Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1940 — Page 14

Three Plays Are Scheduled By Players Club for Nov. 2

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Q. Richey, co-chairmen for The

Players club’s first program Nov. 2 in the Civic Theater, -

‘have announced titles and casts for the three one-act plays to be presented. ey

“Ballroom,” first play of the series, will have Mr.

and Mrs. Larry Willson as its only characters. In “Green

Room” Reginald Garstang will be the “Spirit of Art,” John I. Kautz will represent the stage properties and an off-stage voice, and Robert S. Wild will appear as

club presideat, assisted by the club’s new members. The closing play, “Stateroom,” will present Miss Alice Vonnegut

as the bride, C. Otto Janus Jr. as the bridegroom and Charles M. -

Wells as a porter. Other members of the committee in charge of the program are Messrs. and Mesdames Wells, Howard J. Lacy II and Claude C. Jones Jr. : . |

Parties Planned to Attend Play :

SEVERAL PARTIES are planned for the opening night of Lillian Hellman's play, “The Little Foxes,” starring Tallulah Bankhead. at English’s Theater tomorrow. The first performance is being sponsored by the Orchard School Parents’ Association. Dr. and Mrs. Russell Hippensteel will have a buffet supper at their home before the show for the guests who will attend with them. These are Dr. and Mrs. John R. Brayton, Dr. and Mrs. Aflan K. Harcourt, Dr. and Mrs. Harry L. Foreman and Messrs. and Mesdames Robert M. Stith, Oscar M. Helmer, John H. Waldo and Dr. and Mrs. David L. Smith. ; With Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Lacy Sr. in their box at the theater will be Dr. and Mrs. Robert O. McAlexander, Miss Helen M. Patterson and Orin L. Patterson, Canyon City, Ore. With Mr, and Mrs. Russel Williams will be Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Peckham. Mr. and Mrs. James F. T. Sargent Jr, will have as their guest Mrs. R. L. Anderson, Elwood City, Pa.

Shower Honors Barbara Ballinger

MISS BARBARA BALLINGER, whose matriage to Robert J. Clay will be next Wednesday in the Broadway Methodist Church, will be honor guest this evening at a “handy” shower given by Mrs. Emsley Johnson Jr. and Miss Martha Norman at the home of Mrs. Johnson's mother, Mrs, R. L. McKechnie. Guests with the bride-to-be and her mother, Mrs. Arthur L. Ballinger, will include Mrs. George H. Clay, mother of the bride-

groom-to-be, and Mrs. Ross Wolfe, both of Logansport, Ind.; Mrs.

Robert Lewis, Finley, Ind.; Mesdames Francis Carrell, James O. Harris, Thomas E. Reilly, Paul Dolzall and John Sheets. Other guests will be Misses Bettyann Jones, Mary Jane Shafer, Harriet Jane Holmes, Ellen Hamilton, Dorothy Wehling, Catherine Heard and Madeline Trent. Three of Mr, Clay's wedding attendants will have a dinner ‘for him this evening at the Brookview Inn. Hosts will be William Ash, best man, and John Sheets and’ Emsley Johnson Jr., ushers.

Barbara Hickam Will Play MISS BARBARA HICKAM, music instructor at Tudor Hall

School, will present a program at the meeting of the Caroline Scott:

Harrison Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, tomorrow afternoon in the chapter house. The program committee will present a Professor Quiz on historical subjects. Delegates to the recent state conference in French Lick, Ind., will report at a business meeting at 2 p. m. Mrs. Gustavus B. Taylor, regent, will preside. Mrs. W. B. Bartholomew, hostess chairman, and Mrs. Joseph A. Scherrer, vice chairman, will be assisted by the Mesdames Samuel Ashby, Conrad Clever, Edgar J. Randolph Jr. Brandt C. Dowhey, Walter H. Green, Ralph W. Roderick, Samuel C. Hanson, Giles L. Smith, Frederick D. Stilz, Alexander L. Taggart, Charles F. Voyles, Cecil S. Webb, Frank F. Wocher and Miss Jane M. Scudder.

