Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 February 1941 — Page 17

PAGE 16

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ociety—

Several Dinners Will Precede "Alice in Wonderland" Ball

SEVERAL DINNERS and informal parties will precede the “Alice in Wonderland” Ball which the Junior Auxiliary to the Indianapolis Day Nursery will give Saturday night in the Woodstock Club.

. Mr, and Mrs. Joseph W. Barr will entertain at dinner in their home before the dance for Messrs. and Mesdames Emmett Jackson,

Felix T. McWhirter II, John S. Lynn and Hall rane is general chairman of the ball.

Entertaining at a dinner party

Cochrane. Mrs. Coch-

in the Woodstock Club will be

Mr. and Mrs. William E. Vaughn. Their party will include Messrs. and Mesdames Ray Peterson, Charles Nugent and B. B. Daigh,

Chicago.

Mr. and Mrs. Horace F. Hill III and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence

Moore will attend the dance together.

In another group will be the

Messrs. and Mesdames Ralph Coble, John Milton Hussey, Sheldon

A. Raiser and John B. Lookabill.

Mrs. Coble is a member of the

publicity committee for the dance. Mrs, John Kitchen, a member of the invitations committee, Mr. Kitchen and Mr. and Mrs. John T.

Hays of Sullivan will be together.

Mr, and Mrs. John A. Hook will be hosts at an informal party

in their home befcre the ball.

Guests will include the Messrs. and

Mesdames Harold Ransburg, Edward Benzel, John Mutz, Norwood

Sallee and Earl Grimsley.

The Misses Catherine Cunningham, Anne Noble Johnston and Madeline Judd and James Hutchison, Kenneth Rau Woolling and Alfred Symmes will form another party.

Ushers for Children's Concerts Announced

A LIST OF USHERS for the

Children’s Symphony Concert

at 10:30 a. m. March 8 in the Murat Theater has been announced by Mrs. Charles R. Weiss, ushers chairman.

Among them will be Misses Jane

Laura Sheerin, Patricia Eaglesfield,

Adams, Catherine Cunningham, Ann Fox, Joan Taylor, Anne

Johnston and Margo Sheerin, Mrs. William Groat and Mrs. Blaine

Miller Jr. “ushers are Miss Rosemary

Senior students of local high schools who will act as Reddel and Miss Barbara Phegley,

George Washington High School; Miss Rita Camp and Miss Rhea McGoldrick, Broad Ripple High School; Miss Jean Salvey and Miss Betty Jean Shead, St. Agnes Academy, and Miss June Holtman and Miss Elsie Hubert, Emmerich Manual Training High School. To acquaint young patrons of the Children’s Museum with the programs presented by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, Jules Salkin, first violist of the orchestra, will speak at the museum at 2:30 p.m. Saturday about the concert the following Saturday. Mr. Salkin toured South America with Leopold Stokowski’s Youth

Orchestra.

Through the Children’s Museum - Guild, with Miss

Katherine La Penta as chairman, a series of similar music talks has been given. Glinka’s overture, “Russlan and Ludmilla,” Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony and “Concerto for Violin” by Haydn will

. be discussed and illustrated by Mr.

Salkin.

Mrs. William T. Finney, a member of the Museum Guild, is on

the promotion committee for the Children’s Concert.

Other meme

bers are Mrs. Howard B. Pelham, chairman, and Mrs. Hamlin Well ing. Mrs. Herbert M. Woollen is general chairman of the Children’s

Concerts.

Head of Notre Dame Music Department to Speak Here

MR. AND MRS. DANIEL H. PEDTKE, South Bend; the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Henry F. Dugan and Elmer A. Steffen, K. 8S. G., will be special guests at the speakers’ table at the pre-concert luncheonlecture held in the Athenaeum at noon Friday by the women’s committee of the Indiana State Symphony Society.

