Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 June 1940 — Page 20

BE

a

Many Parties to

Grand Circuit Races

The opening day of the Grand Fair Grounds tomorrow promis * box

from the society angle. The

Attend Opening of

at Fair Grounds

Circuit at the State to be a gala one will be filled with -

numerous parties, several of which were announced today. The Indianapolis Junior

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opening day’s program.

League is sponsoring the

~~ Mrs. W. A. Miskimen will entertain at luncheon before the races. Her guests will be the Mesdames Dudley Pfaff, Edward Gates, John Grant and Miss Eliza-

beth Brown. Mrs. Pfaff and

Dr.; Pfaff will be in the

box of Mr. and Mrs. William P.|Anderson III at the races as will Miss ‘Hulda Pfaff and Dudley Pfaff Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. A,

tings Fiske are planning a luncheon, too.

They will entertain Messrs. and Mesdames Donald Test, Orland

Church, Clayton Mogg and Alex Metzger. |

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Higgin races Messrs. and Mesdames Evans Philip E. Boyd of Palm Springs,

| have in their box at the len Jr.,: Perry O'Neal and

will

S ‘Woo

Cal. i :

Mr. and Mrs. Jo Desha McDowell and Robert Jewell of Lex-'

ington are coming to spend the week-end with Mrs. Hortense Rauh Burpee and will be her guests tomorrow at. the races.

Mrs. Eisenlohr Will @ive Dinner |

Mrs. William T. Eisenlohr will give a dinner at home after the event. Her party will include Mrs. Harvey A. Tutewiler, Messrs. and Mesdames Floyd Mattice, Paul Simpson and Sam W. Simpson. Mrs. John J. Madden Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Madden will

be in the box of Mr. and Mrs. W. J.

Taylor.

Messrs. and Mesdames Arthur Shea, Louis Huesmann and John Hollett plan to attend together. Another) party will include Messrs. and “Mesdames Joseph Hanna, Ralph C. Boozer, Thornton Sterrett,

Mr. and . Bruce Bennett will

| Roy Bain and Mrs. Hilton Burghard of Johnson City, Tenn.

entertain Mr. Bennett's mother,

| Mrs. Lawrence’ C. Spieth, Cleveland, O., and Mr. Spieth, and W. L

| Longsworth. Included in the party of

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Quigg: of ‘Richmond,

Clarence Moore and Louis Thomas.

‘Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Woollen will be

‘Ind, and Mr. and Mrs.

Sarah Frances Kackley and Fiance:to Be: Guests

1

the sister of Thomas Reid Kackley

Edward Gregg, whose marriage will he Samuel Grant Gregg.

|

Mesdames Erwin C. Stout, Volney Gaylord A. Wood.

M. Robert Dinnins to Enterta Mr. and Mrs. M. Robert Dinnin

Mr. and Mrs. G. Vance Smith will entertain at dinner tomorrow ‘night at their home for Miss Sarah Frances Kackley and Raymond

be June 29. Miss Kackley is and Mr. Gregg is the son of

Guests with Miss Kackley and Mr. Gregg will be Messrs. and

M. Brown, George Rose and

in : and Mr. and Mrs. William S.

O'Connor will entertain informally tomorrow evening at the Dinnin

home for Miss Patricia O’Connor a

nd Walter R. Shiel Jr. whose

marriage will be at 10 a. m. June 29 in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral.

Miss O'Connor is the daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. William L.,

O'Connor and Mr. Shiel is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Shiel. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Sweeney Jr. will entertain informally

Sunday for Miss O'Connor and Mr.

Shiel.

Personal Shower Tomorrow for Marian Messick Miss Marian Messick will be honor guest at a luncheon and

personal shower to be given tomorrow by Miss Betty Messick at

her home. The hostess will be assi

E. Messick.

sted by her mother, Mrs. John

Mr. and Mrs. Edward N. Messick are parents of the bride-to-be.

