Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1939 — Page 4
MONDAY, OCT. 30; 1989 Clubs to Hear gi Book Reviews * 3 And Lectures «| Talk on Act Scheduled for ]
- Guest Day by Chapter | Of Sisterhood. |
Society— Informal . Parties Being Held For Mrs. Julia Lilly Darlington
Several informal parties and family gatherings: are being held in honor of Mrs. Julia Lilly Darlington prior to her marriage Wednesday to Eugene Cecil van Wyck, New York. The wedding will be at high noon in Mrs.
Darlington’s home. cy ; Mrs. George Lilly, Mrs. Darlington’s aunt, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Campbell are entertaining this evening at a family dinner in their home. Mrs, James Watkinson Lilly, Mrs. Darlington’s mather, will give a bridal dinner tomorrow evening at Woodstock for members of the family and out-of-town guests. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Vonnegut gave a party Friday evening and the week-end was filled with informal gatherings of friends of the couple and members of the family. Mrs. Darlington’s son, James Lilly Darlington, came Saturday morning from Philadelphia.
Meridian Hills Juniors Plans Treasure Hunt. Juniors between 11 and 14 years old at Marion Hills Countrg Club are making extensive preparations for the treasyre hunt after school this afternoon at the club. Several parties have been are ranged and a few juniors have invited guests to “hunt” with them. Pencils, flashlights .and “huntin’” clothes have been laid oyt all week-end, their mothers say. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Arensman head the committee and have all 18 clues well concealed. The clues, written in football jargon, are in rhyme and the two children who return to the club first with the greatest number of correct . answers will win. However, the committee, including Mr. and Mrs. James L. Murray and Dr. and Mrs. Edgar T. Haynes, have cautioned everyone to be back by 7 o'clock in time for refreshments. Bobby Haynes will take a group of five of his friends, including Bob Steinhart, Bob Burnett, Jim Lodwick, Jack Henderson and Jimmy Hoover. Joan Summers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Summers, will have Patty Lewis as her partner. Flo Mary Foreman, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Foreman's daughter and Carolyne Smith will hunt together, as will Betty Arensman and Barbara Suits. Harry Kerr Jr, son Bf Dr. and Mrs. Harry Kerr, has invited several of his friends, including Toner Overly Jr, Ray Coleglazier, Billie Eckhart and Jimmy and Billy Guyot. Margaret Waldo and Martha McConnell have joined forces for the hunt.
Dr. Wicks to Address Literary Club. Members of the Indianapolis Literary Club will hear the Rev. Frank S. C. Wicks talk on “Apology for Reading Fiction” at their meeting this evening in the clubrooms at the D. A. R. Chapter House. Ferris T. Taylor was scheduled originally to talk on “White Oak Farm.” :
Ladywood Sophomores to Give Party.
The sophomore class at Ladywood School will give a Halloween party tomorrow night in the Ladywood gymnasium. Miss
Several lectures and two book ree views are scheduled for, women's ‘lclubs meeting tomorrow. One group will observe its annual guest day with a talk on art. Mrs. John Mason Moore will dise cuss “Citizens of Tomorrow” and Miss Ruth O’Hair will talk on “Divided We Stand” at the meeting of the FORTNIGHTLY LITERARY CLUB at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at th Propylaeum. y /
# . Mrs. D. E, Kramer and Mrs. A. Reid Liverett are to present the proe gram at the meeting of the IRVe INGTON CHAUTAUQUA CLUB to=morrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. William® H. Burgess, 133 Downey Ave. '
Mrs. Charles Wintergerst ‘will ree view “Three Harbours” (F. Van Wyck Mason) at a meeting of the ST. CLAIR LITERARY CLUB toe - morrow at the country home of Mrs, Paul Bowman. ;
A review of “Safari” (Martin Johnson) will be presented by Mrs. C. M. Finney before members of the HOOSIER TOURIST CLUB tomorrow. Mrs. T. E. Foster will be hostess at her home, 801 Carlyle Place. Mrs. Foster will talk on “African Hollywood.”