Groups to Attend Civic Theater Opening

Ticket sales have been so heavy for the Civic Theater's opening play. “Of Thee I Sing,” Pulitzer prize winning musical comedy, that the SRO sign has been put out for opening night Friday. The advance reservations give promise of full houses every night of the run scheduied through next Wednesday. - Many parties are being given for the opening, with special arrangements being planned by Mrs. Russel S. Williams. / Mr. and Mrs. George T. Parry will entertain with a dinner for Mr. and Mrs. H. Foster Clippinger and Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Stephenson before taking them to Lhe theater. will be Mrs. George T. Guffin and her daughter, Miss Catherine Guffin, Gary, and Mrs. Chestina Mauzy. With Mrs. Raymond P. Van Camp will be her daughter, Mrs. Rosamond Van Camp Hill; Miss Helen Coffey and her mother, Mrs. J. W, Coffey; Messrs. and Mesdames George Zeigler and R. G. Lazarus. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ball, Muncie, have reservations for nine. Mrs. Wesley C. Coffman's guests will be Messrs. and Mesdames W. Scott Deming and Carl Reynolds. Another party will include Messts. and Mesdames Thomas J. Scanlon apd Thomas Massoth, Mesdames Carl Reifsteck and Thomas La Manna. gMr. and Mrs. Chauncey H. Eno II will go with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Elder. Miss Harriet Jane Holmes will give a dinner for Barbara Ballinger, a. bride-to-be, before taking the party to the theater. With Mr. and Mrs. Earl Noggle will be Messrs. and Mesdames Howard T. Griffith, Frederick Schmidt and Arthur Taylor and Mrs. Robert McKay, mother of Jean Jarrard, a member of the cast.

Among others arranging parties for the opening in addition to

others previously announced are Richard Hoover, director, and Mrs. Hoover; Ned Le Fevre, Dr. and Mrs. Russell J. Spivey, Messrs. and Mesdames Howard Nyhart, Farless Hewlett, Thomas Neal, Mortimer C. Furscctt, Thomas Harvey Cox, C. W. Weathers. Noble Bretzman, Emery Cline, Harry Hartley, C. Hollis Hull, A. K. Scheidenhelm and Dillon Huder.

Evelyn Lilly Entertained

Honor guest at a luncheon given yesterday by Mrs. J. K. Lilly Jr. at her home was Miss Evelyn Lilly, who is visiting her father, Ell Lilly, and Mrs. Lilly. Miss Lilly’s engagement to Francis B. Chalifoux, Boston and Beverly Farms, Mass., recently was announced by her mother, Mrs. Frederic Clay Bartlett, White Hall, Beverly Farms. oo wedding will be Nov. 23 at White Hall. She is to return home OMmOITow. :

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I am a girl 16 and a junior in high

school. I am simply crazy about a certain boy of my own age. We got started oft pretty good and I think he did like me. Then another boy told him some terrible things about me. He said I was bad morally and was a little flirt. Now this isn’t true. What ever enticed this boy to say such horrible things is something I don’t uffderstand) Not only has the rascal told this one boy untruths, he’s told them to others, too. Why? Anyway, my boy friends believes what he has hoard and treats me terribly. In spite of this I am still very fond of him. Is there anything I could do to win back his esteem? I try to be good to him and I guess I dog his footsteps continually. I can’t stand the look in his eyes when I pass him. I've cried and I can’t get my mind on my school work. Please, can you help me? : MISJUDGED.

Answer—I imagine the fact that you dog the boy’s footsteps has

more to do with the look in his eyes when you pass him than the -

stories which were circulated about you. No boy likes to be pursued, not even by a girl whose reputation is pure as the driven snow. To be adored by a girl whom one has rejected is a nuisance. want his esteem you simply cannot afford to show such a distressing lack of pride. I do not know why one of your former friends should want to spread nasty stories about you. You must have hurt his pride in some way and this is his method of retaliating. A boy who would go out of his way to ruin a girl's chances with another boy must have wanted her himself in the first place. At any rate, he has fallen far short of the standards of a gentleman and you should cross him cff your list fofever. » Scandalous gossip dies quickest when it is ignored. The more protesting you do the more people will talk. However, you certainly do not have to curry favor with people who talk about you or who believe yarns about you. Your cue is to register resentment. Treat the young man with icy politeness but don’t crawl after one who has done you an injury. Where is your dignity? 2 8 8

