Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1940 — Page 4
. PAGE 4
SOCIETY—
Plans for Fall and Winter Activities Are Brightening the Social Scene
At a time when social activity is as limp and drooping as once crisp summer wardrobes, it is like feeling the first nip of October air to learn that there are plans afoot for the fall and winter social season. Members of the Traders Point Hunt already have begun thinking of that annual harbinger of autumn— the Farmers Party for landowners over whose fields the Hunt rides from fall to early spring. Committees for the party in mid-September will be named soon.
The date for the Hunt's annual ball has been set, too. It will be Dec. 14 that men of the Hunt in their “pink” dress coats and women in black, red, gray or white gowns—customary colors at hunt balls—will dance at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Another outstanding social event will be the Dramatic Club ball Nov. 9, also at the I. A. C. A second club dance is scheduled there for Dec. 21.
Mask and Wig Dance to Be Dee. 27
A tea and supper dance for the Mask and Wig Club Dec. 27 is being jotted down in engagement books about town. The annual charity ball of St. Margaret's Hospital Guild has been set tentatively for Dec. 7. Funds obtained from the dance are used in the Guild's philanthropic activities at the City Hospital. Another tentative date is Dec. 20 for the Southern Club's dinner dance. The three latter events also will be held at the Athletic Club. Evidently there will be reasons after all for buying the new gowns the stores are displaying.
Club Activities Enliven the Scene
Meanwhile summer ennui is being relieved by country club pros grams and vacation jaunts. The monthly luncheon-bridge of the Indianapolis Country Club will be held Wednesday with Mrs. Herbert S. King in charge Members of the standing committee will assist her and Mrs. Newell C. Munson will act as hostess, he luncheon will be served at 12:30 p. m. The Hibhland Golf and Country Club's regular luncheon-bridge also is set for Wednesday at the same hour. Mrs. Floyd Mattice, general chairman, will have as her assistants Mesdames L. C. Burnett, William V. Kingdon, M. Crosby Bartlett, W. H. Trimble and E. N, Trago. Members and guests of the Meridian Hills Country Club will play bridge at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow preceding a 1 p. m. luncheon. Mrs. Arthur O. Pittenger and Mrs. Edward P. Everett arranged the event.
Golf Tournament Opens Today
Golfing enthusiasts at the local clubs will be kept busy this week. A two-day tournament at tie Hillcrest and Indianapolis Country Clubs opened today. Tomorrow is to be ladies’ golf guest day at the Indianapolis Country Club with Mrs. Alfred L. Piel as general chairman. Members of her committee are Mesdames Edward Dean. George E. Enos, William M. Morris, Herbert A. Pinnell, Charles R. Rngers and William H. Wells and Miss Clair Morris. Several Leave for Vacation Trips Among those headed for Michigan resorts are I. s. Silvey D. Murphy and her daughter, Miss Ruth Fishback, who left by motor yesterday with Mrs. William Coleman Atkins. Mrs. Atkins will visit Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coleman at Wequetonsing and Mrs. Murphy and Ruth will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fairbanks at Harbor Springs. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wilde and their daughters, Barbara and Louise, were to go today to Lake Maxinkuckee for a week's visit, . Returning recently from Maxinkuckee vacations were Misses Mary Ann Zinn, Mary Jo and Peggy Jane Gray, Joan Bartley, Lois Hilkene, Elizabeth Harding, Carolyn Kiger and Eleanor Hazen.
