Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1941 — Page 4

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"Robin Hood" Ballet CommiHes

To Meet With Harriet Jane Holmes

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A MEETING of the executive committee for the

Children’s Civic Theater sponsorship of the Junior Proheld. at 2 p. m,

grams’ ballet, “Robin Hood,” will be Thursday at the home of Miss Harriét Jane Holmes under the direction of Mrs. Joseph W. Walden, general . chairman. “Robin Hood” will be presented at 3 p. Mills Hall at Shortridge High School, The century English court will be revealed in settings for the ballet. Music compiled from ancient manuscripts is given a modern interpretation and expert professional ballet performers will depict the action of the story. Saul Lancourt, Junior| Programs’ production director, delved into history in order to present an authentic portrayal of the period. ’ =] Members of Mrs. Walden’s committee with) Miss Holmes are Miss Betty Tharp, theater chairman; Miss Jane Throckmorton, Mes dames Richard K. Tucker, Robert Darlington and James R. Miller, They will be aided by a corps of ticket, sellers. Reservations for the entertainment may be made at the Civic Theater Playhouse after Thursday.

Theater Affairs Committee to Meet Feb. 12

CIVIC THEATER AFFAIRS COMMITTEE members will hear a talk on the Straw Hat Opera Company at their monthly meeting at 10:30 a. m. Feb. 12 at the home of Mrs. James S, Rogan. Paul H. Krauss III of Indianapolis, who has appeared in a number of Civic Theater plays, was an organizer of the company formed last summer at the Oscar Seagle Music Colony, Schroon Lake, N. Y. Miss Jane Hempson, an official accompanist for the company, will appear on the Affairs Committee program. 88 B 8 8 = The reception for Gladys Swarthout which was postponed from Jan. 20 will be held by the Affairs Committee on Feb. 27 at the Columbia Club. Miss Swarthout will appear in| concert that evening at English’s Theater. |

Tea to Be Given for Hunt Members

MEMBERS of the Traders Poinf, Hunt will be entertained at a tea from 4:30 to 6 o'clock: Saturday afternoon at the Woodstock Club by Mr. and Mrs. Richard McGarrah Helms. » » » ao » o Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. McKibbin will eritertain with a buffet supper at their home Saturday night for Dr. Henry A. Bowman, professor of sociology at Stephens College in Columbia, Mo. Friends and Stephens alumnae will be guests. Dr. Bovman will appear Saturday afternoon in the Banner-Whitehill auditorium under the sponsorship of the Stephens College Alumnae Club, His lecture topic will be “Making Marriage Meaningful.”

Comings and Goings

MISS IRVING MOXLEY, daughter of (i Barret Moxley, will come this week from New York, where she has completed a course of study at Columbia University. ,.. . Mrs. Clarerice F. Merrell arrived Saturday from Ft. Lauderdale Fla, where she has been visiting. She is general arrangements chairman for the annual meeting of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Association to be held at noon tomorrow in the Columbia Club. mr. and Mrs, Norman R. Kevers will leave Feb. 17 for Miami Beach where they will visit Mr. Kevers’ mother, Mrs. William J. Wemmer, at her new home on La Gorce Islarid. ... Mr. and Mrs. John R. Barrett, who are visiting at Clermorit, Fla., are expected to return home about Feb. 15. Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Robert J. Axtell left lest week for residence in Hattiesburg, Miss, where he will be located at Camp Shelby for a year’s service with the 38th Division of jhe Indiana National Guard. Lieut. Col. Axtell is “assistant chief of staff with the 38th Division. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde R. Baker left yestercely for a two months’ stay in Topeka, Kas. . . , Mr. and Mrs. Robdrt Graham left this week-end for Miami Beach, where they will stop at the NormandyPlaza Hotel. They expect to fly to Cuba about. the middle of the month, returning here in March,

Mayflower Society Board Meeting Called Mrs. Tilden F. Greer, governor, has called a luncheon meeting of the board of assistants of the Society of) Mayflower Descendants for noon tomorrow in Ayres’ Tearoom. |

