Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 January 1941 — Page 14

Members of the Girl Scout Choir were on hand last night to parti‘ipate in the annual dinner meeting of the Indianapolis and Marion County Girl Sicouf, Council in Ayres' auditorium. Miss Donna Wiggam (left) explained the flags, which gave an “interngtional”- background to the speakers’ table, io (left to right) Betty Fisher, Ruthann Gossom and Ramona Dongworth. :

Society—

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Director of Migration Service

To Speak at Day Nursery Meeting

PATRICK MURPHY MALIN, New

York, director.

of the American Branch of the Internatipnal Migration Service, will speak at the annual meeting of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Association at noon Tuesday in, the

Columbia Club. arrangements chairman.

Mrs. Clarence F. Merrell is general

i

A short history of the Day Nursery, with a description of the

type of work being carried on there, will be James Cunningham, the membership chairman.

presented by Mrs,

Mr. Malin will talk on “International Migration—a Problem of Democracy.” The Service, which he heads in this country, is a

unique international enterprise.

It assists persons who need aid

in two or more countries simultaneously. Headquarters for the group is in Geneva, Switzerland, with branches in various parts of the world. In recent years it has worked with refugee groups and aids

other organizations. It is one of

function internationally, even between belligeren The group closely co-operates with the Unite

the few agencies still able to ts. d States Advisory

Committee on Political Refugees and the Departnients of State and Justice on the rescuing of outstanding Europeans without a threat

-to this country’s national interest.

It also co-operates in the in-

quiry by government officials and social agencies doncerning possible changes in immigration’ and naturalization procedure.

Mr. Malin was for many years the head of

the department of

economics at Swarthmore College and vice chairman of the Amer-

ican Friends Service Committee.

Recently he Has worked closely

with the United States Committee for the Care of European Children which has helped to place European children in American homes and aided residents here to locate friends and relatives

© in war areas.

. ; ! > | Plans Evacuation of Children From France AFTER HIS TRIP {o the Middle West, Mr. | Malin is planning

to leave for France. At the request

of the Committee on the Care

‘of European Children, he will supervise the evacuation of American,

French and German children from unoccupied France. pens is a trip to Latin America to establish a migration t

his future

service on that continent,

Officers of the Day Nursery Association

Among

are Mrs. John. E,

: Messick, president; Mrs. M. J. Spencer, vice president; Mrs. El

Lilly, second vice president; Mrs.

secretary; Mrs. Harper J. Ransburg, correspondi Arthur L. Gilliom, recording secretary; Mrs. R.

and Mrs, Cunningham,

Hudelson, financial ng secretary; Mrs, W. Spiegel, treasurer,

Ralph J.

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"Alice in Wonderland" Dance Is March |

CHILDHOOD MEMORIES of the Duchess, the March Hare, the Mad Hatter and the Cheshire Cat will be evoked March 1 when the ‘Junior Auxiliary to the Indianapolis Day Nursery holds its

“Alice in Wonderland” dance at the

Woodstock Club. Mrs. H. Hall

Cochrane is general chairman for the event. | Members of the committees assisting Mrs. Cochrane have been

announced. They include Mrs. Paul Thomas M. Billings, John Kitchen,

B. Payne, chairman, Mesdames Frederic D. Anderson, Chester

C. Schuetz, James W. Ray and Wendell Hicks and Miss Patricia Eaglesfield, invitations; Mrs. Mayburn Landgraf, ¢hairman, Mesdames Robert D. Eaglesfield Jr.,, John Bruhn and Frederick W. Mitchell,

arrangements.

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Mrs. Donald B. Keller heads the sales promdtion committee with Mrs. Kenneth PF. Griffith as assistant chairman. | On the decorations committee are Mrs. E. Hardey Adriance, chairman, Mrs. Horace F. Hill III, Mrs. Walter Hiser, Misses Betty Tharp, Mary Jane and Betty

Hamerstadt, Jean Rau, Ruth Noblitt, Jane Snyder and Eaglesfield.