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a young man of 26. I come from an unusually good family and have an excellent job. For some irritating reason 1 have been unable to locate a decent girl with brains since acquiring the job. For years I have gone with above average girls but now that I am in a position to get serious they have vanished. I have a lot of friends, go to a lot of functions but meet only scatterbrains and dullards. Isn't there some respectable way of meeting some one worth while? A good face and figure are appreciated, a good heac is required. A. B. Answer—This sounds a little bit like an advertisement to me and 1 expect to be swamped with replies to your letter. However, since I do not exchange addresses, the girls may just as well save their time. If you keep in circulation sooner or later you will meet a girl who fulfills your requirements. To be sure there are plenty of scatterbrains and dullards but there also are plenty of .intelligent girls. Unless you lock yourself up in a back room I do not see how you can ' avoid meeting one. - JANE JORDAN. ET Bt a A Tg eee

Mrs. St. Clair Parry's guests .

If you:

\ {short puffed sleeves.

cine

Among the busiest women in town these days are members of the Children’s Museum Guild, who are 3 selling tickets for the lecture by Elmer Davis, news |*arrangements committee meeting of the sponsoring

Sell Tickets for Lecture By Elmer Davis Nov. 1 :

group.

“THE INDIANAPOLIS. TIMES

dames Harrison Eiteljorg, Frank T. Sisson and E. H. Gable (eft to right) are shown leaving a recent

Lynch-Carson

Wedding Today

The Rev. W. G. Morgan, assisted by the Rev. Stanley Mahan, will officiate at the wedding, at 8:30 p. m. today in the Barth Place Methodist Church, of Miss Wilhelmina Carson to Don C. Lynch, son of Don L: Lynch. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. Howard Carson. : The ceremony will be read before

“la background of palms and green-

ery lighted by tapers in candelabra. Mrs. Robert Buckner, organist, will play the wedding music. The bride, given in marriage by her father, will be gowned in candlelight satin fashioned with a basque bodice, long sleeves puffed at the shoulders, a sweetheart neckline and a full skirt forming a long train. Her long illusion veil will fall from a Juliet cap of seed pearls and she will carry a bouquet of white roses and chrysanthemums centered with gardenias. Her attendants will wear taffeta frocks, the fitted bodices of which have heart-shaped necklines and The skirts are formed of three shirred flounces. They will wear matching bows of ribbon in their hair. Mrs. Alden Blacketer, matron of honor, will wear rose and will carry gold pompon chrysanthemums and Queen Mary roses. The bridesmaids, Miss Mary Lynch and Mrs. Albert South, will wear blue and rose respectively and will carry gold pompons. Joyce Ann South, flower girl, will wear pink and will carry a basket of rose petals. Colin Fulle is to be best man and ushers will be Harold Imler and Ernest Koch. The brides mother has chosen a wine velvet gown with which she will wear wine accessories and a corsage of Talisman roses. A reception at the home of the brides parents will follow the ceremony, after which the couple will leave for a wedding trip east. :

Headmistresses

|Group to Meet

The Headmistresses Association

nual convention at Tudor Hall School tomorrow through Saturday. Miss Elizabeth Singleton, Girls Latin School, Chicago, is presi-

dent of the organization and Miss Eloise Tremain of Ferry Hall, Lake Forest, Ill, is secretary, Miss I. Hilda Stewart, principal of Tudor Hall School, has arranged for the entertainment of the guests. The conference will open with an informal dinner at the school Thursday evening, followed by 4 meeting at the Marott Hotel, at which, Miss Nellie McCaslin, director of dramatics at Tudor Hall, will speak. The guests will visit classes at Park, Orchard and Tudor Hall Schools Friday morning. Miss Harriet O’Shea, professor of psy-

-ichology at PurduesUniversity, wil

speak af 10:45 a. m. Friday at Tudo Hall on “The Girl at the Top and the Girl at the Bottom.” » Following luncheon at the Woodstock Club, the group will visit the Conner Prairie Farm and wil} be entertained at tea at the home of Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith, Mrs. Alice Wesenberg, professor of English at Butler University, will speak at the evening meeting . at the Marott Hotel. Her subject is “In Praise of Chipmunks.” Following a business meeting Saturday morning, Dr. William Cullen Dennis, president of Earlham College, will address the association on current international conditions.

