Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1941 — Page 12

New Officers Chosen by the Players At Annual Meeting at Woodstock

RAYMOND F. MEAD will bie in charge of 1941-42 activities of The “Players club, following his election as ‘| the group’s president Saturday evening. Other officers ‘|: "chosen at the club’s annual business meeting and dance at the Woodstock Club were Mrs. Ralph Boozer, vice. |: president; Mrs. Harry V. Wade, secretary, and Ralph Vonnegut, treasurer. . ie Club members present three plays during the winter season, with the cast drawn from the Players’ roster. Each play is followed 'by.a dance ta-honor performers at tae Woodstock Club. RNa Sa ogre . 2 #.8 8 / - The Indiana; :Mount * Holyoke Alumnae Club will hold its final meeting of the year at the home of Mrs. Ralph Erskine |i Cleland in Bloomington at 2 p. m. Saturday. Mrs, J. Perry Meek | is president of the club; Miss Helen Thornton, vice president, and Miss Evelyn Sickels, secretary-treasurer, ’ ; j 2 8 8 5 2 88 : Tudor Hall School’s annual Play Day featuring a series of sports events will begin at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the school. Officials in ¢harge will be Miss Barbara Cooke, Miss Ruth Ferguson and Mrs; Ruth Hutchison of the physical education department of the school. © = : ‘ .1 © Miss Barbara Klein, student manager of baseball, and Miss ari = 7 re Br -. J+’ Mary Landis,” student manager of tennis, will assist with the Members of the Butler University chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary journalism fraternity scheduled events. Finals in the Green and White tennis tournament for women, are preparing for their annual Matrix Table dinner to be held Thursday evening at 7 p. m. in | will be ‘played and the Green and Ve i sams Will Mosls the Canary Cottage. Miss Betty Lupton (left), general chairman, and Miss Joan Hixon (right) are shown: Topoing sit de Spetnion 3) program will be the Fathers a. g conferring with Mrs. Trevor R. Geddes (center), world traveler and lecturer, who ws! be the guest speaker. ; g Pr Outstanding women. in the. journalism department at Butler are to be honored at the annual dinner. , R.Z

ra 2 er Alice AnneWoodard Honored di = Myr. M : 111 : MISS RUTH DICKERSON entertained Saturday with a lunch’ a ‘eg and rs. Th omas Och iltree Dr . B €nson to ‘son bridge. at, the. Merigian Hills Country Club for Miss Alice Anne 3 Mt ° oo a . © =“! Woodard, whose marriage to Donald RE Hui Sonne, ; Co (a H 4 ig ] 111, will take place Saturday evening. Miss ard is'the daughter 4 Leave f or Trip to awatt, Give Dip omas - of Mr: and Mrs. Isaac E Woodard. | : ) Lo T : H H i A 1 : i = "Guests ‘were Mesdames Robert Wacker, Donald White, Hugh : 4 0 Be at € ere ug. To 94 Nurses : and George Hayes; Misses Betty Schissel, Ann Noel and Martha | : : Lupton. . 2 ) : the| ~~ Mrs. Wacker and Mrs. White will give a dinner and kitchen shower at: the: Propylaeum today for Miss Woodard, with - the Mesdames. Smelizer,” William F. Davis, W. V. Kingdon Jr. and Miss Dickerson as guests. Hostesses for the two parties and Mrs. Hugh

_E. V. Mitchell, (left) was in charge of dedication services yesterday for the Sunnyside Guild's new Recreation Hall for patients at the Sunnyside Sanatorium. Mrs. Irving D. Hamilton, Guild president, presented the building, which was accepted by city, county and-state officials and the hospital's heads.