Assisting Mrs, Thomas B. Henderson, chairman of the patrons committee, will be Mesdames John B. Watson, Leroy Gordner, James

Northam and Joseph W. Ferree.

Miss Holmes, |chairman, and Mrs,

D. C. Duck, assistant chairman, form the finarice and tickets come mittee. The publicity staff includes Mrs, David| V. Burns, chairman, Mrs. Ralph Coble and Mrs. Henry E. Gibson.

Shower Honors Martha Louise Pearce | . MISS MARTHA LOUISE PEARCE will He honor guest at a kitchen shower given. tomorrow evening by Mrs. Jack E. SHideler Sr. and her daughter, Mrs. John S. Lynn, at the Shideler home.

- Mrs. Jack E. Shideler Jr. will assist

the hostesses.

Miss Pearce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Starling Pearce, will became the bride of John A. Hare, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willard

. J. Hare of Noblesville, in an 8:30 p.

Episcopal’ Church.

m. ceremony Feb. 15 in Christ

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Guests tomorrow will be Mesdames Pearce, Hare, William D. Hamerstadt, Thomas M. Billings, Eugene B. Hibbs, Thomas O’Haver and H. Hall Cochrane and the Misses Mary Anne Pearce, Betty Tharp, . Betty Hamerstadt, Harriet Jane Holmes, Constance Lewis, Margo and Barbara Sheerin, Jane Cooling, Florence Gipe, Jane Snyder, Jean Miller, Ruth Osborne, Mary Ellen Voyles and Dorothy Braden.

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Mrs. William Theodore Miller will entertain Friday evening at her home with a linen shower for Miss Louise Regina Argus, whose marriage to J. Vincent Aug of Cincinnati will be Feb. 15 in St. Joan

¢ Catholic Church.

White and green appointments will be us

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for the party. At«

tending, with the bride-to-be, will be her mother, Mrs. J. J. Argus,

Jo

Lanagan and Frank Millet; Miss Frances

esdames Ray Reed, Georgé Fuller, Frank |Argus, Harold Miller, h cGowan, Thaddeus C. Brown, Clara Slattery, Bernard

urnette, Jacksonville,

Fla., and Misses Betty and Dorothy Reed, Mayme Markey, Mar-

guerite Bernatz and Mary Catherine Slattery

Personal Notes

MRS. JOHN B. WATSON will enterta Camera Club at 9:30 a. m. Monday. Lake Wawasee and Indianapolis, left yesterd . . Mr. and Mrs. A. Hastings F ‘their new home in Brendonwood. . .

Southwest. .

i n the Junior League | . .. Frank Remy of, Anderson. ay for a trip to the iske have moved info

. Mrs! Samuel Lewis Shank:

will leave soon for Hot: Springs,” Ark., and will go later to Californiz

for a visit. . , . Mrs, William Lowe Rice r from Washington where she attended the ins Roosevelt snd was the guest of Sen. and Mr

Democrats List Aids For Luncheon: A ‘publicity committee has heen named to assist with arrangements for the luncheon which the Indiana State Women's Democratic Club will“give Saturday at the Claypool Hotel, Governor Henry F. Schricker will speak, cca ef The new committee includes Mrs. Joseph J. Wood, chairman, and Mrs. Ione Sylvester, co-chairman; . Mesdames Frata McCabe, Hazel Calloway, Louis Weiland, E. C. Wakelam, Meredith Nicholson Jr. Norma Amt, Bess Robbins Kaufman, Mary Rhodes, Helen Jackson, James McCaslin, Edward Berry, A. 8S. Beaulieu and Miss Ann Irving.

sturned this week-end uguration of President 5. Prederick VanNuys.