Mrs. Guio to Speak

The Beta Delphian Club will meet at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the director’s room at the Indiana National Bank. Mrs. Max G. Dahl will preside. Mrs. Albert Meurer will introduce the speakers. Mrs. A. R. Young will give a talk on “Gibral-

tar” and Mes. Oliver Guio will speak

|. ‘on “Annapolis and the Navy

Sn

commentator, on Nov. 11 in Caleb Mills Hall. Mes-

L A. C.’s First L

of the Middle West will hold its an-|

Of Season Being

uncheon-Bridge Held Today

The first women’s luncheon-bridge of the fall season at the Indianapolis Athletic Club is being held today, followed by play for table prizes. Mrs. Raymond C. Fox, hostess chairman, is being assisted by Mes-

dames Joe Rand Beckett, Herbert Blackwell, J. A. Brower, Joseph J. Cole, David D. Cutright, E. G. Delgado, J. J. Baker, T. P. Heap, Maxwell Droke, Mark Ferree, J. J. Fitzgerald, Edward Gallagher, John Geller, Marvin E. Hamilton, Charles Hammond, C. Henry Jones, L. O. Peterson, Elmer F. Straub, Walter Hannon and A. R. Jones. Other assistants are Mesdames F. G. LaManna, Glenn C. Lord, Fred Mahaffey, L. W. Mohlenkamp, William J. Mooney Jr, Robert Moynahan, Arthur S. Overbay, Leroy Sanders, Thomas J. Scanlon and Ray Sparrow. Out-of-town committee members are Mrs. H. W. Gante and Mrs. Berry W. Cooper, Anderson, Ind.; Mrs. C A. Leatherman, Muncie, Ind, and Mrs. Harry Goldthwaite, Marion, Ind. The I. A. C.s fall and winter weekly dance schedule will be resumed Friday with the first of the Friday night buffets. Dinner dancing on Fridays will be from 7 to 8:30 p. m. and supper dancing will follow from 9:30 p. m. to midnight. Cocktail hour dancing Saturday afternoons during the football season will start Saturday. Louie Lowe’s Orchestra will play from 4:30 p. m. to 6 p. m. in the Venetian Room. The afternoon dances have been announced as Rhumba-Conga Football .Fiestas, and will feature music for the Latin dance steps. Saturday night supper dancing will be from 10 p. m. to 1 a. m. and Sunday evening dinner music will be played from 6:30 to 8:30 p. m. Other events on the October social calendar include the season's first stag party next Monday; the annual Kiddies’ Halloween party Oct. 27 and the Halloween dinner dance Oct. 31 for members and guests.

Beta Sigma Phi Elects

Mrs. Fred Sonnemaker of Evansville, Ind., was selected. president of the Indiana State Council of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at the state convention: recently in Ft. Wayne. Other officers chosen were Miss Elsie Richards, Evansville, vice president; Miss Virginia Howard, Terre Haute, treasurer; Miss Virginia Hines, Orestes, Ind. recording secretary, and Miss Bess Brown, Pt. Wayne, re-elected historian. The convention will be in Evansville next’ year. .

Republicans to Meet

The Lawrence Township Club of Republican Wamen will hold an allday meeting Friday at the home of Mrs. Roy Sample, -E. 96th St. A noon luncheon will be followed by a tea for Maurice Robinson, United States Representative from the 11th Cohgressional District.

President

Mrs. Ida B. Wise Smith of Evanston, Ill, president of the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union, is the featured speaker at the four-day Indiana W. C. T. U. convention which

‘opened yesterday in Evansville,

Vags, or

S. King, W. C. Bevington, Francis

PT. A. Region Sets Meeting

Mrs. Frank Rieman of Indianapolis, vice president for Region 7 of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers, will preside at the regional conference in Richmond next Tuesday. Sessions will be held in the Central Methodist Church Guest speaker will be Mrs, Walter H. Buhlig of Chicago, field secretary of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers. She will discuss relationiships between local and national groups at the morning session and speak on “True or False” in the afternoon. Mrs. James L. Murray of Indianapolis, presiden® of the Indiana Congress, will present the conference theme, “The Future Belongs to Youth” at the morning session... Response to the greeting from William G. Bate, superintendent of the Richmond schools, will be given by Mrs. Logan G. Hughes of Indianapolis, vice president for Region 4 of the National Congress. Registration at 9:30 a. m. Tuesday is in the hands of Mrs. J. B. O'Maley of Richmond. Conference sessions. will convene at 10 a. m. and 1:10 p. m., with a luncheon scheduled for 12 o'clock. Reservations for the luncheon must reach Mrs. O’Maley, 2039 E. Main St. Richmond, by Saturday night.

