Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1940 — Page 6

Rippy Speaks Tomorrow at - ‘War Memorial.on Dictators

. Prof. J. Fred Rippy of the University of Chicago will discuss “Dictatorship in Action” at 8:15 p. m. tomorrow at the World War Memorial. The lecture is the second in a series on current world affairs presented by the Indianapolis League of Women Voters. Prof. Rippy is the author of!several books on Latin America and has served as official delegate to two Pan-American conferences on history and geography. The speaker, who is a member of the History de partment faculty at the university, will be the guest of Mrs. Frank B. McKibben while in Indianapolis. Mrs. McKibben’s son, David, has studied under Prof. Rippy.

The door committee for the evening includes Mrs. John K. Goodwin, league president; Miss Elsie Sinclair, executive secretary, and Mrs. Donald V. Gerking, ticket sales chairman. Mrs. Gerking ~ 1s ‘being assisted by Mesdames Allan Albright, Claude Baker, E. H. Boswell, E. B. Cracraft, L. A. Ensminger, C. B. Durham, D. C. Hess, Thomas Henderson, John Kautz, Walter O. Lewis, Anne Porter Pangborn, Ernest Ruper, Horace Shonle, Mortimer Furscott, I. W. Sturgeon and C. F. Cramer. Tickets may be purchased at the Spink Arms Hotel. di

38 Equestrians Eye Trophy

About 38 ambitious yeung equestrians, with an eye toward a - championship trophy, have entered the children’s riding tournament at the R. H. Brown Stables. Mrs. Margaret Feore is in charge of the tournament, which will be conducted as five separate tournaments, the first one begining at 8 p. m. tomorrow. | Entries to date include those of Nancy Hoke, Betsy Veit, Sally Stokely, Jacqueline Canfield, Pat Feore, Elaine Anstess and Everett Brooks, members of the~younger group; Mary Lyday, Anne Marmon, Marylyn Richards, Patty Dowd, Sue Reeder, Frances Block, _ Mary Ann Pearce, Maralou Hyatt, Delores Covert, Ann Kennedy, Ah Metzger, Bill McCullough and Bob Perine, intermediate riders. The Junior and Senior Equestrian Clubs at Shortridge have entered members. Riders from the junior group include Mary Jean Stout, Betty Jean Alderson, Pattie Glossbrenner, Betty Graves, Betty Schneider, Hazel Alfke, Barbara Hess, Joan Hendren and Doris Daley. Senior club members who will participate are Evelyn Maraist, Martha Tufts, Ann Plummer, Jane Myers, Joan Bowen, Margaret Curle, Ann Cantwell, Janet Sorenson and Murray Hake. ” ” ” # = »

The board of directors of the Tudor Hall Alumnae Association will meet at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. A. K. Scheiden-

helm, 3225 N. Meridian St. 2 x =n | 2 8 = 2

. Miss Elizabeth Cleland will present a paper on “Time” before members of the Indianapolis Woman's Club tomorrow at 3 o'clock in the Propylaeum. Miss Elisabeth L. Haerle’s paper will be titled - “The Grimm Brothers.” . ® ® = : 2 =» = Scot B. Clifford will talk on “South American Tourist” Monday night beforg ‘members of the Indianapolis Literary Club at their clubrooms in the D. A. R. Chapter House.

Comings and Goings

Mrs. Herman C. Tuttle has returned to her home at the Marott Hotel after spending the holidays with her daughter, Mrs. John L. Barr, Mr. Barr and their family in Washington. . . . Jean Anne Jones ‘and Rosali€ Nanette Lurvey have returned to their studies at Goucher College. . . . Malcolm G. Griffith will sail from New York tomorrow on a .cruise to the West Indies. ... Mr. and Mrs. William H. Thompson aré in Palm Springs, Cal. » ” z i” ” » Mrs. George T. O'Connor will serve as president of the Proctor Club during the new club year following her election yesterday at the club's annual luncheon meeting in the Columbia Club. Other new officers are Mrs. Walter J. Stuhldreher, first vice, president; Mrs. William IL. O'Connor, second vice president; Mrs. Paul Ragan, recording secretary; Mrs. Edmund Bingham, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. William Cornelius Kennedy, treasurer. » » » ® ” ” Several Indianapolis members of the Dartmouth University Outing Club are working on the annual winter carnival to be held Feb. 9 through Feb. 12 at Hanover, N. H. They are Jack C. Behringer, James L. French, Harry S. Hanna Jr., Walter W. Kuhn Jr., Theodore Laurence Iccke Jr. and George White Mahoney.