The $18,000. build ng was built and furnished entirely by Guild contributions raised through .its. annual

# 8 dinner dance and card party and the recent “Buy A Brick” campaign.

a lL

Dr. Bonnell Souder Is Elected Head of State B.P. W.; Seek National Office Here "Dr. Bonnell Souder of Auburn, former first vies president of the . Indiana Federation of Business and Professignal Women’s Clubs, was _ named president of ‘the organization Saturday afternoon. The F

edera= tion -closed its annual convention with an International Breakfast yester« day morning in the Claypool Hotel. fsa “ :

es

Voters’ League To Hear Talk On Defense

A program feature of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters’ annual meeting Widnesday- at the

B. Smeltzer, Herbert H. Smeltzer, C. Hollis Hull, Robert Barrett

are en route to California

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hunter Ochiltree A They will be at home in

from where they will sail May 28 for Hawaii. ~ Indianapolis after Aug. 1. Before their marriage at 3:30 p. m., Saturday, in the First Presby-

Graduating - students . of Methodist Hospital School of Nursing appeared for the first time yes-

x Sa 25

terian ‘Church, ‘Mrs, Ochiltree was Miss Vannetta Jewel Doty, daughter

. of Mri and Mrs. James Franklin Doty of Carmel.

son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Paxton ‘Ochiltree of New York. The single ring: ceremony Was read by Dr. George Arthur Frantz before an altar decorated with palms, ferps and an arrangement of ‘delphinium and" lilac ‘flanked. by . seven-branch candelabra, The family pews were marked by white satin

~ ribbons-and- clusters of delphinium

and lilac.

Miss Dorothy Brown played a program of bridal airs which in-

Mr. Ochiltree is the

We, the Women— If You Want to Embarrass Your

Hubby---

at a luncheon given by the school in honor of the senior class at the Jacob E, Wile nurses’ home. + Baccalaureate services were held

at 3 oclock in Tabernacle Presbyterian{ Church with the Rev. Roy Ewing Vale officiating. Dr. John G. Benson, hospital superintendent, and Dr. William Hartinger, hospital minister, assisted. ie Commencement, exercises will be this evening at 8 o'clock in North Methodist Church. Miss Elizabeth

terday in their new white uniforms|

Smeltzer are to

Arlington Horse Show June 11 to show. Entries will close June 1.

Aid Society as dts-annual project f

camp at Traders- Poin

are middle weight hunter,

according to announcement of Mr.

be bridesmaids at the wedding ceremony.

Classes: Listed for Arlington Horse Show FORTY-SEVEN CLASSES art planned for the 1ith annual

14 at the R. H. Brown Stables, Brown, general manager of the

This year the ticket sale is being sponsored by the Christamore

or the maintenance of a summer

t. for underprivileged children. ‘Among the 12 events. scheduled for Wednesday night, June 11, 3-gaited novice, . gaited Indiana owned stake, children 10 years and under, ‘stallions or geldings, 3-gaited pony, hackney single, ‘fine harness stake,

Shetland pair, 5-5-gaited 3-gaited under 15.2 hands, light weight - hunter and

Woodstock Club vill be a” talk ‘by Mrs. Anne Hartwe 1 Johnstone, program secretary fo: the department of government anc foreign policy of the National Leagie. She will talk n “The League ¢nd National Deense.” 1 Members of the local league will hear a resume of ‘he year's activity given by officers, department and

business session, which will ké pre-

|sided over by Mri. John K. Goodwin, president of the Indianapolis Followinz the reports of plans for next

League. these chairmen,

committee chairmen at the 10 a. m.

Other - officers. chosen are Miss Susannah Fonner of Ft: Wayne, first vice president; Miss Ona Mabel Kell of Princeton, second: vice president; Miss Bess Callahan of Terre Haute, re-elected recording secretary; Miss Lilah Gilbert of Garrett, correspond= ing ‘secretary, and Miss Edna .Mayhak of Gary, treasurer. hd . Among resolutions adopted was one reaffirming the organization's stand for equal rights for men and women and the support of legislation to that end, now in Congressional subcommittee. :

times: since I made my first trip to Paris to study art but not untilI followed the duchess of Windsor, then Mrs. Simpson, across France to Cannes in 1936, was I made so conscious of the narrow aspects of the lives of these expatriates. Int small towns on the Riviera, they were tucked snugly, as they thought, away from the rest of the world, going ‘about their petty round of . pleasures,” Miss Worden said. - “They have lost their little world and they want us to get it back for - them. There are thousands

/ cluded “Liebestraum,” “Ich Liebe Dich” and, during the ceremony, the “Moonlight Sonata.” Miss Opal Dawson sang “At Dawnifg” and “Because.” Entering on the arm of her fath;"the bride wore a white faille ta gown with yoke and ruchings of mousseline de soie. Her halfhat ‘of faille taffeta was ornamented with fresh flowers matching her bouquet of white lilac, delphinium and gardenfas. Her matron of honor, Mrs. M. Scott Waldon, wore blue faille with matching Valenciennes lace trimming the bodice and short, puffed ~ gleaves. She wore a tiara of fresh \ dowers and carried Persian lilac, ~~ delphinium and pink roses. = > Mr. Waldon was best man and . ushers were Ross Freeman and Dr.