Her marriage to Joseph Harold Davi

dson, son of Mrs. Helen David-

‘son, will be June 29 in the St. Joan-of Arc Church. : -. si The wedding colors of {urqueise and pink will be used in

appointments for the luncheon. mother and her sister, Frances,

Mary Louise Dennis, Catherine and

Mary Margaret Ruddell, Harriett Neu and Katherine and Margaret

Elbreg. Carolyn Roth Honored

‘Guests with the bride-to-be, her will be Misses Marjorie Mueller,

Charlene Heard, Ann Tennant,

Miss Jane Blake and Mrs. Jac Ochiltree will entertain tonight at Miss Blake's home with a crystal shower for Miss Carolyn Roth, whose marriage to Dr. Theodore Paul Mantz will be June 29.

Miss. Roth is the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Walter J. Roth,

ahd Dr. Mantz is the son of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Mantz, Keith, W. Va. The bride-to-be’s colors of pink and white will be used in decorations. Guests will include her mother and the hostess’ mother, Mrs. Robert W. Blake, Mesdames William B. Harbison, Frank Harrison Jr. and Richard Ferguson and the Misses Betty * Ann Bashore, Betty Bange, Barbara Tompkins, Barbara Ryan,

Kathryn Hadley and Betty Sanders.

Breakfast and Shower Sunday To Honor Elizabeth Kay Finch;

Picnic Given for Aline Bailey

v

. Clarence J. Finch, 2837 Ruckle

. rows, Chenoweth and Ruby Gene

4 3 *

. ¥

" colors of turquoise and pink will

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4 .

. the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Lee,

2

: ard B. McChord, James Gregory, . Everett Hayes, Glenn Pell, Sylvan i Bush and Harry Echard and the

“7 }

i

£ i

. rows, mother of the hostess; Mrs.

' Barrows,

: son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Jones, ! Bicknell, Ind., in a ceremony at the : home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. +‘ Maxwell V. Bailey, 3054 N. (Penn- : sylvania St.

° be and her mother were the mothers

The week-end will be marked by

. soon to be married.

a round of parties for young women

On Sunday, Miss Elizabeth Kay Finch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

bathroom shower and at a kitchen Garver,

son of Mr. and Mrs. George

St., will be honor guest at a breakfast and

shower. Her marriage to Clyde L. L. Garver, 515 N. Gladstone Ave.,

will be at 4:30 p. m. July 6 in the McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presby-

terian Church. Miss Rosalind Barrows will be hostess for the breakfast Sunday morning at her home, 5828 College Ave. Appointments will be in the bridal colors of blue and yellow. Guests will include the mothers of the betrothed couple, Mrs. F. I. Bar-

Richard May, Mrs. Edward J. Erler and Miss Ruth Chenoweth. Mrs. Erler will entertain Sunday afternoon at her home, 3610 Balsam Ave, with the kitchen shower. Guestg will be Mesdames Finch, Garver, E. F. Erler, Frank Bond, James Chenoweth, William Bufler and R. K. Howe and the Misses Sue and Edith Stuart, Bar-

Beaver.

8 8 2

Spring flowers and the wedding

be used in decorations for a luncheon and linen shower to be given tomorrow at the Colonial Tearoom by Mesdames Robert E. Gilkison, Malcolm Thurgood and James Dixon and Miss Ellen Robinson for Miss Joann McDermed. Miss McDermed’s marriage to J. Wayne Huston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Huston, 3123 E. Michigan St., will be June 30 in the Irvington Presbyterian Church. She is

McDermed, 3760 Forest. Manor Ave. Guests with the bride-to-be and her mother will include Mesdames ‘Ben Wilbur, Donald Delbrook, How-

Misses Jane Ann Gardner, Esther Howe, Virginia Whitmore, Rosemary Dwyer and Mary Elizabeth Pell-and Miss Betty Huse of Detroit.

8 =» =

Miss Aline Bailey was honor guest

Guests in addition to the bride-to-

of the hostesses, Mrs. F. D. Blackmore and Mrs. A. D. fayette, Ind.; Miss Sally Heilman, who will be the bride’s only attendant, and members of - Miss Bailey's bridge club. Br 2 =» 8 eapproximaisly 40 guests, will at-