Soprano, Madrigal Singers and Harpist Are on. Program for

Sorority’s Monthly Musicale

Zeta Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, national professional music

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fraternity of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory, will give its monthly musicale Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Dorothy Knight Greene,

4624 N. Pennsylvania St. A business meeting will precede the program. Fowler, president, will preside, The proMisses Irma Mae Steele, Roberta Trent,

. Mrs. Dorothy Bartholomew gram committee, including the Lillie King, Mrs. Helen Thomas Martin and Mrs. Paul E. Dorsey, are in charge of arrangements. Mrs. Eugene VansSickel, soprano, accompanied by Miss Mae Henri Lane, will sing “The Lass With the Delicate Air” (Arne); “Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal” (Quilter); “The Lark Now Leaves His Watry Nest” . (Parker), and “Under the Green-

Clara Mae Schaefer an

Rolland Mitcham; Carl Priest, bass.

Gives Slumber Party

asterson, Jeanadele Mary K. Smith, sopranos; the Misses Nelda Neanne Firth and Barbara Sims, altos; Gordon Williams, tenor; Virgil Hall and baritones, and

wood Tree” (Buzzi-Peccia). Miss Jeanette Robbins, harpist. will play a Toccata, by Loeillet, arranged by Grandjany; “Annie Laurie,” arranged by Salzedo, and «Believe Me, If All Those Endearing Young Charms,” arranged by Salze-

do. The Technical High School Madrigal Singers will sing under the direction of J. Russell Paxton. Members of the group are the Misses

Miss Betty O'Neill entertained members of the Delta Delta chapter of the Sub-Deb Club at a slumber party last evening at her home, 2821 E. New York St. A midnight lunch and late breakfast were served. Guests were the Misses Mary Jean Bloom, Mary { Ann: Catalia, Helen Murphy, Mary Ann Marks, Joan Lauber and Elsie Bell.

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN—What can you make of a boy who says he loves a girl very much, goes steady, is 'just jealous enough, wants her to love him only, yet doesn’t want to get married? He has a good job, a steady income and is plenty old enough to get married. I have been going with such a boy for almost two years and I just can’t understand him. I love him very much and want to marry him, but everything is so indefinite. I have tried going with other boys to make him jealous enough to ask me. It hurts him but he just says he doesn't want to get married, that he is selfish and doesn’t want to share, but doesn’t seem 80 selfish in other ways. Would a boy tell a girl he loved her and ga with her all the time, yet not want to marry her? I always thought that when two people loved each other they got married if they could. Am I wrong? Should I be the sweet, loving, understanding girl, and just wait, hoping that eventually he may realize that he wants to get married, and that if I am lucky enough it might be me, or should I say to him that either we get married or quit for good? I love him so much that it would hurt me terribly to quit him, put I don’t like to go on and on when there is no future to my Jove. ‘Please tell me how I can make him love me and want to marry me above everything else? BEWILDERED. = = | = 2 = a Answer—If the boy is in his early twenties, his attitude is quite normal and honest. It indicates that he has a lively respect [Tor the responsibilities of marriage and does not wish to incur them before he has built up an adequate income with a reserve for emergencies. To ask you to wait when he isn’t sure that his feeling for you will last forever, seems unfair to him. His attitude is realistic, and more Commo than that of the boy whose desire for a girl