Another asks that the national headquarters of B. P. W. be moved to -Indianapolis from New York. Miss Sally Butler, the state retiring president, will make the request at ‘the national ‘convention, July to 11,:4n Los Angeles, Cal. “As women we can defend ‘the future by keeping an open mind and by taking as little advice as possible from Europe,” Miss Helen Worden, feature writer for the New York World-Telegram and special writer: for Scripps-Howard -Newspapers, including The Times, told members at yesterday’s breakfast: “Not that Europé isn’t wise,” she said, ‘but “that it has little experience in ‘ow’ problem—to make friends with each other. We're prétty international if we can get on our relatives.” :

By RUTH MILLETT IF YOU want to embarrass a husband out in public, there are a number of sure-fire ways. Call him by the silly pet name that makes him purr when there's no one else i around.

Gordon Fox, associate professor of Yale University School of Nursing, will be the, speaker and Dr. Benson will present diplomas to the 94 graduates. Dr. Guy O. Carpenter, Methodist district superintendent, will | preside, assisted by Dr. C. A. McPheeters, pastor of the church, and Dr. Hartinger. The school of nursing will enter=tain Miss Fox at dinner at the Columbia Club preceding the exercises. Guests will include Dr. and Mrs. Hartinger, Dr. and Mrs. Benson, Dr. and Mrs. McPheeters, Dr, and Mrs. Carpenter, Miss Bertha L. Pullen, superintendent of nurses; Miss Ellen Marie Anderson, director: of. nursing education, and - Miss ‘Katheryn M. Nelson, assistant su‘perintendent of nurses. ! “ Following the commencement ex-

knock down and out classes. ] The lady’s 3-gaited stake will be a feature of the following

night’s show. Other events are heavy weight hunter, children’s hunter’ horsemanship, 5-gaited mares, children 10 to 14 years of age, 3-gaited ‘combination, lady’s hackney, 5-gaited amateur, ‘pony stake, Shetland single, junior fine harness stake, jumpers stake and lady’s hunter classes. in the Friday night show, classes to be judged are amateur hunter and jumper, pairs of hunters or jumpers, 5-gaited novice, 3-gaited under 15 hands, lady’s 5-gaited, Shetland stake, park horse, 5-gaited combination, 3-gaited 15-2 hands and over; hackney, ‘junior, hunter and 3-gaited Indiana owned stakes. ; Bringing the four-day run to a close on Saturday night will be open jumping, lady’s Shetland, children 14 to 18 years of age, harness pony pair, 3-gaited amateur and 3-gaited and 5-gaited

stakes. Highland Club Plans Speedway Dance | INVITATIONS were mailed this week-end for the Highland

y 9 “ - ” 3 ht before Golf and Country -Club’s Speedway Splurge” the nig Memorial Day. A buffet supper 1s planned, beginning at 7 p. m,

year’s work and election of officers will conclude the business session. Mrs. Johnstone, serving as foreign policy program secretary, since 1034, has been author or co-author: of numerous league pamphlets in the international. field Two of her latest publications have been “Amer‘|ican Foreign Policy” and “Removal of Racial Discrimination in Immigration Laws.” Shae is also one of the authors of he latest league Publication, “The. Battle of Producon.” boris Mys. John Fuller, in charge of arrangements for the annual meeting, announces tat the:juncheon will be at 12:30 p m.;:and reseivations may be meécle at the ‘league office in the I[llinois Building. League members and their friends

upon thousands of refugees in New York City today who openly saythat ‘when’ this war is over they are going back. : : “I believe we should think things through: more carefully now than ever ‘before. Take an active infere est “in: the government of our coune try. Have a conviction, hut be sure it is based on first-hand knowledge.”

