Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1939 — Page 8
SOCIETY —
Dinner Dance to Be Given at Country Club Saturday Night
WITH the summer social season in the throes of its annual August doldrums, the news is indeed cheering that the Indianapolis. Céuntry Club will sponsor a dinner dance on Saturday night. The dance may be a harbinger of the approaching fall activities and an indication that residents are grow-
ing a bit bored with hot weather doldrums. After all, early Septem- |
ber will see the return of many families from their summer homes and the beginning of the fall social season. Sept. 1 is just a little over three weeks away, you know. Paul Barker and his orchestra will play for dancing under the stars at the club. On. Sunday Hal Benham Jr. will give a diving exhibition and the club has arranged a buffet supper to follow. Mr. and Mrs. Claude C. Jones Jr. are entertainment chairmen.
Weavers’ House Guest Leaves
Mrs. Frank Rankin Schwartz, Columbus, O., has returned home Monday after a .visit with Mr. and Mrs. George M. Weaver. Mrs. Schwa and Mrs. Weaver were in Culver over the week-end to visit their sons, George C. Weaver and Frank Rankin Schwartz Jr., at Culver Military Academy: Mr. and Mrs. Weaver will go to Lake ‘Maxinkuckee the week-end of the 19th for the Academy commencement activities. 5
Comings and Goings
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Taylor have returned from Leland, Mich. They will go again to the lake early in September. . . . Miss Nancy Suitor is the guest of Miss Joan Pinnell and Mrs. Nathan P. Graham at Bay View, Mich.
Day Nursery Board to. Meet
. The board of managers of the Indianapolis Day Nursery will holds a business meeting at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the nursery,
Miss Adams to Be Entertained
Miss Magdalene Adams whose marriage to M. Turpin Davis will be Sept. 3, will be honor guest this evening at a buffet supper and silver shower. Miss Martena M. Sink will be hostess. Mrs. John A. Sink will assist her daughter. Guests will include Mrs. Will Adams, mother of the bride-to-be; Mesdames Wendall Taylor, Eugene Foley, Stewart Smith; Misses Betty Price, Eleanor Semans and Jane on. . : Mrs. Eugene Foley was hostess at a linen shower last night in the bride-to-be’s honor. Miss Mary Jane Shafer is giving a kitchen , shower tomorrow night and gifts of silver will be presented to Miss Adams at the party which Mrs. C. Hollis Hull and Mrs. Robert Wiseheart will have Saturday afternoon at the Hull home. Mrs. Gilbert Guthrie and Mrs. Benjamin Davis, the bridegroom-to-be’s mother, are planning a luncheon for Aug. 26. Mrs. Davis and her gasughien Mrs. Guthrie, of Atchison, Kas., are to arrive this weekend. .
Zimmer Sisters to Sail for Europe
The Misses Dorothy and Mary Zimmer have left for New York where they will sail on the Ile de France for Europe. Mary and her sister will go to Lucerne, Switzerland, for the music festival and will visit friends in London. Dorothy will study voice in Paris for 2 year. The young women are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Karl immer. .
New Arrival at Sturgis Wells’
Indianapolis friends of Mr. and Mrs. J. Sturgis Wells, formerly of this city, will be interested in: the announcement of a new arrival in the Wells home, an eight-pound boy born this week at Evanston Hospital, Evanston, Ill. Mrs. Wells was formerly Miss Katharine Carter. :
Thursday Lyceum Club Lists
Programs for Coming Y ear
Book reviews and discussions of famous people have been planned for members of the Thursday Lyceum Club for their 1939-1940 program
announced recently by the committee headed by Mrs. R. B. Malloch.
Meetings of the club, organized in 1904, will be held on the first and third: Thursdays of the month beginning Sept. 21 and continuing through
June 6, 1940. Mrs. Harry Wilson, president, will talk on “Treasure Island” at the President's Day meeting Sept. 21, at the home of Mrs. H. T. Brown, Kool Kenny Towers in Carmel.