outruns his common sense. ; If he is a man past 30, the picture is somewhat different. It - indicates an evasive attitude toward responsibility and a fear of permanent ties to any one woman from which he may or may not recover. A mat man who still avoids a socially responsible relationship with a woman is not as good a matrimonial bet as a young man who hesitates, In either case, the man has no right to tie you down to his companionship exclusively. I have no idea whether he will change or not, but the sensible thing for you to do is to interest yourself in others. There is no reason why you should cut him off completely if you enjoy his ety, bul a possessive attitude on his part year after year, without a definite engagement, is out of place. - As a rule women are more anxious to get married and settle down than men. If a man’s desire is not strong enough to make him pay what it costs to oust all his rivals, all she can do is to give up and light her fires on some other altar. There is no magic formula by which she can inspire him to feel as she does. A strong * rival for her hand is the most powerful stimulus. If this doesn’t stir - him to action, I 4p not know what will. JANE JORDAN,

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Put your problems in a letter to Jane J y » your questions In ‘this Roma dal Will aniver

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: Help Arrange T. Leap Yea

Lincoln’s Life Club Subject

Book reviews and a talk are among activities planned by church groups for next week.

Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review “Abraham Lincoln; the Prairie Years” Tuesday night at the TABERNACLE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH under auspices of the Business Women’s Club of the church.

The review is the first of a series by Mrs. Garten to be sponsored by the club. Similar series have been sponsored for the past six years. Before the review, members will meet for dinner af 6:15 p. m. at the church.

Officers of the club are Miss Fanny Miner, president; Mrs. Beulah McColgin, vice president; Miss Ruby. Lee, secretary, and Miss Halcie Ridge, treasurer. :

Mrs. Jasper Scott will speak on “China” at a meeting of the WOMEN’S MISSION SOCIETY OFTHE TUXEDO PARK BAPTIST CHURCH at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday. Mrs. Paul E. Dorsey will sing and Mrs. Edward Hittle will have charge of devotions.

Miss Helen Hartinger reviewed “The Three Sisters” (Cornelia Spencer) today at the NORTH METHODIST CHURCH. Luncheon at 1 p. m. was served by the January group of the Women's Missionary Society. Included in the program were a solo by Mrs. J. W. Costin and devotions conducted by Mrs. C. A. McPheeters. Mrs. John G. ‘Benson is chairman of the January group and Mrs. C. T. Alexander is president of the organization.

EVENTS

; SORORITIES Alpha Pi Omega. Today. Miss Helen Hershman, hostess. . Sigma Delta Kappa Alumnae. Noon Mon. Canary Cottage,

CLUBS : Debonette Chapter, Sub-Deb. 7:30 p. m. today. Misses Mary Ellen - Ross, 927 N. Tuxedo St., hostess. St. Mary’s College alumnae, Notre Dame. Jan. 31. Miss Mary Louise Jean, 4311 Broadway, hostess. ea. Tuxedo Park Kindergarten Mothers. 8 p. m., Jan. 18. Grace Methodist Church. Book review by Mrs. Margaret Raley.

/

Hostess Named, Miss Kathleen Cleary, 242 N. Temple St., will be hostess for a meeting of the Tri Lambeth Club at 7:30 p. m. today.

|British Girls

Miss Rosemary Redding, The Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind.

My Dear Miss Redding:

despite the fact that 3453

men. ’ ”

Mr. Bronner year.

can sweet tooth, that is an awful

articles, he clips a coupon.

poultry, fish, vegetables and fruit. 8 ® 8

interested in the findings of my

into a big department store the other day and

. It's Leap Year, so the Q. T. Club of Shortridge High School has started its campaign early. Members will entertain at an informal party at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Columbia Club and then will take their dates, whom they have asked themselves,

Hendrickson, Thomas.

- | Miss Lida Orth. Mrs. H. A. Bordner

Times Photo.

naturally, to the opening of “Knickerbocker Holiday” at the Civic Theater. the party are (left to right) the Misses Marjorie Mary Alice

Assisting with plans for

Sims and Deborah

Matinee Musicale Will Present Program of Piano, Violin and Voice Tomorrow Afternoon

A program of piano, violin and voice selections will be presented by thé Indianapolis Matinee Musicale at 2 p. m. tomorrow at Ayres’

auditorium. Miss Emma J. Doeppers is in charge of arrangements.|.