Renn, La-|

a miscellaneous shower given|

Johns and Mrs. J. Frank McCon-

nell, | Scipio, Ind., at the home of

their mother, Mrs. W. A. Hutchings, 3158 | Kenwood Ave. Miss Julian’s

marriage to Charles William Hutchings, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hutchings,| will be June 30 in the Fairview Presbyterian Church. She is the daughter of Mrs. Clarence E. Marshall, 2353 Central Ave. The bride-to-be’s colors of pink and ‘blue will be used in decorations. Ribbon streamers will fall from an umbrella suspended above the tables to the gifts. Mrs, Marshall will be among those attending, as will. Mrs. Charles Brinkman, her grandmother, and Miss Arda Knox, her aurit. Out-of-town. guests will 'be Mesdames - Ernest Amick, Gordon Helt and George W. B. McConnell, Miss Louise Amick and Miss| Margaret McConnell, all of Scipio. : 2 » Mrs. Robert Lybrook, who was Miss Josephine Miller before her recent marriage, was honor guest last night at a personal shower. The Misses Mary Louise - Barnhart, Helen Smith and Claribel - ers were hostesses at their home in the St. Regis Apartments. . The guests included the Misse Josephine Hodges, Peggy Failing, Charlotte Martin, Harriet Flowers and, the Mesdames Thomas O’Haver, Leroy Cummings and B. J. Siebenthal.

EVENTS

SORORITIES : Beta Chapter, Omega Phi Tau. 7 p.m. Wed. Mrs. Barney Barnett, 1101 River, hostess, Pitch-in sup-

y..pér. ; Beta Chapter, Sigma Delta : Zeta. Mon. night. Miss Melba Woolery |’

and Mrs. Ware Walker, hostesses.

Alpha Chapter, Phi Theta Delta. HE

d. night. Mrs. Edmund Stoy, 3015 N. Meridian, hostess. Beta Chapter, Phi Gamma Sigma, Sat. night. Miss Thelma Schmidt, 1424 Linwood Ave. Plan for a

dance. i CLUBS

Co-Wa-Ma, tonight. Mrs. Mildred

chards, Homecroft, hostess. Miss |

Hpzel Karsner, co-hostess. ~~ COURTS 5, Ben-Hur Life Association. ue. night. Castle Hall. Mrs. AudSuiter, LeRoy Suiter and Mrs.

‘| Hewes,

| The

Aor

New

Altrusa Heads

| To Be Installed

Miss Edith M. Dickover will be installed as president of the Indianapolis Altrusa Club at a dinner to be held at 7 o'clock tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Other officers to be installed are Dr. Edith - Haynes, vice-president; Mrs. Guy H. Boyle, secretary, and Miss Nellie Young, treasurer. New directors will be the Misses Mary Parrott, Janice Berlin and Laura

| Holden.

Several out of town guests will attend. , Miss Edith M. Friday, Lancaster, Pa., and Mrs. R. S. Friday, Philadelphia, will be guests of Miss Dickover; Mrs. Paul B. Phillips, Chicago, will be the guest of Mrs. Elizabeth Everitt Prescott, and Miss Nina Waldron, Elizabeth, N.

1J., will be the guest of Mrs. Richard

Fields. New members will be initiated. The local club has been notified that it has been placed on the national honor roll because of the incfeased enrollment during the past year,

Members of the P. Y. X. CLUB will leave Sunday to spend a week at Ideal Beach on Shafer Lake. Initiation services will be held for the Misses Lillian White, Eleanor Whuerzburger and -Armetta Doolittle. The party will include the Misses Norma Hudson, Dorothy Rosemary Yater, Juanita Marvel, Constance Hughes and Laura Jane Halliburton.

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP CLUB OF REPUBLICAN WOMEN was to meet today for an all day meeting and covered dish luncheon at the home of Mrs. Charles Craig on Road 67. ,

The BUTLER ALUMNAE LITERARY CLUB will meet at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Ralph T. Schad, 809 N. Bradley Ave. Speakers will be the Misses Dorothy Carey, Katherine A. Quinn and Esther Fay Shover.

The TIRZAH CLUB of Arrius Court 5 of the Ben Hur Life Association met last night at the home of Mrs. Arthur Basey, 660 E. 17th St.

Entertains Sorority

Miss Louann Myers entertained members of the Kappa Xi Chapter of Pi Omicron National Sorority last night at her home. She was assisted by Mrs. Ralph Clark, Mrs. Pauline Thompson and Miss Dorothy E. Eller. :

Julian by, Mos: Vall Bel

len Wills in charge of enfert.- Election: of chief, ,_, |

CLT =

=

more Aid Members Attend R

Christa

‘land a corsage of orchids.