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“Wandering in the Southern Hemisphere” vas to be the topic of « Mrs. James H. Genung before the Cien, Arthur St. Clair Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, at 2p. m, today in the Propylaeum. Mrs. Genung, Mrs. Julia Lilly Darlington and Miss Mary Sullivan were to be hostesses. |

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Hostess for the Katharine Merrill Graydon Club at its meeting tomorrow will be Mrs. Charles J. Van Tassel. Carrying out the day’s theme, “Childhood,” Mrs. Arthur B. Shultz will discuss Booth Tarke ington’s “A Model Letter to a Friend.” Others appearing on the program will be Mrs. Dar A. Robinson, talking of “A Start in Life”; / Miss Virginia Kingsbury, whose subject will b¢ Martha Foley's “Her Own Sweet Simplicity,” and Mrs. Leland K. Cater, who will discuss “The Whoffing Gods.”

G. A. R. Group Plans Tea for Prospective Members

MISS MARGARET WALDO, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, John H. Waldo, will entertain board members of the Old Glory Chapter, Children of the American Revolution, at dinner tonight at her home. Prospective members of the chapter will be guests at a tea given by the board Feb. 23 in the home of Mr, and Mrs. Harry W. Dragoo. | Hosts and hostesses will be the Misses Maitha Armstrong, Jean Bosson, Doris Daley, Alberta, Fisk, Patricia Feterson, Waldo and Jane Wright; Victor Barry, John Holmes, Phlllips Huston, Austin Gillespie, David Simpson, William Rudy and Paul Wadleigh.

m. Feb. 22 in Caleb splendor of a 13th

workers.

at the Claypool Hotel. The regional assembly is the first of nine to be held by the Women’s Field Army before the national enlistment campeign in April. Representatives from Ohio, Michigan, West Virginia and Indiana were to register this morning and early afternoon. : Three informal luncheons were to be held this noon. Dr. Frank E. Adair, New York, attending physician in Memorial Hospital, and Dr. W. W. Bauer, Chicago, director of the Bureau of Health Education of the American Medical Association, will speak tonight. Sessions will continue through tomorrow afternoon. Hosts are Dr. and Mrs. Padgett, Dr. and Mrs. Chester A. Stayton, Dr. and Mrs. Charles W. Myers, Dr. and Mrs. Don Ja Bowers, Dr. and Mrs. Karl Ruddell, Dr. and Mrs. Thurman B. Rice, Dr. and Mrs. John Ferree, Dr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Beeler, Dr. and Mrs. Lester Smith, Messrs. and Mesdames Chauncey H. Eno, W. D. Keenan, A. L. Taggart, BE. Francis Bowditch, Thomas L. Neal, Irving Lemaux, Kurt Pantzer, William H. Coleman, Harold B. Tharp, Oliver W. Gress, Daniel S. Robinson, Myron J. Austin, John D. Welch, George Buck, George J. Smith, Paul Jock and J. Perry Meek, Edwin L. Patrick and William Fortune. Other hostesses will be Mesdames Kin Hubbard, Peter C. Reilly, Ru'|dolph Grosskopf, Henry Ostrom, Laura E. Ray, Harper J. Ransburg, Rosamond Van Camp Hill, David Ross, J. R. Sentyey, R. P. Van Camp, Louis Wolf, Kittie Meiers, J. W. Coffey, C. J. Finch, Irving Hamilton, Clayton H. Ridge, Oliver P. Terry and Maurice Lindley, Miss I. Hilda Stewart and Miss Helen Coffey. Mrs. William Guyton, in charge of pages, has chosen the following girls to serve: the Misses Mary Ellen Rhynearson, Juliann McCullough, Patricia Lawson and Ruth Copeland from Broad Ripple High School; the' Misses Patricia Myers, Phyllis Wear, Jean Eichacker and Melville Wiesner of Howe High School; the Misses Katherine Hancock, Martha FHofrnann, Mary Worsham and Fatty Peterson, Short-

Nation's Colors Howard Meyer

Decorations in patriotic theme|yegion Auxiliary’s 12th

Legion Units to Hear

Howard (M. Meyer, Indianapolis attorney, will’ talk on ‘“Americanism” at a meeting of the American District

ridge High School; the Misses Viola Wilkerson, Betty Jane Schenk, Barbara Yount and Doris Smith, Washington High School; the Misses Betty Merrimar, Marttia Jo Hadley, Alice Hackney and Aan Eberhart, Girl Scouts, and the Misses Leona Kreipke, Gerda Lemcke and Jean Luker.