Mr. Pedtke, University of Notre

Dame music department head,

will give the explanatory music talk following luncheon, discussing compositions to be played that afternoon by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in the Murat Theater. - Others at the speakers’ table with women’s committee executive board members will be board members of the northwest region

of the committee.

Psi Iota Xi Sorority will have its usual special

table, the luncheon being part of a program planned for the sorority’s grand officers meeting here this week. Four sorority members, Mrs. Harry C. Mulder, East Chicago;

Mrs. Paul Morton, Lebanon; Mrs,

Roger Martin and Miss Bess

Smith, Bedford, will be official hostesses at the sorority table, Grand officers are Mrs. Mulder, president;.Mrs. Morton, vice president; Mrs. Kendal Matthews, Centerville, treasurer; Miss Elwynne Griffith, Scottsburg, secretary; Mrs. E. J. Hancock, Greensburg, editor; Mrs. Harry Youse, Markle, charity chairman; Mrs. Howard Meeker, Crown Point, north province chairman; Mrs. John Edgar Johnson, Muncie, central province chairman; Mrs. Clovis B. Owen, ‘Bloomfield, south province chairman, and Mrs. J. S. Reichart, Frank-

fort, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra chairman, Local women’s committee hostesses for the

luncheon include

Mesdames Standish Deake, F. C. Groninger, Walter S. Grew and ‘Harlan J. Hadley. The second meeting of the state council of the women’s committee, with Mrs. Walter P. Morton as chairman, will

be held in the Athenaeum at 10 a.

m. before luncheon. Election

of regional directors and appointment of unit chairmen for the

coming year will be discussed.

Special music, a birthday party and a guest day program are included ‘in plans for club meetings tomorrow. CON MOTO CLUB members will hear a program of Edward MacDowell's music tomorrow at the home of Mrs. W. J. Goory, 3933 Arthington Blvd. The hostess will . be assisted by Mrs. E. E. Gardner at a 1 o'clock dessert luncheon. Following luncheon Miss Lucille Stewart, club president, will read a paper on the composer’s life. His songs will be presented by Miss Gertrude Gutelius and Ms. L. P. Kreiser and his piano compositions by Mesdames Varjo Anderson, Norvin Strickland and Ross Johnson.

Mrs. Mary Sallee, 1412 Prospect

St., will be hostess for the 1908 CLUB'S birthday party tomorrow.

The LADIES' FEDERAL CLUB will meet tomorrow at the home of Mn. John T. Larner, 4166 Guilford ve.

Miss Charity Kennedy will talk on “Cyprus and Crete” before COLUMBIAN CHAPTER members of the INTERNATIONAL TRAVELSTUDY CLUB tomorrow following a 12:30 o'clock luncheon in the home of Mrs. H. A. Milbern, 3446 Birchwood Ave. Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. Harry Cooper and-Mrs. Carrie Wray.

The meeting of the EMERA CLUB Friday at 8 p. m. will be in the home of Miss Emily Hensley, Gray Road.

“Antiques and Restored Homes” will be Mrs. Frank Newton’s subject at a meeting of the THURSDAY CLUB of South Bend tomorrow. Mrs. Luther Martin will be in charge of a roll call on art colonies. The hostess will be Mrs. B. A. Anderson.

Meeting in the directors’ room of the Indiana National Bank tomorrow at 10 a. m.,, BETA DELPHIAN ~ CLUB members will hear a program presented by Mesdames Ceril Ober, Walter Jensen and Willian Geisecker,

The ELSA HUEBNER OLSEN CLUB will meet for a 12:30 o'clock Juncheon tomorrow at the Sun Dial Tearoom. Mrs. Robert Goodlet will be hostess.

Mrs. Bruce C. Frantz and Mrs. Louis Prosch will act as hostesses at a 12:30 o'clock luncheon tomorrow of the MARGUERITE FISHER CLUB in the Colonial Tearoom.

The TRI C CLUB will meet at 7 p. m. tomorrow with Mrs. Arthur Norman, 1133 N. Dearborn St.