~ On the program will be Miss Marie Zorn, artist member of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music faculty, pianist; Mrs. Martha

Rucker Foreman, violinist; Mrs. Jane Burroughs, voice teacher at the

Burroughs School of Music, soprano, and Miss Lillie King, mezzp soprano. 3 ; Accompanists will include Miss Helen Ferrell, Miss Frances Wishard and Walter Whitworth. j Mrs. Foreman, accompanied by Miss Wishard, will play the andante rybato from “Ruralia Hungarica” (Dohnanyi); “Piece en Forme de

Habanera” (Ravel); “On Wings of]

Song” (Mendelssohn-Achron), and the allegro from ¢‘Sonata” (Caesar Franck). Miss King, with Miss Ferrell as her accompanist, will sing a song cycle, “Lyrics from Sappho,” by Mary rner Salter. Miss Zorn

will play piano selections including

“Serenade” (Strauss = Gieseking); “Wandering” (Schubert-Gocdowsky) ; “Prelude” (Rachmaninoff), and “Sacro-Monte” (Turina). Mrs. Burroughs, accompanied by Mr. Whitworth, will sing “Spring Came and Went” (MacArthur); “The Old Rocking Chair” (Clarence Loomis); “When Chloris Sleeps” (Samuels); and “Sea Moods” (Tyner). Mrs. James H. Lowry, musicale president, has announced that the second artists’ recital will be presented by the Taliesin String Quartette Jan. 26 in Ayres’ auditorium.

Service Study Club Sponsors Guest Day

The Service-Study Club was to hold a guest day meeting today at 2 p. m. in the Banner-Whitehill clubrooms. :

Mrs. Adolf Wagner was to give a sketch of the club’s history since its founding in 1936 and welcome the guests. Mrs. Bert Moon was to review “Red and Black” (Richmond) and Mrs. Marie Duckworth, accompanied by Mfrs. D. S. McNelly at the piano, was to sing. Miss Roberta Bland, harpist, was to play. Guests of honor were to be officers of the Indianapolis Council of Women and of the Seventh District of Federated Clubs and Mrs. Ethel Woodard Wright, president of the board of the Suemma Coleman Home. On the committee were Mesdames True Carpenter, Chase Johnson, Karl Theilig and E. F. Katzenberger. Mrs. Wagner and Mrs. Julius Rockener were to pour. Favors were to be

G.O.P. Women Will Convene

Luncheons will be held next -week by the Republican Marion County vice ward chairmen and the Woman's Republican Club of Indianapolis. Plans for a card party will be made by the vice ward

chairmen. Mrs. Eleanor B. Snodgrass, Republican State vice chairman, will outline party plans for women at the Republican Marion County vice ward chairmen’s luncheon at noon Tuesday in the Columbia Club. Mrs. Joseph P. Smith, Marion County vice chairman, will preside. Among party leaders who will attend are Carl Vandivier, Marion County Republican chairman; Ralph Gregg and Mrs. Ina Stebbing, 12th District chairman and vice chairman; George Dickman and Mrs. Charles Mann, 11th district chairman and vice chairman. Vice ward chairmen will make plans for their semi-annual card party to be held Feb. 6 in Block’s auditorium. : Judge James A. Emmert, Shelbyville, Republican gubernatorial candidate, will talk at the Woman'’s Republican Club luncheon Thursday, Jan. 18, in the Columbia Club. Luncheon will be served at 12:30

p. m. Mrs. Hollie Shideler is hostess chairman, assisted by Mesdames Frank Boles, Robert S. Smith, L. J. E. Foley, I. W. Sturgeon, George Wilson, John Reed, Louis E. Berner, Leona O'Neil, Ralph Huey, H. A. Adams and Louis Finch. Mrs. Lyman Thompson will be in charge of reservations. Mrs. Clarence R. Martin is club president.