Benefits Paralysis Fund

Mrs. M. A. O'Hara and Mrs. William L.| Ethridge entertained recently with a bridge arty for the benefit bf the Infantile Paralysis Fund. [Guests were the Messrs. and Mesdames John Potts, Eugene Thompson, John" B. Joyce, C. C. Bagley, William Hanrahan, W. T. McDermott, Carl Dietz, W. C. Mathews, Mesdames F. B. Edwards, E C. Ambuh], Frank Monroe, Ella Moore, W. A. Farrar, Misses Catherine Brown, Margaret Crowley, Johanng Sullivan and Mr. Kenneth Herrin. |

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§ To Keep Lemons Fresh To kbep lemons from becoming hard and dry; store in a tightly covered glass jar or porcelain dish.

4+William Laufer,

Scout Workers Honored for Service Terms

President

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Purdue Speaks

By ROSEMARY REDDING

The American way of life musi be re-energized by the trained skill of youth with a passionate faith in liberty for all, Dr. Edward C. Elliott, president of Purdue Uniyersity, old members of the Indianapolis and Marion County Girl Scout Council last night. Three hundred and forty civic leaciers, volunteer workers and heads of Scouting attended th: organjzation’s annual dinner ineeting in Ayres’ auditorium. “The prime business of that utilitarian idealism, called Anmnjerican, is to charge the great control words of human life with that meaning which the youth of the land can understand and have a chance to practice,” President Elliott said. “We are depeiident, more and. more, upon such voluntary agencies as the Girl Scouts to give personal responsibility and - civic reality to such key words of civilization as health, self-control, honesty, tolerance, courage, loyalty, cheerfulness, reverence, work, fear, waste, reliability, sportsmanship, team work and peace. The decisive battles of humanity are determined by what these words mean in actien for our youth.” . “The present war,” President Elliott pointed out, “had its begin-

nings with the capture ¢f the mind

and the spirit of youth. Outs is a century of youth and we are completely dependent on youth for the maintenance of physical strergth and ideals.”

Mrs. Cole Honored

The council gave special recognition to Mrs. Charles E. Cole for 20 years of service to Scouting. Those honored for 10 or mor¢ years of work include the Mestames Abe Bortz, C. K. Calvert, ID. C. Eess, R. O.. Jackson, Robert Lemen, Montgomery S. Lewis, Arthur Medlicott, C. D. Perrine, William B. Schiltges, J. H. Toy, [Charles F. Voyles and the Misses Dorothy Booth, Jane Brisby, Aglies Calvert, Jean Coffin, Betty Feasey, Betty Grauel, Anne Holmes, Harriet Holmes, Adeliné Lewis, Edna Liljeblad, Betty Macy, Betty Mock and Fritzie Yeager. ‘Volunteers given special recognition for five years servite were the Mesdames E. O. Asher, Harry B. Custer, Alvin . Iske, Karl Xisner, Adolph Longere, Ralph Linder, Burke Nicholas, Schiltges, and .the Missis. Maybelle Smith, Lola Pfeifer and Edith Gipson. Troops recognized at tiis year’s dinner for five-year service were Troops 4, 12, 47, 48 and 94.

Civic Leaders Attend Among civic leaders ‘who joined with the Scout leaders in the celebration were Mrs, Henry F. Schricker, wife of the new Governor; William Griffith, head of ‘the |Community’ Fund, and Virgil Martin, the jund director; A. E. Baker, member of the board of the Camp Fire Crirls, and Mrs. Mary Alice St:inhour, the director; Rev. C. G. Baker of Hawthorne Community Center; Miss Marion Scharr of the Communal Building; Miss Essie McGuire, head of the Y. W. C. A, and Mrs. Boyd Miller, head of that organization's board; Capt. Rebecca | Preston of the Salvation Army; | Howard J. Baumgartel, executive secretary of the Church Federation, Miss Meta Gruner of the Indianapolis Orphans Home, and Mrs. Homer Gratz, wife of the Boy Scout director. ‘At the spefkers’ table were Mrs. Lewis, a former commiissioner and now member of the |Council for the Great Lakes Region; V/. B. Schiltges, finance cominittee head; Mrs. Schricker; Mrs, Horace B. McClure, first deputy commissioner; President Elliott, Mrs. Curle, Miss

vice chairman of the Council for the Great Lakes Region; Audley Dunham, member of tie men's advisory board; Miss Calvert, head of the leaders’ association, and Dr. John R. Brayton, chairman of the medical committee.

