Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 March 1940 — Page 4

Artists Club Dinner. Tonight Precedes Opening of Exhibit

‘The Indiana Artists Club will sponsor a dinner at

= : 8 :30 p. m. tonight at Hollenbeck Hall of the Y. W. C. A.

| winners of prizes at the invitational preview tonight.

~ for more than 75 artists and their friends. The dinner precedes the opening of the 33d annual exhibit of the work of Indiana artists and craftsmen at 1 -0’clock tomorrow at John Herron Art Museum. The

_ show includes 145 of!, water-color and pastel paintings, 16. pleces of

. sculpture and 15 pieces of handicraft. * Wilbur D. Peat, director of Herron Museum, will SURES She e: Winsey, director of the art department of DePauw University and “president of the Indiana Federation of Art Clubs, will speak on “How to Advance the Art Interests of Indiana Artists.” Guests will go directly to the preview at the museum following dinner. Members of the Art Association of Indianapolis and their "friends have been invited to the preview. Gordon Mess is president of the Indiana Artists Club; Miss Flora Lauter, szcretary, and Ruthven Byrum of Anderson, program chair man. 8 2 ”

Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Zinn, 6463 N. Illinois St., announce the engage-

ment of their daughter, Ruth, to Robert Davy Eaglesfield Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davy Eaglesfield, 25 E. 37th St. The wedding will be in the spring.

Will Attend Connecticut Wesleyan Prom Miss Florence Wolff, a student at Smith College, will attend the

Mesdames William Garstang, Ralph B. Coble

and Donald M. Mattison (left to right) are assisting

ARRAN GE CHILDREN'S THEA TER PROGRAM

ingham is general ctatiman of the event to: be sponsored by the Children’s Civic Theater. Work-

Times Photos. -

Mrs. Helen Hull, Miss Nancy Todd and Miss Mary Hostetter (left

to right) are members of the Western College Alumnae Fund Cam-

DAY, MA RCH. 2

Parties Crowd Sorority Lists

Beta Chapter, Iota Delta Kappa, to Entertain Pledges at Stacy Home. Initiation services, rush parties, &

style show and bridge party are among current activities planned by

local sororities.

Pledges of BETA CHAPTER, IOTA DELTA KAPPA SORORITY, will be entertained at a series of rush parties beginning Monday with an

: dinner at the home of Miss Viviamstocy, 1429 Linden St.

A theater party will be given Thursday night and a slumber party Saturday night at the Antlers Hotel.

[Miss Leola Bush is pledge captain,

‘A spread and formal initiation services will be held at 6:30 p. m, Wednesday at the home of Mrs, John Judkins, 854 N. Bradley St. for members of BETA CHAPTER, OMEGA PHI TAU SORORITY, Initiates include Mrs. Kenneth Fos=

: ter and Mrs. Dorothy Carder.

Plans for the 89th Founders’ Day celebration will be discussed at a meeting of ALPHA DELTA PI SOR~ ORITY alumnae members at 8 p. m,

Invitations and Eas

‘with plans for presentation of “The Bumble Bee Prince,” a Junior Programs production, to be given

ers met yesterday at Mrs. Kurt Pantzer’s home for

Connecticut Wesleyan College Prom tonight in Middletown, Conn, a‘ report meeting. Miss Betty Tharp, chairman of

as the guest of David Smith, son of Mrs. Matthew Smith. Miss

paign Committee. Alumnae of the school are raising $75,000 to build a new dormitory at the school. Mrs. Wilbur L. Appel is chair-

Monday at the home of Mrs. Paul Butt, 48 S.. Gladstone Ave. Miss

a =

3 Fh for the bronchoscopic department "including an operating table, hu- . midifler and steel supply cabinets,

Wolff is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman C. Wolff. Smith College students will come home for the spring vacation March 20. Among them .are Miss Sylvia Griffith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith; Miss Mary Ann Schaf, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schaf; Miss Susannah Jameson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Jameson; Miss Marion Taggart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Taggart, and Miss Clair Morris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Macgregor Morris. : & 2 Mrs. Russell Ayres, 4245 Washington Blvd., will entertain members of the Wellesley College Club Monday at 1 o'clock luncheon. Mrs. A. W. Noling and Mrs. Carl McCann will assist.