William Bruenger Entertains
William Bruenger, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Bruenger, enter= tained ~ supper party Saturday on the terrace at his home. Guests were the Misses Adeline Lewis, Janet Beach, Margaret Becker, Joann Miller and Sue Virginia Hull, Roger Clapp, John Cregor, Robert Carpenter and Allen Kinnerman. After the supper the group attended a dance. Miss Rosemary Carr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Carr, celebrated her 18th birthday with a buffet supper at her home Saturday. Among the guests were the Misses Virginia Ann Earlywine, Rosemary Fletcher and Helen Rita Swartz, Roland Miles, Harry Weals, Don Carmichael and Larry Metcalf.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley A. Joseph Are on Canadian Wedding Trip; Couple Will Be at Home Here
In a candlelight service at 5:30 p. m. Saturday, Mrs. Dorothy Taylor Darling was married to Stanley A. Joseph. The ceremony was per-
0 p————— me —
Sales Campaign For Symphony Opens Sept. 16
Plans for a state-wide ticket sales campaign for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra concerts next season are being completed by the women’s committee of the Indiana State Symphony Society. The campaign opens Sept. 16 and will continue until Sept. 28. Mrs. Jack A. Goodman, vice president of the women’s committee and chairman of the campaign, will have a tea at her home Wednesday for the state organization of the committee. Guests, in addition to members of the State council and units of the women's committee from all sections of the state, will be representatives of the Indiana Federation of
Clubs, the Indiana Federated Mu-/ sic Clubs, the Indiana Congress of| Parents and Teachers, the social | and educational department of the, Farm Bureau and the Indianapolis| branch of the American Association! of University Women. Members of the state council of] the women's committee who will at- | tend are Mrs. Walter P. Morton, chairman; Mrs. Frank W. Cregor,| vice chairman; Mrs. Burke Nicholas, ! secretary, and Mrs. A. K. Scheidenhelm, transportation chairman; Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren, Whiting; Mrs. C. Lloyd Billman, Manilla; Mrs. E. C. Cline, Richmond.
Council Members to Attend Mrs. George R. Dillinger, French|
Mrs. Charles O. Leonard, Hartford| City; Mrs. Joe McCord, Greencastle; |
Douglas D. Nye, Bloomington; Mus. | Edwin I. Poston, Martinsville, and | Mrs. Macey O. Teeter, New Castle. | State units of the women’s committee will be represented by Murs. Burton P. Allen, Wabash; Mrs. P. E. Allen, Terre Haute; Mrs. Ward
formed by the Rev. E. Arnoid Clegg at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar S. Joseph, 4620 Washington Blvd., cousins of the bridegroom. An improvised altar backed by palms and flanked by seven-branch candelabra formed the background for the wedding. a gown of blush rose point lace, styled on modified Medici lines. | The square neckline was outlined by scallops of the lace, and the long, tight sleeves were full at the shoulders. The full, floor-length skirt fell from a tight bodice. She carried a spray of orchids and wore orchids in her hair.
Her attendant was Miss Marie
A reception followed the cere-! mony, after which the couple left for a trip to Canada. They will be at home Sept. 15 at 1311 E 59th
St. The bride attended Highland Hall, National Park Seminary and George Washington University. Guests from out-of-town, in addiMatuschka who wore a bouffant| tion to Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, the | waltz blue marquisette frock with |bride’'s parents, and the bridea matching head-band of the mar- | grcom’s parents, were Richard and quisette. She carried American|Julius Joseph Jr, Far Rockaway, Beauty roses. and Cecil Barrington, New York The bridegroom's father, Julius | City. Joseph, Far Rockaway, Long Island, s—————— was his best man. . | The bride's mother, Mrs. I. F. Book Review Scheduled | Taylor, Altoona, Pa. was gowned| « » stile] in a floor-length printed CHITIN | ar iy alia (Paivieh | with which she wore white acces- | Craig Pittman. Sevmour. Ind. besories and a corsage of garden flow- | fore Theta Tau Psi Sorority meeting ers. The mother of the bridegroom | Friday for a dessert luncheon at the wore silver gray chiffon with a|home of Mrs. Floyd Norman, 4426 corsage of pastel sweetpeas. |B. 10th St. 3
JANE JORDAN