Event to Benefit Church St. George Episcopal Church will receive the .procecds from g card party to be given by Mrs, Arthur Postel, 1239 ‘Leonard &t., Friday at 8:30 p. m. . The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Edna Baker. : Plan Program en Dolls The 1908 €lub- will meet jomorrow at the home of Mrs. C. O. Warnock, 4324 Park Ave., for a program on “Dolls” preése:dited hy Mrs. Edward ‘Hughes. .

Blanche Coldwell Hostess

~ Miss Blanche ‘Coldwell, €55 E. 24th 8t., will be hostess for 8 meet-

ing of Delta Gamma Beta Sorority | Friday evening. |

Cannon, Mrs, E, Starling Pearce,

Dr. Edward C. Elliott, president of Purdue University, said “fine work” to Mrs. Marvin E. Curle, the Girl Scout commissioner, as they

looked over the annual report pre local Scout director.

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Is Scheduled for

and department meetings. The Art from Feb. 22 to March 8 in Block

Salon plans are in the hands of Mrs. Hezzie B. Pike, general chairman, and Mrs. Leonidas F. Smith, Hoosier Salon counselor. Reservations for the preview dinner must be in at Block's by Feb. 19. Agnes Mathis Cherry, act on the program at the general club meeting Wednesday, Feb. 12, will present “The American Way.” Her appearance at 2:30 p. m. will follow a 2 o'clock business meeting. The Board of Directors will meet at 10 a. m. Monday, Feb. 10. First meeting of the month will be that of the Ten o’Clock Art Department on Wednesday, Feb. 5. The speaker will be Mrs. Frank F. Hutchins, whose talk will be on “Art in Egypt and Greece.” At a Feb. 19 meeting Mrs. Hal Purdy will read a paper on “Art in the Christian World.” Both sessions will be in the home of Mrs. Charles T. Hanna, 157 E. Hampton Drive. Another Feb. 5 meeting will be the Literature and Drama Department’s book hour and program. At 1:30 p. m. Mrs. Edward A. Brown will review “My Brother” (Lawrence Housman). Following a brief business meeting, Mrs. C. Eugene Wolcott will present at 2:45 p. m. “A Study of David Livingstone.” Col. Roscoe Turner will be the speaker at the Community Welfare Department's patriotic program following the 12:30 o'clock discussion luncheon Feb. 19. The general club will be guests. Another guest speaker will be James E. Lowry, landscape engineer, who will talk to Garden Department members Friday, Feb. 28, on “Problems of the Home Gardener.” The program will include music by Robert Rothman’s Accordion Band and will follow a 2 p. m. business meeting.

Dr. Stoneburner to Speak

The American Home Department will present a program from Indiana Central College Wednesday, Feb. 26, at 2 p. m. Dr. W. Earl Stoneburner of the college will speak on “The American Home and the School” and the Indiana Central College Male Chorus will sing under the direction of Eugene Mogle. Dr. Martha Souter will conduct a Home Clinic at 1 p. m. for the Applied Education Division. Mrs. Pike will review “The Hall of Man” (Malvina Hoffman), at a meeting of ther Monday Guild on Feb. 24. At the 3 o'clock social hour, hostesses will be the Public Health Nursing Association members of the department.

