Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1941 — Page 22

Society—

Harlan Hadleys Will Entertain

At Country Club Dance Saturday:

THAT THE SUMMER SEASON has no discouraging effect upon the entertainment urge is- indicated by the number of parties planned for the week-end’s outstanding social events — the Indianapolis Country Club’s Golden Jubilee supper dance and the Lambs Club’s sum-

mer frolic in the Athenaeum

garden.

At the Country Club, Mr. and Mrs, Harlan J. Hadley will entertain Mrs. Hicks Baker, Bloomington; George W. Mahoney, Mr. and

Mrs. Myron R. Green and Mr. and

Mrs. Wallace O. Lee. With the

Earl E. Goelzers at the club will be Messrs. and Mesdames Ray N. Peterson, B. F. Lacy, W. T. Tingdale and Charles Nugent. Eugene 8. Pulliam will entertain Messrs. and Mesdames Albert "J. Beveridge Jr., George Denny and Harvey Trimble and Miss Joséphine Madden before taking them to the Lambs party with him.

Others who will entertain parties at the frolic are Mr. and Mrs,

J. Mason Gaston, Mr. and Mrs, Ruckelshaus and George Bardwell.

Henry C. Atkins Jr. John C.

Mr. and Mrs. Volhey M. Brown

will attend an informal party at the Paul Starretts before goihg to the club with them. Also in the group will be Mr. and Mrs. Lothair Teetor, Hagerstown, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Lochhead and Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey H. Eno. Mr. #and Mrs. John A. Alexander too plan to be at the Athenaeum for the Lambs party.

Edward F. Roesch to Entertain For His Niece EDWARD PF. ROESCH will entertain tomortfow night at his

Brendonwood home with a rehearsal suppe his niece, and her fiance, Ensign Morey J.

or Miss Patricia Roesch, . yle of River Forest, Ill.

The betrothed couple will be married in a ceremony at 9 o'clock Sunday morning in the chapel at Ladywood School with the Rev.

Pr. Maurice Egloff officiating.

Guests at the supper will include parents of the couple, Ms. and Mrs. Herman P. Roesch and Mr. and Mrs. A, J. Doyle of River Forest, and members of the bridal party: Miss Joyce Roesch, maid of honor: Mrs. Jerry Roesch, matron of honor; Thomas Doyle, River Forest, best man; Robert Doyle, Chicago; Jerry and Ryland

Roesch, ushers.

Out-of-town guests for the ceremony who will attend the party tomorrow night include Mrs. Robert Doyle, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Butler, Lake Forest, Ill;

" Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mesterharm, Hammond,

Jack and Thomas McMahon, River

Glen Cooper Henshaw to Open Gallery ON TUESDAY a new studio and art gallery will be added to

Miss Vera Hugle, Oak Park, Ill;

and Everett Hannifan, Forest.

the Brown County artists’ colony as Glen Cooper Henshaw of Baltimore opens the Henshaw Gallery on Nashville’s town square. Mr. Henshaw is a native Hoosier who has won acclaim in art . circles of New York and Paris for his portraits and landscapes. At - one time he had a studio here in the Union Trust Building.

He and Mrs. Henshaw arrived in

Indianapolis yesterday en route .

to Nashville to complete arrangements for the formal opening of the gallery-studio Tuesday. The gallery, to be located in the old Odd Fellows Building, a Brown County landmark, has been re-

modeled to make it fireproof, newly decorated and furnished 4 year-round exhibition center of Mr. ‘Henshaw’s art.

as

Although the Henshaws will spend but a few weeks of the year in Brown County, arrangements have been made for a permanént

curator and caretaker. without admission charge. Included in the opening exhibit

The gallery is to be open to the public

will be a number of canvasses

purchased two years ago by citizens of India who directed that the

paintings 1 shipment may be made to India.

be stored in this country until war conditions subside and | Mr. Henshaw’s work was shown

at the John Herron Art Museum in February last year.

Personal Notes

MISS NANCY GOODRICH, daughter of Mrs. Louis H. Haerle,

jh Boston with her aunt, Miss

: | returned yesterday after completing her sophomore year at Vassar College and visiting with friends in

marriage of Miss Katherine Jackson i Frances Dugan, who is director of

e East. She attended the Boston and spent some time

Winsor School. . . . Mrs. Robart Allyn Sheffield came recently from

Long Beach, Cal,

daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Adams. . . .

to spend the summer with her son-in-law and

Mr. and Mrs.