DEAR JANE JORDAN-—Since last September I have vacillated back and forth between two boys. During the summer I began to realize how much one of them meant to me. Foolishly, I suppose, I disclosed this fact to him. Three days later he decided we were not right for each other and should call a halt to the entire affair. : It is hard to believe that after being chased by a boy so many different times the knowledge of my caring for him could cause this sudden outburst. It just isn't fair. I care too much now to let any silly ideas enter into it. I'm wondering if there isn't someone else as far as he is concerned. One of his main contentions is that I am very likely to hurt him again as I have before. I know this is not so. How can I make him see he is wrong? TROUBLED. = = ” n 2 ”
Answer—Your experience isn’t unusual at all. Lots of men will swim the Hellespont to get a woman and then wonder what on earth they did it for. In other words the conquest counts for more than the girl. The idea that she isn't completely bowled over by their personalities is just more than they can take and they will work day and night until they make her admit that their fascinations have registered. Then the whole purpose of the chase is gone. It was an end in itself instead of a means to an end. Of course it isn’t fair, but what can you do about it? Some men who have found themselves in the predicament of having won a girl whom they don’t really want have been forced by their own chivalry to marry her, and have kicked themselves to the end of the chapter for their folly. Because they knew it wasn’t fair they tried to atone for their unwitting deception by signing on the dotted line. But that isn’t fair either, is it? My ideas to every girl who finds her boy friend’s interest waning is to give up with such speed that she takes his breath away. It may make him want to start all over again, but if it doesn’t let her look for new fields to conquer. Nothing is more unproductive than for a girl to hang on to a reluctant man hoping to fan the fires of a dying love affair. It is both heart-breaking and humiliating for the girl and irritating to the boy who can’t see why she takes it all so seriously. He feels a vague responsibility for her state of mind and it makes him feel uncomfortable. The unscrupulous are scornful, the conscientious extricate themselves gradually, and the quixotic marry—sometimes. Now for mercy’s sake don’t get the idea that this youth who is inflating his ego with the pleasure of turning you down is the only boy on earth. Let us pray that you'll live to meet his superior and live happily ever after. At least that should be your goal. JANE JORDAN,
G. Biddle, Bloomington; Mrs. Wesley Childers, Greencastle; Mrs. C. D. Chipman, La Porte; Miss Gladys
The bride WOre coburn, New Castle; Mrs, Randolph | her father, Her gown of frost white (Cox, Plainfield; Mrs. D. Wray De-|slipper satin was fashioned on em-
prez, Shelbyville; Mrs. Howard] Dodge, Columbus; Mrs. Albert J. Field, Bedford; Mrs. Harlan A.! Foulke, Columbus | Mrs. William Johnson, Franklin; Miss Veneta Kuntner, Greencastle; Miss Lois Luther, Brazil; Mrs. Jo-|
| seph Meredith, Muncie; Mrs. W. R.!
Morrison, Kokomo; Mrs. Hugh M.! Patton, Frankfort; Mrs. William Pearlman, Crawfordsville; Mrs. Daily A. Powell, Columbus; Mrs Eugene K. Quigg, Richmond, Mrs. Carlton Shuck, Franklin; Mrs. Harry W. Smith, Shelbyville; Mrs. William Spiegel, Shelbyville; Mrs. Robert J. Spencer Jr, Marion; Mrs. Albert P. Stewart, Lafayette, Mrs. G. D. Thatcher, Kokomo; Mrs. Robert H. Tinsley, Crawfordsville; Mrs. Helen Whitcomb, Shelbyville.
P.-T. A. to Be Represented
Tonose invited as representatives of their state organizations are Mrs. George W. Jaqua, Winchester and Mrs. George A. Van Dyke, for the Federated Clubs; Mrs. James L. Murray, for the Parent-Teacher Congress, and Mrs. Benjamin Scott, Claytor, for the Indiana Farm Bureau. Representatives of the Federated Music Clubs will be Mrs. Elmer Bossert, Liberty; Mrs. J. T. Clark, North Manchester; Mrs. Bernice Cook, Ridgeville; Mrs. Earl Doane, Covington; Mrs. Paul J. Deer, Peru; Mrs. Ruth Ford, Hillsboro; Mrs. John Gosselink, Hartford City; Mrs Frank Hargitt, St. Paul. Mrs. John Hight, Spencer; Mrs. John Paul Huffman, North Manchester; Mrs. Ralph Lowder, Martinsville; Miss Janet Mauzy, Rushville; Mrs. Roy Mitchell, Newton; Miss Lauretta C. Mosier, Winchester; Mrs. Mary M. Heath, Bedford; Mrs. Frank Russell, Tipton; Mrs. O. W. Stephenson, Greenwood; Mrs. N. J. Webb, North Vernon, and Mrs. Gladys L. Welbourne, Union City.
Uhl Reunion Is Held
The annual reunion of the Uhl family, descendants of John, Frank and Louis Uhl, took place yesterday at Garfield Park. Approximately 60 persons attended. Mrs. Thomas Grinslade and Mrs. Minor S. Goulding were in charge of arrangements.
Lodge Group Will Meet
The Royal Neighbors of America, Northwestern Camp 4415, will meet at 8:15 p. m. Wednesday in the hall at 28th and Rader Sts. Mrs. Zylpha Salyards will preside. Miss Elizabeth Riley is refreshments chairman.