Mildred L. Schaler Shower Guest

A’ miscellaneous shower will be given this evening by Miss Vivian Frost, 819 N. Grant Ave. for Miss Mildred Louise Schaler, whose marriage to Donald H. Gille will be at 4 p. m. Sunday in the Irvington Presbyterian Church. Mrs. James L. Frost will assist her daughter. The bridal colors of pink, blue and white will be used. in decorations for the party. ‘Miss Schaler is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Stamm, 1234 N. Linwood Ave. and Mr, Gille’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. G. W.

Program on ‘The American Way’

By Woman's Department Club

Sponsorship of the fifth annual Indianapolis Hoosier Salon is included in the Woman's Department Club February plans for general

Saturday, Feb. 22, in Block's Tearoom.

pared by Miss Lucile Cannon, the

Feb. 12

Department is arranging the exhibit 's auditorium and a ptreview dinner

Mrs. Clayton Hunt Ridge, president;

John Troxell Takes Bride

A wedding breakfast at the Columbia Club was to follow the marriage of Miss Marguerite Flanagan to John M. Troxell, 4238 Broadway, in the rectory of Holy Cross Church at noon today. The bride is the sister of Mrs. C. J. Koelsch, 5121 N. Illinois St. The Rev. Fr. Victor Goossens was ito read the service. Given in marriage by her brother, John Flanagan, the bride was to wear a beige silk crepe frock in street length, made with sweetheart neckline and bracelet length sleeves. With the costume she was to wear matching accessories and an orchid corsage. Her .only attendant was to be her sister, Miss Alice Flanagan. The maid of honor's blue crepe frock, also made with sweetheart neckline and bracelet length sleeves, was to be worn with orchids and. matching accessories. George Reinhardt was to be Mr. Troxell's best man. Leaving for a motor trip south after the wedding breakfast, the ‘bride was to add a brown fur coat and brown hat to her wedding ensemble. The couple will be at home after Feb. 15 in their new home at 5305 E. Ninth St. Out-of-town guests at the wedding were to be Miss Margaret Mary Fletcher, Minneapolis; Miss Aurelia Metzinger and Miss Madelyn Savage, New York.

Jewish Women To Hear Review

Ernest Hemingway's “For Whom the Bell Tolls” will be reviewed by Mrs. Joseph Lewis of Chicago at the regular meeting of the National Council of Jewish Women’s Indianapolis Section Monday at 2 p. m. in Kirshbaum Center. Mrs. Sydney Romer, chairman of the meeting, will introduce Mrs. Lewis. The president, Mrs. Sultan Cohen, will be in charge of the meeting and will call for a discussion of the scholarship committee’s work by Mrs. Louis Segar. Tea in the lounge will fallow.

Alpha Zeta Betas Will Entertain

A “Bad Taste” party will entertain guests of Alpha Zeta ‘Beta Sorority’s Alpha Nu Chapter tonight at the home of Mrs. Herman Quinlan, 808 Markwood Ave. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Margaret Overton, Miss Mildred Benton and Miss Elise Totten. Guests will be Mesdames Wilbur Baker, Benny Arvin, Katherine Meek and Eleanor Jones and the Misses Mildred Jenkins, Lou Edwards, Agnes Wardrobe and Maxine

Gille, 964 N. Lesley Ave, Included among the guests tonight will be Mesdames Stamm, Donald and Thomas Kelso, Raymond Wright, Earl Justus, Julius Ehlert and Charles Bumb and Misses Betty Westlund, Doris Snyder, Wilma Blumenauer, Marion Lewis, Jean Nickerson and Jane - Goodwin,

Talks on Missionary, Work in Far East

‘Miss Esther Laird, one of the 50 Methodist missionaries who returned from Korea in December after many years work, will speak in the Broadway Methodist Church

‘| Chapel tomorrow at 2 p. m.

Miss Laird is visiting in Indianapolis from her home in Fair Haven, O. Her talk tomorrow will deal with her missionary ‘work in the Far East and her irip back to the United States from the SinoJapanese war area.