A. G. Club Has Party

Members of the A. G. Club held a theater and dinner party recently, followed by a business session at the home of Betty Lou Locke. Guests were the Misses Mary Elizabeth Barrett, Leah Jayne Munro, Alice Barrington, Mary Ruth Hoschiltz, Joyollea Emerson, Mariam Fatout,

{and Saturday.

“Some Aspects of American Prose

Yes, we are still holding the fort here in London business firm i out of London for fear of Nazi aerial ave dusiad Knocking wood, the worst thing that has happened to us has been three air raid scares early in September. For the capital of a world empire at war with the Nazi machine, London has .not changed 3% as much as you would expect. - Of course all the lovely parks are scarred by trenches for shelters from air raids, tons and tons of sandbags are piled up in front of business buildings, and in the hotels and restaurants you see increasing numbers of uniformed

FOR THE CIVILIANS like ourselves, life begins to be lived within narrower limits. Coal for our fires has been cut to 75 per cent of what we had last Sugar has been cut to one pound a person a week. When you have an Ameri-

though it is probably pretty good for the waistline. Not so long ago all of us, whether Britons or foreigners, got a ration booklet filled with coupons good for a month. If you keep house, you have to register with a specific grocer or butcher of your own choosing and continue ‘to deal with him, Every time you buy your alloted amount of the rationed

But seemingly nobody is going to be seriously hungry, because there is evidently plenty of meat,

INDIANAPOLIS WOMENFOLK probably will be

Louise Crokin, Betty McCommon and Edwina King.

Wail: ‘No U. S. Cosmetics’

wanted to buy some safety pins. None in stock. Sold out. She wanted to buy some woolly coatees or whatever you call them. Sold out. Her American feet are used to American shoes. The shops she patronizes had only a very few pairs left and said they doubted whether they would have any more.

And oh, how the gals are suffering when they go to the shops where they handle American beauty preparations! All those fancy U. S. A. lotions and dry creams and skin cleansers and what-nots for the complexion are to be had no more. In fact, some of the shops established here by American firms have closed up for the duration of the war. The answer is quite easy—Britain is going to employ its merchant marine for the necessities and not the luxuries. Meat and raw materials and airplanes and other such things are far more necessary to this country engaged in a war than American shoes, beauty creams and various other doodads.

The same applies here in Britain. Any factory that can be converted into doing useful war work is being so converted. Even when they are making useful things like woolen cloth for men’s suits, the. product is apt to be earmarked for the army. The war comes first, : . It is going to be no unusual thing to see women going abQut in last year’s dresses and hats and men in suits that wear has made shiny. » » »

MAYBE THERE IS no big profiteering in war contracts, but my wife finds many cases of little profiteering with which the Government would have a hard time to cope. For instance, a merchant has cans of corn or asparagus. It’s a cinch he stocked these before the war and bought them at pre-war prices. He has hiked the price anywhere from 4 to "15 cents. But you sort of get used to it. Gocd-bye for now. It is 4:20 p. m.—blackout hour. I must draw all the curtains in my office so that not a bit of electric light will show on the outside. If I don’t, an Air Raid Warden will be pounding on my door.

miniature copies of the club's first year book. .

punishment—al-

Sincerely yours,

fe

wife. She went

Reading Club Will Hear Talk On Philippines ‘Frenc i Personalities’

Topic for Catherine Merrill Group.

Talks, a card party and luncheon,

Ja book review and elections are among “coming attractions” planned |

for clubwomen’s meetings tomorrow

~ Mrs. Wendell Rynerson will talk on “French Personalities” at a meeting of the CATHARINE MERRILL CLUB Saturday at the home

ington Blvd. Hostesses for the meeting of the FRIDAY AFTERNOON READING CLUB “willbe Mrs. A.J. Barnes and will speak on “Manila, the.Pearl of the Orient” and Mrs. G. H. Healey will give a book review. Miss Flora Love will speak on

in the 1890s” at a meeting of the

of Mrs. John 8. Wright, 4411 Wash-|

Butler Horse

3 Soa

Mrs. Libbie Everett will be installed as. president of the Past Matrons and Patrons Associa‘tion of Marion County, Order of Eastern Star, tonight following a dinner at the Masonic Temple, North and Illinois Sts.

