Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1940 — Page 12
PAGE 12
Society— a | ; : bi - Several Parties Planned for Opening | Of Dramatic Club's Season Saturday
DRAMATIC CLUB members, will = attend their opening play of the season Saturday evening, following several dinner barties, and will meet again for a supper dance at the Indianapolis Athletic Club following the performance. The| play, “Spooks,” will be given at English’s. Theater. | : Miss Irving Moxley, who is in charge of the supper dance, with her father, Barret Moxley, and her Cali Sass Moxley Jr, will entertain at a dinner party in honor of her cousin, Mrs. Thomas inclair, and Mr. Sinclair,’ ; At a dinner party given hy Mr, and Mrs, Dudley Pfaff will ke Messrs. and Mesdames W. I. Longsworth, Richard Fairbanks, Frederick T. Holliday, Franeis Puny and J. Landon Davis. “Among other parties will be one given by Samuel R. Sutphin
for Mr. and Mrs. Burford Danner, Mr. and Mrs. Elias Atkins and Mr. and Mrs. Garvin Brown also will entertain. >
Luncheon Will Honor Junior League Executive
. __. MRS. PERRY LESH will entertain at luncheon Thursday for Miss Virginia Howlett, who will be in Indianapolis to attend the Indiana State Conference on Social Work tomorrow through Saturday. Miss Howlett is seeretary of the eommunity service department of the Association of the Junior Leagues of America. Guests at the luncheon will be Mesdames John Cooper, John oni land Booth Jameson, president of the Indianapolis Junior eague.| |
Parties Planned for Civic Theater Play
Civic Theater patrons are planning parties to attend “The Petrified Forest,” opening Friday gvening with Miss Gloria Geddes in the lead role made [famous in the motion picture world by Bette Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Scanlon will entertain several friends at a dinner party in their home preceding the Saturday performance. Guests will be Messrs. and Mesdames Ray F. Sparrow, John M. Smith and Charles DeGraw. . Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Walker Saturday evening will be Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Richards. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Robinson will entertain Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Robinson Friday evening and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Griffith will give a dinner party at the Indianapolis. Athletic Club preceding Friday's performance. Mrs. John Ray Newcomb and Mrs. Harry V. Wade, whose husbands are in the cast of the play, will attend the play with groups of friends, Mrs. | Newcomb for the opening performance and Mrs. Wade on Saturday. With Mr. and Mrs. Francis Huston Saturday will be their son, Charles Huston. Mrs. Rox Geddes will entertain a small group Friday evening and a Saturday night party will be given by Mr, and Mrs. Henry E. Todd. . Others who have made reservations are Dr. and Mrs, William E. Barb, Mrs. Reba Rowe, Messrs. and Mesdames James R. Chase, Frank Lobraico, Marvin Lugar, Harry Hartley, Russell B. Moore and Ralph Tharp, Mrs. William H. Gibbs, the Misses Grace Alexander, Marjorie Bunch, Janet Bamberger, Eldena and :Sara Lauter and Charles Headley. 4
Maj. Gen. Tyndall tol Address Club
MAJ. GEN. ROBERT H. TYNDALL will discuss “Military Policies of the, United States” at a meeting of the Progressive Club at 3 p. m. Monday. Mrs, Lee Burns, hostess, will be assisted by Mrs. Robert Sinclair, chai man of the committee on arrangements.
Symphony Committee Will Meet Tomorrow
MRS. CHARLES LATHAM, president of the Indiana State Symphony Society’s women’s committee, will preside at a meeting of the executive board of the committee -at 10 o’clock tomorrow morning at the Propylaeum. Indianapolis members| of the board are Mesdames Frederic M. Ayres, Frederick G. Appel, Thaddeus R. Baker, James F. Carroll, G. H. A. Clowes, James W. Fesler, Jack A. ‘Goodman, Frank Hoke, Sylvester Fema Robert M. Lingle, Walter P, Morton, Herbert T. Yagnet and Herbert M, Woollen and the Misses Josephine Madden and Lucy Taggart. fi Representatives from [other cities are Mrs. William H. Ball, * Muncie, one of the vice presidents; Mrs. C. Lloyd Billman, Manilla, director of the southeast region, Mrs. J. A. Kautz, Kokomo, director of the northwest region; |Mrs. Milton Matter, Marion, northeast region director, and Mrs. Edwin I. Poston, Martinsville, director of the southwest region.
Columbia Club to Have Election Night Party
The Columbia Club has arranged for the presentation of country-wide election returns in addition to direct wire connections with every county in the state for the benefit of members who will * attend the election night dinner and program tonight at the club. Art Berry and his orghestra, featuring Miss Mercedes Banks as soloist, will provide dance music and entertainment during dinner and throughout the evening. The election returns program will
Yast until midnight.