‘School.

SET MANE

New members of the Christamore Aid Society were entertained | Fortune Jr. Arthur Shea, Norman Perry Jr., Robert this week at a luncheon and reception at the Woodstock Club. They | Miss Ann Noble Johnston. Other new members are Miss Mary Sheerin

include (left to right) the Mesdames Marlow W. Manion, William I.

Kuhn and Miss Joanne Dissette,

Sue Stackhouse Becomes Bride Of Walter Myers Jr. Today In Service at Columbia Club

Miss Sue Stackhouse, daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Stackhouse,

and Walter Myers Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Myers, were married

this morning at 10:30 o'clock at the Columbia Club. . The ceremony was performed before an improvised altar arranged in a corner of the parlor. Palms, ferns, candelabra and tall brass vases

filled with white flowers were used

The Rev. E. Burdette Backus performed the ceremony and Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks gave the blessing. Mr. Stackhouse gave his daughter in marriage. She wore a white silk net dress over tissue satin. The dress was fashioned with a tight waist, bouffant skirt and long sleeves. Her fingertip veil fell from a halo of gardenias and stephanotis. The bride’s shower bouquet was of gardenias, white roses and stephanotis.

Mrs. James Northam, sister of the bridegroom, wore a pastel blue chiffon gown made similar to that of the bride. Her small hat was of matching material. Her. bouquet was of Johanna Hill roses, stephanotis and gardenias. : Mrs, Stackhouse, mother of the bride, chose a blue sheer dress with a matching hat for the ceremony. Her corsage was of gardenias and pink roses. Mrs. Myers, the bridegroom’s mother, wore a green suft with a yellow chiffon blouse, green turban and corsage of gardenias. ;

Walter Myers, who recently was named fourth assistant postmaster general, returned here this week to be his son’s best man. Mrs. Alberta Gaunt, harpist, played bridal selections during the ceremony and - at the breakfast which followed. Only the immediate families attended -the wedding breakfast.

The couple left on a wedding trip East and will be at home July 15 in Marcy Village. The bride selected a brown sheer dress with matching coat for traveling. She wore brown accessories

The bride was graduated from Tudor Hall School and attended Butler University and Principia College, St. Louis, Mo. She is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. Mr. Myers was graduated from Yale University and Yale: Law

Rugs Soften Tones

In a small room where large volumes of sound are not desired, placing a carpet under .the piano will soften its tone.

~~ Even the woolly monkey seems delighted with his little mistress’ ‘new silk dress. It’s in pale coral with French knots in pale blue—an important costume for the big moments in the life of a small girl.’

at the altar.

Home Is Not Safest Place

CLEVELAND, O., June 21 (U. P.). —The safest place isn’t in the home, according to the Cleveland Safety Council. Home fatalities for the first time in the past decade—figures before that time are wunavailable—exceeded traffic fatalities in Cleveland. According to the council's report, the comparative figures were 127 deaths in the home and 115 by

traffic. The council warns to be careful going up and down stairs because that is the time, that accidents are most likely to happen, which cause deaths. By far, of all home. accident

‘ldeaths, falls were responsible for

most. The council figures reported 83 in that manner. It reported that 2 deaths were attributable from falls while on stairs. Contrary to popular’ belief, the bathroom is not the most dangerous place in the home or where an accident is most likely to happen. Only one person in Cleveland suffered a fatal fall in a bathtub. However, two others slipped on bathroom floors and received fatal injuries. Twenty-one persons died of burns in the second ranking cause of death, and carbon monoxide gas poison claimed nine lives. = In one of the oddest accidents reported, a wringer fell from the hand of a woman, struck her knee and foot, and caused an infection that proved fatal.

Club Lunches Thursday

The Twentieth Century Club will meet Thursday at O'Hair’s Tearoom for a 1 o’clock iunchecn. After the luncheon the group will go to the

home of the luncheon hostess, Miss

Carolyn Thompson, 1409 N. Penn-

sylvania St. for a program.