Names Women’s Centennial Committee

Miss Sara Lauter, Indiana chairman of the committee planning the Women’s Centennial Congress in New York Nov. 25-27, announces the appointment of an advisory committee composed of Dr. Amelia R. Keller, Indianapolis; Mrs. Richard Edwards, Peru; Miss Helen Benbridge, Terre Haute, and Mrs. A. H. Beardsley, Elkhart. All were . members of the Woman's Franchise League, forerunner of the League of Women Voters. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt is chairman of the national com=mittee - planning the Congress to celebrate 100 years of women’s progress and “looking forward to removal of discriminations still existing ageinst women.” Among sponsors of the Congress are Pearl Buck, Kathleen Norris, Judge Florence Allen, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, Mary Anderson, Frances Perkins and Ruth Bryan Rhode. Miss Lauter and Mrs. Olive Beldon Lewis, vice chairman of Indiana, have sent 200 letters to members of the old Franchise League asking them to participate. The letter suggests the announcement of the event at .a “Gone With the Suffrage Crowd” tea.

Hoosiers Entertain in Florida

Mrs. Fred Jungclaus was to be entertained this afternoon at a cocktail party by her nephew, Bill Pattison, in Miami, Fla. Mrs. Clyde Whitehall is in Miami with Mrs. Jungclaus, . . . Mrs. W. B. Paul and Mrs. W. V. Wiggin, formerly of Indianapolis, will be guests of Mrs. Lucy B. G. Hoge of Frankfort, Ky., Wednesday at a luncheon at the Surf Club. ... Dr. and Mrs. Ww. F. Hugues have returned from Ft Myers, Fla... . Miss Mary Scott left yesterday for Miami where she will be the guest of Mr and Mrs. C. E. Flick. John C. Ruckelshays has left for Hot Springs, Ark. He will return here about April 1. . . . Mrs. Raymond C. Fox will leave Tuesday for Los Angeles, Cal., where she will spend a month with her

daughter, Joan Fox, a student at Mount St. Mary’s College, Brendon-

wood Heights. . . . Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Norford and son, Don, and daughter. Linda, are visitin . Norford’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Norford. . . . Mr. and 1s. Harry O. Schuyler have returned from a New York visit. . Miss Irving Moxley left yesterday for Los Angeles, Cal. There she will meet Miss Mary Birch Ingram and the. young women will sail Thursday for Honolulu. Miss Moxley

will return early in May.

“Foreign Affairs” Voters’ League Subject

“Foreign Affairs” will be discussed by Clifton M. Utley, University

of Chicago, at 8:15 p. m. Monday in the Indiana World War Memorial auditorium under auspices of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters. His lecture will be the third of the League's

series on current world affairs.

Mr. Utley will be introduced by Mrs. John W. Hillman. Tickets are available at the League office, 506 INinois Building, or may be obtained from the committee in charge, headed by Mrs. Donald Gerking. Her assistants include Mesdames Alan

Albright,

Claude Baker, E. R. Boswell, E. B. Cracraft, L. A.

Ensminger, C. B. Durham. D. C. Hess, Thomas Henderson, John Kautz, Walter O. Lewis, Anne Porter Pangborn, Ernest Rupel,

"Horace Shonle, Mortimer Furscott, I. W. Sturgeon and C.

Cramer.

FP,

The door committee will include" Mrs. Gerking, Miss Elsie Sinclair, executive secretary, and Mrs. John K. Goodwin, president. Tickets will be available the night of the lecture at the Spink Arms Hotel

lobby. .

Children’s Theater Fund Group Named

A special committee of Civic Theater board members will assist the Children’s Civic Theater in collecting a special fund to enable underprivileged children to sée the Junior Prcgrams’ opera, “The Bumble Bee Prince,” to be sponsored by the Children’s group at 3 p. m. March 16 at Caleb Mills Hall. Thomas L. Neal is chairman, assisted by Toner M. Overley and Harold Tharp. Children from special groups have been taken to other productions of Juniors Programs, a non-profit organization devoted to better entertainment for children, which have been sponsored

in other years.

Among groups previously- represented are the

Baptist Children’s Home at Zionsville; the Boys Club, Christamore House, Indianapolis Orphans Home, Northeast Community Center, Mayer Chapel, General Protestant Orphans Home, the Indianapolis Day Nursery, the Evangelical Lutheran Orphans Home and others

as well as individual children.

