Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 August 1939 — Page 10

Er \

Wellesley Club Meets Tomorrow As Members ‘Perk Up’ for Fall

MEMBERS of the Indianapolis Wellesley Club are “perking” up for the fall activities. A called meet-

ing of the group will be held at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow

at the home of Mrs. Maxwell Coppock. Mrs. Karl Koons,

- president of the organization, will preside. - Parties Keep Beth Williston Busy

¥

Wh

The brides-to-be never want for something to do—social slump or no. Beth| Ann Williston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dudley M. Williston, will find her leisure moments -few and far between, according to the list of prenuptial parties planned in her honor. Miss Williston will be married Sept. 3 to Joseph Walker Barr,

5 Bicknell. Mrs. Alexander Corbétt Jr. will give a tea for the bride-

Nid b

.to-be on Aug. 23. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Thornton will entertain at a dinner Saturday night, Aug, 26, at the Athenaeum for Miss Williston and Mr. Barr. ! Miss Margaret Willman will entertain at a tea Aug. 27 at her home, 111 E. 30th ‘St., and Aug. 29, Misses Mary llen Voyles and Jean Storer will give a linen shower at the Jatter’s home, 4451 Park Ave. :

Dinner Honors Magdalene Adams

Another item in the prenuptial news is the small dinner party Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Taylor will give tonight at Cifaldi’s for Miss Magdalene Adams. Miss Adams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Will H. Adams, will be married Sept. 3 to M. Turpin Davis, son of Mr, and Mrs. Benjamin F. Davis. Covers will be laid for the bride-to-be and her fiance, Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Smith, Miss Martina Sink and Harold Kost.

Ellsworth Scotts Return Home

Indianapolis residents are still coming and going, but as September grows closer the arrivals are increasing. Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Scott are back home again after several weeks’ stay in Traverse City, Mich. Miss Margaret Seegmiller, who has been spending the summer at her cottage in Old Mission, Mich., is expected home the end of this week. \ : Shubert Kothe, Lewis Morrison and Harley Rhodehamel Jr., who have been spending the past two months touring Europe, will sail Aug. 23 from Southampton on their way back to Indianapolis. They landed in France early in the summer and have motored through Italy, Belgium, England and Germany. Mr. Kothe will go back to Harvard this fall for his senior year, Mr. Morrison will be a senior, at Purdue University and Mr. Rhodehamel will return to

| Purdue for his junior year.

&

Lewis Girls Sail for Home Sept. 6

Other news from European travelers comes in the letters of Misses Volinda and Phoebe Lewis, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. E. I. Lewis, Washington, formerly of Indianapolis. The Lewis girls are spending the| summer in Italy, where they have been in private homes as members of the Experiment in International Living project. Their latest letter to Indianapolis friends described a trip they took to Sienna, a picnic luncheon in the Leaning Tower of Pisa and a plan to spend a week in the Dolomite mountains before sailing for home Sept. 6. They will arrive in New York Sept. 14. - Another traveler is Mrs. Robert Lieber who plans to return to Berlin, after spending this month at the Marott Hotel. Mrs. Lieber took one trip abroad earlier in the summer. - : Not such! extensive travelers gre Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wright Boyd Jr., who sailed Aug. 10 for a cruise through the West Indies. Mrs. Boyd, who was Miss Ruth Simpson before her marriage, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Rooe Simpson, Indianapolis.

Miss McLin off for Alleghenies

An additional nomination for the “Abandon Indianapolis Club” is Miss Catherine McLin, who has left for the Allegheny Mountains where she will spend the remainder of the summer. She was accompanied by| her cousin, Robert Davidson, New York, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hardin McLin. Another cahndidate is Mrs. J. E. McNamara of the Marott Hotel who is now at White Sulphur Springs and plans to go later to Old Point Comfort for a brief visit. Among arrivals is that of Dr. Alexander S. Dowling, Corning, N. Y., and his sons, Clark and Scott, who will visit at the home of Dr. Dowling’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Dowling. |

McClures to Leave for Lake ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Horace McClure and their children, John, Katherine

and Mary, will leave Monday for Oden, Mich, on Crooked Lake,

. where they will stay until after Labor Day. Miss Lucile Cannon left yesterday for a month’s stay at Colorado Springs. Mys. George Ziegler and her children are spending the summer at Walloon Lake, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. David P. Williams Jr. and their children, who have spent the summer on the West Coast, will return to Indianapolis next week.