Victor Thorley of New York, who have been visiting friends here '* this week, left this morning for Tamworth, N. H., where they will

appear this summer with The Barnstormers.

Mrs. Thorley is the

former Mary Florence Fletcher of Indianapolis who appeared freuently in Civic Theater productions and with the Stuart Walker

layers here.

: : Edward Schorts Will Give Dinner For Daughter and Her Fiance; Shower Honors Louise Byers

A bridal dinner for a June bride heads today’s news of pre-nuptial

showers and announcement of a marriage.

* Mr. and Mrs. Edward Schort will give a dinner tomorrow evening on the Severin Roof for their daughter, Miss Gwendolyn S8chort, and

| Thomas A. Bunch, whose wedding will be Sunday aftérnoon in the Third * Christian Church. Mrs. Elsie Bunch, the prospective pridegroom’s moth-

éf, will be a special guest.

. Mrs. William F. Rothenburger, Mr.

At the dinner will be the Rev. and

and Mrs. Glenn Seitz, Franklin; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bunch, Washing“ton; Mr. and Mrs. Fred G. Johns | Jr. South Bend; Mr. and Mrs. Dean | yarnam, Mesdames Natalia Conner, ' Ralph Holton and Lloyd Newlin, . Miss Connie Conrad, Miss Beatrice - Houze, Frederick Cline and John Taggart. . eather dinner for Miss Schort will be given tonight by Mrs. J. Clyde Hoffman and Mrs. Hollis . Leedy at the latter's home, 6030 Primrose Ave. Guests will be alumnae of Pi Beta Phi Sorority, to whieh Miss Schort belonged at Butler University. Miss Houze, who is to be Miss gchort’s maid of honor Sunday, gave a recent crystal shower for the ‘| pride-to-be in her home. She was assisted by her mother, Mrs. E. E. Houze. Guests at the shower were Mesdames Schort, Bunch, Paul Pritchard, Guy Inman and Thomas | Athey, the Misses Margaret Davis, . Mary Bea Whiteman, Cleota Tapp, Dorothy Tucker, Margaret Swan and Mildred Jones. 4 : 2 8 = A personal shower last night was ' given by Miss Frances McCallian, 5305 Pleasant Run Parkway, for ‘Miss Louise Byers of Kokomo, who will be married to Carl Broo in the . gokomo Congregational Church oh ~ Sunday. . Among guests at the shower will be Mesdames A. F. Byers, Grace Broo and Francis Sallee, all of Kokomo, and active members of the Indiana University chapter of Phi Omega Pi Sorority. : a #8 = The marriage of Mrs. Pearl M. . Brannon to Walter Decker took place at 10:30 o'clock yesterday . motning at the bride's home, 1116 WW. New York St, with Dr. Arthur DeBord officiating. Mr. Decker is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor W.

Decker, Peru, and the bride is the daughter of George Johnson of In~dianapolis. The couple will be at “home in Peru.

J. C. Nelsons to Note Wedding Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Nelson, 59 8. Whitcomb Drive, will""be honof guests at a dinnér celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary this eveat Holly Hock Hill,

nding, with the honor guests, |g

‘be Mesers. and Mesdames Clem

Sororities— Writes Song For Sorority

An international convention and several social meetings are included in sorority events recorded today. Miss Ruth Lett, a Butler University delegate at the ZETA TAU ALPHA convention in Edgewater Park, Miss., this week, is presenting a sorority song, with her own words and music, which, if accepted, will become a national Zeta Tau Alpha song. Convention sessions opened Monday at the Edgewater Gulf Hotel and will close tomorrow. Other Indianapolis girls at the convention are the Misses Maribelle Foster, Bette Smith, Margaret Schoen and Rose Ellen Gray. Miss Peggy Collins of Battle Creek, Mich., and Miss Della Ake from Ft. Wayne, both Butlér chapter members, are also attending the sessions. . Mrs. Lester DeVoe, state rush chairman, is representing Butler, Indiana &nd Franklin alumnae. I'he convention is the first to he held in Mississippi and is the 17th national and 6th international meeting. During the last four years two chapters have been installed in the state, at the University of Mississippi and at Mississippi College. All chapters have exhibits oh display. Butler delegates will returh next week after a post-convention trip and will report on the convention at a meeting July 7 in the home of Miss Foster.