Mrs. Frank S.. O'Neil will be hostess at her home, 7800 Springmill Road for the second meeting of the year on Oct. 5. Mrs. M. E. Woolf will discuss “Flower Arrangement.” i : A review of “Autobiography with Letters” (William Lyon Phelps) will be presented by Mrs. Earl R. Conder at the meeting Oct. 19 at the home of Mrs. V. V. Smith, 4810 . Washington Blvd.. Mrs. Irving P. | Blue will discuss “The National ! Music Camp at Interlochen” before the group. at their Nov. 2 meeting. Mrs. Wilson will be hostess at her home, 1635 Central Ave., Apt. 16. A discussion of “International Relations” will be led by Mrs. Prank Smith at the meeting on Nov. 16 at the home of Mrs. E. J. Shields, 536 Sutherland Ave.
Book Review Scheduled
Mrs. J. T. Hamill will entertain the club members at her home, 4477 N. Delaware St., at the first meeting in December, on the 7th. Mrs. T. D. Campbell, 3690 Central Ave, will be hostess for the Christmas party and meeting on Dec. 21. The first meetihg of the new year will be Jan. 4 at the home of Mrs. Woolf, 4530 Guilford Ave. Mrs. Harry Plummer will talk on “Development of Railroad Trains.” Mrs. Campbell will review “Queen Victoria's’ Daughters” (E. F. Benson) at the Jan. 18 meeting at the
home of Mrs. Hosmer, 3656 N. Delaware: St. :
Observe Leap Year
.Three meetings will be held in February on Feb. 1, 15 and 29, the extra day of the Leap Year. W. E. Johnson will discuss “Famous Artificial Canals” on Feb. 1 at the home of Mrs. Blue, 4233 Boulevard Place. Mrs. L. C. Messick, 150 E. 14th St., will entertain the group Feb. 15 and Mrs. M. A. Baltozer will talk on “The Golden Age.” A review of “Midway in My Song” (Lotte Lehman) will be presented by Mrs. Brown at the extra meeting, Feb. 29, at the home of Mrs. Frank Smith, 536 Sutherland Ave, Officers for the 1940-41 club year will be elected at the March 7 meet-
ing at the home of Mrs. Plummer, 3314 Broadway. Mrs. Malloch will
‘| talk on “Our Leisure Time.” A talk
on “Jack Woodford, Author,” will be presented by Mrs. Messick at the meeting March 21 at the home of Mrs. O. W. Cross, 6208 Washington Blvd. A hook to be selected later will be reviewed by Mrs. O'Neil at the meeting April 4 with Mrs. Malloch as hostess at her home, 4022 Ruckle St. “Frank Cameron, Soil Cheniist,” will ‘be discussed by Mrs, V. V. Smith on April 18. Mrs. Johnson will entertain the group at her home, 405 E. 50th St. Mrs. Baltozer, 426 E. 21st St., will be hostess to the group May 2. A discussion of “Television” will be presented by Mrs. Shields. “The Tire That Binds the Whole” will be the subject of the paper by Mrs. Hosmer at the final program meeting on May 16 at the home of Mrs. Earl R. Conder, 25 Meridian Place.
JANE JORDAN-
EAR JANE JORDAN—I am 17 years old and in love, or at least I think I am. This boy and I have been going together
more than six months;
would when I finished high school. tough character, rah around all the time, changed him. We went together steady until May. During
I have
and he asked me to marry him.
I said I Before he met me he was a drank and acted terrible.
that time he gave me a wrist watch. Then for three weeks he never
showed up at all. believe he stepped out on me.
I knew nothing about his whereabouts, yet I didn’t Then he came back and we went
steady again until July when he started running around with a
bun
He once a week and
y comes
of boys who care nothing for themselves and anyone else. sometimes not for two weeks. °
He is a mechanic but doesn’t stick to his job long, and is out of
work again. two months at
Even his boy friends don't stay with him more than a time. Now I have heard that he is stepping out
on me. I have been true to him all this time and turned down date
after date. I fellow and I'm a date which is not with him. :
1 am terribly hurt. Now I have gone out withs another sorry for it. I cry myself to sleep every time I have
He is now planning to go north to stay for a year but said that he would come back and claim me. I am sure he will fall back in the
- same old to me I will still
this terrible hurt? I've always been unlucky in love.
. 8 8 Answer—You're not unlucky in
a lucky for it will give
% love at all. preak for you that the young man is going away for a year, you a chance to come to your senses.
rut and I don’t want him to. Even though he has done this go back to him if he wants me. How can I ease
UNLUCKY, # 8
8 / On the contrary, it’s
Do not be
deceived by the intensity of your emotion, for it will not last.