Women Are Filling

U. 8. are being trained as machinists. Louise Amundsen and Florence Scipione work drill and lathe.

Hostesses Announced for Dinner To Be Held by Regional Assembly Of Cancer Control Army

Mrs. E. E. Padgett, hostess chairman for the regional assembly cf the Women’s Field Army of the American Society for Cancer Control, has announced hosts and hostesses for the Assembly Dinner tonight

emphasized the “All American” mo{if of the Sunnyside Guiid’s annual dinner dance Saturday night in the Columbia Club. . Cascades of red, white and blue fell from the ceiling lights of the 10th floor ballroom and the doublebarred cross of the anti-tuberculosis insignia appeared with American flags in decorations. Similar decorations were used on the third floor. "Adding to the brilliance of the occasion were the gowns of the women guests. Mrs. Irving D. Hamilton, Guild president, wore French blue taffeta with matching net embroidered in silver. Chairman Wears Blue Crepe Mrs. Kurt W. Schmidt, general chairman, was in hyacinth blue crepe, the skirt made with draped front fullness. The fitted jacket of the gown, in American beauty, was incrusted with gold beads and se-j quins. A black jersey frock with tightly fitted bodice and sweetheart neck‘line was worn by Mrs. Gus G. Meyer, ‘co-chairman and music chairman for the dance. The bouffant skirt of her gown was made of alternating rows of black and white lace. Mrs. William B. Currie wore embroidered marquisette in apricot shade over matching taffeta and had a cluster of violets in her hair. Chooses Faille Silk

Mrs. Myron J. Austin, reservations chairman for the dance, chose a “faille silk in champagne color studfed with brilliants, gold accessories and orchids. Mrs. Oscar B. Perine, who served as decorations chairman, wore a black dinner dress with emerald sesleeves and an extremely full skirt. A wide sequin belt accented Mrs. Russell Spivey’s flame chiffon

peared in a black and white taffeta with cascades of mousseline de soie falling from the hipline.

Mrs. Brown to Assist Guests of Alpha Chapter mem“bers of Sigma Delta Pi Sorority will be entertained tonight at th& home Hazel Hart, 37 E. 45th St.

1Cieorge Swain and Earl B. Cobb.

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Council Wednesday af 1:15 p. m. in the World War Memorial. Mrs. Jean S. Boyle will preside at a business meeting and call for reports from all unit and district chairmen.

Aux|liary Plans Colonial Tea

A colonial tea appears in news of Americen Legion Auxiliary activities for tlie week. The INDIANAPOLIS POST 4 AUXILIARY will have the tea from 2 to (4 p. m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Charles O. Holton, 3326 Ruckle St. On the committee for the event are Mesdames Clarence 'I'aylor, Ralph Hesler, J. R. Steirlboch, Herbert Winkler,

Miss Maly ‘Ann Blessing, violinist, will play, accompanied by Miss Mary Louise Houk. Miss Patricia Cirfdmer will sing and Miss Priscilla Pierson will present a group of readings. Mrs. Grover Parr and Mrs. Dale White willi preside at the tea table. ‘olondal costumes will be worn by committee | members. :

The- monthly meeting of INDIANAPOLIS PETIT SALON DES HUIT (JHAPEAU QUARANTE FEMMES 295 of the Eight and Forty will] be held Thursday at 8 p. m, at the home of Mrs. Audrey

hour will follow. The meeting will be presided over by Le Petit Cha-

peau, Mrs, Carl Boeldt.