8 and 40 Plans Conference

Marion County Salon 126 of the 8 and 40, American Legion Auxiliary honor society, will be hostess at a Departmentale Pouvoir for Indiana salons this week-end at the Hotel Lincoln., Mrs. Leta Hasselbring, president of the local salon, has appointed Mrs. Elsie Johnson general chairman of arrangements and Mrs. Vivian Hughes cochairman. Honor guests at the opening banquet at 6:30 p. m. Friday will be Mrs, Pauline Rairdon of Indianapolis, national secretary of the organization, and Mrs. Mabel Morningstar of Ft. Wayne, state presient. Mrs. Hasselbring, master of ceremonies, will introduce Miss Mary A. Meyers, secretary of the Marion County Tuberculosis Association, who. will discuss “Prevention of Tuberculosis.” Business sessions of the pouvoir will begin with a meeting at 9 a. m. Saturday morning in Parlor A. Mrs. Morningstar will preside.

Washington P.-T. A. To Hear Principal

W. G. Gingery, principal of Washington High School, will interpret the school’s study of the 1935 graduating class at the first regular meeting of the Washington P-T. A. tomorrow evening at the high school. The Boys’ Glee Club, under direction of Edward Emery, will sing. Mrs. T. V. Petranoff and Miss Shirley Harvey are in charge of the program. :

Luncheon Scheduled,

The October committee of the Holy Angels Church will serve a chili luncheon tomorrow noon: ‘in the school building, 28th St. and Northwestern Ave. A euchre party will follow at 2 p. m.

Card Party Set

An all-pillowslip card party will be sponsored at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Citizens’ Gas & Coke Utility auditorium by Indianapolis Auxiliary of Star.

.|zer, Catherine Leich and Josephine

Walter Storks Will Give | Dinner Friday,

Honor Guest

comprise today’s prenuptial news. Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Stork will entertain Friday evening at Cifaldi’s with a bridal dinner for their daughter Ann, whose marriage to William A. Boswell will be Saturday afternoon in the Irvington Methodist Church. ~ Guests with the betrothed couple

will include his parents; Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Boswell; Dr. and Mrs. Clyde Saylor Black, Brownstown, Ind.; Dr. and Mrs. Ezra L. Hutchens: Edwin C. Boswell, Visalia, Cal, who will be his brother's best man; Miss Elizabeth Denzler, cousin and only attendant of the bride; Robert Koss, Miss Rosemary Bryket and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gerdts. ; ® ” 2. Miss Adele Dunne, riage to John BE. Fehsenfeld III will be at 7:30 p. m. Monday in McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, will be honor guest at an “every hour of the day” shower given tonight by Mrs. Roland F. Knox. Assisting the hostess will be her mother, Mrs. Eunice Tyner, and Mrs. Z. B. Knox. Guests hesides Miss Dunn and her mother, Mrs. V. L. Dunn, will include the bridegroom-to-be’s mother, Mrs. J. E. Fehsenfeld Jr.; Mesdames R. E. Shuman, Adele Langsdale, J. G. Jones Jr, M. B. Hancock and. Edgar Druley and Misses Virginia Bruns, Mary Hanceck, Doris McDonald and Elizabeth Mahin, Pinehurst, N. C. : 2 8 =

Mrs Griffith B. Niblack and Miss Mary Margaret Miller entertained recently with a bridal shower at the Niblack home, 3836 Central Ave, in honor of Miss Margaret Youngs, who will be married Saturday to Frederick H. Myers. Miss Youngs Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James C Youngs. Guests included Mrs. Youngs and the Misses Mary Crowe, Virginia Gant, Betty Pagach. Martha Peterson, Beulah Anderson, Dorothy MacMurphy and ‘Miss Margaret Faulkner, a #2 8

Miss Julia Spitzer. who will be married to Raymond Wiltshire Saturday, was guest of honor at a personal shower last night at the home of Miss Roxie Deranian, 2842 N. Talbot Ave. Assistant. hostesses were Mrs. John Hawes, Mrs. William Sheehan and Miss Bernadette Treadway. : : The guest list included Mesdames J. Herbert Hartman, William MecKeand, J. J. McLaughlin Jr., Bernard Kunkel, Edward King, R. N. Fritsch, Herbert Spitzer and Robert Goodwine, the Misses Thelma Spit-

Russo.