Wilbur D. Peat, director of the John Herron Art Museum, will speak to members of CHAPTER Q of the P. E. O. SISTERHOOD and their guests at a tea tomorrow at 2 p. m. in Sculpture Court of the art institute. His subject will be “The Artist's Point of View.” Mrs. John R. Kuebler, second vice president of the state chapter and president of Chapter @, will introduce the speaker. In the receive
a
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Riviera Club 3 Events Listed
1Sewall Council
Will Hold Tea
Marianna Walsh has charge of invitations and students will wear
.the same clothes they were wearing
when they received the bids.
Miss Jayne Heidbrink, sophomore president, has appointed Miss Eugenie McCarthy refreshments chairman; Miss Audrey Montrose, entertainment head, and Miss Dorothy Sheering, chairman of decorations. Miss Cornelia McGurk will direct the entertainment. Miss Heidbrink and ‘Miss Patricia Mushrush will give an acrobatic dance.
Form Junior Riding. Club.
. Young rides in Indianapolis have decided to do a little pros moting of their own affairs in a=new junior club which was formed last week at the home of Miss Marilyn Richards, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank F. Richards.
Club members have been winning
ribbops in recent shows along with the veterans. Dr. P. O. Bonham and Miss Audrey Pugh will be club sponsors. The new group will hold its next meeting Nov. 12 at the home of Miss Letitia Sinclair and will take a breakfast ride next month as
its opening event. rangements for the ride.
Group Elects Officers.
Miss Beth Anderson will have charge of ar-
New officers of the group, whose members all are under 20 years old, include Jimmie McNutt, president; Miss Richards, vice-presi-dent; Miss Ann Cantwell, secretary, and Albert Metzger, treasurer. Additional charter members are the Misses Patricia Doud, Sinclair, Cynthia Test, Frances Bloch, Marlou Hyatt, Mary Anne Pearce, An-
derson, Jane Cullough.
Abraham and’ Messrs.
Bob Perine -and William Mec-
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Witt Hadley On Trip Through Great Smokies | After Wedding Saturday Night
»
Times Special
EVANSTON, Ill, Oct. 30.—Mr.
and Mrs Donald Witt Hadley are
. on a wedding trip through the Great Smoky Mountains following their marriage at 8 p. m. Saturday in the St. Matthew's Episcopal Church. They will be at home after Nov. 6 in the Ridgeview Hotel, Evanston. The bride was Miss Flora Louise Milnes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Milnes, Evanston, and Mr. Hadley is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Witt W. Hadley, Indianapolis. The Rev. John Heuss officiated at the candlelight service. Large vases of white chrysanthemums and white snapdragons flanked the altar. Among Indianapolis guests at the wedding were the bridegroom's parents and brother, Witt H. Hadley Jr., who was an usher; Miss Lou A. Rubush, Miss Katherine E. Rubush, Mrs. J. P. Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Johnson.
Coronet of Orange Blossoms
The bride, who was given in marHage by her father, wore a longsleeved gown of off-white satin made with a romance neckline, gathered bodice, full skirt and circular train. Her long veil with a
short face veil was held in place by a coronet of orange blossoms and she carried a bouquet of white sweet peas and roses. : Miss Peggy Milnes, the bride's sister, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Ellen Bruckert, ~=Oak Park, and Mjss June Chloupek, Wilmette. All the attendants wore gowns of hyacinth blue moire fashioned ‘with heart-shaped necklines, floor-length skirts, short puffed sleeves and bustle backs. Miss Milnes’ headdress was a head veil of dubonnet secured by curled ostrich plumes. Miss Bruckert and Miss Chloupek wore similar head.dresses of hyacinth blue and all carried bouquets carrying out the color scheme of hyacinth blue and dubonnet. Charles D. Johnson, Indianapolis, was best “man. Ushers included Russell Westfall, Chicago, and formerly of Indianapolis; Foster Snyder, Evanston; Edward Morgan, Oak Park, and Witt W. Hadley Jr.