Suemma Coleman Ho MRS. J. WILLIAM
e Board Elects
IGHT has been re-elected president of .ma Coleman Home board of directors. Mrs. Arch Grossii RA in he , Mrs. Thomas Elder secretary, and Mrs. William H. Morrison, first vice president. Other officers chosen were Mrs. Ray Blatchley, second vice president, and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, third vice presidents Mrs. Agnes L. Graf is superintendent of the home and Miss Mary Smith, superintendent of nurses,
JANE JORDAN
R JANE JORDAN+I am a young girl of 17 very much in ove eh a young man of 24. He is a musician and I met him one evening where he was playing. He told me at that time that he had been married and divorced, Sometime later a friend told me that he was still married. I asked him about it at once and he admitted it but said his wife had filed a divorce. They have a baby hoy 15 months old and from all I hear he is plenty sweet, His wife still goes places where he plays and he takes her home. When she is around we aren't to know San ginet I can’t understand why is if she has filednfor divorce. : sn Se to forget him but I always find my heart aching for him and the next thing I know we are seeing each other again. I've gone out with other Hoys, even to the places where he plays and always end up by sending the boy away and going homsa with the musician. Do you kngw of any way I can find out if their divorce is on file or not? [You may think this is an easy problem to solve but I've never had one trouble me as much in all my life, Please help me. . SLUGGO. ” ” o ® ” ” : N R—The only answer to your problem for the present is a a oe not his wife has filed suit for divorce or not is not important. The important thing is for you not to be seen with him until it is granted. You simply give his wife fresh evidence against him and endanger your own good name. 3 The man deceived you in the first place and now you can't believe what he says without checking up on him. What a bad beginning this is! When a friendship starts out on a note of distrust, the outlook is not hgpeful. At 17 you re too much engaged with your own romantic feelings and you aren't using your head at all. : 4 : : : : ou suppose tHe man’s wife wants a divorce from the air ay Poe if she really wants it why does. she still seek his company? If you were older and wiser you would eon= clude that he had qualities |invisible to you which made him undesirable as a husband, and you would disregard your romantic stiri eliable. { ne Tere a girl who says she has tried to forget a man put can’t. I know she. hasn't tried very hard. She went through the motions of making other dates hut her heart wasn't in it; so she just gave up and said, “I can’t.” hat she means is “I won't. At 17 your choice of men is very wide. All the boys your age « are single. Somewhere among them is a boy without entanglements whom you can loye as much as you love this dishonest young ‘musician. Find him. JANE JORDAN,
s in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer Put your problem questions in this column daily.
Weltare Club Gives
Book Review Series ‘The Welfare Club will Isponsor Mrs. Everett D. Hood in the first of a sesies of book reviews ati2 p. m, tomorrow in the World War Memorial auditorium. Mrs. Hood will discuss “Polish Profile” (Princess Paul Sapieha). Funds derived from pi series will aid elderly women. s. Carl Sheets, ways and means chairman of the club, is in charge of the reviews, assisted by Mesdames Charles ‘Maxwell, Harry Kuhn, Ralph Middelton, Homles Raine, J. W, Dixon and R. I. Rummel,
¥
Altar Society Gives Party The St. Philip Neri Altar Society will give a public card party tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock, with
Mrs. Joseph Loechle as chairman of arrangements. *
Formosa Is Topic of Club Speaker
“Excursion to Formosa and Hainan” will be the subject of Mrs. C. J. Ancker before the Normandy Chapter, International Travel-Study Club, at its meeting Friday. Mrs. Fred Geiger, 5617 Guilford Ave, will be hostess at the dessert luncheon at 1p. m. Mrs, Chris
Harm will be co-hostess,
/
A. M. Welchons (left to right) are
Mesdames Stewart Gordon, Herman Harreld and
are assisting with ticket sales for the Bird Show
among those who
_~ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES |
. Distribute Posters Announcing Bird Show
Nov. 23 and 24 at the Hotel Severin, which is being sponsored by the Camp Fire Girls and directed by the local Cage Bird Club.
£2
A —————
study the problem of peace, Mrs. on “Pius XII and Peace.” Mesdames Jchn Commons, A. J.
Smith and Peter Specht.
CHAPTER V OF THE P. E. O. SISTERHOOD will have a birthday party tomorrow at the home of Mrs. William C. Brass, 354 N. Audubon Road. Mrs. Louis M. Richardson is assisting hostess.