Mrs. Paul Kester was to review “The Nazarene” (Sholem Asch) following at 1:30 p. m. dessert luncheon today for THETA TAU PHI members. Hostess was to be Mrs. Eugene Wright, 5516 Smock 8t.

Following a dinner tomorrow evening at the lake Shoré Country Club, ALPHA CH. of RHO DELTA SORORITY will hold formal initiation for Mesdames Russell Duvall, Everett Sheets and Clifford 8. McGee. Dancing for members and guests will conclude the evening. Mrs. Fred Azbell is in charge, assisted by Mesdames Harry Snodgrass, Merle Denney and Albert South. ;

will dance tomorrow night at Westlake and hold an 8 p. m.- meeting Monday at the home of Miss Eleanor Morris, 3707 E. New York

Klepfer, Fo

rest].

SIGMA LAMBDA CHI members

Beta Sigma Phi Chapters Organized Here

First organization meetings for Beta Sigma Phi Sorority’s two new chapters, Beta Eta and Beta Zeta, will take place Monday evening in the Claypool Hotel. Mrs, Irving D. Hamilton is sponsor of Beta Eta Chapter and Mrs. W. D. Keenan of Beta Zeta. Members of the chapters were ini-

_|tiated into the sorority at a recent

ceremony conducted by Mts. Dan Norvell and Mrs. Carol Guibert, international secretaries who are visiting Indianapolis. New officers were installed preceding an installation banquet in the Claypool’s Empire Room. Miss Eunice Johnson was a guest at the banquet. Mrs.

Norvell left yesterday for Kokomo and other Indiana cities to install and inspect state chapters. New officers of Beta Zeta Chapter are Miss Tressella Murphy, president; Mrs. W. A. Wasson, vice president; Mrs. Lester Hanson, corresponding secretary; Miss Ilene Hasler, recording secretary; Mrs. Marta Camden, historian; Mrs. Floyd Buckley, treasurer; Miss Helen Magee, director, -and Miss Thelma Caidwell, program chair= man, Other members are the Misses Rosemary Carr, Betty Jane Arnett, Ann Presutti, Lois Rosenbaum, Judy Blackburn, Helen Girvin, Barbara Wells, Norma Walters and Betty Jean VanCamp. Honorary memberships were ¢onferred on Mrs. Keenan, Mrs. Hamiltoh and Mrs. John W. Thornburgh, who will be spon< sor of the local Chi Chapter and direct its educational program. i Mrs. Walter Bertrand, 3537 N.: Pennsylvania 8t.;: & member of Psi: Chapter, will be one of 16 Beta Sigma Phi mem-

ing the sorority’s annual summer Mre Bertrand tour. She will join this year’s friendly neighbor tour in Boston early next week. Other tour members began their trip from Kansas City, Mo. 1941 convention city, and were to visit San Francisco, the Panama Canal and the Bahamas on their way to New York. Other tour cities will be Toronto, Montreal, Quebec and Boston. A joint meeting of all city Chapters, Delta, Chi, Psi, Omega and Beta Zeta, will be called soon for reports on the international convention held last week-end. Local delegates were Mrs. Marguerite Foster, Miss Mildred Heavrinh and Miss Lestie Fleming of Psi and Mrs. Elfreda Rodgers of Delta.

Democratic Club Meets Tomorrow

The monthly n eeting of the Perry

Township Women’s Democratic Club will be held at’ 2 p. m. tomorrow at the American Legion Hall at Thompson Road and Shelby St. with . Mrs. Florence Smith as hostess, : Assisting hostesses will include Mesdames Harmon Cory, Florence Funk, O. D. Ludwig and Miss Eleapor Wiles.

To Give Recital

Mrs. W. R. Sieber will present Miss Margaret Kime (above), soprano, in a recital at 3 p. m. Sunday in the Fairview Presbyterian Church, Miss Kime, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Kime, 5265 Washington Bivd., will be assisted by Miss Irma Mae Steele, violinist, and Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter, accompanist, Miss a graduate of the Sher-

Volunteer Worke

§

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ". rs Turn Out. Surgica

Volunteers wark five days a week and Monday night.

Mrs. Charles R. Weiss assists with

Every dressing must meet Government measurements,

s =

is celebrating an anniversary.

five days out of every week fr

away at making cotton pads, gauze sponges, etc. Just since last March, the station has turned out 57,000 dressings of a 98,300 quota.