Fi Gown Floor-length The bride’s mother wore a floorlength gown of claret wine crepe with a matching turban of ostrich feathers and velvet. The bride-
Legion Women To Hear Coulon
. Norman H. Coulon will be guest speaker at the first evening meeting of the 12th District American Legion Auxiliary at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday in the Indiana World War Memorial. Mrs. H. S. Té¢itel, president, will preside. Mr. Coulon’s subject will be “The Armistice and the Versailles Treaty.” He is vice commander of McllvaineKothe Post and a member of Forty
and Eight and the 12th District
American Legion Americanism School faculty. Ray Grider, 12th district commander, and Mrs. Grider will be honor guests. Mrs. Hale Wilson, 12th" district auxiliary membership chairman, will present unit membership quotas for the new year.
Award Winner
groom's mother wore a sapphire|
velvet dress with matching turban of velvet and rose petals. Each wore a corsage of orchids. , A reception at the Georgian Hotel in Evanston followed the ceremony And the couple left on their trip. The bride traveled in a dress of steel blue wool with a short kidskin jacket and dubonnet accessories. Both Mr. and Mrs. Hadley are graduates of DePauw University.
Woman's Rotary Club To Hear Talk on War
Miss Ruth Merrifield, director of the, Speakers’ Bureau of the MidCouncil on International ; Re- » ns, was to speak to members of the Woman's Rotary Club following their luncheon at 12:30 p. m. today at the Columbia Club. She was to talk on “Rumbles of War.” Miss Merrifield spent three months last summer as a staff member of the American Cammittee in Geneva, : Switderland. The final collection of gifts or money ‘for the annual was to
Miss - Mary Zook (above), organist and senior in Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, has been awarded the Eva Schurmann memorial scholarship of Zeta Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, national professional musical group. The award is a $100 scholarship. Miss Helen Flaig, harpist, senior at the Conservatory, was given the second award of $50. Auditions were held during the second and third weeks of September at the Conservatory and were open to members of the sorority’s active group. Miss Zook, .a native of Peru, is a pupil of Dale Young. Miss Flaig, whose home is in Ft. Wayne, is a pupil of Rebecca i Lewis. Mrs. Dorothy M. Fowler is chapter president and Miss Mae Henri Lane is chairman of the scholarship and student aid committee. The scholarship is named in memory of Mrs. Eva Schurmann,
whe was a member of the Patton
A silver tea will be given by the May Wright Sewall Indiana Council of Women from 2-4 p. m. tomorrow in the Governor's Mansion. Guests
Mrs. M. Clifford Townsend will head the receiving line. With her will be Mrs. R. Earl Peters, Ft. Wayne, president of the organization; Mesdames Edna Pauley, E. May Hahn and E. Maude Bruce, Anderson, past presidents; Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher, Miss Sally Butler, Mrs. B. J. Roberts, Ft. Wayne; Mrs. J. E. P. Holland, Bloomington; Mrs. Emmet White, Gary, presidents of large organizations; presidents of the auxiliary to the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War; auxiliary to Veterans of Foreign Wars; auxiliary to National Association of Letter Carriers; auxiliary to 38th Division, Women's Relief Corps; Anderson Council of Women, and Huntington Council of Women. Mrs. A. C. Bernloehr, pianist, will present a musical program. Miss Betty Benauer, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. William Benauer, will sing and the Misses Norma Kroetz and Betty Brown will play accordion duets.
Purdue to Give Parents Party
Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind, Oct. 30.—~The annual state-wide Parents Institute at Purdue University will be held Wednesday and Thursday, Nov. 8 and 9. Speakers have heen announced and a tea has been planned. Institute speakers will be Dr. Lillian Gilbreth, Dr. Marion L. Mattson, director of the Nursery Schools at Purdue; Dr. Harriet E. O'Shea, mental hygienist; Dr. M. D. Steer, director of the speech clinic at Purdue, and Prof. O. F. Hall.
afternoon in the new women’s Residence Hall and Wednesday evening the group will be entertained by the Morton Parent-Teacher Association of West Lafayette.