Mrs. Joseph G. McFarland, 5689 Winthrop Ave. will be hostess at the regular meeting tomorrow of the FOREST "HILLS GARDEN
CLUB. The program will be a discussion of holiday decorations.
QUEEN ELIZABETH CHAPTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL TRAV-EL-STUDY CLUB will hold a 12:30 p. m.| covered dish luncheon tomorrow at the home of Mrs. J. L. Neel, 23 S. Downey Ave. Dr. A. Ebner Blatt will speak on ‘Mystic Isles of the South Seas.”” Assisting hostess will be Mrs. George Dyeér.
A business meeting of CHAPTER F OF THE P. E. O. SISTERHOOD will be held tomororw at the home of Mrs, Cyrus Rutherford, 4601 N. Pennsylvania St.
The INDIANAPOLIS EDUCATIONAL COUNCIL will meet for a 12:30 o'clock luncheon tomorrow at the home of Mrs, C. B. Casselman, 1232 W. 35th St. *
Mrs. Jules Zinter will speak on “China” at a meeting of BRITTANY CHAPTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY CLUB tomorrow. A noon luncheon will be
“lheld at the home of Mrs. C. L.
Witham, 2005 E. Riverside Drive.
The BROOKSIDE MOTHERS’ CLUB of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society will hold an election of officers tomorrow following a 1:15 p. m. luncheon.
The November meeting of the PHI DELTA THETA MOTHERS’ CLUB of Butler University will be a 1 o'clock luncheon Thursday at the chapter house, 7560 W. Hampton Drive. Guests will be mothers of chapter alumni. Mrs. Carl Spencer will review “Mr. Skeffington” (Elizabeth).
JEANNE D’ARC CHAPTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL TRAVELSTUDY CLUB: will meet at 1 p. m. Friday at’ the home of Mrs. Lloyd Kirk, 32 Jenny Lane. The lecture by Mrs. John W. Thornburg® will be “Off the Coast of China.” Mrs. E. E. Wischmeier and Mrs. John Price will be assistant hostesses.
The EUCHRE CLUB of. the South Keystone Boys Town will sponsor a public card party at 8 p. m. Friday at Boys Town, 800 S. Keystone Ave.
Social Hygiene Doctor's Topic
Mrs. Fletcher ‘Hodges, president of the Mary Hanson Carey Research Chapter of the White Cross Guild, will introduce Dr. Harriet S. Cory of St. Louis who will speak on “The Relation of Social Hygiene to Defense” at the White Cross Guild meeting Thursday at 2:30 p. m.
in the Methodist Hospital Nurses’ Home. The research unit is sponsoring the lecture to which members of all guild chapters have been invited. . Chapter presidents will serve at the reception in the.parlors following the lecture. They are Mesdames Lee O. Nicholson, Elmer Freeman, Frank Watts, 1da Burrus, K. E. Wilson, Harold B. Rennard, Frank M. Kinderman, Rally W, Fitch, Albert Ward, Kerr Hollensbe, Sam D. Stabler, O. W. Cooper, H, A. Harlan, W. A. Shoemaker, James W. Taylor and William F. Hansman. Others are Mesdames Willard S, Gore, .John Schneider, Anna Pawling, Joseph J. Conner, James P. Carder; Herman Culbertson, John A. Sink, William Laufer, ‘John Ehrensperger, ‘Bradford Snodgrass, 0. L. Kranz, Herbert F. Sudranski, J. M. Milner, John E. Schadt, Oscar Robbins, Thedis Case, Lena Hotz, John Stonehouse and Herman von Willer, Miss Martha Jo Patterson, Miss Hazel McCollum, Mrs. Luther Poe, Franklin, and Mrs. Ralph Hornady, Plainfield. ?
Sew for Red Cross
Alpha Chapter members of Xi Delta Xi Sorority will sew for the Red Cross at their meeting tomorrow evening at 8:15 o'clock at the home of: Mrs. Charles Mount, 4048 College Ave, —— ia ali fda
Study Club Will Discuss Peace; I T. S. C. Chapters to Meet; Educational Council to Lunch
A panel discussion ‘of peace and a birthday celebration are on the calendar for tomorrow's club meetings. ~The IRVINGTON CATHOLIC WOMEN'S STUDY CLUB will meet tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Carl Kernel, 5260 E. Washington St., to
Harry Burkart will lead a program
Participating in the discussion will be
Ulrich, A, H. Ehrsenperger, R. J.