By MARIAN YOUNG NEW YORK, June 21 (NEA).— Little girls’ new summer frocks for

. Sunday School, parties and special

occasions are finished with the fine details which distinguish the best clothes for grown-ups. | Hand-fagotting, embroidery, handmade lace and French knots are used on yokes, at waistlines and to trim collars and cuffs. Such decoration is used in a restrained manner, however. The old rule about the more simply

- dressed a child is, the smarter she

looks still prevails. I Fine. Swiss organdy, ! crisp eyelet batiste, gossamer lawn and pure silk—washable and long-wearing— are favored materials for children's party dresses in the de luxe category. White is the favorite, with pastel blues, yellows, pinks and greens following closely, in the. order named. | » = = ONE smart frock, in sizes 2 to 6,

* 8 in soft powder blue silk with a | smocked in |

panel down the front, coral. : I For. an older child, white organdy, cut oh. princess lines; | a white slip with hemline edging

of eyelet embroidery. Slightly more | casual is a white eyelet batiste suit | —the skirt flared, the jacket bloused |

and finished with a tiny round col-

lar, st

The very thin child would be adorable in a floral siik print with

powder blue background and flow- | ers of red, lighter blue and white, | Fullness starting a narrow shoulder

yoke obscures thin spots.

For the little girl who is grow- | ing outward instead of upward, |

vertical stripes, in colors on silk =

Swiss Organdy and Batiste Are Favori

smocking and |

used over |

i

Times Photo. Stempfel and

4

Wellesley Plans Conference

Mrs. Karl M. Koons, president of the . Indianapolis Wellesley Club, today announced the eighth annual Summer Institute for Social Progress to be held at Wellesley, Mass., July 6-20. Indianapolis men and women are invited to attend. Theme of the institute will be “What Can the American Voter Do to Build Democracy in a War-torn World?” Peter H. Odegard, professor of politics at Amhert College, will head the resident leaders group which includes Broadus Mitchell, former professor of economics at Johns Hopkins University; George Taylor, professor of economics at Amherst College, and HWrnest Minor Patterson, preside of the American

|Academy of Political and Social

Science, {Henry E. Warren, president of the Warren Telechron Co., is the elected head of the Institute. Alfred D. Sheffield of Wellesley College has organized the round tables to be led by experts on housing, health, labor relations, democratic methods in community life, the economic Bases for peace, and economic planning. {Rabbi William G. ,Braudg of Providence, R. I, and Prof, Kirtley F. Mather, director of the Harvard Summer School will give keynote speeches on “Religion and Democracy” and “Science and Democracy.” The conference will feature forums with William H. Vanderbilt, Republican; Norman Thomas, Socialist, and Frances Perkins, Democrat, as speakers. | Applications and programs may be obtained from Mrs. Frederic M. Hadley, 6240 Sherman Drive, or from Dorothy P. Hill, director of

Vellesley, Mass.

Homemakers to Plan For Food Contest

|The board of the Marion County iomemakers Clubs will meet Mony at 1 p. m. in Room 441 of the Federal Building to plan for a county contest on vegetable plate preparation. {The winner of the contest will represent the county in the state contest to be held in November during the Muck Crop Show in DeKalb County. Mrs. William Wisehart, 6050 Massachusetts Ave. was the winner last year. The board also will plan an itinerary for a tour to inspect remodeled and new kitchens in connection with its kitchen planning

the institute at Wellesley College,

Gives Garden

Party Today

Phi Omega Pis Will Entertdin Sunday

Parties and . teas have been planned by active and alumnae members of sororities for the next few days. / A southern garden party was to be held at the home of Miss Margaret Esterline, 51056 N. Meridian

|St., this afternoon by the INDIAN-

APOLIS ALUMNAE ASSOCIA-

{TION OF PHI MU SORORITY,

Guests were to include active members from the chapters at In-

{diana University, Purdue Univer{sity and Hanover College,

women who will enter these schools as freshmen this fall. The hostesses were. to be assisted by Mesdames John Mitchell, A. J. Orr, R. S. Hiatt, John Collins an Miss Ruby Lou Lillard.

Mrs. C. S. Ober, 676 E. Fall Creek

|Parkway, will be hostess Sunday

afternoon, June 30, to mothers of

- | Indianapolis —alumnae and active - {members of Chi Omega Sorority.