P.-T. A. Sponsors Party The Parent-Teacher Association of School 78 will sponsor a card party Friday at 8 p. m. in the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. auditorium. Tickets may be secured from Mrs. Thomas Moshenrose, 130 N. Kealing Ave, who is president of the school P.-T. A.

Juniors to (Have Supper

Members of the junior class of St. Mary's Academy will be. guests at a supper this evening at the home of the class president, Miss Josephine O'Donnell, 232 Hendricks ace,

so youf coffee pot ou just right

ill be Searvil 4 Se full flavors

BOKAR COFFEE

233

Exhibits of the community service work done by the Scouts during the fall were on display in the

Tearoom foyer. composed of Scout leaders.

This quintet also was interested in the revolving exhibit of thé training” committee, Left to right are Jane Gossom, Martha Scott, Patricia Jarvis, Norma Walker

and Suzanne Foster. Mrs. Thomas J. Blackwell Jr. arranged the training committee display.

Assembly Club Committees Announced

Tea Tuesday Honors New Officers

Standing committee appointments of the State Assembly Woman's Club were announced today by Mrs. Howard V. Johnson of Mooresville, new president. They are: Program—Mrs. Charles Dawson, chairman; Mesdames Thurman Gottschalk, Joe Rand Beckett and Albert Walsman. Calendar and Printing—Mesdames Johnson, Estelle Ebaugh and Charles Bedwell of Sullivan., House and Social — Mrs. Richard T. James, chairman; Mrs. Leo X. Smith and Mrs. Frank Richman of Columbus. Publicity—Mrs. James M. Tucker, chairman, and Mrs. Curtis Shake. Transportation —Mrs. Roger Phillips of New Albany and Mrs. Emsley W. Johnson r. . Mrs. A. Leroy Portteus is historian and Mrs. Clarence Martin is parliamentarian. Other committees are: Music — Mrs. Archie N. Bobbitt, chairman; Mrs. Harry Miller, Anderson; Mrs. Walter E. Treanor and Mrs. George Henley, Bloomington, and Mrs. S. K. Ruick. Membership —Miss Tella Haines, chairman; Mrs. Howard Hiestand, Kentland; Mrs. Charles H. Leavell, Winchester; Mrs. John W. Atherton and Mrs. H. Nathan Swaim. Telephone—Mrs. Lloyd €laycombe, chairman; Mesdames Joseph F. Sexton, Ernest C. Ropkey and O. U. Newman. Next club-sponsored event following today's meeting in the World War Memorial will be a tea in the Governor's Mansion Tuesday from 2:30 to 5 p. m. Honor guests will be Mrs. C. J. Buchanan, new state officers and Mrs. Dawson. Mrs. Henry F. Schricker will be hostess. : ” » = Mrs. Fabien Sevitzky will be honor guest at a imusical tea given by the Wm. H. Block Co. tomorrow at 3:30 p. m. in the Block Terrace Tearoom for members of the State Assembly Woman's Club. Each member of the club will bring a guest in observance of Guest Day. Mrs. Ruth Seidel Jackson. of Block's will be among those acting as hostesses. The tea will mark the premiere of the recordings recently made by Mr. Sevitzky and the Indianapolis Symphany Orchestra of which he is condudtor. The records are Glinka’'s “Russian and Ludmilla” and Rimsky-Korsa-kov's “Dubinushka.”