I. T.-S. C. Unit Meets

Mrs. Max H. Norris, newly elected president of the International Travel-Study Clubs, will entertain ‘members of the Netherlands -Chap--ter of the clubs in her home, 4116: E. Michigan St., at 7:30 p. m. today. Mrs. Melissa Cornish will speak

aise

the dishes. Tell another woman, in his presence, how little you paid for the dress you have on. Straighten his: necktie. ; Cling tightly to his arm when

Ey ~ D..J. Caseley.

oy

.. gessories and orchids.

The bride’s, mother chose a navy redingote with navy

‘ and white accessories and an orchid]

corsage. Mrs. Ochiltree’s dress was of mist blue and she wore navy ac-

The families and the bridal party attended a reception at the home of ~ Mr. and Mrs. Wajdon, 3205 Suther-

land Ave. after the cetemony. As-

sistants were Mrs, D. S. Horth and Mrs. Caseley. For traveling the bride wore a two-piece summer blue sports suit

with navy and cinnamon brown

E

cago.

accessories and an: orchid -corsage. 3 The: bride attended Butler Universtiy.- Mr. Ochiltree was gradu‘ated from DePauw University and is a ember of Scabbard and Blade and Sigma Delta. Chi and Delta Chi Fraternities. +: : Among out-6f-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. John Martin of Chi-

“ Couple to Live In New York

Now on a wedding trip to New Orleans and the city of Mexico, Mr. - and Mrs. Robert Bernstein will be at home in New York after July 1.

~ Before her marriage at noon yes-

terday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club, Mrs. Bernstein was Miss Jacqueline Wolf, daughter of Mr. and Mrg. Jacob H. Wolf, 3826 N. Pennsylyania St. Mr. Bernstein’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. David Bernstejn. n-of New York. : z Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht officiated at the service, which was fol- . lowed by a dinner for the families and out-of-town guests. White flowers and greenery were used in decorating. c. “A Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a delph blue crepe suit with navy blue straw hat and accessories and an orchid corsage. Arnold Bernstein of New York ‘attended his brother as best man. Mrs. Bernstein is a graduate of Tudor Hall School and of Wellesley College. Mr. Bernstein was gradted from the Harvard University School of Business Administration.

State P. E. O. Elects

* New Officers =

New state president of the P. E. 0. Sisterhood, chosen at the 18th ‘annual convention’s closing session here Saturday morning, is Mrs. ‘Clara Brandenburg of West Lafayette. She is a member of ChapD. Other officers elected to serve with her are: Mrs. Marie B. Wagoner of Greensburg, first vice presient; Mrs. Helen Hillman of South end, second vice president; Mrs. ¥ M. Souder -of Indianapolis, er; Mrs. Jo Kuebler of napolis, corresponding secreys: Mrs. Enos P, Richardson of jokomo, recording secretary, and Simpson Stoner of Greencastle,

hapters U and Vio lis

he happens to be looking at another girl. ‘ Talk about the children when he’s in a good-fellow, life-of-the-party mood. :- Take the “we old folks” line when he is under the influence of a winning alma mater football team to the extent of whooping it up like an undergraduate. Tell .an anecdote about your courtship days, preferably describe your “husband’s proposal. > Point out that he needs s haircut Amuse the crowd by telling how your husband got stung on the last deal he made. 7 = = © : JR BE Sie 3 TAKE OVER:in a restaurant, giving instructions to the waiter instead of keeping still and letting your hushand take charge. Get the floor and hold .forth on any subject. ! Talk about some subject on which you know nothing—and make your ignorance very obvious to those: listening. Or, easier still, just mispronounce a word. It's easy once you get the hang of it. Why, with a little practice you can embarrass a man anywhere, betes -either his friends or his enees.

St. Joan of Arc Club to Play Bridge

The Woman's Club of St. Joan ‘of Are Catholic Church will entertain with a luncheon bridge tomorrow at the Riviera Club. Mesdames James Curtis, Thomas Tressler and Walter Stuhldreher are in charge of arrangements. ~ Their assistants are Mesdames E. 0. Marquette, Charles Mason, William J. Mooney Jr., William Flynn, John J. Kennedy, Robert. Boyle, J. Albert Smith, Marvin Brezette, Richard Hennessey, Gordon Kelley, Robert Kirby, - Frank . Langsenkamp, Thomas Leonard, Harlan O'Connor, Carl Reifsteck, Charles. E, Wagner and Joseph A. Naughton. Others are Mesdames James E.