. A 1 o'clock luncheon tomorrow at ~ the Sun Dial Tearoom will be attended by FIDESSA CLUB memyore. Mrs. Frank Ebner will be

“|she, had the mumps,

Theater Group To Hear Talk

Norbert Silbiger, a native of Austria, will give Civic Theater Workshop members a glimpse of foreign

ih today’s sorority news.

will preside at the convention and hostesses. | Entertainment at the luncheon will include songs by members of chapters from Indiana, Purdue, Butler and DePauw Universities and the Butler chapter’s prize-win-ning stunt from the Geneva Stunt

(fontest held on the local campus last fall. Miss Betty Rose Martin, Butler president, will direct the production. Mrs. Harry E. Elliott, president of the Indianapolis Alumnae Assogiation, has appointed Mrs. Herichel E. Davis and Miss Helen Hartinger co-chairmen for the lunch¢on. The decorations and menu committee will consist of Mesdames Gzeorge R. Gilbert, Robert W. Gruén, Guy Morrison and Miss Jean Grumme. ; Invitations and reservations will he handled by Mesdames Paul Rhoadarmer, Robert - M. Talbot, John Hillman, Thomas FP. Riddell, Richard Lowther, Gustav Dongus, {3. C. Badger Jr., Colby Van Weslrum, Harold H., Wright and George Hd. Kingsbury. Hostesses will be Mesdames Louis R. Lowe, Max ritz, Ross B. Clark and Ronald R. Seott, Miss Jane Cooling and. Miss Helen Rogge.

A formal tea Sunday from 4 to 8 o'clock at the Butler University PI BETA PHI chapter house will honor Butler faculty members, Miss ®lizabeth McClure is in charge. In the receiving line will be Mrs. Edith Herrington, house mother; Mesdarnes Paul D. Hinkle, Robert S. Wild and Noble Ropkey and Miss Joan Silberman, chapter president.

TRI PSI SORORITY, mothers’ club of Delta Delta Delta Sorority at Butler University, is sponsoring a book review at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Ayres’ auditorium. Mrs. Russell

theatrical methods in a talk he will {311 (Kenneth Roberts).

give before the group at a meeting | at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Athe-|Foster, co-chairmen of ways and

naeum. Mr. Silbiger, graduate of the University of Vienna, formerly was a play director for the Manchuria State Theater, He is an accomplished linguist and his varied career includes experiences as a piofessor, author, newspaper worker and musician. He is a resident of the Quaker

Hill Hostel at Richmond, a home for refugees who have entered this

lands. papers preparatory to becoming an American citizen.

Miss Miller Entertains

The F.EM. Club will meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock at the home of Miss Dorothy Miller, 1428 N. Dearborn St.

National B.P. W., Sponsors Health Drive

. By SALLY MacDOUGALL Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Feb. 26. “No woman has a right to offer her« self to business unless she ig reasonably sure that she is capable of doing a good job and keeping well,” said Dr. Minnie L. Maffett of Dallas, president of the National Federation of Business and Profes« sional Women’s Clubs. | The white-haired and dignified doctor came here recently from her Texas home to get the federation’s new health drive off to a good start. The drive, imposed by women workers themselves, sets up a new ideal, for it demands that every pay-envelope earner should make it her own business to keep in the pink of health. . Booklets and charts have gons out to 1700 clubs, and these ares supposed to warn 75,000 members that the federation expects every working girl to go to the doctor for a checkup once a year, to have that visit on record in the federation office and to have in her possession the facts of her case. Dotted lines are being filled on the federation’s health examination record, a large sheet with questions and blank spaces. The applicant is asked to write in the dates when whooping cough, smallpox, rheumatism, appendicitis. There are 17 diseases in that list. And does she consider her work detrimental to health? . . At first sight the new program looks as if. it might be a plan lo give doctors and dentists more work. But Dr. Maffett insisted

the,main idea is to keep workiog-

{ Mrs. R. C, Cashon and Mrs. D. R.

country on quotas from their home-| He has taken out his first!