For the moment you are blind,
stubbornly blind, because your
will is crossed. Let your good judgment come to the rescue. This
young man has not
is as changeable as the wind. He sticks to nothing. He stuck to his’ job; his friends, his good resolutions or his girl.
For the moment you are consumed with the desire to reform him. His brief response to your efforts was exceptionally flattering to you. It made you feel superior and much bigger and stronger than he. However, you can establish your superiority in better ways than
to serve as
much grief attached to such a role,
packbone for a weak and wavering man. There is too
and the chances for failure
too great. / Give up the idea that there is anything admirable in your wish
to save a it for what it is, an inferior to look up to you. and do the looking up yourself.
young man who hasn't the character to save himself. See a weakness within yourself which makes you want It is better to/choose a supdrior man
JANE JORDAN,
Mrs. |;
New Resident Backs Sy
Mrs. James C. Skinner, a resident of Indianapolis for only a month, already is one of the enthusiastic workers preparing for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra subscription campaign. Mrs. Skinner at tended many Boston concerts of Fabien Sevitzky,
ni
Miller Photo.
r . ‘conductor, when she was a student at Smith College, Northampton, Mass. . Mrs. Skinner is shown busy at work on files and mailing lists at the Symphony headquarters in the Murat. tion campaign opens Sept. 11.
The subscrip-
tion and insfallation services.
Miss Eldamerle Warrenburg, 3026 Boulevard Place, will be hostess tonight at a meeting of Zeta Chapter, Phi Theta Delta Sorority.
A social meeting has been planned for tonight at Little America by members of Alpha Chapter, Phi Delta Pi Sorority.
Formal initiation services will be held at 8 p. m. tonight for one pledge of Alpha Chapter, Phi Theta Delta Sorority, at the home of Mrs. Claybourne Blue, 3165 Kenwood Ave. Miss Eleanor Earnheart will be inducted into the organization.
Members of Beta Chapter, Delta Phi Beta Sorority, will have a picnic this evening followed by a swimming party at Broad Ripple Park.
Officers of Alpha Chapter, Alpha Beta Phi Sorority, will be installed at a meeting tonight at the home of Mrs. Leo Brand, 2630 Allen Ave. Newly elected heads who will take their offices are Mrs. Erwin Hoeing, president; Miss Genevieve Pettit, vice president; Mrs. A. N. Haag, secretary; Mrs. William Hinz, treasurer, and Mrs. Arthur Cramer, social editor.
Another Greek letter organization that elected their officers for the ensuing year is Beta Chapter of Beta Chi Theta Sorority. Miss Thelma Miller will serve as president of the organization, assisted by Miss Sally Cox, secretary, and Miss Martha M. Vaughn, treasurer.
Gives Slumber Party
Members of the'D. A. R. E. Chapter of the Sub-Deb Federation will be entertained Saturday night at a slumber party at the home of Miss Mary Anne Strawmiere, 4520 Park Ave. The following week-end the group will be guests at the summer home of another member, Miss Jean Thorpe. : i
By ALICIA HART HE main reason health farms J and beauty resorts are so popular with women who can afford them is that exercises, diets and such are really fun if others are carrying them on with you. You know that a mask treatment is pretty much of a lark if your house guest feels like giving herself one’ at the same time. And weight-watchers will agree that it’s much easier to stay on a diet if some member of the family is counting her calories, too. Word comes from a sorority house in an Eastern college that exercise classes are held one night a ‘week, with the sisters agreeing on which night and appointing a different one to be teacher. She outlines the old exercises to be done fifty times each (and teaches her class how to do one new routine. This has been going on for months and the letter ends on the optimistic note that “hippiness” is a thing of the past in that house. P In Hollywood, many of the figure experts now take their pretty starlet pupils by twos, instructing them once a week and encouraging them to do their exercises together the other six days. And extras, who do not have access to the studio hairdressing shops, are getting more and more adept at rearranging one another’s ringlets. Getting back to the East, the prize story of all comes from two women who go through the whole works from hair brushing through exercises to pedicures one night a week while: their husbands ‘are bowling. 3
costs their husbands to bowl for a year fixing up an adequate but not pretentious gymnasium in the younger woman’s attic and they ‘really use that gym. 3 ~ They say that they honestly look
forward to bowling night—and
Kappa Delta Thetas to Lake Freeman House Delta Phi Betas Give Picnic
A discussion of houseparty plans will be held tonight at a meeting of one Indianapolis sorority, another group will picnic and swim, while more formal activities of several other organizations will include initia-
Plan Party;
Members of Kappa Delta Theta Sorority will talk over plans for a house party at Lake Freeman at their meeting tonight at the home of Miss Florence Schaub, 2203 College Ave. :
Ramona Grove Team to Attend Detroit Session
A convention, card party and picnic are planned for this week and next by fraternal groups.