The volunteer workers, none are paid, work in a large, light and airy room provided through the courtesy of John P. and Otto Frenzel. Some of them arrive quite early in the morning and stay on the job until five. There are attractive girls, no older than sixteen, and even grandmothers. Among the volunteers are women who served the Red Cross in the last war, Miss Brink did canteen work at that time and Mrs. Stanley Timberlake, who assists with the packing now, was a volunteer in World War I, too. The women work at large tables uinder the direction of supervisors (volunteers too). ‘The dressings come in various sizes and are measured to meet goverhment regulations. And after they are finished; a packing group carefully counts them into packages and these in turn are placed in Specifically labeled sacks, boxed and sent off to Toledo, the clearing house for stations in the Middle West.

Serve Many Hours

It is exacting work. Sometimes it becomes almost monotonous. But this doesn’t stop the volunteers. A record of hours worked from the beginning of the station to May 30 reveals that over 77 women donated more than 256 hours work. Miss Brink worked 554 hours plus. There are several women with over 200 and over .800 hours to their credit. Donors of more than 18 hours are privileged to wear the blue veil with their uniforms, : Incidentally, the Indianapolis group is one of 428 chapters in the country which have accepted quotas for dressings and to date have finished more than three million. The workers have the feeling that after all this is “everybody’s war” and that they really want to help alleviate. suffering — despite the sentimental sound that it has in the spoken and written word. A class of from 30 to 50 meets on Monday nights. Phis includes working women who want to “do their bit.” They need more workers. ‘There are at least two large vacant tables at the station and the room can accommodate more.

To Answer British SOS The quota now being filled will be used by our own armed forces. The ‘closer ' home” feature has brought renewed interest in the station, Miss Brink points out. After that quota is filled, the station will answer an SOS from the British Red Cross for 1000 scultetus, large and more intricately made. dressings, for use in Egypt and India. Surgical dressings is just one division of the Red Cross. Garment making and knitting are the other two braniches in which Indianapolis women are working now. A large increase in the preduction of both the dressings and garments is anticipated as a result of activities began recently by a newly appointed Emergency Volunteer Service Committee ~ under the leadership of Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres.

Norway Club Plans Annual Election

The Norway Chib will hold its annual election of officers at an 8

in the D. A. R. Chapter House, 824 N. Pennsylvania St. Hostesses for refreshments and a social hour later will be Mrs. Christian Olsen, Mrs. Niels Juel Henricksen and Miss Steéna Marie Holdahl.

Tools for the Barbecue If you're going barbecuing, don’t

forges to. take Along & pair of clean OMSL 10 SOK MODE £704 OF Syean

Red Cross Station Is Rounding Out Year of Service; Additional Volunteers Needed

By ROSEMARY REDDING

They're passing candy around this week up in Room 807 of the Merc¢hant’s Bank Building for the Red Cross surgical dréssings station there

It was just a year ago that Miss Julia Brink, the director, and Mrs. George Home came back from Washington with instructions for organizing this vital division of the Red Cross here. With the help of Mrs. William C. Young, they really got things underway and now

rAm' An American — What Every

20 to 25 volunteers diligently work

Theta Sig Gives "Three Awards

Times Special "BLOOMINGTON, Ind., June 27.— Theta Sigma Phi’s 1941 headliner award winners are Ruby Black of Washington, Frances Cavanah of Chicago, a DePauw University graduate, and Martha Wright Shakespeare of Kalamazoo, Mich. formerly of Indianapolis and Bloomington. Announcement was made at the opening session of the journalism sorority’s national convention oh the Indiana University campus, which will continue through tomorrow.

Miss Black, a graduate of the University of Texas and a former nationdl president of Theta Sigma Phi, is head of hér own news service in Washington. She suggested to Mrs. Roosevelt the idea of her women's press conferences and helped the First Lady wotk out her plans for her syndicated column, “My Day,” appearing-in the Indian= apoiis Times. With Edwin Rosskam she is the author of “Washington: Nerve Center.” : Formerly: associate editor of Child Life, Miss Cavanah is now a staff writer for Row, Peterson & Co., and is the author of several juve-

nile books and short stories. Her “I

Citizen Should Know,” has sold a million copies since publication in January. Other books are “Famous Paintings,” “Marta Finds the Golden Door” and “Told Under the Christmas “Tree.” “My Country” will appear soon. : Mrs. Shakespeare's first novel, “Two Solitiides,” was published last August and her second, “Begun in Laughter,” will come out this summer. Within the last year she has sold 25 short stories to pulp maga-

gines, Dinner Tonight

Today's program was to include the election of national officers and a luncheon with C. Walter McCarty, | Indianapolis News managing editor, as principal speaker. Following a dinner at the Abe Martin Lodge in Brown County State Park, members of the Bobbs-Merrill Publishing Co. will present a panel program on book publishing. The conven tion will close tomofrow following group discussion luncheons and the Matrix Table batigtiet.