Winners in Bridge Forum Announced
Winners in the bridge forum held recently in Block's auditorium have been anhounced by Mrs. ‘Dorothy Ellis, director. They are: Section"1: North and south, Mrs. Merritt Thompson and Mrs. Arthur Pratt, first, Mrs. Keith Jones andj Mrs. Maurice Ent, second; east and west, Mrs. John Kelly and Mrs. Wayne Warrick, first, Mrs. R. A. Schakel and Mrs. Howard Etzald, second. Section 2: North and south, Mrs. C. E. Maudlin and Mrs. H. D. Kendrick, first, Mrs. F.:A. Mulbarger and Mrs. E. R. Jones, second; east and west, Mrs. J. T. Cracraft and Mrs. Jack Moore, first, Mrs. O. M. Combs
land Mrs. H. S. French, second.
Section 3: North and south, Mrs. K. P. Pettijohn ‘and Mrs. Richard Mills, first, Mrs. £. PF. Gerlach and Mrs. W. A. Marsche Jr. second: east and west, Mrs. D. E. Grifith and Mrs. A. L. McPherson, first, and Mrs. T. A. Stewart and Mrs. C. S. Hummel, second.
Mrs. Barry Talks to To Catholic Women
Mrs. James L. Barry, diocesan president of the National Council of Cathloic women, spoke yesterday at the annual communion breakfast of the Mother Theodore Circle, Daughters of Isabella, at the Claypool Hotel, Members assisted at the 7:30 p. m. mass at St. John's Church and received Holy Communion in a body before the breakfast. Mrs. James T. Ryan, retiring regent, presided at the breakfast. Mrs. Charles Grammar, the incoming regent, and 8ther officers were installed.
Pi Omicron Sorority Plans Party Tonight
Pi Omicron Sorority will hold a Halloween party this evening in the Gold Room of the Hotel Washington. Mrs. J. Russell Hamilton is in charge of arrangements. Miss Betty Zimmerman wlil lead a grand march and a rough initiation of the new chapter will be held under the direction of Miss Mary Armstrong. Each of the six chapters will present a stunt and prizes will be awarded for the best cos-
toness Club of the sorority, _
have charge of decorations,
A tea will be given Wednesday |
from all over the state will attend.}
1. Mrs. J. B. Raper was Miss Marie Baird, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. George M.. Baird, Detroit, before her marriage Oct. 1. (Dex-heimer-Carlon Photo.) 2. Miss Marietta Mae Lamoyreux became the bride of John Egan Oct. 23. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Lamoureaux. (Ramos-Porter Photo.) 3. An Oct. 4 wedding was that of Miss Charlotte Pieper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Pieper, and Kenneth Williams. 4. Mrs. Edwin Vincent Preston was Miss Mary Jane Miller, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. E. Edwin Miller, before her marriage Sept. 4. (Kindred Photo.) 5. On Oct. 18, Miss Betty Jane Swank, daughter of Mrs. Mary Swank, became the bride of Albert L. Hughes. The couple will be at home at 960 N. Drexel Ave. after Nov, 1 (Block Photo.) 6. Mrs. Richard F. Cahill was Miss Elizabeth K. Sommer before her marriage Oct. 14.
T. B. Patients
Will Be Guests
Patients at the Marion County Tuberculosis Sanatorium at Sunnyside will be entertained this evening with a Halloween party to be given by the Sunnyside Guild. Mrs. Alonzo B. Chapman is program chairman. Decorations in the main dining room will be in the traditional Halloween spirit with witches, goblins, Wayne Horton’s Orchestra will play. Marjorie Stutz, accompanied by Marwill present a
skeletons and pumpkins.
jorie Thompson, musical monolog.
Jimmie Alltop and Dickie McCamron will give a skit, “Special Delivery,” while Marjorie and June Stutz’ skit will be “Who's Afraid?” Beatrice McHenry will give a reading. The Misses. Emily Mae Johnson, Corrine Burton and Dorothy Shoneker will assist performers. Mrs. William H. Hanning and Mrs. Erwin B. McComb will have charge
of refreshments.
Virginia White,
Friends of the brides-to-be are both with shopping for shower and parties.