Members of the Addie Braly Guards, drill team of Ramona Grove, Supreme Forest Woodmen's Circle, will leave this week to join similar groups from all parts of the United States and Canada in an infernational exhibition Monday at Detroit, Mich. The exhibition is a part of the program planned by the National Fraternal Congress for its 53d convention, Aug. 13 to 18. : Over 200 drill teams will participate. A banquet, ball and Lake Erie cruise are planned for visitors. Speakers will include Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, Governor Luren D. Dickinson, Mayor Richard W. Reading of Detroit, and David Croll of Windsor, Canada. A costume street dance will be held Monday night after the exhibition. Louie H. Mills is the local team captain.
Mrs. Gladys Ferguson will be hostess at a meeting at 1:30 p. m. today of the homemaking committee of the Women of the Moose at her home, 714 N. Bosart Ave,
Mrs. Pearl Hull, publicity chairman of the organization, will have charge of the public card party tomorrow afternoon in Moose Hail, 135 N. Delaware St. Mrs. Esther Hansford and Mrs. Cora Blue will assist Mrs. Hull with arrangements.
Members of Patriot Militant I. O. 0. F. Chanton 2 and the auxiliary will hold a picnic Sunday in Wash-
ington Park.
Two pretty movie stars do their exercises. Mary Beth Hughes lies flat on the floor while Jo Ann Sayers, with her feet on either side of Mary's legs, leans forward without bending her knees, grasps Mary’s hands and pulls her up and back. This routine is excellent for flattening Mary’s stomach and at the same time it reduces Jo's waistline and improves her posture.
They spent as much money as it _
Time Slips
Grandma’s Hour Glass Silhouette Again In Fashion,
1 TIARIS, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—Pockets * set on the back of the hips, fur tacked on the thigh and everything from a sash to a full grown bustle were shown today in the sophisticated new winter ‘fashion collection of M. Balenciaga. He. makes you look round in the middle and gives you an hour-glass silhouette that would put Grandmother’s to shame. ‘ M. Balenciaga's daytime dresses have a sleek chic look about them that is sure ‘to be copied by smart American women. Tied-on sashes of skirt fabrics make exciting bows yeu down the skirt in front, usualy at one side. A black afternoon dress has a sleeveless mink bolero which stops short of a naturally tied waist with the skirt gathered on two inches below. The whole effect is marvelously flattering to both hips and waist. 2 os 8 OBACCO brown with black is Balenciaga’s favorite color combination. He uses it for everything from ribbed velvet corduroys for trim little suits to lustrous plaid satins for evening. For evening he introduces beautiful royal court gowns in duchess satin, almost always in black with appliqued or pieced motifs in coffee, cream, tobacco brown, baby blue, rose, red or white. Skirts flare into bell shapes fullness from sleek waists or push out with cinoline hips to emphasize the hand-span midriffs. Shoulders are covered and often there are long sleeves. A satin checked black velvet dress with long sleeves slides a big
bustle bow right down to the
knees to catch the skirt into precarious hobble width. Other treatments used for evening are whole gowns of shirred lace with flowers appliqued on black net or cut out of solid velvets. The most striking evening coat yet seen in collections is M. Balenciaga’s fitted black satin, completely covered with a vertical fringe of dyed monkey fur. A picturesque evening bag is a huge monogrammed locket, carried over the arm by a velvet ribbon.
A Brand New Idea in Charm Routine
ow
| Marjorie Macy
set her wedding cate and. chosen
To Be Guest at Two Showers
Marthellen Ratcliff Gives Party for Viola Hall, Bride-to-Be.