Showers Honor Brides-to-Be
Showers claim the limelight in teday’s pre-nuptial news. Miss Myrtle E. Short will be honor guest tomorrow at a ' personal shower given by Mrs. Donald G. Hays, 1310 Marlowe Ave. assisted by Mrs. J. P. Parker. Miss Short, daughter of Mrs. M. L. Faber, 3043 Ruckle St., will be mar=ried to Harry K. Lister, 2502 Park Ave, Nov, 15 in McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Guests with the bride-to-be and her mother will include’ Mesdames Eugene Short, George King, Dean Stephenson, Charles Holtman, Glen Booth, Fred Gelle, V. S. Jones, E. T. Leiper, Charles Bass and Ralph Chandler and Miss Marietta Varley. Mrs. Howard Paddock, 3045 Ruckle St., will entertain Nov. 12 with a luncheon and miscellaneous shower for Miss Short.
» » »
Mrs. Gene Hittle, 549 N. Emerson Ave. will entertain tomorrow with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Rosemary Ryce, whose marriage to Donald X. Flanagan will he Nov. 21. Those attending will be Mesdames William McKibben, George Rummel, Charles Sweeney, Harry Latham, Joseph Ryce, John Flanagan, Francis D. Clark, Marion Cooke, Howard Hoover, Herbert Rushton ang William Griffin and Mrs, Herman Kohr, South Bend. : Other guests will he Misses Marguerite Butler, Margaret Flanagan, Dorothy Welch, Dorothy Mae Sifferlen, Betty Griffin, Catherine MecKibben and Eleanor Ryce.
# » s
Honor guest at a crystal shower given recently by Mrs. dH. B. Bryant was her niece, Miss Margaret Irwh, who is to be married to Bernard G. Halstead Jr. Saturday in St. Joan
guests attended.
8% » =
Miss Norma Rahe, whose marriage to Henry J. Decker Jr. will take place Thanksgiving Day, will be guest of honor tonight at a bathroom shower given by Miss Eileen White, 3339.Ruckle St. Miss White will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. William W. White. Guests will be Mesdames O. H. Rahe, Harry Riddell and James R. Noe, the Misses Carrie C. Reid, Betty Parker, Dorothy Jones, Mary Bell, Doris Belzer, Betty Breech, Eloise Foreman, Betty Prinzler, Marjorie Pyke and Marjorie Treton.
Personals
Miss Carolyn Kreusser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Kreusser, spent ithe last week-end “in the field” when she joined a party of 45 Stephens College students of science for an 800-mile trip into the southwest Missouri region and the lead and zine mines of northern Oklahoma, with stops in Arkansas and Kansas.
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Sexton have returned from a month's vacation in Tucson, Ariz, where they visited their son, John Sexton, and his family.
Mrs. W. R. McGeehan, 6105 Haverford Ave., entertained recently with a surprise birthday party for Mrs. Lois Graves. Guests were Mesdames Billie Brown, Hazel Edmunds, Vickie Rench, Mary Vaughan and Margaret Clay and Miss Ruby Little.
Background of Child Will Be Discussed
The 49th Street Kindergarten will have a general meeting for parents of pupils at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at the kindergarten. “ John Hessong, principal of John Strange School, will speak on “The Home, the Background of the Child.” Mrs. Ted Abel, chairman, will be assisted by the Mesdames W. L. Appel, Robert Berner, Adrian Nail, Earl Swain, J. C. Morden, Eugene Wilson ‘and A: R. Paden.
é¢ . - Family Fun” Is Topic Mrs. Matthew Farson will lead a discussion of “Family Fun” at a meeting of the Scheol :T7 Parente
Teachers Association at 3 p. m. tes morrow. Belden Leonard will direct & musical program.
of Are Church. Approximately 40
Mrs. Olive Beldon Lewis returned
"|dames Fred Howenstine,
‘TAU SORORITY Nov. 16 at the
a
Panhel Names Tea Hostesses For Tomorrow
Mrs. Lewis Meier Jr., president of
the Alpha Xi Delta Alumnae Asso-|
ciation in Indianapolis, and Mrs,
Owen Calvert, regional chairman for Delta Delta Delta, will preside at the teatable at the INDIANAPOLIS PANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION tea tomorrow. Officers cf the organization wil receive all local alumnae of college sororilies from 3:30.to 5:30 p. m. Assisting hostesses will be MesSeward Baker, Harry Hooley, John McConnell, Kenneth Adair, Garrett Olds, Robert Renick, Murray DeArmond, William Raffensperger, Alex Curtis, Dennis Hill and Wendell Hicks.
Phases of early American history will be on the program at a meeting of ALPHA DELTA OMEGA S8ORORITY tonight: at the Hotel Washington
The Misses Marie Cook, Derotha Neiger and Anita Cassidy are planning a dance to be given by LAMBDA CHAPTER OF OMEGA NU
Indiana Roof ballroom.