Active and Alumnae Sorority

Prospective pledge ‘members of several college sororities are to be rush parties tonight and Saturday by active and alumnae - members of college social groups. Another organiaztion will meet tonight

honored with

Groups to Entertain Pledge

at the Y. W. C. A. Young women who are to enter universities and colleges having Phi Mu Chapters will be entertained by ithe Phi Mu Alumnae Association of Indianapolis. at a County Fair party this evening [at the home of Mrs. Clinton H. Glascock, 5158 Kenwood Ave. Alumnae who will assist the-host-‘ess are the Misses Florence Day, Nancy Benefiel, Dotty Lackey, Ruby Lou Lillard, Mesdames Robert Reed, W. C. Shannon and William B. Wilcox. Active members assisting with arrangements, include the Misses Patty Lou Pluess, Judith McTurnan, Betty Jean cKamey, Irma Williams, Mary| Jo Barker, Virgene Moore, Nina Brittain and Patty Roesch, Indianapolis; Misses Charlotte Lockner, Ann Pierce and Jean McClintock, (Lafayette, and Miss Mildred Hupp, Newcastle. Miss Hupp is visiting at the McTurnan home. Miss Maurine Keller, Davenport, Iowa, rush captain of the Alpha Chi Omega chapter at DePauw University, is the house guest of Miss

Frances Loomis, 5915 Lowell Ave.}

until Tuesday.

Girls planning to enter DePau next month are to be entertain by active members of the chapter a a cabaret party Saturday afternoo at the home of Mrs. Robert L Mason, Local young women in charge o arrangements preceding Miss Kell er’s arrival are the Misses Miria Ransberg, Elizabeth Kadel, Louis Beechey and Mary Jane Mc Gaughey.

Members of the Verae Soro Chapter of the Verus Cordis So rority held a picnic recently a Forest Park in Noblesville. Follow ing ‘ the picnic dinner variou games were played.

Mrs. Merle Denny and Mi Helen Reith will be cohostess for the meeting this evening o Alpha Chapter of Rho Delta at th Y. W. C. A,

7979 Morningside Drive|

| Joan Fritz,

COUNT

Gl

Summer afternoons at the Indianapolis Country Club are lively affairs, particularly on bridge party days. This quartet, which includes (left to right) Mesdames Sherwood Blue, Murray De Armond, J.

Times Photos, !

‘Between hands, conversation flourishes. At this table are (left to right) Mesdames Leon Desautels,

Rex Moonshower, Cooke Coen, Chicago, who is visiting hi E. Curtis, who played together yesterday afternoon.

er mother, Mrs, William S. Allen, and Mrs. James |

“The Showers Arrived’ —for Brides-to-Be

Mrs. Norman Gold to Give Linen Party Tonight For Helen Marvin. A suggested title for memoirs of any of the current brides-to-be

might be “The Showers Arrived’— because there is a torrent of parties

|being planned by hostesses for the | young women who will be married

soon. Several . engagements have been announced and one young woman has chosen members of her bridal party. ££ Miss Helen Marvin, whose marriage to Lawrence Rolland Baker

{will be Sept. 1, will be entertained | {tonight at a linen shower given in

her honor by Mrs. Norman Gold. Guests will include the Mesdames LeGrande Marvin, George Baker, C. J. Petithory, Herman Bickers and the Misses Esther Marvin, Ann Custer, Betty Custer, Nancy Davis, Helen Swank and Elsie Lawrence. ” ” 2