This month's wetldings and those planned for early next month are being preceded by many showers| and parties for brides-to-be. Most of the parties are in the linen, personal and miscellarieous category. “Another engagement and approaching marriage has been announcéd, while one bride-to-be has
members-of her bridal party.
Mrs. Lee H. Macy, 619 N, Delaware St., will be feted at showers tonight and tomorrow night by three of her friends. Her marriage to Dr. Irving
Miss Marjorie Macy, daughter of
fg oe
: Bride-to-Be
Ayres’ Photo.
Mr. and Mrs. William Jones announce the engagement of their daughter, Fern, to David J. Murphy. The wedding will be Aug. 26 at the Holy Cross Catholic Church. :
A. Iverson, son of Mr. and Mrs Harold Iverson, Conra¢, Mont. will be Saturday. : Mrs. George H. Freers, assisted by
at a linen shower fomorrow evening at the Freers’ homie. Guests with the bride-to-be will include Mesdames George F. Freers, Frank Bernard, Merrill Richardson, Paul Weatherly, Lester Meek, Floyd John, E. FP, Crain, Virgil Bankson, Macy, Miss Virginia Hallock, Mrs. Iverson, the bridegroom-to-be’s mother; his sister, Miss Laila Iverson, Conrad, Mont,, and Mrs. K. H. Stephens, Lawrence. \ Mrs. August Wulf and Miss Sarah Boland are entertaining tonight for Miss Macy. : 8 8 = Miss Marthellen Ratcliff will entertain this evening with a miscellaneous shower at her home, 3645 Park Ave. for her brother’s fiance, Miss Viola Hall. Miss Hall and Dr. Perry A. Ratcliff will be married Aug. 20 at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis B. Hall, 2841 N. Talbott St.
Guests at the shower and dessert card party will include the Misses Claribel Hall, Barbara Sedam, Margaret Terry, Jane Ludwig, Doris Brown, Betty Gravel, Geraldine Johnson; Mesdames Wilbur Dawson, Hall, Jack Newsom, William
Mesdames John - ¥inglish, Charles Candedo, Nina Rogers, T. R. Ratcliff, the bridegroom-to-be’s mother, and Mrs. S. B. Plasket, Ft. Wayne.
® s 8
Miss Elizabeth Cook will entertain at a bridge party tonight for Miss Mary -Jeannette Seller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, J. Y. Seller, 1638 N. New Jersey St., whose marriage to Herman G. Morgan Jr. will be Aug. 25 in the Third Christian Church. The party will be given at the home of Mrs. (x. M. Broo. Guests will include the Misses Jane Colsher, Martha Cook, Mary Eleanor Cook, Mary Jane Laatz, Betty Pringler and Mrs. Charles Haugh. Decorations will be carried out in bronze, pink and blue, colors of Delta Gamma Sorority.
» » »
Mrs. E. F. Davis, 5202 Park Ave, assisted by her daughter, Nancy, will entertain tomorrow night with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Helen Marvin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LeGgande Marvin, 3228 Central Ave. whose marriage to Roland Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs. George R. Baker, will be Sept. 1 in the MeKee Chapel of the. Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. . Glests with the bride-to-be and the mothers of the two principals will include Mesdames Norman Gold, Troy Miller, C. J. Petithory, Miss Marilyn Gregory, Miss Florence Easterday and Miss Anne Custer, Miss Betty Ross and Mrs. Ross Custer, Lebanon. 2 2 a =
Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Suding, 1822 S. East St., announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Clara, to Eugene Bauman, son of Mr. and Mrs. fidward Bauman, 808 E.. Minnesota St. The wedding will be Aug. 26 in the Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Members of the Tau Alpha Tau Sorority will entertain at a dinner party Saturday evening for the bride-to-be. 2 x = Mrs. James Hiner, Terre Haute, Mrs. Cart Schopp, Miss Denzel Moffitt and Miss Mabel Piercy entertained lagt night with a personal shower at the Canary Cottage for Miss Lorraine JFiercy, whose marriage to Albert’ O. Moffitt -will ke Sept. 10. !