Dzan Sorority Meets
Dzan Sorority will meet tonight at the home of Mrs. Hazel Balser,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Miss Martena Margaret Sink Is Wed to Harold C. Kost in Rite at First Friends Church
Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Kost ar Saturday in the First Friends Church.
bride is traveling in a costume suit of black and white sheer with
marriage at 8:30 p. m.
matching accessories.
She was Miss Martena Margaret Sink, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Kost, of Toledo, O., is the son of
Lick; Mrs. J. A. Kautz, Kokomo: | Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Kost, Vermont, Ill.
John A. Sink, 3820 College Ave.
The Rev. Eirol T. Elliott officiated at the wedding which took place be-
Mrs. Don M. Nixon, Wabash; Mrs, fore an altar bafiked with palms| Richard Cain, D. W. Medtnwald
and candelabra. The aisle down! which the bridal party entered was | marked with tall tapers in standards tied with white ribbon. Before the ceremony Earl W. Wells, organist, played a program of bridal music and Miss E. Leona Wright sang “Theta Lips,” “Phi Delta Bungalow” and “Because.” The bride entered un the arm of
pire lines with wide inset bands of Chantilly lace. Lace formed the high neckline and extended in points at the shoulders. The sleeves were fitted from wrist to elbow and were puffed at the shoulder. A row of satin-covered buttons ran from the neckline in back to the low basque waistline. The front of the bodice was shirred and banded at the waistline with lace. The gored skirt formed a long, wide train. She wore a tiered fingertip-length illusion veil, the cap of matching illusion incrusted with tiny seed pearls. Cousin Is Matron of Honor
Her only attendant, Mrs. Doyle C. Nicely, Plainfield, Ind, a cousin, wore a floor-length gown of romance rose satin made on Empire lines. The sweetheart neckline was finished with an insert of shirred net banded in rose satin. Short, puffed sleeves finished the shirred bodice with long basque back. The full skirt formed a short train. She wore an illusion head-dress with shoulder veil falling in tiers from a bow at the crown. Harry H. Hollis was best man and ushers were Oliver A. Rauch, Kirk J. Kendall, Danville, Ind.,, and Mr. Nicely. Mrs. Sink, mother of the bride, wore a frock of rose lace and Mrs. Kost was in yellow taffeta. Both wore corsages of gardenias. A reception at the church followed the ceremony. Assisting were Mrs. J. Richard Dresback, Deland,
\ Chairman
Terminal Photo Mrs. Pearl Benham is chairman for the annual session of the - Daughters of America which opens Wednesday night in the Travertine Room of the Hotel
their The
e on a wedding trip following
Ill.; Mesdames Howard B. Stitt, and Clarence Cheney, and the Misses Maxine Quinn, Evelyn Delgado, Jane Julie Turner, Georgeann Thrush, Juanita Carmichael, Ann Brown, Juanita Rauch and Sarah
Wright,
FOOD
By Mrs. Gaynor Maddox
HASH on Monday nights is al-
day morning. It's a sound idea, t00, | using up the leftovers. But too] often the economy is better than the taste. A noted American food expert, Margaret Sawyer, stakes her reputation on the statement that hash, properly made, can taste as good as the original roast. Edith Key Haines stands up for American hash, too. Mrs. Haines, a direct descendant of Francis Scott Key, who wrote “The Star-Span-gled Banner,” ought to know something about American ways. She uses canned corned beef hash, a steady seller these days. Here's her recipe: CORNED BEEF HASH, AND BAKED (Serves 4) One can (1 pound) corned beef hash, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 small white onion, peeled, and finely chopped; 12 teaspoon salt, 1 can condensed pea soup (10': ounces), 2 tablespoons stale bread crumbs, butter to dot the top. Saute onion in butter. Do not brown. Mix hash, sauted onion and butter, salt and 1:2 cup pea soup. Mix thoroughly. Make into a mound, as compactly as possible, on a 10inch glass pie plate, well greased. Leave an inch margin around edge. Sprinkle with crumbs, dot with butter, and bake in moderate oven (375 degrees F.) for 30 minutes, or until well browned. Combine the remaining pea soup with 2 tablespoons light cream, 1 teaspoon butter and 1 tabléspoon minced parsley. Place around the hash in spoonfuls as a garnish. Service hash with sweet mustard pickles or relish.
MOLDED
over chicken and served with toasted corn meal muffins or corn griddle cakes. Use the bones and skin to make a chicken broth.