Mrs. Albert E. Wilson will be in charge of the tea, assisted by Mrs. Ober, Mrs. C. E. Remy and Miss Louise Reiter.

Indianapolis girls who plan to enter Indiana University in the fall will be entertained by the 1INDIANA ALUMNAE CLUB OF PHI OMEGA PI SORORITY Sunday from 3 to 5 p. m. at the Indian-

{apolis Athletic Club.

Miss Virginia Gray is in charge of arrangements. She will be assisted by Mrs. Frank B. Lamb, president of the alumnae group, and Miss Lorene Reynolds, rush captain of the active chapter at Indiana University. Mrs. Joseph Urban and Mrs. William J. Hayes will preside at the tea table. Among out-of-town almnae and actives who plan to attend are Mrs. Clark Atkins, province director; Mrs. Joanna Olmsted, the Misses Leota Bruner, Doris Dobson and Mary K. Harris, Bloomington; Mrs. Frank Ivins, Argent Pion and Miss Betty Lowry, Ft. Wayne; the Misses Betty Hauss, Jane Williams and Lucille Schooley, Cincinnati; Miss Virginia Hunter, Versailles; Miss Georgeanna Giovaninni, Hillsboro, president of the active chapter at the university; Miss Eleanor Taylor, Madison; Miss Doris Katterjohn, Huntingburg; the Misses Dorothy Knoop, Nell Jane Higganbotham, Pauline Lowther and Rosemary Bailey, Gary; Miss Dema Fowler and Miss Maida Fowler, Reynolds; Miss Sarah Louise Earle, Union City; Miss Winifred Werts, Ladoga; Miss Louise Byers, Kokomo; Miss Caroline Martin, . Portland; Miss Miriam Stembel, Wheatfield, and Miss Caroline Davis, Crawfordsville.

Members of PI OMICRON SORORITY will give an echo party tonight at 6:30 o’clock at the Canary Cottage, using highlights of the state convention held recently at French Lick as the theme of the party. { Miss Hazel Peacock, assisted by Miss Amelia Cook, will be in charge of arrangements. Members of chapters in Muncie and Crawfordsville will attend. : :

Mrs. Jacob Herald, Mrs. Harold Jackson, national vice president, and Miss Irene Gunter, members of the BETA ZETA CHAPTER, LAMBDA CHI OMEGA SORORITY, left yesterday to attend the national convention of the sorority to be held this week-end at Detroit.

Norman Rubys Are to Live in Indianapolis

The marriage of Mrs. Florence Davis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Watson, 1408 Finley Ave. to Norman Ruby, son of Mrs. Susan Ruby, 2347 Shelby St. took place Wednesday at the home of the bride’s parents. The Rev. Fr. J. M.. Downey, pastor of St. Catherine’s - Sienna Church, read the candle light ceremony. James Waltz played two violin solos, “Ah Sweet Mystery of Life’ and “I Love You Truly.” Mrs. Florence Sinninger, Butler, Ind, was bridesmaid and Truman Kellie, Kokomo, was best man. Out-of-town guests included the bridegroom’s grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Weathers, and Mr. and Mrs. Kellie, Kokomo; Mr. and Mrs. Omar Calvin, Mrs. Mary Dugan, Mrs. Flossie Dennewitz and Miss Mildred Dugan, Montpelier. Mr. and Mrs. Ruby are at home

A

program. ;

aon

frock this.

il

a patty

It's of

at 1418 Finley Ave.

tes for Children’s Frocks

5 Ey lue :

i

ou're

Pi Mu Alumnae]

and |

d

| will close Wednesday.