Personals

Mrs. Ralph S. Joyce and son, Ralph Jr. of Terre Haute, Ind, are the guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Von Ohlen, 2941 N. Delaware St. for a week's visit.

Mr. and Mrs. Harris P. Wetsell have left on a motor trip to Atlantic City, N. J, New York, Saratoga] Springs and Lake Placid Club.

Mesdames W. W. Reedy, George Barnes and William Paulsel, representatives of the Central Women's Christian Temperance Union, left yesterday to attend the state W. C. T. U. convention in Evansville. The meeting will last through Friday. \

Multum-in-Parvo Aid Announced

Mrs. Herbert T. Grouns, president of the Multum-in-Parvo Literary Club, has announced the appointments of Mrs. Elwood Rogers as ghairman of the club’s industrial aid for the blind and Mrs. Vern Harrison as contributor to the Indiana Club Woman's Magazine: The appointments were made at a

Margaret Youngs Ts|.

A bridal dinner and shower notes

whose mar-|

“| Zionsville, Ind., and Mr. and Mrs.

Chairman

=

Mrs. Max H. Norris is chairman of the benefit card party which the Sigma Chi Mothers’ Club will sponsor tomorrow in Ayres’ auditorium.

Mrs. Coleman Is Honored At Luncheon

The first editions included in the collections of Indiana authors’ works presented Yale and Butler Universities by Mrs. William H. Joleman make those collections especially valuable, President D. S. Robinson of Butler said today. He spoke at an Authors’ Luncheon honoring Mrs. Coleman at the Columbia Club. President Robinson, Bernhard Knollenberg, Yale librarian, and Indiana authors attending

gave three-minute talks on Indiana authors’ contributions to literature and Mrs. Coleman's gifts. Dr. Robinson pointed out that many (first editions fall into the hands |of individuals and collectors and libraries have only second editions. Since the libraries are places of research, they are especially in need of first editions. He emphasized Butler's obligation to Mrs, Coleman for the gift and that of Indianapolis for her philanthropic work in general. Mrs. Coleman has presented the collections as memorial to William Coleman Atkins of the Yale Class of 1933 and Hilton U. Brown Jr. of the Butler Class of 1918. Mrs, Demarchus C. Brown was toastmaster at the luncheon. Indiana authors were seated at the speakers’ table with honor guests, including the presidents of Indiana colleges and universities. Miss Margaret Knollenberg, Richmond, Ind. sister of Mr. Knollenberg, | was among guests at the luncheon. Others were Mrs. Robert J. Hamp, and Mrs. J. H. Nixon, Kokomo, Ind.; Mrs. John Shaffer, Chicago; M. F. Kennedy, Morgantown, | Ind.; Winant Jonnston, Washington, and Mrs. George Reisner, wife of the Egyptologist, who returned recently from Egypt and is living at Long Branch Farm near

John Mitchell and their daughter, Jean, and Judge and Mrs. Willian A. Hough, Greenfield, Ind. Judge Hough recited two of James Whitcomb Riley's poems at the luncheon. Many wires and leiters were received at the luncheon from persons! throughout the country. Among] them were messages from George Ade, Brook, Ind.; John T. McCutcheon, Chicago; Booth Tarking-

Mrs. Charles A. Beard, New Milford, Conn.; Dr. Morris Fishbein, Chicago; George Jean Nathan, Oliver Sayler, Mrs. Benjamin Harrison, Miss Florence Heywood and Elmer Davis, New York, and Louis Ludlow, Washington.

I.T. S.C. Group to Meet The Panamanian Chapter of the International Travel-Study Club was to hold its regular meeting at 12:30 o'clock today in the Colonial Tearoom. Mrs. Ruth Holman was to speak on “New Zealand.” The hostess was to be Mrs. George B. Poppa. ;

Betty Tingle Hostess

meeting of the club yesterday at the home of Mrs. Colin L. Lett. The program included talks by Miss| Mayme Jacobs on “South America” and Mrs. William W. Stanley on “The Monroe Doctrine.”

| Members’ guests are invited.

