Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1941 — Page 11
i LD
MONDAY, JULY 7, 1941
N\ Society—
‘Country Clubs Are Favorite Haunts Of Those Spending Summer .in Town
* 1aembers.
LIKE SAIL-FILLING BREEZES in the midst of the summer social doldrums are the activities scheduled by country clubs for the entertainment of their members. For the many families city-bound this summer because father is perspiring over war-inspired business activity and mother is absorbed by war relief work, the
country clubs are ‘“‘pinch-hitting” as vacation spots.
A group of the younger set will gather at the Meridian Hills Country Club Wednesday evening for a moonlight swimming party
and wiener roast. planning the event for high school Stackhouse.
Chairman of the club’s young people’s committee
and college members is Richard
On his committee are Misses Mildred Cornelius,Marjorie Baxter, Marjorie Powers, Elizabeth Ott, Mary Jo McGuire, Jane Williams and
" Alice Slappey and John Lyons, George O'Neil, James Murray Jr.,
Fred Flickinger, Ned Merrell and Robert Meeker. Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Powers are counselors for the group.
The regular women’s luncheon
bridge party will be held July
15 with Mrs. Russell R. Hippensteel as chairman, assisted by Mrs. John Waldo and Mrs. Edward D. Campbell.
A special program is planned for the club’s 16th anniversary
celebration on Saturday, July 19.
Winding up the day’s activities
will be an outdoor supper. Dr. and Mrs. Harry R. Kerr are chairmen for the celebration and their aides are Dr. and Mrs. Harry L. Foreman, Dr. and Mrs. Hippensteel and Mr. and Mrs. William J. Millikan. Late in the month the regular Sunday night buffet supper for mem
bers and their families will be held.
At the Indianapolis Country Club
GOLFING EVENTS predominate on the month’s calendar at
the Indianapolis Country Club.
Today the club is .conducting a
caddie tournament and a caddie-member tournament is scheduled
to begin tomorrow at 10 a. m. On
Sunday hosts for a mixed two-
ball foursome will be Piatt F. Searle and Cecil W. Weathers. Next week several women members of the club will be participating in the Women's State Tournament at Morris Park Country Club, South Bend. A Guest Day is planned for Tuesday, July 15, with Mrs. William Frederick Souder Jr. as hostess, and on the following day the monthly bridge luncheon will be held with Mrs, William G. Davis and Mrs. Richard W. Lee as hostesses. Tentatively set for late July or early August is an informal dance for which Mr, and Mrs. Harrison Eiteljorg are to be chairmen. On their committee will be Messrs. and Mesdames Joseph E, Cain, Henry T. Davis and Talbott Denny.
Parties Planned for Highland Bridge
WEDNESDAY at the Highland Golf and Country Club will be marked by the monthly buffet luncheon and bridge party for women
Among those entertaining will be Miss Louise Ellen Trim-
ble. Her guests will be Mrs, Richard DeMars of Anderson, Mrs. Hiram Sexson and Mrs. Gordon Cruickshank. Miss Trimble’s mother, Mrs. William H. Trimble, is chairman, with Mrs. William V. Kingdon of the bridge committee for the year. Assisting them this month are Mrs. Harry Bitner Jr. July chairman, and Mesdames Frank Davis, Sam Garvey, Leroy Sanders, Wilbur B. Shook, Chester T. Spriggs, Bert. C. McCammon and
Court G. Alfs, of Zionsville.
Mrs. McCammon will start the day with a swimming party for four guests from Kokomo, Mesdames Paul Mills, J. B. Marshall, Garrett Beck and Worth Rudy. Among others joining them for the bridge party will be Mrs. George H. Lilly and Mrs. David
Cutright.
Mrs. Spriggs’ bridge guests will be Mesdames Herbert King,
J. Thayer Waldo and Harry Reisser.
With Mrs. W. A. Brennan
will be Mrs. Frank B. Ross, Miss Flora Paetz and Mrs. J. Albert
Smith Jr. : At Mrs.
Fred W. Dopke's table will be Mesdames A. C.
Crandall, Robert Rogers and William Morgan. Mrs. Ralph Duncan,
Misses Mary and Janeth Crawford A. Brower... Mrs. Alfs has made
will be guests of Mrs. Joseph reservations for two tables as
“have Mrs. Ben Olsen and Mrs. Kingdon. Also entertaining will be
Mrs. Shook and Mrs. Lacy L. Shuler.
University of Chicago Will Hold Annual Institute for Officers Of Higher Educational Schools
Times Special
CHICAGO, July 7.—The 19th annual Institute for Administrative Officers of Higher Institutions will open here Wednesday on the quadrangles of the University of Chicago. : ' New teaching techniques by which American colleges are making rapid strides toward the goal of universally well-educated citizens will claim the attention of ieading educational experts.
More than 200 administrators and faculty members from universities and colleges throughout thte Middle West will attend the three-day meeting which has as its theme “New Frontiers in Collegiate Instruction.” The institute is the latest feature in the summer schedule of the University’s 50th anniversary celebration. A highlight of the meeting will be an address at the opening session by Dr. Carter Davidson, president of Knox College, Galesburg, Ill, on “Intellectual Discipline as the Goal of the Instructional Program.” ' He wil] speak Wednes-
day evening.