INDIANAPOLIS POWER &|

LIGHT A charge of Veterans’ yesterday. music cha

UXILIARY 300 was in musical services at the Hospital at 5:30 p. m. Mrs. Anns Mexey is rman of the unit. -

nnegan in Charge argaret Finnegan is in & 5 o'clock supper to be morrow preceding the

Mrs. M charge of served to regular In

dore Circle, Daughters of Isabella,

. Miss tant hostess will be Mrs, Har-

at the Cu

Mount, 67 N. Sheridan Ave, A social] §

eeting of Mother Theo-|

Athletic Association Initiates Members

Miss Louise IM. Schulmeyer, faculty sponsor of the Women’s Athletic Association at Butler University, has announced the initiation of 14 coeds, recently chosen as members for .their participation in the physical education department’s sports program. New members include ‘the Misses Shirley Ann Einbinder, Ruthellen Goodman, Betty Graham, Miriam Hoss, Mildred Xapherr, Edna Liljeblad, Patricia McGuire, Evelyn Martin, Betty Murmsen, LaVerne Ostermeyer, Julia Renfrew, Miriam Sturm and Wilma Young of Indianapolis and Miss Charlotte Moor, Knightstown.

Wed Recently

Kindred Photo. Miss Ernie Eaine Foster was

holic Community Center,

Lg N. Fenngylvania Bt, + A Jan.dL

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married to Kennard A, McIntosh

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|Miss Rowena Harrison,

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There’s nothing so important in modern war as skilled machine To replace men called to active service, girls all over the

Above, in Stamford, Conn,

Dinner, Dance Are Scheduled

Dinner meetings, an annual dance and a rush party are included on sorority calendars for this week. Mrs. Ralph Jones, 4621 Guilford Ave., will be hostess to the Indiana Beta Alumnae Club of PI BETA PHI SORORITY at a dinner meeting at 6 p. m. Wednesday. Indiana University alumnae are invited.

An informal bridge party will be given at 8 p. m. today by Gamma Chapter, THETA NU CHI SORORITY, at the home of Miss Betty . Rochford, 964 Ellenberger Parkway. On the committee for the party are Misses Bernice Petty, Helen Holtsclaw, Elsie Wolf and Jean and Joan Petit. The sorority will have its annual dinner dance at the Columbia Club Saturday night.

The evening section of KAPPA DELTA ALUMNAE will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow with IArs, Maxine Williams Scholl, 3720 N, Pennsylvania St.

Miss LaVerne Fleener will entertain members of Mu Chapter, PHI CHI EPSILON SORORITY, this evening at a bridal shower honoring Miss Bernice Hull. Appointments will carry out the Valentine motif. Miss Hull will be married to Henry Bracken Feb. 14 in the Woodruff Baptist Church.

A Valentine rush party will be given at 8 p. m. today by Alpha Chapter, THETA DELTA SIGMA SORORITY. Miss Mary Jo Guire, 3074 N. Delaware St., will be hostess. Decorations will be in Valentine colors. Members of the social committee are Miss Katherine Robbins, Mrs. Carl Reichel and Mrs. Harold Unversaw,

Beta Chapter, OMEGA PHI TAU SORORITY, will meet at 8 p. m. Wednesday at the Hotel Lincoln,

Mrs. Russell Davis will. hold a meeting and pledge services for Beta Chapter, PHI GAMMA TAU SORORITY, this evening at her home, 848 W. 43d St.

Alpha Chapter, PHI THETA DELTA SORORITY, will meet Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Betty Kelly, 3355 Graceland Ave. Beta Chapter of the sorority will sponsor a theater rush party tomorrow for Misses Maxine Roush, Florence Stolte, Barbara Schwartz, Jane Richards, Jean Bundy, Betty Postma, Dorothy Breeden and Betty Waldcoetter.