Ruth Millett

J. Beckerich, Edward M. Curry, J. E. Kiefer, J. E. Pettig, Joseph M. Markey, Louis Mohlenkamp, William E.. Moran, Edward J. Bidwell,

Thomas King, Gilbert Osborne, William Merrick and Frank McAvoy.

Dr. Willard Clute to Lecture Wednesday

Holliday Park Botanical Gardens, will give the second of a series of educational lectures for garden club members at 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Holliday home. . His subject will be “Stems.” If

duct a tour of the grounds. The lectures are sponsored by a come mittee of city garden club members

as a garden center. Representatives of all garden clubs may attend.

Sorority will meet Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Raymond Mrs.

as hostess chapters for

EO Lb] Ae 3 A hs bo -

E. Edmondson, 1603 Hoyt Av p Joslin Wil be 80 BOBO

. 2

iid

Faust, Rex E. Moonshower, Leonard |

Michael C.. Carr, John M. Collins,

Dr. Willard Clute, director of the :

weather permits, Dr. Clute will con-|’ promoting the Botanical Gardens|:

Mrs. Edmondson Hostess| Alpha Chapter of Delta Sigma Chi

ercises, graduates and their families will be guests of the White Cross Guild at a reception in the church parlors. Mrs. Ambrose E. Pritchard is chairman, assisted by Mesdames Raymond Herath, F. E. Thornburgh, D.- A. Bartley and Desmond Noonan. JE pl - Special guests at the luncheon yesterday were Mr. and Mrs, DeWitt S. Morgan, Dr. and Mrs. Vale, Dr. and Mrs. Hartinger, Dr. and Mrs. Benson, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence C. Hess, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. McLeod, Dr. Horace M. Banks, Dr. Harold Ochsner, Dr. and Mrs, Charles Seaman, Miss Thelma Hawthorne, Mrs. Otto Miller, Mrs. J. W. Miller, Mrs. Florence H: Stone and faculty members and supervisors. On the committee in charge were Mrs. Ellsworth Sunman, Miss Katheryn Nelson and Miss Blush Millett. : 2 8 = Senior nurses of the Methodist Hospital will be entertained at a luncheon tomorrow noon at the nurses’ home. ‘Mrs. J. W, Noble is chairman of the White Cross Guild committee arranging the event. . Assisting her are Mesdames William R. Klingholz, William M. Tgylor, Harry Cooler, Harold B. Rennard, Ida Burrus and William H. Day. Miss Lela Porter, accordion-

ist, will play. “Mystery. mothers” and their

{adopted “daughters” will meet for

the first time at the luncheon. Oniy those women who have senior daughters will gttend, i ; Plainfield Chapter of the Guild was to meet in the nurses’ home today. The Office and Business Women’s Chapters will meet tonight. New Jersey Street Methodist and Meridian Heights Guilds wiil meet tomorrow; Alpha Omicron Alpha, Mary Hanson Carey Research and St. Paul Methodist Chapters, Wednesday; the Irvinge ton and Library Guilds Thursday, and the Brightwood and Greenwoo Chapters, Friday. ”

Bride

Mrs. Charles Z. Bond was Miss. Legis Edna Countryman, daugh-: ‘ter of

. of Ft. Wayne, before her '

-

d dancing will be from 10 p. m. to 2 a. m. an Mr. ey Mrs. Charles M. Hammond and Mr. and Mrs. PJ.

r are co-chairmen of the committee arranging the event. Bobi ho ‘their committee are Mrs, L. Merrill Thiesing and Messrs, and ‘Mesdames Malcolm G. Campbell, E. N. Trago, L. E. Randle, Dean’T. Burns and M. C. Bartlett.

| general;

| president, will preside. | be made for chapter inspection.

‘comb Ave, will entérfain ALPHA

"A buisineés meeting Will be’ held {J. Frank Ittenbach, 4532 Baltimore

{| Epstion cmaptER, RHO DELTA, will ‘hold a social meeting" this

| CHI CHAPTER; ALP | CRON ALPHA, will nieet at 7:30 p. § \ MC LOC DF [Alice Jean Morrett, 1201 W, 32d St.