Edward Aumann, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl-F. Aumann, 614 N. Bosart Ave., will he married Nov. 1 in the First Baptist Church. Guests at the shower will include Mesdames Bernard Arvin, George Irish, Louis Stewart, Walter Lowry, Frederic Azbell, John Linhart, T. White, the Misses Miriam Barnett, Jane Schnell, Pauline Oliver, Margaret Ensley, Lillian Tuley, Mary Florence McClure, Annabelle Pontius, Neva Dike, Evelyn Mead, Helen Shirley, Shadie Ann Shanks, Margaret Hunt, Opal Franklin, Christine Cloyd, Elsie Johnson, Eloise Galloway, Maureen Sonday, Hilda Thomas and Catherine Ebey.
8 8 2
Miss Mary Helen Haerle, who wlil be maid of honor at the wedding Nov. 17 of Miss Mildred Joan Wei[land and Wayne V. Long, will entertain Wednesday evening at her home, 2049 N. Capitol Ave. with a linen shower in honor of the bride-to-be. Miss Weiland is the daughter of Mrs. Bertha Weiland, 142 E. Ohio St., and Mr. Long is the son of Mrs. Violet Smith, 1602 Broadway. Girls in the office of the J. I. Holcomb Co. will give a dinner party Friday, Nov. 10, in the Hoosier Athletic Club, 2% Another bride-to-be who has been feted extensively is Miss Mary Zimmer, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Karl Zimmer, whose marriage to John Maynard Cusack will be Nov. 4. Miss Helen Chappell will give a luncheon for her Wednesday at her home,
3322 Washington Blvd. Guests at the luncheon will in-
Taupe Is a Fashion Favorite
“Taupe beaver and taupe wool tied in an intricate topknot make up
this “pl
tumes. Miss Leona Lingenfelter will| are taupe. The skirt of the three-quarter jacket is
to match hat and roll collar,
” hat worn by Claire Trevor of the films. Frock and coat
banded with beaver
Miss Edna Smith, 818 N. Bradley St., will give a miscellaneous shower tonight in honor of Miss Virginia White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Newton White, 5024 E. New York St. Miss White and Robert
p
{
Bride-to-Be,
Will Be Feted by Edna Smith; Plan Shower for Joan Weiland
almost as busy as the brides-to-be, wedding gifts and giving prenuptial
clude Miss Zimmer and her mother, Miss Judy Raymond and Miss Jayne Sumner, bridesmaids for the wedding; Mrs. Lawrence Taylor and Mrs. F. Durwood Staley Jr. Miss Zimmer and her fiance were honor guests at a number of parties over the week-end. Last night Miss Roberta Denham gave a dinner party at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Her guests were Miss Sumner and Miss Raymond, Paul Umberger, Gene Dickson Guy and Lewis Schilling. Saturday night, Mr. and Mrs. Staley Jr. gave a party at their home, 811 E. 36th St. . Mr. and Mrs, August Bohlen were hosts at.a dinner party Friday evening in their country home near Zionsville. Guests at the dinner were Messrs. and Mesdames Zimmer, Alexander Corbett Jr., Warren Bevington, F. Burwood Staley Sr., Mis. Walter Cusack, the bridegroom-to-he’s~pother, and Mrs. Post Milliken. The bride-to-be’s parents will give a bridal dinner Friday night in. the Columbia Club. o
Miss June Hefner, whose marriage to French O. Livezey will be Saturday, will be entertained tomorrow at a luncheon and party at the Elk’s Club in Richmond. Mrs. Olive Pearce of that city will be hostess. Among Indianapolis-guests at the party ‘will be Miss. Ruth ‘Ransdell, who will -be maid of honor for the wedding, Mrs, Roy Money and Miss Maude Hardy. Miss Hefner entertained a group of her friends recently at a dinner at the Homestead. Following dinner the party continued at her home at 1320 N. LaSalle St., to see the bride-to-he’s trousseau and gifts. Guests were Mesdames Jack Brown, B. B. Emswiler, Charles Kirkbride, A. L. Flowers; the Misses ‘Marian Lee Clark, Dorothy Moffat, Carolyn | White, Anne Carr, Irene Aiken, Florence Grimes and Genevieve Brown. : a 8 8
Miss Mary Magdeline Gottemoeller, sister of the prospective bridegroom, will be maid of honor for the wedding of Miss Monica Eder, to Elvin H. Gottemoeller. The wedding will be Nov. 23 in Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Miss Joan Kraeszig, niece of the bride-to-be, will be junior bridesmaid. Stanley Eder, Detroit, brother of Miss Eder, will be best man. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. Sophia Eder, Detroit. Mr. Gottemoeller is the son of Mr. and Mrs: L. J. Gottemaeller, 4601 E, Raymond St. :
” ” o : Mr, and Mrs. W. J. Cook entertained Saturday evening with a bridal dinner for their daughter, Martha Louise, and Charles S, Rennard, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Renard, whose marriage will be Friday. The wedding will be at 7:30 Pp. m. in the Tuxedo Park Baptist Church. Members of the wedding party were guests at the dinner.