Omega Kappas to Meet

Alpha Chapter, Omega Kappa Sorority, will meet at 8 p. m. this]

as in the Junior Programs’ ballet,

musty tomes in famous libraries. The production of this famous non-commercial organization devoted to better entertainment for children will be sponsored by the Children’s Civic Theater. No previous Junior Programs’ productions, which have been seen by three million youngsters throughout the country, has had such a profusion of trappings in the way of scenery, costumes and lighting. “Rabin Hood” will bring to life the simple grandeur of the Earl of Huntington's castle, the exciting Sherwood Forest, the majesty of King John and Queen Eleanor’s Court and the color and spectacle of the Crusaders’ tournament. Artists combining dancing with acting and pantomime ability interpret the famous story. Edwin Strawbridge, principal dancer and choreographer, who has appeared here in previous Junior Programs’ ballets sponsored by the theater, leads the cast. Martha Picken plays the unique role of narrator and speaks all the lines of the characters, changing her voice and keeping in pace with the action and development of the story through dancing and pantomime. Mrs. Joseph W. Walden is chairman of the ticket sales for the theater which first brought Junior Programs’ “Pinocchio” here in 1937. Tickets may be purchased from committee workers or at the Civic Theater box office, 1847 N. Alabama St. ,

Teachers to Sponsor Annual Party

The informal style show and card party given annually by the Indianapolis Grade Teachers’ Association will be held Saturday at 2 p. m. in Ayres’ auditorium. Proceeds will go to the association’s scholarship fund. . Miss Margaret Schofield, chairman of the social committee, will be assisted by Mrs. Bess Hume and Miss Bertha Keller, Miss LaVon Cox and Mrs. Lucile Heizer. Mrs. Martha Guilford is president cof the association.

John Hamiltons Hosts

Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hamilton, 245 W. Maple Road, entertained récently in their home for Miss Virginia Smith, Frankfort; Miss Lutie Young, Plainfield; Mrs. Georgia Rost and the Misses Wallace Montague, Pauline - Rathert,

Virginia Fillinger and June Wood-

| worth.

Children’s Theater to Sponsor

Junior Programs’ Ballet, “Robin Hood,” on Feb. 22

' To reproduce the full flavor of Old England in the 13th century,

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“Robin Hood,” appearing at Caleh .

Mills Hall on Feb. 22, no little amount of digging was required through

Federation Day Held at Salon

Times Special * CHICAGO, Jan. 29.—Hoosier Salon exhibits in the Marshall Field d&s Co. galleries are attracting patrons from Indianapolis and other cities of Indiana, in addition to Hoosier residents in Chicago. Among Indianapolis guests at the Indiana Federation of Clubs’ lunche eon. Monday were Mrs. W. D., Keenan, second vice president of the federation, who spoke briefly o her recent trip to Washington; Mrs, Clarence Kittle, federation art chaire man, and Mesdames O. B. King, A. J. Lauer, George Russell, H. B, Olney, Margaret Williams Russo and Walter 8S. Grow. Prize-winning Indiana artists spoke at the luncheon to describe the painting of their Salon entries, They were C. Curry Bohm and Ede ward K. Williams of Nashville, Rane dolph Coats of Indianapolis, J. ©, Templeton of East Chieago, and Le« nore Conde Lawson of Hammond. Mr. ‘Coats was the winner of the $275 Tri Kappa prize. Marshail Field & Co. entertained these and other Indiana artists with a tea Monday afternoon. . Guests of Mrs. C. Warner . Wil liams at a recent luncheon durihg the exhibit were Mesdames Hugh Baker, Leonidas Smith, Colin Lett, H. B. Pike, Gertrude Kiger and Katharine Groh Blasingham of Indianapolis. Following the luncheon Mr. Williams, Chicagd arfist, cone ducted guests through -his studio.

Earl Hoods at Home In East Chicago

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hood are at home in East Chicago. Mrs. Hood was Miss Dorothy Griffith, daughter of Grover Griffith, 1427 Linwood Ave., before her marriage Saturday in the rectory of the Littl Flower Church. The Rev Fr. Richard Kauanaugh officiated. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Kesterson, uncle and aunt of the bride, were the attendants.

Meet at Spink Arms

Alpha Chapter of Omega Phi Tau will have a business meeting at 8 {p. m. tonight in the Spink Arms | Hotel.

evening at the Hotel Lincoln.

* IT'S FU

ar ALL A&P SUPER MARKETS

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