Miss Doris Driggs will be hostess tomorrow night at her home, 3454 E. 25th St, with a party in honor of Miss Lorene Arbuckle, whose

‘| marriage to Howard T. Averitt will

be Aug. 26. Guests with the bride-to-be and

|| her mother, Mrs. Harry Arbuckle, will be Miss Marguerite = Averitt,

sister of the bridegroom-to-be; Mesdames J. A. Bruns, Vivian Taylor, George Hewes, F. L. Harrison, Era Courts, W. L. Caskey, R. K. Caskey, Alpha Cromer, Froney, H. H. Petty, Fred. McWhinney, Hazel Brown, Edith Demaree, Fred Anderson, William Westfall and the Misses Martha Caskey and Katherine McWhinney. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. C. P. Driggs. .

2 2m Miss Geraldine James, 35 Hendricks Place, entertained with a dinner and miscellaneous shower recently in honor of Miss Mary Beth King, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence H. King, 501 Sutherland

Ave, whose marriage to George Martin Ferry, Hartford, Conn., will

lI be Sept. 7 in Hartford.

- Guests were Miss King, Mrs. Rush | Brown and Misses Gladys Lipscomb, | Elizabeth Sullivan and Betty Jeanne | Balz. Mrs. Nicholas Suding entertained | recently at a miscellaneous shower in honor of her niece, Miss Clara | Suding, whose marriage to Eugene | Bauman will be Saturday, Aug. 26, in Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Attending the shower were Mesdames George Suding, Adolph Fritz, Otto Fritz, Nicholas Biehl, Joseph Suding, Joseph Suding Jr., Ray Steffen, Theodore Schuster, Carl Suding, Arthur Timpe, Albert Hoop, Michael Schott, Henry Suding; the Misses Dorothy Biehl, Mary Suding, Anne Suding, Elizabeth Suding, Lorene Sheats and Louise Suding.

5 8 s 2 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Harms, 2158 S. Pennsylvania St., have announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their daugh-

JANE JORDAN-

EAR JANE JORDAN—I am a girl of 19 and am having trouble

|

| 1

with my parents. My mother

objects to my staying out until

10 o'clock or after. If you go to a dance or to a show it is sometimes 12 o'clock when you get out, and if you get anything to eat it is

late when you get home.

vy Mother is also always telling me that the only person she trusts or has any confidence in is her mother. Naturally it makes me feel bad. The other night we had some words and she told me if I did not like the way our house was run, why didn’t I find a better one? She seems to enjoy telling me she will be glad when I get married. I admit that I may be an independent child, but I don’t like to make any trouble. My mother has worked hard to rear me and I appreciate the fact. ' Could you recommend ‘something I could do or say to better this situation? TROUBLED.

#8 ” ” » 2 2

Answer—You say you are having trouble with your parents but the only difficulty you mention is with your mother. Where does your father stand in these conflicts, with you or with your mother? Although sentimental opinion would have it that a girl's best friend is her mother, we often find mother and daughter in bitter competition for the favor of the father. If your father takes your part frequently, it would serve to make your mother find fault with you, the better to lower you in his estimation.

If this is true, your father could help you by paying more atten--

tion to your mother. In general it is true that a woman in love with her husband is not as apt to find herself out of sympathy, with her daughter as one who feels deprived in her married life. Something about your mother’s remark that the only person she trusts is her own mother, indicates disappointment in her marriage. One does not lean so heavily on the love relationships of childhood unless one has failed to find other equally satisfactory loves in maturity. Try to understand your mother. She has worked hard and met with many frustrations, among which is the failure to establish a friendship with her daughter. It looks as if you were going to have to help your mother instead of receiving help from her as you expect. A few sympathetic remarks which show’ insight into her difficulties will help to eiter her attitude toward your actions. _ obliged to oppose her do so kindly, and refrain from saying things "that cut, for you only invite retaliation. ” c “Are you friendly with your grandmother? If she is your mother’s . guiding star, you might get some help from her in establishing a ; relationship at home. JANE JORDAN,