The OQ. F. F. Club. of Shortridge High School will meet this evening at the home of Miss Betty Tingle. Final plans will be made for the club's trip to Turkey Run Oct. 24.

| convention

ton, Kennebunkport, Me.; Mr. and|

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 16, 1940 League of Pen

Women to Have

Luncheon :

Mrs. Clyde Titus Ig To Be Hostess

A Puerto Rican luncheon will bs held by the Indiana branch of the

National League of American Pen Women at 1 p. m. Saturday at the home of Mrs. Clyde Titus, 758 Middle Drive, Woodruff Place. Assisting hostesses are Mesdames Felix T. McWhirter, Oscar A, Ahlgren and Frank N, Wallace, Mrs. Carrie Abbot Guio, president, will discuss her trip to the nations} ; in Washington last spring and will outline the year's projects, The Puerto Rican delegate at the convention presented Mrs. Guio with the decorations that will be used for the luncheon table Saturday. . er A musical program by Miss Ellen Johnson will follow the business session. A graduate of the Cincine nati College of Music, Miss Johnson now teaches piano in the Wilking Piano Co. Studios. She studied

J with Rudolph Ganz and received 8

Master of Music degree at the Chicago Musical College and s8ls0 has studied at the St. Louis Conservatory of Music with Perey Grainger and Gottfried Galston. Miss Johnson will play “Prelude in C-sharp Minor” (Rachmaninoff), “Minute Waltz” (Chopin) and “La Campanella” (Liszt).

Lodges Book Meetings

Meetings honoring gst a present officers have on Bi by Indianapolis lodges. ¥ ENGLEWOOD CHAPTER 483 OF THE O. E. S. will entertain the worthy grand matron, Mrs. Nelle Johnson, tomorrow evening at the Englewood Masonic Temple. 2714 E. Washington St. Mrs.. Margaret Martin is worthy matron and Hermon Corbin ‘is worthy patron,

NAOMI CHAPTER 131 OF THE O. E. 8. will honor past matrons and patrons at a 6:30 p. m. dinner Friday in the dining room of the Masonic Temple, North and Tllinojs Sts. At the stated meeting at 2 o'clock, the past oMcers will fill the stations in the exemplification of degrees, Mrs. Cora Weiland will preside as worthy matron during the ceremony and Leo A. James as worthy patron. Reservations for the dinner must be made in advance.

The INDIANAPOLIS POWER. AND LIGHT AMERICAN LEGION POST 300 and the auxiliary will sponsor a card party at 8 p. m, Friday in Ipalco Kall, 16th and Ala~ bama Sts. Arthur Humphrey and Mrs. Joseph Matters are cochairmen, assisted by Mesdames Arthur Humphrey, Donald Davenport, Bernard Connelly and Harold Haas. Card parties are held the first agd third Fridays of each month at Ipalco Hall and business meetings every second Friday of the month,

Mrs. Raymond Dailey is chairman for the public fish supper to be held Friday from 5 to 7 p. m. at the Prospect Masonic Temple, Prospect and State Sts. The handkerchief booth of the PROSPECT O. E. S. Auxiliary Christmas Bazaar is sponsoring the supper.

EAST INDIANAPOLIS UNIT 123 OF THE AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY will hold its regular meeting tomorrow at the World War Memorial. © Mrs. W. Grover Cross will preside. Mrs. Stanley Eikenherry, junior past president. has been naméd chairman of’ the national defense committee for the 12th District of the auxiliary,

Mrs. Bertha Baker To Speak Friday

Mrs. Bertha Walton Baker will speak on “Migrants’ at the atternoon session of the -semi-annuak meeting of the Indianapolis Councit of Women of the Evangelical and Reformed Church Friday. The meeting will open at 10:13 a. m. at the First Evangelical and Reformed Church. . Mrs. Emma L. Fricker will be in charge of Hevotions and Mrs. R. FT, Entwistle will preside. Mrs. Johan PF, Hawk will talk on “The Woman's Guild” and Mrs. Charles Young will show a film “His Master's Voice.” Mrs. E. H. Shoemaker will be in

charge of the devotions in the afternoon.

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