{ Ten Eyck, 1539 Spann Ave.

J. Sanders will discuss “Oliver Wis-

means, are being assisted with plans by Mesdames W. L. Jones, C. E. Parsons, O. H. Rahe, J. O. Brenner and Mabel Converse.

A business meeting of the PHI GAMMA RHO SORORITY will be iheld at 8:15 p. m. tomorrow in the home of Mrs. T. A. Brothers, 2612 Kessler Blvd.

ee ———————————— | CY tA S. Q. U. A.W. S. Club Plans Dance The S. Q. U. A. W. 8S. Club of Technical High School will meet { tonight at the home of Miss Peggy Plans wil be made for a dance early in the spring. Officers, of the club are Miss Josephine Beck, president; Miss Rita

Glen, vice president; Miss Betty Jo Quillin, secretary, and Miss Rosa-

Kappa Kappa Gamma State Day Will Be March 15 at I, A. C. Pi Phi Tea Is Sunday

State Day plans and an announcement of a faculty tea are included

Indiana members of KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA will meet March 15 for their annual state luncheon at the -Indianapolis Athletic. Club. Jonor guests will be Mrs. Everett M. Schofleld, national president, and the new president and vice president of Delta Province, to be elected at the province convention March 7 and 8 in Greencastle. Mrs. Mark H. Reasoner of Indianapolis, present province president,

DePauw University Kappas will be

Envoy Slaps Aid Bill Foes

NEW YORK, Feb. 26 (U. P.).— Mrs. J. Borden Harriman, United States Minister to Norway at the time of the German invasion, said yesterday that many opponents of the Lend - Lease Bill were ‘being

used by fifth columnists.” Mrs. Harriman spoke to a women’s lecture club in Brooklyn after Mrs. Robert A. Taft, wife of the Reaublican Senator from Ohio, had denounced the bill on the grounds it would give President Roosevelt power to “run the war.” Fifth columnists made the easy German conquest of Norway possible, Mrs. Harriman said, adding: “Without a doubt fifth columnists are at work here and now. Many of the persons who are opposing the passage of H. R. 1776 (the LendLease Bill) are, innocently enough, being used by fifth columnists and don’t know it. “That’s how it started in Norway. The Germans spread dislike and distrust among the people of Norway of the people in power.” If President Roosevelt had wished to be a dictator, she said, “the time for him to have accomplished it was after he was overwhelmingly reelected in 1936.” .

Sorority’s Dinner Bridge Is Tonight

Mrs. Thomas Crouch and Mrs. Stewart Coleman will entertain members of Lambda Mu Chapter, Sigma Beta Sorority, and their guests with a 6:30 o'clock dinner bridge tonight in the Colonial Tearoom. Guests will be Mrs. Leo Stella, Mrs. John Jefferson, Miss Juanita Dove and Miss Thelma York.

Omega Kappas to Meet

Pledges who will attend a meeting of Beta Chapter, Omega Kappa Sorority, at 8 p. m. this evening are Mrs. Marjorie Plummer, Misses Mary Jayne Miller, Roberta Alderman, Mary Middleton, Frances Tourjee and Norma Zapp. Miss Peggy Buck, 2125 N, Pennsylvania St., will be hostess.

Card Party Is Tomorrow

A card party will be sponsored at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Citizens’ Gas & Coke Utility auditorium by the Uniben Club. Assisting Mrs. Harry Petty, chairman, will be Mesdames T. E. Denham, O, P. Smith

lind Campbell, treasurer.