When you are

ter, Alice, to Alfred Bunte, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bunte, 4716 Bluff Road. The wedding will be Sept. 16 at 8:30 p. m. in the Pleasant Run Boulevard Evangelical and Reformed Church.

ra 2 2

The Rev. and Mrs. J. F. Flanigan, 627 Division St., have announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Alma Elizabeth, to Robert W. Davis, Indianapolis; son .of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Davis, Greenfield. The wedding will be Sept. 10 in the Trinity Methodist Church. “-

Kenneth}

Personals Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hogan, W. 56th St. and DeLong Road, and their daughter, Mrs, John Blish of Seymour, are vacationing in New York following a trip to Bermuda. During their New York stay the family plans to attend several Broadway plays and visit the World's

Fair. They will stop to see relatives in Ottawa,. Ill, before returning to their homes. : Mrs. Daisy Hunter, Beech Grove, junior past state councilor of the Daughters of America; Mrs. Maude Foxworthy, state law committee; Mrs. Fannie: E. Draper, state press committee, attended a recent Hard Times Social at Noblesville given by the Liberty Bell Council, Daughters of America. : : Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hood Martin, 311 E. 51st St., have returned after several weeks at their cottage at Macatawa, Mich. Their daughter, Barbara, and her guest, Miss Virginia Niven, who visited at the Martin cottage, returned with them. Barbara will enter Butler University this fall and Miss Niven will go to DePauw.

Pauline Tdylor Is Married to George Kidwell

Miss Pauline Taylor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Taylor, 925 Keystone Ave. became the bride of George Kidwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kidwell in a ceremony at 9 o'clock this morning in St. Philip Neri Catholic Church. The Rev. Fr. Edwin F. Sahm officiated at the single ring service. White net over satin fashioned the bridal gown, which was styled with long sleeves, a train and satin insets at the neckline. Satin covered buttons formed the bodice trim down the back. The bride's veil was flingertip length and fell from a seed pearl coronet. She carried lilies of the valley and pink roses. Miss Margaret Louise Taylor was her sister’s maid of honor in a pink net gown trimmed with blue. She wore ‘a pink and blue bow in her hair and carried an old-fashioned bouquet of garden flowers. Barbara Jean Taylor, younger sister of the bride, was flower girl. She wore a blue net dress over a taffeta petticoat and carried a pink and blue basket of petals. Earl William Kidwell ‘attended his brother as best man. : A wedding breakfast was served, after the ceremony at the Taylor home and a reception is to be held there until 2:30 p. m. After a motor trip the couple will be at home Thursday, Aug. 24, at 805 Fletcher Ave. :

Recruits Sought For Gitl Scout Leadership Here

Newly appointed members of the junior division of the group organization committee of the Girl Scout Council are. to meet this afternoon at a tea at the home of Mrs. Marvin E. Curle, committee chairman. Plans to interest young women of the city who were graduated from college last June, in being Scout leaders or assisting with the Scout program will be discussed. A tentative tea party is scheduled for next month. 'A discussion meeting for prospective workers at the Little House also will be held. Members of the newly formed junior group are leaders and assistant leaders of troops. They include the Misses Jean Rau, Betty Hammerstadt, Jean Soehner, Betty Messick, ‘Jane Snider, Mary Ellen Voyles; Mesdames Kenneth Kin-

near, Richard McCreary and David 5

Laurence Chambers Jr."

Help Arrange Church Fete

Plans are nearly completed for the garden party tomorrow and Saturday being given by Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church. - Th ' group, including deft to right) Miss Margaret O'Rourke, M Miss Helen Galm, Mrs. Frank R. Lutz and 1

|| Day, has taken an active part in m

is | building and buying amounting. to

Thayer Waldo anc Paul T. Rochford, are taking a “breather” at yesterday's guest party.