Business yesterday included the presentation of a chatter to the

Sally geles, national president, presented the charter to Miss Betty Shryock of the Texas school. Mts. Jeannette Covert Nolan of Indianapolis spoke at a luncheon on “Personal Prob< lems of the Writer.” v

Marian Guild to Sew | For Red Cross Members of Marian Guild will sew for the Red Cross at a meeting

from 10:30 a. m. to 4 p. m. Tuesday at College, 3600 Cold Springs

Clubs

Women’s organizations and girls’ clubs meeting this week and next have planned study programs and picnics. Mrs. Logan G. Hughes will review “This Above All” (Eric Knight) at a meeting of the BUTLER ALUMNAE LITERARY CLUB tomorrow in the home of Miss Clara B. Thor-

meyer, 93 S. Butler Ave. This will be the year’s final meeting.

THE ST. CLAIR LITERARY CLUB will hold a picnic on Sunday at the country home of Mrs. Paul Bowman southwest of Brownsburg. The hostess will be in charge of the program closing the eclub’s year. The next meeting will be a luncheon on Sept. 23.

County officers of the Women's Christian Temperance Union will take part in an institute program planned by the ELLEN WRIGHT W. C. T. U. for Tuesday at 10:30 a. m. Hostess for a noon luncheon will be Mrs. Ray H. Guthrie, 3702 N. Tacoma Ave. The Rev. Stanley Woltjen of the First Moravian Church will conduet devotions at the morning séssion. Afternoon speaker will be Mrs. C. Q. Eicher, county director of evangelistic and religious education.

, Miss Margaret Ann Atgustine, new president of the JOHN STRANGE 4-H CLOTHING CLUB, and Miss Jane Augustine, secretary, were hostesses yesterday for the group’s meeting. Older girls in the group began making dresses suitable for school wear. Other officers of the club are Miss Helen Tyrie, vice president, and Miss Frances Tyrie and Miss Ann Berlin, club reporters.

THE BELLANAIRE CLUB met yesterday at the home of Miss Jean Laughner to make plans for a picnic on Sunday.

es

the packing.

Stowe-Hurst Wedding Is Tonight

A double-ring ceremony tonight will unite in marriage Miss Betty Jean Hurst, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Hurst, 957 Yoke 8t., and Jack R. Stowe. Mr. Stowe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Stowe, 2405 N. Pennsylvania St. The wedding will be in the Shelby Street

Methodist Church. Before an altar banked with palms and ferns and lighted by candles, the Rev. Befinie Morgan. will read the 7:45 o'clock service. Mrs. William Knopf will sing “Because” and “I Love You Truly” preceding the marriage ceremony and also will be a bridesmaid with Miss Betty Lee King. Miss Opal Dinkins will be maid of honor. Best man will be Robert Stowe, brother of the bridegroom, and ushers will be William Hurst, the bride’s brother, and Harold Bavender of New Castle. Roberta Gene Bishop will be flower girl. Entering with her father, Miss Hurst will wear a white marquisette gown made with a high neckline and long sleeves. White lace will form cuffs at the wrist and will be placed in epaulets on the shoulders. Insertions of the lace will be at the waist and in three rows on the full skirt. The bride’s three-tier fingertip veil will fall from a halo of orange blossoms fashioned of white satin and her bouquet will be of white roses and orchids. Colonial bouquets of pink roses, blue delphinium and baby’s breath will be carried by the bride's attendants, who will have small arrangements of the same flowers clipped in their hair. The flower girl's gown will be a miniature of Miss Dinkin’s blue organza frock, with a sweetheart neckline and puffed sleeves. Lace trim will be on the shoulders of the bridesmaids’ pink marquisette gowns. The .mothers of the couple will have corsages of pink roses and delphinium, Mrs. Hurst with a pink silk jersey dress and white accessories and Mrs. Stowe with a powder blue redingote ensemble, ) Following a teception at the Hurst home, Mr. and Mrs. Stowe will leave on a wedding trip to Lake Shafer. They will be at home next week at 1016 N. Tecumseh St. The bride will travel in a pink silk jersey frock with white accessories and an orchid corsage.