Dr. Minnie L. Maffett

women well, She said the first to fill in the dotted lines were members of the staff at national headquarters, 1819 Broadway. All these women, she is sure, feel better snd wiser with the doctors’ reports "in their lockers. She wants that to come true wherever women work all over the land. Underweight from dieting and insufficient sleep is- the bane of American women from 16 to 60, the woman doctor finds. : Middleaged ones have no more sense than the youngsters about food, gadding, sleep. Recently she found students in the Sousberg, Methudiss, Unlverstty,

x

and Beatrice Crouch.

where she is staff physician, 10 to 44 pounds below normal. She regretted that, no matter how she talks to them, there are some who refuse to eat enough. She blames the fashion silhouetfes in magazines for most of the emotional instability and fu onal disturbance that affects students and working girls. She hopes the health campaign will bring working girls to their senses. “You can’t make them eat if they don’t want to,” she said in the only dejected . tone that got into the interview. “I have been advocating a health program for business and professional women for six years,” she said. “It seemed timely to parallel the defense program with something like this. At a time when extra demands may be made on all of us we should admit of -no element of weakness, physical or wmworal. It takes strong units to make a strong nation.” Reminded that some women think they never have time to go to the doctor and just keep on working, Dr. Maffett said: ‘There's plenty of time to get sick, to go to the hospital and die.” If they don’t go to the doctor she would like them to go to sleep. “Adequate rest, mental relaxation and a sense of security will cure a surprising number of diseases,” she has found. “I'm reminding women all the time that there are only 24 hours in a ddy. They can’t crowd in more. If they burn: up most of these and refuse to take enough

To

1. Miss Dorothy Krish, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Krish, 3055 Ruckle St., is engaged to Herschel Cohn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sol Cohn

of Cincinnati.

(Ramos-Porter Photo.)

2. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brouhard are at home at 668 E. 11th St.

before her recent marriage.

Photo.)

Gus Howard. (Kindred Photo.)

Mrs. Brouhard was Miss Ruth Young, daughter of Mrs, Fannie Young,

3. Mrs. Ernest Eppen was Miss Ruth Walker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Walker, before her marriage Feb. 15,

(Photoreflex

4, Miss Marjorie Howard was married to Carl L. Francis, son of Mrs. Charles Francis, Jan. 30. She is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs.

5. Miss Dorothy Hausman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert H.

Hausman, became the bride of Horace Edwin Buckner, son of Mr, and

Mrs. A. H. Buckner, Jan. 25,

(Fritsch Photo.) .

6. Miss Elizabeth Corinne White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank

Allan White, and Harry E. Blewett, Bloomington, were married Feb. 14. The bride was graduated from Indiana University and is a member of

Chi Omega Sorority. Mr. Blewett attended I. U. (Bretzman Photo.)

8. Miss Donna Marie Mitchell,

Brunelle of Duluth, Minn.

7. A spring wedding will be that of Miss Pat Nolan to Ralph McGovern, son of John McGovern, Loogootee. (Fritsch Photo.)

daughter of Mrs. Altha Mitchell,

and Raymond A. Jerge, son of Mrs. Margaret Jerge, will be married April 13 in the Englewood Christian Church. 9. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. James of Lebanon announce the engagement of their daughter, Dortha, to Chester E. Brunelle, son of Mrs, S. L. (Porter Photo.) P 10. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Persell are at home in the Pinewood Apartments. Mrs. Persell was Miss Mildred Heaton, daughter of Mr.

(Photoreflex Photo.)

and Mrs. George W. Heaton, before her marriage Jan. 25, (Photoreflex

Photo.)

11. A Feb. 14 wedding was that of Miss Bernice Hull, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo C. Hull, to Henry C. Bracken.

(Kindred Photo.)

12. Mrs. Charles Stratton Jr. was Miss Catherine Dent, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dent, before her marriage Jan. 18.