Mrs. McNutt Heeds Call of

‘It’s No Hotter Here Than In Indianapolis,” She Declares. |

Times Special WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.—The McNutt family has been in and out of Washington many times; but this time, says Mrs. McNutt, wife of Paul V. McNutt, new Federal Security Administrator, “We have come to stay.” “The “stay” may be even longer than Mrs. McNutt thinks, since her husband has climbed from fifth to second place in the Gallup pole as Democratic preference for President. | “Well, perhaps it is warm; but it’s no warmer than Indianapolis and not nearly as warm as Manila,” was Mrs. McNutt’s cheery reply to the eternal weather question put to her upon her recent arrival to take up permanent residence at the Hotel Shoreham. That is, as “permanent” as any residence ever is to such a movable household.

' Dishes and - Silver Awaited

Her arrival was something of a surprise, as she had not intended

late in September, when daughter Louise was snug in Indiana University. But having a breezy husband who can take Washington weather in his stride after his ex-

| tended stay in the Philippines, Mrs.

McNutt decided that she, too, could bear it. So here she is with bag,

in a frenzy of unpacking. However, official housekeeping at the McNutt menage will not be inaugurated until next week, when dishes and silver arrive from the Midwest. ! Meanwhile Louise is digging in with the family and willl stay put here until about Sept. 8, when she will be off to Bloomington. True enough, school doesn’t begin until the middle of September, but no attractive freshman can fail to miss sorority “rush week.” She already has her share of bids to join up, but being her own political dad’s daughter, she is making no commitments and refuses to be quoted. |

With an eye to the future, Louise

already has her parents signed up to

visit her on Thanksgiving, which will make it her turn to, come to Washington Christmas for the holidays and the gay goings-on among the vacationing students here.

Morning Golf Scheduled

Fresh from what Mr. McNutt calls the “upheaval in Indianapolis,” which had her maving here before she had moved in from the Philippines, this intrepid traveler already has her eyes trained to find the likeliest golf course for her game. Her golf bag was one of the first items to be unscrambled, and she already had taken up with her husband a program of esarly-morning

likelihood will include Louise, who has started learning the mysteries of tee and green, but is as yet far from keeping up with her finished putting parents. f : However, neither can they keep up with her at swimming or badminton, so all’s fair, especially as the trio agrees on love of riding. Come the

Nutt will join the Capital's official trail blazers. Mrs. McNutt feels confident that she won't need to flee the torrid town even for shore or mountain

things kept on simmering into September she might be tempted. For the nonce, however, she wants to get unpacked and havé a breathing

pell. E“It will be so nice to get settled,” she murmured.

By now she has learned not to

'| ask: ‘For how long?”

This year Indianapolis is giving us a fair share of courageous temperature defers, for Senator and Mrs. Prederick VanNuys for the first time are continuing serenely through a Capital summer.

Women to Hear R. Earl Peters

R. Earl Peters, director “of the Federal Housing Administration in

| Indiana, is to address members of

the May Wright Sewall Council of

‘| Women following a luncheon meet-

ing today at the Spink-Arms Hofel. . Peters is to talk on ser

of the FHA to prospective home

| owners. Since the opening of the | FHA office, 3836 applications from

Marion County were received for an approximate volume of home

cil

at Sewall

Capital Links|

to descend upon Washington until|

baggage and daughter and already|

matches. These dawn sorties in all|

fall, the Administrator and Mrs. Mc-|

week-ends. She admitted that if|}

Varied Program

The organization, founded in 1885, meets on the second Saturday of the month from October through May. Meetings this year are to be heid at members’ homes with the exception of special gatherings which will meet at the Woodstock Club, the Propylaeum and the John Herron Art Museum. Mrs. Charles B. Campbell will speak on “Red Letter Days” at the Presidents’ Day meeting. Miss Josephine Herron is president. “Reflections” will be the subject discussed by Mrs. David Smith at the meeting on Armistice Day at the home of Mrs. Louis Burkhardt, 3159 N. Pennsylvania St, A guest day meeting with “Christinastide” as its theme will be held Dec. 9 at the Proylaeum. Miss Helena Sipe and Miss Madelaine Speers will present the pro-