Mrs. George Fotheringham is general chairman of the project assisted by a group of workers and Miss Betty Tharp, Children’s Theater chairman. The opera is by Rimsky-Korsakoff. and the story by Alexander Pushkin. Saul Lancourt,. the director, has worked with such notables of the operatic world as Lawrence

Tibbett and Helen Jepson.

A second report meeting of ticket sales will be held at 10: 30 a.m. Friday at the home of Mrs. Kurt Pantzer.

Riley Cheer Guild Will Give Benefit Lecture on March 15

Pirs. Carl Aumann will serve as general chairman of the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild’s benefit lecture Friday afternoon, March 15, in ‘Ayres’ auditorium. Miss Katrina Haramy will talk. Mrs. Aumann will be assisted by Mrs, J. W. Price and Mrs. Agnes M. Todd. Mrs. Robert L. Mottern will have charge of a musical program. - Mrs. S. G. Huntington, Guild president, has reported the delivery

of a Hess Oxygen Unit, an incuba-

"tor for premature babies to Ward A. Riley Hospital, and equipment

all gifts from the Cheer Guild. Mrs. John G. Beale, state secre-

+ tary, announces the addition to the _ Guild's

roster of four newly orchapters. The Guild will present the hospital with complete albums of the symphonic records offered by the Music Appreciation

Committee which will be placed in

the various wards at fhe hospital.

Omega Nu Taus Meet

The grand council of Omega Nu u Sorority will meet tomorrow in ‘Bedford. Among local members who “will attend are Boesdames Paul M. A Roy: rian Ard Wilford on A. Pa Lee Oldd, Bernard Smith, Floyd Kenyon and Ralph Worrell and the Misses Lucy Daily, Edith

Mayflower Meeting Set

The Board of Assistants of the Soot; dety of Mayflower Descendants will meet gt 13 o'clock Monday. for

Kathleen Bohannon

To Be Wed Tomorrow Miss Kathleen Bohannon and

Dewey Spence will be married at],

2:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the Garfield. Park Baptist Church.

The Rev. Robert Lewis will officiate before an altar decorated with palms and potted plants. Mrs. W. A. Spence, mother of the bridegroom, will sing “I Love You Truly,” “O, Promise Me” and “Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life.” The bride will wear a pale blue costume suit with red fox collar and matching: blue accessories. Her corsage will be of roses and gardenias. : Miss Bernice Collier, her attendant, will wear dusty rose with blue accessories and a corsage of spring flowers. Glenn Spence, the bridegroom’s brother, will be best man. Mrs. Spence will wear teal blue with teal and black accessories and a corsage of roses.

Entertain at Bridge Mesdames John Mitchell, Fred Phelan and Walter Jameson entertained 24 friends at bridge last evening at the

=

Club to Hear Prof. Haramy

Talks, a book review and a musical program are planfied by clubwomen meeting next week. Mrs. Edgar Eskew will review “The Kennebec” (Coffin) at a meeting of the MONDAY CONVERSATION CLUB Monday. Mrs. William Schiltges will be hostess and the meeting will be at the Marott Hotel.

Parents of children of the EMERSON HEIGHTS KINDERGARTEN will hear a talk by Prof. John J. Haramy at a guest meeting of the Kindergarten Mothers’ Club at 8 p. m. Wednesday at the kindergarten, 1014 N. Emerson Ave. Prof.

ca in 1960.” Miss Eleanor B. Miller of L. S.

terior Decorating” at the March luncheon meeting of the DELTA TAU DELTA MOTHERS CLUB at 1:15 p. m. Tuesday at the Chapter House, 423 W. 46th St. Miss Mary Nicholas, vocalist, ac=

| companied by Mrs. Virgil Ragan,

will present a program. Mrs. Mark Covert, luncheon chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Myron S. Harding, Ford Wood, Mildred Farr, Herman C. Taylor and William Lilly.

Chairmen to plant flowers in the esplanades on the streets were appointed recently by the EMERSON GROVE GARDEN CLUB. Chairmen are Mrs. John Olsen, Mrs. J. W. Walters, Roach St.; Mrs. Noral Hemphill, Mrs. Pierre A. Williams, 26th; Mrs. Oscar .Stevens, Mrs. H.

IP. Willwerth, 25th; Mrs. Thomas

Rollison, Mrs. Luther Alberts, Edgemont and Mrs. Charles Rodgers, Mrs. Chalmer Webb, 23d. Mrs. Frank Neukom will care for the grounds at Unity Methodist Church.