Dexheimer-Oarlon ‘Photo— | I

Mr. and Mrs. K. W.. Coun- A

And Delta Theta

-- BETA CH OMEGA PHI banquet held at 7 p.m. Friday at * The recently elected officers are Ray Mrs. Benney Mrs. Fern Hudson, -sergeant-at-arms; Mrs. Mary Green, attorney Miss Dorothy Thompson, organizer, and Mrs. Sylvia Simpson,

publicity: manager.

The installation banquet of ZETA KAPPA CHAPTER, DELTA THETA] TAU, will be at-7 p. m. Wednesday in the Lincoln Room of Hotel Lincoln. Arranging the event are Mrs. william Wolsiffer, chairman, Misses Lucille Thomas, Katherine Schmidt and Margaret Ann Branham.

Officers to. be installed are Mrs.

Paul’ Wedtherly, president; Mrs. Wwolsiffer, vice president; Mrs. Guy Ray, recording secretary; Mrs. Thomas Allen; corresponding secretary; Miss Sarah: Boland, treasurer; Miss: Thelma Wright, sergeant-at-arms: ‘Mrs. August Wulf, historian, and Mrs. I A. Iverson, press correspondent. ; 2 The weekly meeting of ALPHA CHAPTER, PHI OMEGA KAPPA, will be held this evening at the home of Mrs. Georgia Teare, 2906 Station St. LAMBDA CHAPTER, OMEGA NU TAU, will hold a business meeting at 8 p. m. today at the Hotel Lin-

coln. Mrs. Richard. Cheesman, Plans will

Mrs. Forrest Blackwell, 49 S. Whit-

CHAPTER, SIGMA DELTA SIGMA, at 8 p. m. today. ail

by BETA CHAPTER, BETA CHI THETA, tonight at the home of Mrs.

Ave;

ori, “1001 St, ‘Peter St. Moody willbe assistant

CHAPTER; - ALPHA . OMI-

. tomorrow at tlie home of Miss

_ INDIANAPOLIS

Steffey, vice president; Mrs. Barney Arvin, corresponding secretary;

Installation Banquets Planned By Chapters of Omega Phi Tau

Tau Sororities

Installation banquets highlight sorority activities this week.

TAU, will install new officers at a

Holly Hock Hill.

Mrs. Gladys Spahr, president; Mrs. Burnett, recording secretary; Miss Ruth Bubeck, treasurer;

P-TA News—

An annual meeting highlights Parent-Tegcher activities for the week. : [i The Howe High School P. T. A. annual meeting will be at 7:45 p. m. tomorrow at the school with election of officers and reading of the annual report as program features. Also on the program arranged by Mrs. C. E. Donnell, program chairman, will be the presentation of two plays by the speech department directed by D. C. Gooch. In the, cast of “It Was a Lovely Meeting” will be Charlene Montgomery, Gertrude Hall, Mary Concannon, Clyde Holder, Betty Jane Kyle, Betty Lou Spangler, Jeanne Rohyans, _ Link and Miriam Jasper. Phil Gwynn, Eileen Edwards and Shirley Courtney will appear ii “Farewell, Cruel World.”

Chester Gray will stage manage

both plays. Mrs. Robert Mannfield is chair= man for a reception to follow the program. : Other meetings scheduled for this week are:

‘TOMORROW

School 41 Parent Education Group —1:30 p. m. ““Good Literature for Children,” by Mrs. Ray Harris. James E. Roberts—1:15 p. m. Installation of officers; social hour.

. WEDNESDAY

1—2:30 p. m. “The Pursuit of Happiness Through Social Security,” by Virgil Sheppard, State Public Welfare Department director; May Festival music by pupils; insallation of officers. 2—2 P. m. " ; in Living”; report of State P.-T. A. convention by Mrs. F. A. Holder; election and installation of officers. A

by Dr. Olga Bonke Booher; in- * stallation of officers; musical selections from May

42—3:15 p. im. cers; m 1001 directed {by Irene H. Jones.

{56=—3 p.m

|60—2 Dp.

DOREY:

Health film, “More Life|

20—2:30 p. m. “Your Child’s Health,” |

Festival. | ‘Study Grqup meets at 1:30 p. m.| Installation of offi-} c¢c by school orchestral

are invited to attend the luncheon meeting to hear Mrs. Johnstone explain the league’s part in the National Defense program. Only league members, nowever, are eligible to attend th: morning session

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