‘Mrs. Howard Hoaver, will entertain |
Fre Helen and Julia Colbert, tickets; Mrs. Joseph Madden, card parties, assisted by Mesdames Edward Boltz, Joseph Davey, Timothy Shanahan, John Gallagher, Mary Keller, Thomas Quill and Syrious Alvey. Others
Youth Grpup of Catholic Church Sponsors. Party
A garden party, lawn festival and
lecture are among activities for this week which members of groups afRlisied with churches plan to atend.
Members of the Catholic Youth
Organization of St. Francis de Sales @atholic Church will sponsor a garden card party at 2:30 p. m. Saturday at the hgme of Mrs. Peter Clements, a junior advisory board member, at 2920 Clements Ave. Proceeds are to go to the C. Y. O. Hope Chest which will be given at the St. Francis bazaar next month. .
Assisting with the party are Mrs.
William Goory, senior advisory board member; Miss Anna Marie Patterson, James Maginnis, officers of the junior C. Y. O., division of the parish.
Miss: Elizabeth Mueller and
Mrs. Charles O. Britton® will talk
on “Women and the Way in China” this afternoon at a meeting. the Women’s Missionary [Society of the Memorial Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Robert Reeves, 5246 Central Ave, will be hostess. She will be assisted
y the Mesdames Walter Idle, Walter
Jones, George Perlee, Charles Deeter Vos; Wesley Gainey of Greenfield; |and Florence Daniel. ‘£
St. Patrick’s Church will hold its
annual summer lawn festival opening today and continuing through Saturday on the church lawn. A chicken dinner is planned for tonight, a fish fry on Friday, card parties tomorrow and Friday afternoons and a children’s party on Friday afternoon.
Committees in charge include Mrs. Engelking, dinner; Misses
are: Mrs. Joseph Davey, children’s
party; Mrs. J. J. McGovern and Mrs. John Fitzgerald, apron booth; the Young People’s Club men members,’
soft drinks, and the young women, candy and ice cream. Men of the
parish gre in charge of games.
Annabelle Shalley, To Be Wed Aug. 20
Miss Annabelle Shalley, 1832 N. Harding St., has chosen Sunday, Aug. 20, as the date for her wedding to Edwin M. Schaad, Washington,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Emil V. Schaad,
2645 Applegate St. Miss Shalley is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Shailey, 1832 N. Harding St. Miss Doris’ Stanger will be maid of honor at the wedding and James C. Brown ‘will be best man. Flower girls will be Joan Johnson and Geraldine Johnson, \
Mrs. Frances Weddle
Is Psi Chi Phi Guest|
Mrs. Frances Weddle will be honor guest tonight at a shower which members of Psi Chi Phi have planned for tonight at the home of
Mrs. Robert Dickinson, 919 Spruce
St. : Mrs, Weddle was Miss Alice Marquette before her recent marriage. Members will plan a group visit to see Miss Lita Stephenson, a member who is convalescing in the hospital. : :
Joy Lodge 5 to Frolic
Members of the Widow, Widowers;
Guests included’ Mrs. Earl Piercy and Mrs. Silas C. Moffitt, mothers of the bride and pridegroom-to-be; Mrs. Larry Kirk and Mrs. Frank Henzie and the Misses Dorothy MacDonald; Marjorie Montel, Cora
Maid and Bachelors Joy Lodge 5, will hold a picnic for the public at 2:30 p. m. Sunday in the Municipal Gardens. Dancing will be held from 3 to 7 p. m. and entertainment will be provided. William McMasters, president, and Mrs. Nellie Houldson,
‘| terline, Carmel.
|neman and Mrs. Iva Arbuckle, en-
Maunt, Carol Suhre, Edith Garner, Mildred Overbeck, Darline Winter, Virginia Merklin, (Gienevieve Jatho
secretary, rangements, .
are ' assisting with ar-
3 .