Nurses to Sponsor

Play Performance

The Feb. 12 performance of “Love From a Stranger” at the Civic Theater will be sponsored by the Central District, Indiana State Nurses’ Association, to raise funds for the group’s educational program... Miss Fern Coy of the University Hospitals is. in charge of ticket sales. Other workers are Miss Mabel Wharton, Sunnyside Sanatorium; Miss Ethel Jacobs, State Public Health Nurses’ Association; Technical High School nurse. Misses Ethel Royce, Emma Hannafin and Margaret Borst, St. Vincent’s Hospital; Miss Hazel Swain, City Hospital; Miss Ellen . Marie Anderson and Miss Julia Cushman, Methodist Hospital; Misses Bertha Waterman, Helen Hoover, Grace Witwer, Bernice Cain, Mary Brake and Wilma Carr, private duty Miss Alice Cuddy, assistant superintendent of nurses at Riley Hospital, is publicity. chairman.

Dine This Evening

The Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Indianapolis Firemen will have a dinner this evening at the Food Craft Shop with a card party following. The regular business meeting will be at 7:30 p. m. Thursday at the Hotel Lincoln.

Mary Ryan Hostess

" Delta Chapter of Psi Iota Xi Sorority will hold: a business meeting

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Robert Crafts i To Be at Home

In Indianapolis

Mr, and Mrs. Robert L. Craft are in New York on a wedding visit following their marriage Saturday in Holyoke, Mass. The former Miss Elizabeth Hammond Pomeroy, Mrs. Craft is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Pomeroy of Holyoke. Mr. Craft's parents are Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Craft, 4802 Washington Blvd. The ceremony at 4 o'clock in the Skinner Memorial Chapel of Holyoke’s Second Congregational Church Was read by Dr. Frank E. Duddy of Cambridge, Mass., assisted by the Rev. Albert J. Penner, pastor of the church. An uncle of the bride, Dr. William Churchill Hammond, was organ soloist. The bride's attendants were Mrs. Richard W. Loud of Newtonville, Mass., matron of honor; Miss Marjory Craft, sister of the bridegroom, maid of honor; Mrs. Prescott L. Kettell, Boston; Miss Marian D. Mapes, Shaker Heights, O.; Miss Edith S. Dawson, Belmont, Mass.,, and Miss Jean Thomas of Holyoke. Miss Barbara Loud of Newtonville was flower girl. Standing with Mr. Craft as best man was Richard C. Grove of Warsaw. Ushers were Mr. Kettell, Mr. Loud, Grant Smith Jr. of Greenfield, Mass, and Squire Hurst, Keene, N. H. Bride Wears Satin Given in marriage by her father, the bride entered wearing an ivory satin antique gown on princess lines with period muscatel sleeves and a Pierre rolled collar. A full-length veil of English imported tulle fell from a Juliet cap of Coronet macrosse lace which belonged to her great-grandmother. The bridal bouquet was of ivory gerbera and lilies of the valley. Identical gowns of charm blue faille tafleta, made with tight basques, bracelet-length sleeves, fuil skirts and sweetheart necklines, were worn by Mrs. Loud and Miss Craft. They wore blue Juliet caps with small sheer halos and carried arm bouquets of deep pink gerbera and light blue delphinium. Delphinium blossoms also outlined their caps and halos. The bridesmaids’ gowns were similar in style of a deep moon blue. Mrs, Pomeroy’s costume was a lavender crepe gown with a purple flowered hat and a corsage of large, single violets. Mrs. Craft chose a coral crepe gown with coral bead trimming, a matching coral flowered hat and a corsage of white orchids with coral tips. The ceremony was followed by a reception in the Pomeroy home. Mr. and Mrs. Craff will be at home after March 15 at 4450 Marcy lane, Apartment 105. The bride is a graduate of Lasell Junior College and DePauw University and is a ‘member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. Mr. Craft attended DePauw and Butler Universities and belongs to Sigma Chi Fraternity.

Personals

Miss Wenonah Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William PF. Johnson, 5807 N. New Jersey St. left recently for Miami, Fla. to visit her sister, Mrs. Margaret Jordan.

Mrs. Louise Boyd, 2618 E. Michigan St., and Mrs. Lena Culman, 44 N. Oakland Ave., left yesterday for an extended trip to St. Petersburg and Miami, Fla.