Capital and Labor Join to Make New York the Fashion Capital

NEW YORK, Feb. 26 (U. P.).—Capital’ and labor of the dress in-

dustry were pledged today to raise $3,000,000 to -$4,500,000 to make

New York the world’s fashion capital. : : The fund-raising provision was contained in a collective bargaining

F. H. La Guardia by representatives of the joint dress board of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union and four employers’ associations. - The United Better Dress Manufacturers’ Association, a fifth employers’ group representing 700 shops employing 25,000 of the industry’s 85,000 unionized workers, refused to sign the agreement. The contract, which is for three years, provided that workers have the right to obtain efficient shop management through their union; that workers and employers will cooperate in the fund-raising campaign and that an ‘efficiency office” will be established to assist employers in improving their shops. La Guardia predicted the contract “will bring a new era in the dress industry in this city and provide our country with the best dressed women in the entire world.”

Women Urge Work for Aid

(Continued from Page One)

tax.” ‘This opposition will be conveyed to the Legislature. 2. Asked that citizenship responsibility in democracy be given increased attention in Indiana schools. 3. Pledged support to health programs. : : 4. Urged an educational program on insurance. The resolution on welfare and relief pointed out that one of the most serious problems confronting Indiana is welfare. It emphasized that society must recognize the existence of certain obligations to the needy, but in turn must seek a method of discharging those obligations that will not be a hardship on taxpayers or destroy the incentive of a person on relief to work. The Department points out that for years it had fought for the principle of taxation according to ability to pay, which “resulted in the gross income tax law.”

Urge Outside Contacts

“We need outside contacts and an exchange of ideas outside our tasks of homemaking to make us better homemakers,” Mrs. Elsie Mies, president of the Associated Women of the American Farm Bureau Federation, said in her address this morn-

“We need soil conservation,” she said, “but we need to look ahead more than just to soil fertility. With a look into the future, we must plow under some of our prejudices, some of our selfishness and some of our individualism.”

Counties set Awards

Achievement awards made to Departments in the counties for their year’s work included (in the order of their rating) Montgomery, Barthelomew, Park, Fountain, Hancock, Spencer, Jackson, Johnson, “Clark and Madison. le rs Dr. H. E. Barnard, research director of the National Farm Chemurgic Council, and Larry Brandon, secre-tary-treasurer of the Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc., were to talk at this afternoon’s meeting. Approximately 4000 persons attended last night's sessions devoted to rural youth. Cyrus L. Dwyer, director of the Bureau’s Department of Education, welcomed the young

vest, there's nothing much a-doctor can do, 0 : 4h

b 20g

agreement novel in American industry. Another clause gave labor the right to demand efficiency of management.

It was signed before Mayor

Personals

Mr. and Mrs, Clyde E. Whitehill, 4450 N. Meridian St., will return soon from St. Petersburg, Fla. where they have been visiting during February.

Mr. and Mrs. Marc J. Wolf, 729 E. 57th St., are spending the week in Wheeling, W. Va., visiting with Mr. Wolf’s father, Leo Wolf, and his uncle, C. J. Wolf,

Dr. Carl Habich, 4335 Broadway, will return the last of this week; after a visit with Gus Habich and family at their winter home, “Dreamland,” near Astor, Fla.

Miss Irma Huckriede has returned to her home in Louisville after spending the week-end with Mrs. June Moll Wilcox, 327 E. 31st St, and attending Alpha Chi Omega State Day activities on Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. O'Neill, 7800 Spring Mill Road, will arrive in Indianapolis the last of the week after a visit in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Miss Ruth Schooler, Spink Arms Hotel, has returned from Atlantic City, where she attended the National ° Edycational _Association’s convention last week.

Indianapolis visitors in St. Petersburg, Fla. who will return within the next week are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Williamson, Arlington Apartments, and the Misses Janet and Imogene Shaw, 2803 Washington Blvd.

Mrs. Louis C. Ward, 4634 Cornelius Ave., and her daughter Elizabeth returned early this week after a week's trip to Atlantic City and Washington.

Among local visitors to Florida who have returned recently are Mr. and Mrs. Dale Horning and daughter Lois;- 938 Parker Ave.; Mr. and Mrs. Edgar F. Brown, 2440 Adams St.; H. F. Hargrove, 1328 Burdsal Parkway, and his brother, R. S. Hargrove, 4646 Carvel Ave.; Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Parsons, 3415 College Ave., and Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Rowe, 2102 Brookside Parkway.