“ ER Brg at bri ATTY Ad a

Delegate

Photoreflex Photo. Mrs. Gentry Haun (above) left today for Detroit, Mich., where

she will board a special train for megane of Delta Gamma Sorore

it go to Mackinac Island, Mich. Mrs. Haun is delegate from the Indianapolis Delta Gamma Alumnae Association to the nae tional convention there Sunday through next Friday. Miss Sarah Sisson and Miss Edna Nowland are other local alumnae attending. Mrs. Frank Miller left Monday to visit friends en route to Mackinac. Miss Mary . Clay, pwesident of the Butler Chapter, will be a delegate. Other "Butler coeds attending will be the Misses Jane Riggs, Marguerite Ellis, Ruth Ludwig and Suzanne

Qleinser Riley Guild to Picnic Tuesday

Members of the Riley Hospital Guild will hold their annual June picnic and covered dish luncheon Tuesday at noon at the home of Mrs. GE. Bomberger, E. 82nd St. Mrs. Ray Retter and Mrs. Paul Richardson, members of the trans portation committee, will arrange to have cars at College and Fairfield Aves. at 11 a. m. Tuesday to provide transportation. A musical program including a group of accordion selections will be provided by the Rinne Music Co. Mrs. J. G. Beale and Mrs. Dorsey King, chapter secretary, will give reports. Mrs. J. W. Prince, reserva= tion chairman for the annual June breakfast, will report on growth of the Guild as indicated by increased attendance at the breakfasts. The WIRE broadcast at 5:15 p. m. today will include James Whitcomb Riley’s “Prayer Perfect” to be sung by Mrs. Rosha E. Smith, accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Ruth Jackson. Mrs. King will speak and Miss Emily Mae Johnson, dramatic art instructor, will read poems writ ten by the Hoosier poet.

Mary Huffman Weds Tonight

Miss Mary Evelyn Huffman, daughter of Mrs. Jessie Huffman, Akron, O., will be married to Wile liam E. Dosch, son of Mr. and Mrs, Emmett A. Dosch, tonight at 8:30 o'clock in the Englewood Christian Church. The Rev. O. A. Trinkle will ‘per= form the ceremony. Mrs. Grace Thacker, organist, will play during the ceremony. Miss Dorothy Brown and David - Wickes will sing ‘Bee cause” and “I Love You Truly.” The ‘bride, who will be given in marriage by her brother, Roy Huffman, will wear a white silk Ore ganza dress with a basque bodice, Ruffles edged in white lace will form a train. The sleeves are short and puffed. The finger-tip length veil will be caught at the head with orange blossoms. The bride’s bouquet will be white roses. |{Mrs. Irvan Martz, matron of honor, will wear a blue organdy dress fashioned with short puff sleeves and a full skirt. She will carry pink summer flowers. | Mrs. Huffman will wear a black d white sheer ensemble and a corsage of pink roses. Mrs. Dosch has chosen a brown sheer dress with white accessories for the cereBink She will wear a corsage of

ink roses. Mr. Martz will be best man. Ushe ers will be Edgar Ashcraft,’ James Brooks and Carl Fulk. | An informal reception will be held at the church following the cere~ nony.. The couple will leave for a short wedding trip and will be at home in Indianapolis after July 1. {

‘ive Will Make Bicycle Trip

i 5: | Five Indianapolis young women 11 leave tomorrow for Asheville, N, ., Where they will begin a bicycle osteling trip through the Smoky ountains. The trip is sponsored by e Y. W. C. A. They are the Misses Helen Deere urg, Jane Jenner, Lucy Hollingse worth and Betty Roche, accome panied by Miss Lillian Preston, die rector of the trip and a member of the Y. W. C. A. staff. : A dinner will be held at 6 p. m, Monday by the board of directars of the Y. W. C. A. at the Central. rs. Boyd I. Miller will be in charge f the final business meeting of th n to begin at 7p. m. | The “All Around the Town” group visit the Indianapolis Street ilways barns and Radio Sta WIRE Wednesday night.

¢ A dinner at 6 p. m. in the Central i | Building of the Y. W. C. A. will

precede the tour. Miss Lucie Helm will be in charge. Miss Lucy Schulte, staff member, will accompany the

‘| group. -

A scavenger hunt will be held Thursday night under the direction

{of Miss Hilda Becker. Those who

will participate will meet at the Y. W.C. A at 7:15 p. m. : Four Girl Reserve advisers will

leave Monday for Oberland College to enroll in the training course for The course

Girl Reserve advisers.

They are Mrs. F. L. Good the Misses Dorothy Forsyte,

; |Trefs and Martha Weddel. ‘These : women WII fomm Me ittee to

leaders’ training rl Reserves in the

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oy

SR oun