Miss Barbara E. Sims, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Firman C. Sims 5456 Hibben Ave. appeared last week in the cast of the “Junior Jollies,” annual “triangle show” of Stephens College at Columbia, Mo.

Miss Mildred Steiner, daughter of Mrs. William E. Steiner, who has been secretary to the ministers at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, left this week-end for Washington where she has accepted a Government position.

Ye ———————————— Dr. Elsea to Speak “your Child's Friend—the Dentist” will be Dr. R. W. Elsea’s subject as guest speaker at a meeting of the Garfield Park Kindergarten Mothers’ Club at 1:15 p. m. Wednesday in the kindergarten rooms. Mrs. Herbert Dugan, social chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Walter Woempner, Charles E. Riley, John Wainwright, Seaborn Solomon and Ernst Foernzler.

On P.-T. A. Program “The Community’s Responsibility to the Child” will be the topic of Mrs. Clayton Ridge when she speaks before School 77 Parent-Teacher Association at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday. For group singing by children of

tonight-at the home of Miss Mary

‘John Murray,

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Welding. That's a man’s job/ if there ever was one. Yet, remove the mask on that welder, above, and yowill find a girl's face. working at Stamford, Conn. in the state’s expanded NYA program which is training women for national defense.

She's

by local churchwomen this week.

Self-defense is the first step in think of taking roles to aid Uncle of the “manly” arts, too. Above,

Roles on the National Defe

national defense. So when women Sam prepare, they go in for some in Washington, two members of

the Green Guards keep in trim, under Army supervision.

Presbyterian Society to Meet With Mrs. Fermor S. Cannon; Elizabethans Will Sponsor Tea

A Valentine luncheon and a musicale are among events scheduled

Mrs. C. W. Ackman will be the speaker before the Woman’s Mis-

4235 N, Pennsylvania St.

Mrs. Cannon at the tea table will be Mesdames John E, Seybert, T. W. Huddleston, Boyd M. Gillespie and Grace H. Federman and Miss Ann Rouse, Mrs. H. E. Barnard will preside.

A 12:30 p. m. luncheon will open the Wednesday meeting of the Elizabethans of ALL SOULS UNI-

TARIAN CHURCH at the home of Mrs. Roger Teeguarden. Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames Paul Allen, Fritz Schaefer and Justin Merriman. Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks, minister emeritus of the church, will speak to the group after luncheon. The Elizabethans are planning sponsorship of an: afternoon lecture, musicale and tea Feb. 12 at the church. The program, beginning at 2:30 o'clock, will feature piano solos by Miss Barbara Hickam and a talk on “Charles Dickens” by Mrs. Charles C. Baker. Tea will be served in the church parlors after the ‘program. Cochairmen for the tea are Mrs. Charles Nugent and Mrs. Earl Teckemeyer. Mrs. Norman Coryell, assisted by Mrs. John Brayton, is in charge of ticket sales. A board meeting will be held by the Jessy Wallin Heywood Alliance of the church at 11:30 a. m. Thursday followed by luncheon at 12:30 p. m. and a business meeting at 1:30 o'clock. The sewing group of the Alliance will meet to sew from 10 a. m. until 12:30 p. m. The customary February party of the More Light Guild of the church will be held Saturday.

Mrs. Maurice Lindley is general chairman for a Valentine luncheon and program to be given at 1 o'clock Wednesday afternoon by the Women’s Federation of the MERIDIAN HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 47th St. and Central Ave. Her assistants are Mrs. luncheon hostess chairman, and Mrs. Ronald Hazen, program chairman. The program arranged by Mrs, Hazen will consist of solos by Mrs. Paul Dressel, a monolog by Miss Jenny Lind Duncan and ‘a play, “The Poor Dear,” by members of Miss Eleanor Dee Theek’s Short-

Miss Lucy Mayo will be in charge of a worship service.

sionary Society of the SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH at its meeting at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs, Fermor 8S. Cannon,