OVER THE TEACUPS CLUB to-| morrow. Mrs. J. A. Sutherland will! be hostess. |

Members of the IRVINGTON QUEST CLUB will elect officers at| a meeting tomorrow at the home of | Mrs. H. P. Bartlett. In a discussion of socidlized medicine, Mrs. E. B. Hargrave will present arguments in favor of its adoption and Mrs. Arl Garrett will give the opposite viewpoint,

The CHEER BROADCASTERS will meet for luncheon at 12:30 Pp. m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Henry Dithmer Sr. 3634 Watson Road. Mrs. R. H. Goodrich, luncheon chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Otis Carmichael, Chauncey M. Buck and J. P. McGowan. Mrs. Clarence E. Blacklidge is chairman for card games to follow the luncheon.

Mrs. Horace Shonle and Mrs. James Pearson will present “A Panorama of Africa” at a meeting of the CLIO CLUB tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Charles Woods.

Miss Lucille Pryor will speak on “The Play’s the Thing” at a meeting of the ALPHA GAMMA LATREIAN CLUB tomorrow. Miss Margaret Knox will be hostess. Miss Virginia Davis will conduct the

study of Chapters 13 and 14 of the study book.

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Personals

. Miss Pauline Schellschmidt has returned from a holiday visit to the Southwest. She was the guest of her nephew, William Koehne in Phoenix, Ariz. Miss Schellschmidt and Mr. Koehne later were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. E, Flickinger in Los Angeles. Mrs. Flickinger was formerly of this city. Miss Schellschmidt also visited in Palm Springs, Cal. as the guest of Mrs. Otto Lefler.

Miss Lucille and Miss Mildred Craigle will entertain with an open house from 7 to 10 p. m. Friday at their home, 4134 N. Capitol Ave., in honor of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Craigle, who will celebrate their silver wedding anniversary tomorrow. No invitations have been issued.

Mrs. Charles Louis Chevrolet and Mrs. Earl F. Blessing will leave tomorrow for Miami Beach where they will spend several weeks. Mrs. Chevrolet will visit Mr. and Mrs. Louis Chevrolet at their winter home at Lake Worth before returning to Indianapolis.

Mrs. M. E. Wilkes, Miss Elsie Gingrey, C. J. Haring and W. E. Rogers are among Indianapolis residents now in New York.

Jacob H. Hays, 4406 Central Ave. will return Saturday morning from New York, where he has spent the last week.

Mr. land Mrs. J. E. Messick recently | were guests at the French Lick Springs Hotel.

Among Indianapolis residents who visited recently in St. Petersburg, Fla., are Mesdames Dora Canan,

Margaret Gosman, J. B. Pearcy, Joy G. Stoddard, Mary O. Macy, W. W. Stockton, Tommie G. Whallon, Messrs. and Mesdames Keith Canan, Raleigh Hogan, Hobart Litteral, H. H. Esky, G. E. Green, Harley. Litteral and Tommy Litteral, Fred Ray and Perry, Margie and Dorothy Ray, T. W. Mclean, Misses Catherine and Honora Curyan, Augusta Stevenson and Betty Cochrane.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank X. Kern and their daughter, Barbara Jean, will leave Jan. 26 for St. Louis, where they will make their home.

17 Units Pla

The mid-winter union meeting of the 17 Indianapolis chapters of Alpha Omicron Alpha will be a dinner at the Hotel Lincoln Tuesday, Jan. ‘30, Mrs. Charles Compton, a member, will give s book review. A musical program is planned. Mrs. J. R. Sentney, 3514 Birchwood Ave. national president, will go to Chicago Jan. 25 to install a new chapter, the second in that city. The new chapter will be named Rho. also to Minneapolis soon to conduct pledge services for two recently installed chapters.

Maennerchor Ladies Party Tomorrow

of the Athenaeum Turners will hold a card party at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the ladies’ parlors of the Athenaeum. Mrs. Margaret Meyers is chairman of hostesses, assisted by Mrs, William Noelke.