ST. VINCENT'S HOSPITAL GUILD will hold its regular meeting Monday. :

LA PHYLLIS CLUB will meet Monday at the home of Mrs. C. D. Vawter, 25 Pasadena St.

Mrs. George M. Gahagail will be hostess for a meeting of the IRVINGTON WOMAN'S CLUE Monday at which Mrs. James C. Todd will talk on “Fannie Kemble.” Mrs. R. B. Lon’s topic will be “Actors at Home and Abroad.”

The GARFIELD PARK KINDERGARTEN MOTHERS’ CLUB will hold "a covered dish - lugcheon Wednesday. Hostesses will be Mesdames Ralph J. Jansen, Thomas Brune and Florentine Steinkamp.

Bowhay Rite To Be Sunday

Miss Dorothea Bowhay and Harold Thompson will be married at 3 p m. tomorrow at the First Baptist Church in a dotible ring ceremony, with Dr. Carleton W. Atwater, pastor, officiating.

The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Clara R. Bowhay, 236 N. LaSalle St., and Mr. Thompson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thompson of Crawfordsville. The church will be decorated with palms and ferns. Before the service an Haner, tenor, will sing “Because” and “I Love You Truly” with Loren Woodard as accorapanist. Miss Bowhay will wear an afternoon frock of blue fashioned with front fullness in the skirt and a sash tied at the back. The sleeves are short with breadth at the shoulder and the neckline is square. Her shoes will be navy blue. She will wear a corsage of sweetheart roses and gardenias.

honor, will wear a dusty rose dress fashioned with a flared skirt, short sleeves and a V neckline. She will wear a corsage of sweet peas. Mrs. Bowhay’s frock will be a many-col-

Jon will be a monotore print of ue. Charles Bowhay, brother of the bride, will be best man and Albert Thompson, brother of the bridegroom, and Harold Purcell will be ushers. A reception at the home of the bride’s parents will follow the ceremony. After Monday the couple will be at home at 5308 Lowell Ave.

Pauw University.

. Emera Club Floste Miss Emily Hensley ie the newly elected president of th» Emera Club. Other new offi -are Miss Elizabéth Pringle, vice president; Miss Ruth Flick, corresponding secretary; Miss Pearl Taylor, treasurer; Miss Dorothy Allen, recording secretary;

home of Mrs, Mitchell, | Miss 408 E. 18th St. hE

March 16 at Caleb Mills Hall, Mrs. George Fother-

Ayres & Co. will speak on “In- pr

the Children’s Theater, is among those assisting.

PRESENT WABASH SCHOLARSHIP

Haramy's subject will be “Ameri- |g

man of the local group.

in the clubhouse.

Church Group Gives Supper

Talks and a supper party are among current activities of church groups. Business and professional women of the FIRST CONGREGATIONAL

" |CHURCH will meet for a supper

The scholarship committee of the International Travel-Study Club, Inc., will give a scholarship gift of $100 annually to Wabash College March 14 at its Founder’s Day meeting in honor. of Tom Artman, son of Mrs. 8. R. Artman, the club’s founder. President L. R. Hopkins (left) of Wabash will accept. the gift. Mrs. H. P. Willwerth

(center) and Mrs. R. J. Roller are on the scholarship .committee.

ored spring print, and Mrs, Thomp-| .

Mr. Thompson is a graduate of De- ;

servatory of Music.

tions and decorations. Mrs. Mary Zeta Alumnae Chapter, will be toastmaster. - Responses will be made by Miss Pauline Schellschmidt, patroness; Mrs. William A. Devin, alumna; Mrs. Paul E. Dorsey, active, and Miss Mary Catherine Stair, initiate.

ince president, and Miss Ada Bicking will be special guests. Mrs. Dorothy Fowler, Zeta Chapter president, will conduct initiation services, assisted by Mesdames C. D. Corwin, Helen Thomas Martin, Paul E. Dorsey, Rosalee Spong, Marian K. Thomas, Eugene VanSickle, Robert J. Shultz, Thelma Bosworth and the Misses Mary Bell Masterson, Thelma Grannis,

|Grace Stevens, Helen Flaig, Max-

ine Shrader, Lillie King, Roberta Trent and Irma Mae Steele. Initiates include the Misses Mary Louise Houk, Stair, Mary Spalding, Martha Egger, Juanita Copple, Maxine Roberts, Helen Ferrell and Mrs. Russell J. Sanders. Mrs. E. O. Noggle, program chairman of the alumnae, has arranged a musical program. Mae Henri Lane, pianist, will play “Etudes Symphonique—Opus 13” (Schumann). Miss Marian Green, soprano, accompanied by Dorothy Knight Green, will sing selections