Nature Study Club To Have Outing

Nature Study Club members will go on an all-day bus trip to Brown County State Park tomorrow, starting at 9 a. m. On the program for the day will be a picni¢, swimming and hike led by a park guide. Dr. Oscar lackey, Miss Augusta Heberlein, Miss Hattie McFerrin and Theodore McCain will be in

o Bly

Thausands of People Realise’ the Impor tance of Buying Shoes at a Shoe Store

charge of the outing.

El ESS EEE ES

Mnestls Shoe oie

STORE »

WNED FAMILY SHO

JS HOME: ale

on the dough and cut around : a sharp knife. Bake pas

FRIDAY; JUNE 2% 1

| Dressings for the Army

Voters’ Leagt : Will Campaigt

1On July 4

w

‘Board Maps Plans af Wawasee

- »

The Indiana Leagué of Women Voters has set July 4 as a date on which to émphasize its “Win the Battle of Production” campaign, Plans were discussed yesterday at a meeting of the board at thé cottage

the south shore of Lake Wawasée.

own individual plans to join with the National League and other state and local leagues to make Indéepéndence Day celebration “as significant as that of '76,” to unite all citizens behind the nation’s program of un< paralleled production for defense at home and aid abroad. “More getting together, more sacrifices, more taxes, moré work” are the elements of the league’s formuly for more rapid production of planes, tanks, guns and goods. Pointing to “speedy production” America’s answer to the danger threatens our independence, Mr, Richard Edwards, Peru, Indian§ League campaign chairman, told rd:

“War today is a war between things—airplanes, tanks, trucks. The side that has the most things wins, That embodiment of evil thinking and action we personify as Hitler has taken a monstrous gamble. He has bet that the mechanical things an enslaved people produce could conquer a world of people slow to organize to produce for the defenss of their own liberty. When the peace-loving American people unite to out-produce a warlike autarchy, they will add final proof of thé: fallacy of gambling on the worst in human nature as against the best, “The League of Women Voters has dedicated the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence to the task of bringing home to every citie zen that when he recognizes the une limited emergency and submerge his individual interests to the whole, the country will meet this emergency successfully.” The Indianapolis . League was represented at the Wa wasee meeting by Mesdames Clarence F. Merrell, S. N. Campbell, Leonard Smith, Miss Mary Sinclair and Mise Irene SWeeney.

Elects Heads

Mrs. Thomas A. Lenahan is the new president of Robert BE. Kene nington American Legion Auxiliary

Unit 34, following her election at & recent meeting. She will be a dele gate to the state Auxiliary convene tion at South Bend in August with Mrs. Charles McCoy, retiring presie dent. Other new officers are Mrs, Thomas Fagan, first vice president; Mrs. Gerald T. Leahy, second vice president; Mrs. Thomas Maley, sec~ retary; Mrs. Minnie Rigg, treasurer; Mrs. Charles Commons, chaplaing Mrs. Jack Thurston, historian; Mrs, Ralph Kennington, parliamentare ian, and Mrs. Clarence Lapp, serge eant-at-arms. Alternates for the state convenes tion will be Mrs. Rigg and Mrs, Maley. Mrs. Maurice Hays will be a 12th District page at the sessions and Mrs. Thomas Randall, newly elected recording secretary of the district, will be assistaht page to Mrs. J. S. Boyle, district president,

Holiday Pies

To make decorated pies or tarts for special holidays, cut an appro= priate design from plain, rather stiff paper. Roll pastry dough about one eighth inch thick. Place the de i’ designs on a cooky sheet in a hot ovem until done, Arrange on filled open pie.

Causes Cake Failure

Overbeating as well as under failure. ‘To obviate any guesswork, one hew electric mixed is regu

lated by a mixing dial on which 18 clearly indicated the correct speed

is desighed to

er ee

do.

. DICKERSON'S

ARCHLOCK

|

ARCH RELIEF

p

84410"

Legion Group §

mixing is a common cause of cake)’

for each mixing job the machine .

of Mrs. C. N. Teetor, Hagerstown, on Local leagues will draw. up thele

il