr., 3909 Central Ave. Mr. and Mrs. William Hagan received informally Tuesday at their home in celebration of their 25th wedding anniversary. Dr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Lord will return next week to their home at 4455 Washington Blvd., after a visit in New York. Miss Mary Lou Over, 3041 Central Ave. is spending several days as the house guest of Miss Betty Jean Mc=Donald in Muskegon, Mich. The two young women are classmates at Butler University. Robert Cohen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Cohen, Wheeling, W. Va. is spending several days visiting his cousin, Miss Evelyn Koby, 3630 N. Capitol Ave. Miss Koby is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Koby. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pinkerton, Athena, Ore. are spending the month of July with their son, John Pinkerton. Mrs. Pinkerton and the John Pinkerton’s daughter, Carolyn Kay. Guests at a house party last week-end at the Pinkertons’ cote tage on Lake Shafer included Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pinkerton, Mr. and Mrs, Elmer Merleau of New Palestine, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kershner and Mrs. Augusta Kershner. Mrs. Pinkerton will entertain at luncheon tomorrow in honor of the Oregon guests.
Lawn Fete Arranged Members of Bethel 4, Job's Daughters, will give a lawn social Saturday evening at Harlan St. and Southeastern Ave. Enter= tainment, beginning at 4 m.,
p. will be under direction of Miss Anita Caldwell.
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