Mrs. Julius C. Travis is spending the winter in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Indianapolis are Mrs. Frank M. Fauvre, N. Michigan Road; A. W. Sutton, 3¢ W. 32d St.; Mrs. William E. Fraser, 3720 N. Meridian St.; Mrs. Cora Harrison, Woodruff Place; Mr. and Mrs. W..H. Melle,

Melle, 3460 N. Pennsylvania St.; Mr. Shirley, 3748 . Salem. St.; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Meurer, 4714 Central Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Thomas, 3310 Central Ave.; Mr. and Mrs, Jack Whalen, ‘5661 Madison

cliffe and Fred Radcliffe, 5432. W. Minnesota : St. : :

Quick! Easy! Delicious!

So rr A

people and Paul Foster, president of! Indiana Rural You i

Other St. Petersburg visitors from

3122 N. Harding ‘St.; Mrs. Mary |. and Mrs. Frank Reiss and daughter

Ave.; Mr. and Mrs. Roy B. Rad-

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 2, 1041 Wed in Recent Rites

are the Institute on Club Problems tion all day Friday, March 28. “Art and Industrialism” will be Mr. Craven's subject at a 2:30 p. m. program following a business meeting Wednesday, March 12. Mr. Craven’s first book in 1931, “Men of Art,” was followed by “Modern Art” in 1934, “A Treasury of Art Masterpieces” and the current best-seller, “A Treasury of American Prints.” He was born and educated in Kansas and lived for a time in New York with Thomas Hart Benton, leading American artist. The club problems institute at 1:30 p. m. Monday, March 10, will follow the monthly meeting of the board of directors at 10 a. m. and a 12:30 o'clock luncheon. Speeches on the program will include “Keeping House” by Mrs. W. C. Bartholomew, “A New Club House?” by Mrs. Everett M. Schofield, “General ClubDepartment Relationship” by Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, “The Curator Speaks” by Mrs. Philip A. Keller, “Membership” by Mrs. Alvin C. Barbour and “Flag Etiquette” by Mrs. E. May Hahn.

Nellie Crawford to Talk

Miss Nellie Crawford will talk on “A Needle in Her Hand” at the first department meeting of the month, that of the Art Department, Monday at 2:15 p. m. following a 2 o'clock busihess meeting at the club house. An art exhibit and tea will close the afternoon’s program. The Ten o0’Clock Art Department’s meetings next Wednesday and March 19 will be at the home of Mrs. Charles R. Yoke, 4144 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. Helen Talge Brown will discuss “Primitive Italy and the Renaissance” next week and Miss R. Katharine Beeson .will talk on “A Mosaic of Early European Art” at the second meeting. Another meeting next week will be the Literature and Drama Department’s program on Wednesday. Mrs. Schofield is scheduled to review the 1940 Pulitzer Prize play at 2:45 p. m. after a brief business meeting. The Book Hour at 1:30 o’clock will feature Miss Elizabeth Hall's review of “Stars on the Sea,” by F. Van Wyck Mason. The Community Welfare Department’s 12:30 o'clock - luncheon Wednesday, March 19, will precede a panel discussion of “How Religion Helps Our Community” by Dr. Howard J. Baumgartel, executive secretary of the local Church Federation; Dr. Henry Edwards Chace, radio chairman of the Federation, and Dr. Ralph L. Holland, president of the Indianapolis Ministerial Association.