” 2 8 p # The marriage of Miss Bertha C. Keen, daughter of Mrs. Bena Keen, 1010 E. Market St., to Joseph F. Kirkhoff, son of Mrs. Ellen Kirkhoff, 5270 E. Washingten St., will be at 11 o'clock Thanksgiving morning in the Holy Cross Catholic Church.
Kindergarten Party The Pat and Polly Kindergarten will have a Halloween party tomorrow morning in the school. Decorations have been made by the children.. Mrs. Glenn Lawler, director, has planned a treasure hunt and
games will be under the direction of
Social events at the Riviera Club have been announced for next month. The Women's Western Zone table tennis elimination tournament Nov. 11 and 12 in the new recreation
building will be a feature. The first event will be the club’
ing line with Mrs. Kuebler will be Mesdames F-ank Pobst, Frank Wise, Charles Gray, Phillip Hildebrand and Dale Wilson, Mrs. B. H. Lybrook, president of the Indianapolis P.. E. O. Council, and Mrs. Harry S, Rogers, state re cording secretary, will preside at the tea table. The committee ih
§ charge includes Mesdames W. E,
regular luncheon-bridge Wednesday at 12:30 p. m. A dance will be given Saturday night and open house will be held Sunday. Open house from 3-5 p. m. will be a Sunday feature during November. Bridge and pinochle parties will be held each Monday evening during the month and Saturday night dances will be a regular feature. The Riviera Boosters will hold a pitch-in supper Sunday evening followed by dancing. The following Sunday, Nov. 12, the newly organized group of young married couples, bachelors and young women will hold a pitch-in, also followed by dancing The annual Riviera Booster Thanksgiving dinner-dance will be held Thursday, Nov. 1, for mem-
Kyle, H. W. House, Gray and James L. Rainey. ; :
Y.W. Religious
Seminar Set
Miss Winnifred Wygal, religious
resources secretary for the Y. W. C, A. National Board, will come to Ine dianapolis Monday, Nov. 6, for a week of conferences and meetings with the local association.
She will conduct a seminar on re<
ligion for members of the ¥Y. W, C, A. board and committees from 10
matic director. will do arrangements,
rc.
bers and guests. : The regular club Thanksgiving formal dance has been planned for Nov. 23. Another Booster dance will be given Thursday, ‘Nov. 30. The new recreation building is open for inspection and the indoor pool will be ready for swimming soon.
Aid Ice Hockey
Box Seat Sale
Several Indianapolis society wom-= en are assisting the Civic Theater with the sale of box seats for the opening ice hockey game Friday, Nov. 10, at the Coliseum. The women are in charge of the office at 107 Insurance Building on Monument
Circle. =
Miss Helert Coffey and Mrs. James
a. m. until noon on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Nov. 6, 7 and 8. Thursday morning she will meet with the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W, staffs at a breakfast and will speak at 1 p. m. that day at a South Side Association luncheon. Wednesday and Thursday eve= nings she will talk at the Industrial and Quest Club meetings and will be a guest for dinner Thursday eve= ning at the Blue Triangle Hall. Miss Wygal, a graduate of Drury College, is a member of the board of directors of the school. She has done graduate work in Columbia Univere sity’ and Union (Theological Semi nary. Her Y. W. work includes exe perience: with the North Central Field Committee from 1920-22, stu=dent and activity work on the national staff in New York, five years teaching, five years as resident secretary of the Student Y. W. C. A. at the University of Nevada and war work with the Y. W. for two years at Camp Funston.