BETA CHAPTE OF THETA DELTA SIGMA S(MORITY will meet at 8 p. m. tonight at the Spink Arms Hotel. Miss Mary Ellwanger and Mrs. Benjamin Braughton will be hostesses.
LAMBDA CHAPTER OF DELTA SIGMA KAPPA SORORITY will hold a regular meeting at 8 o'clock
yesterday from New York.
tonight at the Central Y. W. C, A.
Chairman
Miss Sally Smith (above), assisted by Mrs. Forrest Watson, will have charge of a dinner to be given by Rho Chapter of Sigma Beta Sunday at the Severin Hotel in honor of Mrs. Hal Shultz, newly elected national president of Sigma Beta. Guests will be the national officers: Miss Rhea Morrical, Huntington, first vice president; Miss Dorothy Ervin, Hammond, reeording secretary; Miss Hilda ‘Dunn, Auburn, treasurer; Miss Catherine Sherbundy, Ft. Wayne, editor, and Miss Hazel Haines, Greenfield, corresponding secretary.
_ TUESDAY, NOV. 5, 1640"
Sorority Plans Formal Dinner+ At Propylaeum
The Indianapolis Alumnae Chaptet of Pi Lambda Theta, national honorary education sorority, will en=
tertain with a formal dinner at 7: p. m. Priday in the Propylaeum ‘im -
honor of its national president, Dr:
Beulah Clark VanWagenen, New.«
York. Dr. VanWagenen will talk om: “National Defense and Human Res" lations.” Mrs. Ada Bing will be hostess. he
The alumnae chapter will hold”
affiliation services for the Misses: Doris Boettjer, Wallace Montague and Mrs. Mildred" Dirks of Indianapolis and Miss’ Frances Botsford, Muncie, and Mrs. Matilda Hardin McKrill, Martinse. ville. . ne
5)
Virginia Huntef;"
Arrange Dance Rh
Members of Beta Chapter, Gamma . Phi Alpha rority, will discuss, plans for a card party Nov. 14 af, its meeting tomorrow night at the, home ofe Mrs. John Feeney. rangements for an inter-chapter. dance also will he made. :
Give Card Party
The Indiana Women's Memorial
3
Ars
#0
Association to the 38th Division,
U. 8. A. -will sponsor a card party at 2 p. m. tomorrow for veterans at tHe Veterans’ Hospital. Reservations’
of association members should be . made with Mrs. E, W, Cowley, chair=
man of the arrangements committee, °
Karastan shown above, 9x12,
Let them Roughhouse — a KARASTAN can take it
John trips Bill and the fun is on. Fists fly, heels dig into the rug. They roll, they struggle. Then both remember there’s cake in the pantry. : _ This happens every day in homes all over the country where lively young Americans get together. And Mothers don’t mind the wear and tear on the rug so much when it’s a Karastan, They know, from experience, that youthful energies; strenuous and destructive; might mean disaster to some rugs, but not Karastans. These magnificent Oriental patterned rugs, beautiful and luxurious-looking as the original masterpieces from which they were copied, are woven for wear. It’s no idle rumor that a «Karastan can take it.” |
Choose from 3 famous qualities; 13 different sizes u
!
APPROXIMATE SIZES: >
KARASTAN
KARASHAM
KARA-IMPERIAL
9x 12 feet 9x 15 feet 9 x 18 feet
10.6 x 12 feet...ccocevveee 10.6 x 14 feet......cc00vee 10.6 x 16 feet............. 10,6 x 1B feet...ccovveeeee 10.6 x20 feet.....coo0nuus 12x 12 feet, ..covcerccrces 12x 14 feet. ..coccvescsnnse 12x 16 feof. ..cccoooecccenss
[AREER EER EE ANE NE]
$169.50 215.00 255.00 200.00 230.00 265.00 295.00 330.00 230.00 265.00 300.00
$135.00 170.00 200.00 160.00 185.00 210.00 235.00 265.00 185.00 210.00 240.00
$99.75 127.50 150.00 120.00 140.00 160.00 180.00 195.00
00000
2 i
v » : > . » z : Pde ge mrtg ial,
a -
340.00 375.00
12x 18 f00Fccecccrrrcnsces 12x20 fe0t.ccccococccsnsee
270,00 300.00
Keorastan. The Wonder. R
if of America
’
Karastan Rugs, Fifth Floor.
L. S. AYRES & CO.
Ci ATW
mi
-~
“
BAHT
“A
Wy *
-
°
*
“>