Miss Biantha Thompson, maid of | ii

? Bhunbers chaplain, n 8nd

Sigma Alpha Iota Will Initiate Eight Arthur Jordan Students At Ceremonies Tuesday Night

A formal banquet and initiation services will be held at 6 p. m. Tuesday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club by Zeta Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, national professional musical sorority of the Arthur Jordan Con-

Mrs. Harold Sweeney and Mrs. Leon Levi are in charge of reserva-

Ellery Smith, vice president of Nu

from the “Sixth French Suite,” by Bach and four numbers from “Short Stories in’ Music,” by Carlos Salzedo. A harp ensemble, including Jeanette Robbins, Mary Spald-

; ling, Mary Louise Houk and Helen Mrs. C. Harold Larsh, Beta Prov-

Flaig, will play several selections.

Maennerchor Group To Give Card Party

The Mannerchor Ladies’ Society of the Athenaeum Turners will hold its monthly card party at 2 p. m. Friday in the ladies’ parlors of the Athenaeum. Mrs. Gertrude Keller, general chairman of the hostess committee, has appointed Mrs. Clarence Elbert hostess for the meeting. Mrs. Elbert will be assisted by Mrs. Morris Pinnecke. Mrs. Franz Binninger, president, and her executive committee are making plans for the club’s annual guest day card party to be held soon.

Meeting Called Kappa Phi Delta Sorority will hold a business meeting at 7:30

Active and alumnae oie of the Pan-Hellenic Association will hold a joint meeting sponsored ™ fond

p. m. Monday at the Y. W. C. A.

trict 9, and Mrs.

I | party Monday at the home of Mrs.

Theodore L. Locke, 5210 Washington Blvd. Dr. Buell C. Gallagher, president of Talladega College, spoke yesterday on “Widening Our Horizons” at the church Lenten Fellowship Dinner. The Lenten thank offering which was taken will be used for educational and missionary work at

{home and in foreign countries. ! Circle 4 of the PLYMOUTH

UNION of the church met for luncheon yesterday at the home of Mrs. Albert F. Buchanan, 3637 N. Delaware St. Mrs. Etta Newhouse was assistant hostess. Circle 6 was the guest of Mrs. John M. Wilson, 5829 Forest Lane. Mrs. Fletcher Hubbard assisted the hostess.

Miss Katrina Haramy will lecture at 7:45 p. m. March 8 at ‘the

der sponsorship of the GOODWILL CLASS OF THE NEW AUGUSTA LUTHERAN CHURCH.

Cancer Army Offices Filled

Several additional offices have been filled in the state organization of the Women’s Field Army for Cancer Control. New appointments include those of Mrs. Beryl Showers Holland, Bloomington, third vice commander for the state with Mrs. Kin Hubbard and Mrs. Peter C. Reilly, Indianapolis, other vice commanders. . New district commanders are Mrs. Frank W. Peyton, Lafayette, DisFred Cossairt, Shelbyville,. District 6. Mrs. Carl Walker is captain for Shelby County and Miss Eldena Lauter, Indianapolis, will serve as field secretary for Marion County. - - Dr. Frank L. Rector, Evanston, Ill, talked at a recent meeting on cancer control: Dr. Rector is a field representative for the American Society for Control of Cancer,

W.C.T.U. To Meet

Mrs. Guy Kelsey will talk at a meeting of the Tuxedo Woman's Christian Temperance Union at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday in the ‘Wheeler Rescue Mission. Mrs. Rosetta Cox will have charge of devotions and Mrs. Minnie Pettit, president, will

Tents smctude gett to right) Beta

preside.