Mesdames H. A. O. Speers, Russell Williams, Samuel M. Deal, Thomas R. White, Carl Walk, Herbert S. Wood; .the Misses Mary Sullivan, Grace Emery, Anna Sickels and Sara C. Ewing. A paper on “French Personalities” will be presented by Mrs. Wendell Rynerson on Jan. 13, the first meeting in 1940, with. Mrs. John 8S. Wright as hostess at her home, 4411 Washington Blvd. Mrs. Mansur B. Oakes will discuss “Scents of Yesterday” before the group on Feb. 10 at the home of Mrs. Evans Woollen Jr., 3924 N. Delaware St. The spring guest day program will

gram and hostesses will include|

of Sketches

And Papers Arranged for 55th

Year of Catharine Merrill Club

A varied program of personality sketches and papers has been announced. for the 55th year of activity for the Catharine Merrill Club. The 1939-40 club season will open with the President’s Day meeting Saturday, Oct. 14, at the Woodstock Club. i :

be held March 9 at the John Herron Art Museum. Miss Dorothy Segur and Mrs. Wilbur-D. Peat are to present the program, “Within the Hermitage.” Hostesses will be Mesdames James C. Carter, George Caleb Wright, Hugh Carpenter, J. T. McDermott - and Miss Constance Jones. : Mrs. John W. Atherton will be hostess April 13 at her home, 5060 Pleasant Run Parkway, for the club birthday meeting; Mrs. Clifford E. Wagoner will be in charge of the program. Miss Daisy Avery will speak on “Indiana With a Pen in Her Hand” at the final meeting of the season May 11 at the home of Mrs. Ross C. Ottinger, 5720 Sunset Lane. Er Other officers assisting Miss Herron for 1939-40 are Mrs. John S. Wright, vice president; Mrs. George Caleb: Wright, recording secretary; Mrs. Vance Smith, corresponding secretary, and Mrs, Ethel M. Rathert, treasurer. Executive committee members include Mesdames Charles Brossman, Margaret. B. Segur, Samuel H. Fletcher, Miss Sara C. Ewing and Miss Jessie E. Moore. Members of the membership committee are Mesdames Samuel M. Deal, Henry Kahn and J. Jerome Fittell. The memorial library committee is’ composed of Mesdames Carter, Carpenter; Addison A. Howe,

Miss Emery and Miss Jones.

N ew Leader of J.I.F.F.Club To Be Seated

Mrs. Fred Hite Will Be Luncheon Hostess to On-Ea-Ota.

Installation of officers, an initiae

tion service an all-day outing and:

a luncheon-bridge party are scheds

uled among women’s club activities

for, today. and tomorrow. Initiation services and installa=

tion of recently elected officers will.

be held this evening by members of the J. I. F. F. Club of Shortridge High School at their meeting at the home of Miss Lois Ruth Liljeblad, 3846 Park Ave. Miss Lois Ruth Liljeblad, outgoing president, will be in charge of initiation services for Miss Betty Willingham. Miss Sallie Vaught will be installed as president and other officers include ‘Miss Alice Hart, vice president; Miss Mary Frances Arnold, secretary, and Miss Edna Liljeblad, treasurer.

Members and pledges of the Lo-Sin-Loy Club will hold a dinner meeting at 6:30 p. m. today at the home of the Misses Virginia and Carolyn Creek, 4071 Byram Ave.

Mrs. Fred Hite, 2133 English Ave, is to be hostess this afternoon for a ‘luncheon-bridge m On-Ea-Ota Club. been appointed trustee of the char-

ity fund by Mrs. W. C. Baker, newly .

elected president of the club. A short business I held before the bridge

sisting the hostess will be Mrs,

Gern L. Hefferman and Mrs, Clara .

Seitz of-the sick committee.

Alecks

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