To Report on Gardening Interests Miss Ida Helphinstine, principal of School 72, will report on “Gardening Interests in the Public Schools” at a meeting of the Garden Department Friday, March 21. The 2:30 p. m. program also will include music by Mrs, Arthur Madison. The following Monday Mrs. Hal Purdy will read “Peer Gynt” (Ibsen) for members of the Monday Guild. The Little Club Committee will be hostesses for the 3 p. m. social hour following the 2 o’cloék program and 1 p. m. business meeting. The general club will be guests of the American Home Department March 26 for a musical program presented by the Indianapolis public schools under the direction of Ralph Wright. At a 2 p. m. business meeting department officers elected. Preceding the meeting, at 1 p. m., the Applied Education group will meet for a panel on “Religion in Everyday Life” by Mesdames Carl J. Weinhardt, Felix T. McWhirter and Bert S. Gadd. .

New Under-arm Cream Deodorant v safely Stops Perspiration

1. Does not rot dresses, does not irritate skin. 2. Nowaitingto dry.Canbeused . right after shaving. ~~. 3. Instantly stops perspiration -for 1 to 3 days. Removes odor - from perspiration. '& Apuré, white, greaseless,stainless vanishing cream.’ . 8. Artid has been awarded the Approval Seal of the American Institute of Laundering for being harmless to fabrics. . 285 MILLION jars of:Arrid + have been sold. Try ajartadayl

RRID TE

ret Song iis goute

Art Critic Will Speak March 12 To Woman's Department Club; Other March Programs Set

Thomas Craven of New York, art critic and, anthologist will .come to Indianapolis March 12 to speak to Woman's Department Club mem bers at their monthly general meeting. = Also on the March calendar

March 10 and the annual club elece

Party Aids War Relief Work

A -benefit program for Bundles for Britain will be given at 1:30 o'clock Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Walter C. Kelly, 5859 Forest Lane. Highlights from “The White Cliffs” (Miller) will be given by Mrs. Athelia Makemson, follow« ing talks by Mrs. Roy Lazarus and Mrs. William Macgregor Morris on Bundles for Britain work. Tickets for the program may be secured from Mrs. Kelly and her assistants, Mesdames James IL, Dinehart, - Leslie A. Cain, Ernest Spickelmeier and Steve Radford. Other activities of the organiza=tion include co-operation with local clubs and groups. The Wednesday Afternoon Club will have a Bundles for Britain talk and exhibit at its second March meeting. Additional organizations which have made contributions recently

will * be|

are the Indiana Poetry Society, headed by Mrs. Carl Taylor, and the Indianapolis Alumnae Chapter of Delta Zeta Sorority, whose presie dent is Miss Katherine Rubush. Mrs. Carl Klutey is organizing a group of workers in West Indianapolis to make coverlets for air-raid shelters from upholsterers’ and tailors’ scraps and samples of war materials, It was to begin its meetings today.

Mrs. J. A. Johnson To Entertain

A guest meeting will he held at .2 p. m. tomorrow by the North Side Mothers’ Club at the home of Mrs, J, A. Johnson, 4210 N, Illinois ‘St. A program of readings and music will be presented by Mesdames J, Clifton Hirschman, Frank J, Billeter and F. H. Hirschman. Mrs. B. C. Johnson and Mrs. W, W., Peet will be assisting hostesses. :

I. T. S.C. to Hear | Mrs, Geddes

Mrs. John Keppler, 1110 Butler Ave., will entertain Castle Craig Chapter members of the International Travel-Study Club tomorrow evening, assisted by Mrs. Virgil Marshall and Miss Beth Wilson. Mrs. Trevor Geddes will speak on “Through the Suez Canal.”

Sorority Meets Tonight ' Miss Rosemary Darringer will “be hostess for Alpha Chapter, ‘Omega Kappa Sorority, meeting at ‘8 p.m. today in the Hotel Lincoln," * ==

Mrs. McLean Hostess . fa

The Pastime Pleasure Club’ met for ‘a’ noon luncheon today in the home of Mrs, C, E, McLean, 1846 Dexter St. ils

RESHLY ROASTED

GROUND TO ORDER’

COFFEE

~J tr coFrse SERVICE

Order Bokar ground right ) or your own coffee pot

, =——see how vigorous and ‘BOKAR COFFEE’

. winey the flavor is!

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