Assisting

ridge High School dramatics classes, the Misses Duncan, Jo-Ann Bartley, Mary Lou Metsker, Sue Canny, Virginia Thompson, Elizabeth Peet, Dorothy Davis and Georgeanna Madden. Hostesses will be Mesdames E. L. Hamlin, H. O, Mertz, E. L. Grover, Ford Smith, Herbert Showalter, Elizabeth Taylor, George Kamphaus, H. W. Ballman, George Hadley, James Gibson, Charles Stevens, L. M. Henderson, Carl Iserloth, P. B. Montgomery, W. P. Hartz, Myron Austin, 8. J. Dyer, Harold Mercer, Gentry Haun, Olie Crane, A. R. Ferguson, W. E. Mohler, H. E. Walker, W, E. Kyle, Fred Luker, Frank J. Wise, W. D. Guyton, H. H. Akers, James Murray, Carl Pike, J. E. Wyttenbach, Joseph K. Langfitt, W. J. MacArthur, J. C. Hartle and Robert C. Cross. .

Women Will Take Tour

“A sightseeing tour, luncheon, movies and a tea are scheduled for members of the State Assembly Woman’s Club Thursday. Busses for the tour will leave the Claypool Hotel at 10:30 a. m.

Stops will be made at points of historical interest; at the Riley Hos-

pital where Mrs. Winifred Kahmann

will exhibit occupational therapy work, and at the Municipal Airport where I. J. Dienhart will explain features of interest. The tour will be under direction of Mrs. Joe Rand Beckett and Mrs. Louis R. Markun. Luncheon will be served at the Kopper Kettle in Morristown and the remainder of the afternoon will be spent at the Markun Lodge on Twin Lakes, where a movie made by the Welfare Department at the recent Harrison Home Tea will be shown. : The program will conclude with a Valentine tea at the lodge. Assisting will be Mesdames Henry F. Schricker, Charles M. Dawson, Howard V. Johnson, Edward Stein and

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White Cross Guild to Note 9th Birthday

The ninth birthday of the Methodist Hospital White Cross Guild will be celebrated tomorrow afternoon when the Founders’ Day tea will be held at the nurses’ home,

Members of the 44 chapters will at= tend. Dr. John G. Benson, superine tendent of the hospital, will be the speaker for the auditorium programs at 2 o'clock. Mrs. Carl Ploch, presie dent, will review the history of the organization and will introduce past presidents and chapter presidents who will be given corsages. The Madrigal Singers of Teche nical High School will sing. Mrs. Benson will be in charge of a tea in the parlors following the program. Mrs. Ambrose Pritchard is general chairman, assisted by Mesdames L. C. Messick, C. H. Castor, Raymond Herath, D. A. Bartley, F. E. Thorn=burgh and Desmond Noonan, The Music Guild, with Mrs. John Schneider as chairman, is in charge of music and the Temple Sisterhood Flower Guild, with Mrs. H. FP. Sudranski as chairman, is in charge of decorations. A trio composed of Mrs. Leslie Hallam and . Mrs, Joseph Small, violinists, and Mrs. Lawrence Hayes, pianist, will play during the tea. Mesdames Felix T. McWhirter, Isaac Born, Benson, Ploch, W. C, Hartinger, John W. Noble, Arthur Fairbanks, James E. Perry and Clarence U. Knipp will pour. Union Chapel Guild 1s the newest to be organized and the 44th chapter. Officers elected at a lunch eon at the hospital recently are Mrs. Wilbur Tyner, president; Miss Margaret Kitchen and Miss Letha Kerr, vice presidents; Mrs. Armon Dawson, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs. Wilbur Welling, work chair man. : Central Avenue Methodist Church Chapter was to meet today in the nurses’ home. Others meeting during the week will be Capitol Avenue Methodist and University Park Christian chapters, tomorrow; Children’s Cheer Guild, West Washington Street and Speedway Boulevard chapters, Wednesday; Music and Broad Ripple Guilds, Thursday, and Sun-Rae Guild, Friday.

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