Arrange Pan-Hellenic Meeting at Butler

©. Times ‘Ha Kappa “Kap: Miss Mary Haynes, ppa _Renihan, elia. Delta

New Augusta Community Hall un- tal

[ors Clavion Ridge Unopposed For Re-election as Department Club President on March 13

A president and several executive officers of the Woman’s Department. Club will be elected at a meeting at 10 a. m. Wednesday, March 13, Mrs. Clayton Hunt Ridge ‘has been renominated for ‘president, and will be unopposed for the office. Other nominees include Mrs. Othniel Hitch, first vice president; Mrs. Edward H. Niles, recording secretary; Mrs. Alvin C. Barbour, member-

ship secretary, and Mrs. George A. Bowen, treasurer. These candidates also are unopposed. Three directors at large will be chosen. Nominees include Mesdames Ray B. Dorward, William H. Hart, Ira M. Holmes, Ralph I. Thompson and William L. Sharp. Mrs. Hitch is chairman of the nominating committee. A general club business meeting will be conducted gt 2 p. m. Ernest K. Lindley will talk at 2:30 p. m. on “Day by Day in Washington.” Balloting will close at 3 p. m. Club directors will meet at 10 a. m. Monday, March 11. Officers of the GARDEN DEPARTMENT of the W. D. C. will be elected at a meeting at 2 p. m. Friday, March 15. Mrs. Raymond Boller, Troy, O., will talk on “Gardening on a Shoestring.” The horticultural committea will be charge of an exhibit.

Mrs. Gallop te Talk

Mrs. Marion G. Gallop, superintendent of the Indiana Woman's Prison, will talk on “What Is My Responsibility” at a meeting of the COMMUNITY WELFARE :: DEPARTMENT of the club at 12: 30 p. m. Wednesday March 20. Mrs. Ray B. Dorward is in charge of luncheon reservations. A general Jiscussion will follow Mrs. Gallop’s

De . Hitch ‘will talk ‘on “Pewter and Glass” at the TEN O'CLOCK GROUP'S meeting Wednesday, March 20, in the John Herron Art Institute. "Miss Lois Virginia Fout will talk at 2 p. m. Monday, March 25, at the MONDAY GUILD meeting. Her topic will be “No. 9, Balnhof Strasse.” A business meeting will be conducted at 1:30 p. m. Mrs, Charles B. Crist will have charge of a social hour following the meeting. The LITTLE CLUB of the W. D. C. will give a bridge tea for members and guests at 2 p. m. Tuesday, March 26, in the clubhouse. Reservations mcy be made with Mesdames Royal A. Nicholas, Clyde Vv. Montgomery, Alvin G. Jose and William Kassebaum,

Home Group to Meet

The AMERICAN HOME DEPARTMENT will entertain at 12:30 p. m. Wednesday, March 27, at an American Home. luncheon. Charlene Butz, accordionist, and Mrs. Russell Grey Fortune, soprano, will present a musical program. Following a business meetihg at 2 p. m., Ralph Wright will direct a musical program by pupils from the city schools. Mrs. Vivian Arbaugh will play piano numbers. Mrs. Mary B. Hedges is in charge of luncheon reservations. Dr. Marlow W. Manion will have charge of a program on “Home En-

vironment as a Factor in Health”|

at 11 a. m. Wednesday, March 27, for the APPLIED EDUCATION DEPARTMENT. Members of the COMMUNITY WELFARE DEPARTMENT will tour the Indiana Woman’s Prison at 1:30 p. m. Friday, March 29.

Club to View Exhibit

Wilbur D. Peat, director of the John Herron Art Museum, will talk on the “Indiana Artists’ Exhibit” at 2:15 p. m. Monday in the Museum at a meeting of the ART DEPARTMENT. A business meeting will be held at 2 p. m. and a gallery tour, tea and reception will follow Mr. Peat’s talk, General club members will he

{entertained Wednesday by the

LITERATURE AND DRAMA DEPARTMENT. - The Civic Theater will present a one-act play, “Happy Journey” (Thornton Wilder) and Mrs. Robert Lambert will review “My Wife and I” (Sydney Hower). A business meeting will be held at 2:30 p. m.

{Luncheon to Be Held

By Sunnyside Guild

Members of Sunnyside Guild will

meet for luncheon at 12:30 p. m.

Monday at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Erwin B. McComb, hostess

‘|chairman, will be assisted by Mes{dames Jesse G.

Martin, LeRoy Martin, Mort W. Martin, Ralph L. Martin, Floyd J.

; ‘Mattice and Gus G. Meyer. A final

report on the Sunnyside Guild ball held recently will be made.

0. E. S: Unit to Dine

Officers of the Englewood Chap-|

ter of the Order of the Eastern Star, husbands and wives, will hold a dinner and social ineetne tonight

at the Hom | Blake is

Marshall, Attia

Helen Adolay will conduct a “hobby lobby” contest following the busie ness meeting.