Troop Mothers Meet

The Mothers Club of Boy Scout Troop 72 will meet tomorrow for luncheon and a program at the

arrollton Ave. Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames Charles Grinslade, Leland Davis and W. D. Mc-

Winter Parley

Mrs. Sentney will go|.

The Maennerchor Ladies Society|

ome of Mrs. Frank Cooper, 3610

Abee,

Show Sunday

Events and contestants for the

first semester Butler University horse show to be held at 2 p. m. Sunday in the show horsebarn at the State Fair Grounds have been announced by Max de Vietien, instructor in riding at Butler, and faculty members of the women’s physical education department. The show will be held in the new show arena. Mr. de Vietien has announced that there will be ample seating facilities. No admission will be charged. : Formation riding will be executed by the Equiteers Club, an organizafion composed of second semester riding students at the university. The seat and hands class will parficipate in mixed games on horseback and in the balloon polo contests. Members of the horsemanship class will take part in saddling and bridling contests and bareback pair riding. These events are designed to demonstrate students’ ability to care for and to control the horses. : The jumper horsemanship class will perform in the jumping events. Each contestant will « jump: eight times at mixed heights. Judges for the show will be Tillman Bubenzer, manager of Fairraount Stables; Max de Vietien, instructor; Glenn C. Caldwell, ring steward, and Bloor Schleppey, announcer. Trophies have been donated by local merchants, : Members of the Equiteers Club faking part include Gretchen Huetter, Joan Jay, Patricia Stayton, Janet Ingham, Joan Colgan, Madeline Judd, Richard Bennett, David Craycraft, Max Morris, Harry Sharpnack, Albert Symms and Otto Cruidellhofer. Students of the Butler riding classes who will participate include Betty Smith, Elizabeth Marshall, Jean Pickett, Geraldine Getz, Marne Groothart, Rosemary Clauer, Elizabeth Kiger, Mary Lee Porter, Jane Reynolds, Shirley St. Pierre, William Vaughn, James Borders, Sam Meyers, Jack Schernakau, Lewis Schneider, Rodney Hankins, John Bernhardt, Richard Wamsley, Robert Kimmick, George Wever and Herbert De Haven.

| McAtee-Brown

Wedding Held

Mr. and Mrs. Norbert McAtee will be at home after Feb. 16 at 412 N. Alabama St. Mrs. McAtee was Miss Jean Brown before her marriage yesterday. Mrs. McAtee is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Brown, 1103 N. Dearborn St., and Mr. McAtee is the son of Mr. and Mrs. O. L. McAtee, 3101 Moore Ave. The Rev. Fr. Harry Hoover celebrated the nuptial mass at 11 a. m. yesterday in the rectory of the ‘St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church. Miss

Eleanor Brown, sister of the bride, and James Hoover were attendants.

Joan of Arc Dance Jan. 26

The St. Joan of Arc Women’s Club will hold a pre-Lenten dance Friday, Jan. 26, at the Columbia Club. Larry Price and his orchestra will play. Chairmen for the dance are the Mesdames Edward Faust, James Curtis and Robert E. Meyers.

Churchwomen

Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood Chairman of Affair Set Tomorrow.

A series of teas, the first one from 4:30-5:30 p. m. tomorrow, will be given by Indianapolis churchwomen : for "women all over the United States who are attending the Council of Women for Home Missions and the Home Missions Council: meetings tomorrow through Tuesday in the Severin Hotel. Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood is chairman of tomorrow’s tea on the mezzanine floor of the Severin. Her assistants includes Mesdames D. A. Anderson, E. Ainger Powell, Henry

Beeson, Lyman Pearson, Mark Cove ert, ‘Timothy Harrison, ‘Harold E. Sutherlin, Harry Krause and Harry Schaaf. Mrs. Royal McClain will ‘be in

|charge of the tea Saturday, assisted

by Mesdames IL. C. Trent, E. A, Piepenbrok, Fred Iske, W. C. Hartinger, O. W. Fifer, O. H. Greist, W, A. Shullenberger, William Rothen~ burger and K. V. Ammerman. :