CAROLINA CHICKEN HASH
(Serves 4)
Two cups cold, leftover chicken, cut into large dice; 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons minced raw celery, 1 cup chicken, celery and carrot stock, 12 cup cream, 1 tablespoon scraped cnion, % teaspoon mace, salt and pepper. Heat butter in Skillet, slowly stir in flour. Then slowly stir in chicken, celery and carrot broth. Add celery and scraped onion and season to taste with salt and pepper. Simmer 10 minutes. Add cubed chicken, mace and cream. Heat thoroughly. Serve with cornmeal muffins, toasted, or cornmeal waffles or grid-
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.
9180 E. 52d St.
Lincoln.
dle cakes,
Here's a grand hash made of left- |
1. Mrs. William F. Moon was Miss Wanda LaVonne Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Smith, 953 N. Oakland Ave., before her marin the Centenary Christian Church.
riage Aug. 11
Photo.)
2. Mrs. Milbert Ratcliff (left)
Misses Pauline and Ruth Neier, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Neier, Greencastle, Ind., before their double wedding ceremony in the First Presbyterian Church at Greencastle April 6.
Photo.)
3. Before her marriage in St. Joan of Arc Church Aug. 10, Mrs. J. Frank Ittenbach was Miss Ruth Beauchamp. She is the daughter (Ramos-Porter Photo.)
4, The wedding of Miss Gertrude Murphy to Joseph L. ‘Garza took place April 14 in St. John's Evangelical and Reformed Church. Mrs. Garza is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Murphy, 518 Hottage Ave.
of Mrs. Walter E, Beauchamp.
(Ramos-Porter Photo.)
5. Mrs. Andrew W. Weidekamp, formerly Miss Margaret A. Egan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael W, Egan, was married May 30 in Our Lady of Lourdes Church. The couple is at home at 44 S. Haw-
thorne Lane.
Autumnal Motif Marks Rite Uniting Miss Marian Gearen And Victor Milton Guio
The Rev. Stewart William Hartfelter read the ceremony at 3:30 p. m. most as general from coast to coast | Saturday in McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, which as a line of clean clothes on Mon- | united Miss Marian Elizabeth Gearen and Victor Milton Guio. Mr. and Mrs. Willard K. Gearen, 4160 Guilford Ave., are the bride's Mr. Guio is the son of Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Guio, 720 E. Drive,
parents.
Board to Plan. Program
Executive board members of the Welfare .Club, both new and retir-
ing, will be luncheon guests Wednesday of Mrs. Leroy Martin at the Rochester Country Club on Lake Manitou. Wednesday evening the group will go to Lake Webster where they will be house guests of Mrs. E. Monty Campbell and Mrs. Raleigh Fisher on Thursday. Mrs. Gustav Schmidt will entertain Thursday with a luncheon bridge for the party at her Lake Wawasee home. The board will make plans for a series of entertainments to be given in the World War Memorial auditorium during the winter. Mrs. Ollin Hatton Sr. is club’ president,
Buffet Supper Today
A buffet supper will be given tonight by Mrs. Richard Smith, 1020 E. 59th St., for Alpha Epsilon Chapter, Delta Theta Tau Sorority. The hostess will be assisted by Miss Philena Argo and Mrs. Rex Haines.
Married
Before her marriage in early spring, Mrs. Robert W. McDuff was Miss Ruth Banister, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Banister. Mr. McDuff is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. McDuff.
EK
(Ramos-Porter
and Mrs. Reginald Hooper were
(Ramos-Porter
Woodruff Place. The altar of the chapel was banked with palms, cibotium ferns, golden wheat, red oak leaves and baskets of bronze and yellow chrysanthemums, interspersed with seven-branch candelabra with lighted tapers. Miss Donna Alles, organist, played for the ceremony. A street-length dress of Indian earth crepe was worn by the bride with a matching felt hat, brown accessories and a corsage of green orchids. Her father gave her in marriage.
Attendants Wear Green
Her sister, Mrs. James J. Stewart, was matron Qf honor and Miss Hazel
Guio, the bridegroom’s sister, was bridesmaid. Both wore village green crepe frocks with wide metal belts. Brown silk jersey turbans with draped veils matched their gloves and shoes. They carried loose arm bouquets of bronze and gold chrysanthemums. Mrs. Gearen chose a clay colored crepe dress and black hat and wore pink roses.» Mrs. Guio’s moss green gown was worn with a matching hat and bronze chrysanthemums. Mr. Guio’s best man was Harold Martin, Lapel, Ind. Ushers were James Holland, Richard Curtis and Charles Fisher. The couple received their friends after the ceremony at the rear of the chapel.