BETA CHAPTER OF PHI THETA DELTA SORORITY will hold initia« tion services this even at Cathe erine’s Tearoom. Mrs. Kennard Frita and Miss Edith Rohl will be rl ducted into the group.

KAPPA GAMMA ALPHA AND LAMBDA CHI DELTA SORORIe TIES will entertain jointly this afte ernoon with a style show and bridge — party in Ayres’ auditorium. Mem bers of the committee in charge ine clude Mesdames Edward Sargent, George Miller and Albert Hoop and Miss Helen Tindall. :

Club to Hear Mrs. E. C. Cline

Mrs. E. C. Cline of Richhond, Ind., president of the Garden Club of Indiana, will speak at a guest day luncheon of the North End Gardenp Club next Friday noon at Whispering Winds, Brookville Road.

The luncheon will be in observance of the beginning of the organization’s 12th year. “Information Please” will be the title. of Mrs. Cline’s talk. She will

in describe the set-up of the state ore

ganization and of the National Council of State Garden Clubs. Mrs. Orville. DeMotte, retiring president, will introduce Mrs. Fose ter V. Smith, the new president, and other new officers, Mrs. William Seagle, vice president; Mrs. J. A, Spalding, recording secretary, Mrs. Bert Johnson, corresponding secre=tary; Mrs. Walter Sanders, treasurer, and Mrs. Minor S. Goulding, historian.

Committees Listed

Commiftees which will serve une der Mrs. Smith are Mesddmes Charles S. Wiltsie, L.. R. Cartwright and Frank Wade, membership; Mes= dames Harry E. Rasmussen, A. H, Backus, Goulding, Miss Anna Hosea

and Miss Margaret Stevenson, pro= gram; Mesdames Arthur G. Wilson, DeMotte, E. D. Parsons, H. J. Schnitzius, A. Ross Williams, yea? book; Mesdames George B. Elliot, Arthur Moore, Merle Sidener, lunch eon arrangements; Mesdames Dee Motte, J. A. Bernloehr, Edward Swanson, telephone; Mesdames Seas gle, Elliot, Cartwright, flowers. Other committees are Mesdames John Galm, Sanders, Walter P, Morton, transportation; Mesdames J. 'W. Noble, W Meyers and Johnson, roadside development; Mrs. Parsons, garden center; Mrs. Spalding, horticulture; Mrs. Wilson, junior gardens; Mrs. Wade and Mrs. Morton, conservation and birds, and Mrs. Goulding, publicity, Each program for the year will be given the title of a radio hour. The talk Friday is the first of the series. The April 12 meeting will be “Tunes Up-Time,” a musicale with Mrs, Galm as hostess. Mrs. Elliot will be hostess for “Melody Time” May 10, Mrs. W. C. Gardner and Miss Helen Coffey will give a program on birds and bird calls. Mrs. Backus will talk on “Roses in Poetry and Legend” at the “Moonlight and Roses” party June 14 at her home,

Mr. Tuschinsky to Speak

i. Alex Tuschinsky will speak on “Pools: and Aquatic Plants” at the July 12th meeting at the. Hillsdale Nurseries. The. title of this meet« ing will be “Reflections.” Aug. 9 Mrs. Parsons will be hostess for the “Silhouettes” meeting at which Mrs. Spalding will talk on “Seaweeds and Other Under Sea Plants.” An “Ask-It-Basket” question program on garden problems will be presented by Mrs. Eliot at the Sept. 13 meeting for which Mrs. A, Ross Williams will be hostess. Mrs. Arthur L. Moore will be hostess for the Oct. 11 meeting, which will have as its theme “Deep Forest.” Mrs. J, W. Noble will discuss “Trees in History.” “Famous Gardens Down Through the Years” -will be the topic of a talk by Mrs. Morton at the Nov. 8 meeting at the home of Mrs. Seagle. “March of Time” will be the meeting motif. The club’ pactivities for 1940 will close with a Chrisimas party in December.

Girl Scout Party

1

- The last. of a series of games pare. ties sponsored by the mothers’ come mittee of Girl Scout Troop 18 will be held at 7 p. m. tomorrow at hes... home of Mrs. Martin 4905 Brookville Road. Mrs.

, troop mittee members and "mothers Scouts of the troop met recently the home of Mrs, John Cron to cuss. Soouting activities. =~ ~ Taking part in. the were i Victor

i

é

Series Is Near: End 7

AY