~ Farewell Fete: In Scout Area
|. i
Aloha Campfires to Mark Closing Ceremonies of ~ Dellwood Season. ;
Indianapolis Girl Scouts will give a farewell party tonight at Camp Dellwood as a finale to several weeks of troop and regular camping. Ceremonies will start with a special supper at Sycamore Lodge. The Service unit is to be seated at a Mariner Table; the Sherwood group at a Robin Hood feast; Wood-
‘|land, ‘at a gypsy table, and the Fairy
Ring ‘at an elfin supper. After supper each unit will hold an aloha campfire saying farewell to some popular spot. The. Fairy Ring campers will be at Swinging Bridge and will send small lighted boats down Big Eagle Creek. Sher- . wood and Woodland units are to build campfires on the hilltop and the Service Scouts will build a fire before the Log Cabin and pay tribute to pioneer scouts. The units will gather at the Council Bowl for a general Camp Fire. It will be extinguished by each Scout dropping on a green leaf with good wishes for the 1940 season. After the Seouts have gone. to their: tents the staff will hold its farewell party. Miss Dorothy Hande, field captain, “will be the honor guest. She will leave soon for her home in Maryland and later for a scouting position in California. Mrs. Earl E. Moomaw, chairman, announces that Scouts have camped at Dellwood this season. ; A three-day regional training school will be held at the Camp on Saturday for leaders from four states of the Great Lakes Region. Miss Janet Webb of the national training staff will be here to direct the camp. -
Alpha Omicron National Leader To Speak Here
Mrs. J. R. Sentney, national president of Alpha Omicron Alpha Sorority,” will speak this afternoon following the annual Founders’ Day luncheon of the local chapter at The Homestead. Bridge will follow. Members of chapters in Colume bus, Muncie, Minneapolis and Louise ville are expected to attend. : Mrs. J. W. Hill is in charge, ase sisted by Mesdames George Studee baker, J. J. Kintner, Maurice Linde ley, William Steart, Charles Miller and L. H. Noble. The local chapter is planning its annual benefit card party for Sept, 19 at Ayres’ auditorium.
EVENTS
SORORITIES
Theta Sigma Delta. Mon. eve. Mrs. Frances Fox, 3614 N. Tacoma, hostess. Social party.
Alpha Chapter, Beta Chi ‘Theta. 8 p. m. today. Miss Mary Louise Harrell, hostess. Miss Thelma Huber, assistant. Business meet-
ing. CLUB North End Garden. Fri. Mrs. Merle Sidener, 5305 Washington Blvd, hostess. Miss Anna Hosea,
speaker, LODGES Naomi Auxiliary, O. E. S. Fri. Mrs, Mathilda Tschute, hostess at summer. home on Michigan Road. Chartered bus to leave at 10 a.m. from Masonic Temple, Illinois and North. Covered dish luncheon at noon.
Pilgrim Shrine 12. 7:30 p. m. Thurs, Mrs. Daisy Carlisle, 520 N. Bradley, hostess. Garden party and cards, | CARD PARTY
St. Mary's Social Club. 2 p. m. Thurs. School Hall, 317 N. New Jersey. Mrs. Elizabeth Siener, hostess. Public invited.
Bay Laurel W. C.T.U. Meets at 2 on Friday,
Members of the Bay Laurel Women's Christian Temperance Union will meet at 2 p. m. Friday at the West Michigan Methodist Church, Mrs. Claude H. Faulkner, president, will be in charge. Mrs. Mary Cox will lead the devotions and Mrs. Martha Best will provide music. Departmental reports will be presented and dues collected. g :
C. R. U. X. Club to Meet
The C. R. U. X. Club of Shortridge High School will hold a business meeting tonight at the home of Jack
‘Hayes, 2805 Ruckle St. Members will
go to the Little America recreation center. : : :
and Miss Betty Stansbury, Lake Forest, N. C., Miss Winifred Fike, Kokbmo, and Miss Marguerite EsMiss Piercy is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Piercy, Carmel, s 8 8 | Mr. and Mrs. William R. Hopkins entertained at dinner last night for Miss Florence Scott and her fiance, James R. Herdrich. The couple will be married Sept. 1. Miss Scott is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Elmer E. Scott and Mr. Herdrich's parents are Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Herdrich. Guests with the betrothed couple included the Misses Ruth Coler,
Bruceville, and Miss Mary Lou Spencer of Monticello; Messrs. Williard Blachley, Ted and Eugene Scott.
Old Settlers to M eet
The Jackson Park Old Settlers Reunion will be held Sunday at
will be followed by a program. Fred Verick is president; Mrs, Flo Forkner, secretary, and Mrs. Grace Bar-
tertainment chairmen. |
Martha Anderson Wed
: have
Alice Woods, Marjorie Hill of]
William Gaus and]
Brookside Park. A basket dinner}
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