Couple to Live Here
MONDAY, AUG. 19, 'T%0
Sisters, Wed in Double Ceremony, Are Among Recent Brides
Shower Honors Bride-to-Be
Engagement announcements, tos gether with notes on a shower for a bride-to-be, appear in today's nuptial news. Miss Elizabeth Cook and Miss Marjorie Willsey entertained re« cently with a surprise miscellane« ous shower for Miss Lucille Green, whose marriage to Herman Troutman of Evansville, Ind, will be Sept. 1. Appointments for the party were in pink and green. Guests included Mesdames Rosalind Arnett, Emily Heckman, Margaret Hardin, Emalie Jones, Mildred Scott, Dora Strawmyer and Dorothy Latham and Misses Martha Chapman, Nellie Jean Baker, Frances Noll, Pauline Muench, Mildred Robinson and Margaret Schumacher. The bride-to-be’'s mother, Mrs. Bessie Green, 1905 S. Delaware St., also was a guest. The hostesses were assisted by Mrs. Bertha Cook.
5 un n
Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Ferguson, 5405 Guilford Ave. announce the engagement of their daughter, Phyllis, to Harris Sumner of Indianapolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Grover Sums ner, Arcadia, Ind. The wedding will be at 4:30 p. m. Sept. 1 in the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church.
u ” 8
The engagement of Miss Martha Elizabeth Kays to Christopher Lee Pierle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Pierle, 2102 S. Meridian St., is ane nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo E. Kays, 1801 8. Meridian St. The ceremony will be performed at 3:30 p. m. Sept. 7 in the rectory of Sacred Heart Church.
Installation Service Set
A joint installation of Post and Auxiliary officers will be held Wednesday night by Wayne Post 64 of the American Legion at the post home, 6566 W. Washington St. Past District Commander Albert, Meurer, assisted by a past district president, will install the officers. Recently elected department and district commanders will attend. The new post commander, John D. Ricketts, served in the U. 8S. Navy during the" first World War and has been a member of Wayne Post for 10 years. Other officers who will be ine stalled are Clifford Robbins, first vice commander; John Dickerson, second vige commander; Lee Everett, adjutant; Cecil Barker, finance officer; John Schofield, sergeant at-arms, and Henry Woehlecke, chaplain. Willard Thomas is retiring commander. Mrs. Muriel Ricketts will be ine stalled as president of the Auxiliary; Mrs. Grace Jester, first vice president; Mrs. Louetta Kiley, second vice president; Mrs. Ethel Warren, secretary; Mrs. Nona Kepler, treas=urer; Mrs. Margaret Hagan, chape lain; Mrs. Grace Tirey, sergeant-ate arms, and Mesdames Ruth Nahre, Anne Thomas and Ruby Woehlecke, executive board members. Mrs, Edith Burton is retiring president. Mrs. Nahre, past junior president, is chairman of the installation, After the ceremonies there will be a dance open to the public.
Sorority Meets Tonight
Zeta Kappa Chapter, Delta Theta Tau Sorority, will meet at 8:15 p. m. today at the home of Miss Lucille Thomas, 3928 E. 11th St.
New Under-arm
They will be at home in Indian-| apolis upon their return from a| wedding trip. Out-of-town guests) were Messrs. and Mesdames E. L. Ferguson, F. W. Beer, Walter E. Rugh and Thurman McDavid, Misses Virginia and Margaret Rugh and Robert Rugh, all of Decatur, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. George Abbott, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Heilman and Charles L. Abbott, Joliet, Ill.; Miss Rose Guio, Polo, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Guio, Rochelle, Ill, and Mrs. William A. Hockett and Miss Marilyn Hockett, Montclair, N. J. The bride was graduated from Butler University where she was a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority. Mr. Guio also attended Butler and is a member of Sigma Nu Fraternity.
Phi Delta Pi to Meet
Mrs. Lee Benner, 819 E. Main St, Beech Grove, will be hostess Wednesday night to Alpha Chapter, Phi Delta Pi Sorority.
Card Party Is Planned A card party will be held at 2
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