Rogan are chairmen of the group, : :
which includes Mesdames C.
Harlan Livengood.
The office is open daily from 9 . = a. m. until 5 p. m. Only a few choice box seats remain, but more will be available when rink-side boxes are
installed.
Fish Studio Students
To Present Operetta
Students of the Edith: Jane Fish Studio will present an operetta, “The Magic Slipper,’ at 8:30: p. m. Wednesday, Nov. 15, at the American United, Life Auditorium, 30 W. Fall Creek Blvd. The book is by Ethel A. Wynne and the music by Mary Susan Singer. In the cast will be the Misses Betty Edwards, ‘Marion Edwards, Betty Bernamer, Virginia Coolsby, Jeanette St. Clair, Beatrice Smith, Mary Hungerford, Helen Abbett,
Anna Marie McCoy, Noell Pate
naude, Marie Mansfield; Messrs. Pat Healy, Pat Edwards, Paul Ashly, Melvin Unger, Vernon Nunn, Dick Weaver, Larry Nieten, Forrest Julian, Eugene Max Smith and Robert
Long.
Miss Fish is vocal director and Harold H. Arnholter will be draMrs. H. E. Singer
Married in July
3 Ramos-Porter Photo. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Tullis announce the marriage of their
daughter, Anna Ione, to Robert:
C. Reid, son of Mrs. Anne Reid. Mr. and Mrs. Reid were married July 24 in Lebanon. They will be at home in Terre Haute.
B.
Bohner, W. T, Finney, E. S. O'Neill, R. G. Kazarus, John W. Coffey and
Opens Exhibit | Of Handicraft
The third annual Handicraft Exe { hibit, sponsored by the Indiana Fede eration of Art Clubs, opened today in celebration of National Art Week in the auditorium of the William H, Block Co. The exhibit committee includes Mrs. Leonidas Smith, Mollie Rath bun Cawthra and David Klaus« meyer. On exhibit are fine wood carvings by Gustav Stark; metal crafts, including jewelry and service articles by Gladys Denny, an in= structor in the public schools, and Mrs. Cawthra; tooled leather by Helen Andrews. of Nashville, Ind; Juanita King, Indianapolis, batik; Mrs. Charles Gimber, Worthington, handmade rugs; Catherine Martin land Karl Martz, pottery, and Loreen
The convention of the federation will be held Friday. The public is invited to attend this exhibit which will be open from 9:30 a. m, to 5:30 p. m. daily.
P.T. A. Notes
The Indianapolis Council wels comes a new member this month, The JAMES E. ROBERTS SCHOOL has organized a Parent-Teacher Ase sociation and elected the following officers: Mrs. Herbert Resener, prese ident; Mrs. James Huntsman, vice président; Mrs. R. S. Winchester,
treasurer. Mrs. Georgia 8. Rost is principal of the school. Meetings will be held the third Tuesday of each month.
Harry G. Gorman will speak on “Relationship Between the Boys’ .|Club and the School” at 3 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at SCHOOL 8, Music will be by the pupils.
/SCHOOL 12 will hold a junior High School program Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. Esther Cohen will invite parents to visit the school dur American Education week and w: make a short talk on “The Amere ican Way of Life.” A group of
will be followed by a film, “Physical Education Activities in Junior High Schools.”
by Parent-Teacher members SCHOOL 41. Their first meeting will be held Friday at 1:30 p. m. in Room 18. An Armistice Day proe
view by Mrs. Jack Black,
Wingerd, Indianapolis, block prints.
secretary, and Mrs. George Abels,
by the Junior High School Choir
A Literary Club has been Sormed
gram will bé given and a book ree