Assisting Mrs. Ralph J. Hudelson with Monday afternoon’s tea will be Mesdames Edward H. Maye, R. A, Simpson, Grover Long, George Burkhart, Vernon Couillard, C. N, Wachter and R. L. Brokenburr, Films on migrant and Indian work will be shown at the teas and exhibits of books, literature and home missions projects will be on display, Mrs. F. R. Daries of the Zion Evangelical Church is gene eral chairman of the tea series. Mrs. Greist, Piepenbrok and Mrs. . Hartinger, will be in charge of a luncheon’ Tuesday to be’ given by the Indie anapolis’ Council | of Federated Church Women in the North Meth odist Church. Migrant labor will be discussed following the luncheon.

Luncheon and

A luncheon, a supper, & business meeting and a talk have been are

ing Saturday and next week.

Mrs. Edwin Gable will speak on “Period Furniture” at a meeting of the INDIANAPOLIS ALUMNAE

OMEGA Saturday at the home of Mrs. Fermor S. Cannon, 4235 N, Pennsylvania St. Luncheon will be served at 1 p. m, Mrs. Thomas W. Ayton is lunche eon chairman, assisted by. Misses Nadine Frye, Katherine Frost, Flore ence Guild, Ann Hall, Mary Hame mond, Mesdames George W. Gable, W. A. Schofield, E. P, Carson, Ellis Hay, Henry G. Unger, HG. Meek and Robert Tracy.

The DELTA CLUB OF KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA SORORITY will hold a supper meeting Monday at the home of Mrs. Max Fritz, 580 Indianola Ave. Assisting hostesses will be Mrs. James Blacklidge and Mrs. Richard Callane.

Miss Martha. Ortstadt, 250 N. Oakland Ave., will be hostess for a meeting of GAMMA CHAPTER OF DELTA THETA PHI SORORITY Thursday.

ALPHA CHAPTER OF PHI OMEGA KAPPA SORORITY will have a business meeting Monday at the home of Mrs. Samuel Mele houn, Terrace Beach, Ravenswood.

Mrs. Marie Kyle, 911 Cottage Ave., will entertain members of KAPPA ALPHA GAMMA, mnmusie sorority, tomorrow evening.

8 & 40 Women Dance Is Set

Marion County Salon 126, Eight and Forty, will give a benefit dance Saturday night at the Forty and Eight Chateau, 119 E. Ohio St. Pro ceeds will be used to further the na~ tional program of juvenile tuber< culosis prevention. Mrs. Gradys W. Pribble is general chairman. She will be assisted by Mesdames Wendell V. DeWitt, George B. Poppa, Kurt G. Francke and Glen E. Frey. :

Dance on Program

Theta Sigma Phi, national honor ary journalism sorority, at Butler University, will give a spread at § p. m. Tuesday in the Butler Cole legian office. Plans will be come pleted for the annual Riters Rounde

up dance.

PONCE DE LEON 7 Lv. Indianapolis 5:40 P. M. Daily

Through, air-conditioned sleeping car to

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7

Berths, sections, bedrooms. - Direct route to both coasts of No extra rail cost to visit Florida East Coast, West Coast and Asheville, N. C, Completely air-conditioned. =

Jacksonville.

FLORIDA SUNBEAM

The Short-cut to Sunshine Lv. Indianapolis 4:20 A.M. Daily

e cars, orida.

ROYAL PALM Lv. Indianapolis 4:20 A. M. Daily

.| TICKET YOUR AUTOMOBILE=AT | LOW COST. ASK TICKET AGENT

NEW YORK CENTRAL SYSTEM Phone Riley 2442 SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Phone Riley 3160 ; SEABOARD RAILWAY

Benham, Emmet Judson, Norman

assisted by Mrs.

Talk Arranged ranged for sorority groups meet-.

CHAPTER OF ALPHA CHI

Mission Teas . Scheduled by

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