- Chicagoans to Speak Outstanding University of Chicago educators who will speak at the meeting include Dr. Robert Redfield, professor of anthropology and dean of the Division of the Social
Sciences; Dr. Robert J. Havighurst, professor of education; Dr, Aaron J. Brumbaugh, professor of educa-
tion and dean of the College; Dr.|
Ralph W. Tyler, professor and chairman of the Department : of Education, and Dr. Arthur P. Scott, associate professor of history. Out-of-town authorities who will participate in the meeting include Dr. Harold M. Dorr, associate professor of political science of the University of Michigan; Dr. Edgar Dale, professor of education, Ohio State University, and Dr. T. R. McConnell, associate dean of the College of Science, Literature and the Arts, University of Minneosta. All sessions will pe held at Judson Court, 1035 E, 60th St., on the University quadrangles, and are open to the public. Dr. John D. Russell, professor of education at
' the university, is in charge of ar-
rangements.
Silk J ersey Favored
For Draped Gowns
Nina Price, prominent American designer, favors thin silk jersey as a
fabric for clinging gowns. Especially |*
for the woman who likes one spec-
tacular jeweled spray or clip. Mrs. Price has designed a dramatic evening gown of draped white silk jersey with a clinging but rather full skirt. The space from hip to bust is molded to the figure. The top is merely a halter of the jersey cut very narrow on one side and wide on the other. The narrow side of the front is almost covered by a mammoth jeweled spray of emeralds and brilliants. For daytime wear, Mrs. Price uses: thin black silk jersey, with ingeniously spaced shirring, tucking or unusual hip drapery.
Reseal Jelly If Unspoiled
Jelly that has molded under the seal is not necessarily entirely spoiled. Skim off the top and taste to see if the balance of the jelly is unharmed. If so, and it is not to be used immediately, re-paraffin and store in a cool, dry place.
YPeR
Reversible Front
Remember the apron frocks with reversible fronts? This trim, youthful frock is made on the same principle—the front can be buttoned either way. Gives double the service and twice the wear. Side sashes placed at front darts adjusts the waistline snugly to your own figure. Trim the frock with white cuffs and collar. Pattern No. 8969 is designed for sizes 14 to 20; 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 4% yards of 35-inch material. Collar and cuffs require 5 yard fabric, 214 yards 1% inch bias fold. For this attractive pattern, send 15c in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times’ Today’s Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland St. The summer fashion book has styles for all sizes from 1 to 52. Send for it, let it be your guide for summer sewing! Pattern, 15; pattern book, 15¢; one
pate and pattern book ordered
Sh ER
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ~.
Attend Alpha Chi Convention In Pasadena
Several alumnae and active members of Alpha Chi Omega will attend the sorority’s national convention which opens tomorrow and continues through Sunday in Pasadena, Cal. Included in the party which left over the week-end were (left to right) Mrs. Robert P. Tracy, an alumna; Miss Betty Graham, president of the Butler active chapter, and Mrs. Everett Small, an alumna,
Delegate Goes To A.O. Pi
Convention
Leaving yesterday for the 17th national convention of Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority in New Orleans was Mrs. Ted Marbaugh, W. 75th St., the Indianapolis Alumnae Association delegate. The convention is being held in the Roosevelt Hotel. Mrs. Marbaugh was a member of Beta Phi Chapter of Indiana University and is a past district alumnae superintendent of the sorority. Delegates from 42 college chapters and 62 alumnae groups in the United States and Canada are represented at the biennial session opening today. This is the first convention held in the deep South by the organization and Southern chapters have made extensive preparations to entertain delegates from northern, western and eastern chapters. Pi Chapter at H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College at New Orleans and the New Orleans Alumnae Chapter are official convention hostesses. Plans for social service work for the year will claim delegates’ attention along with evaluation of the sorority’s progress and consideration of the convention theme, “Tradition.” : Reports on the national philanthropy for the organization—maintenance of the social service department of the Frontier Nursing Service of Kentucky, will be presented by Mrs. George Dean, Montgomery, Ala., second vice president, and by Miss Edith Anderson, social service director of the Nursing Service. Three living founders, Miss Jessie Wallace Hughan, New York; Miss George H. Perry, Brooklyn Heights, N. Y.,, and Miss Elizabeth Heywood Wyman, Glen Ridge, N. J., will be present to take active parts in the convention. Large events on the social program include a Panhellenic Tea, to which members and officers of other national sororities have been invited; the convention ball, patterned after the Mardi Gras, and the closing banquet at which newly installed officers will be honored and national awards made. The convention will be followed by a house party at Hotel Buena Vista, Biloxi, Miss.
BEAUTY By Alicia Hart
MORE OFTEN than not it’s a mistake for the mother of a ‘teen age girl to take too seriously every last bit of the sundry advice about the importance of keeping young girls young-looking and natural. Her fresh, natural look is a young girl's greatest asset. She certainly should not wear a lavish amount of makeup or clothes that were designed for her sophisticated older sisters. However, about the most certain way for a mother to make sure that her high school age daughter will be lacking in poise and self-confi-dence is to refuse to let her use lip stick and powder long after all of her high school friends have started using them. It’s worse yet if her mother makes her wear babyish party dresses long after girls of the same age are going to high school dances in rather grown-up dance frocks. . ” ” »
THE ADOLESCENT, unlike her mother, simply doesn’t care about being individualistic. She wants to look like every other little girl in her crowd. She wants to wear the kind of clothes that they are wearing, use the same kind of slang, read the same kind of books. The very idea of being different is abhorent to her, makes her self-con-scious and unhappy. Wise mothers appreciate this. You don’t catch them making their daughters wear short day dresses to dancing school if every other girl in the class is allowed to wear floor length gowns. They permit the use of lipstick and powder just as soon as it becomes apparent that mothers of all the other nice little girls in the school have given similar permission. Furthermore, they see to it that the youngsters have the right cosmetics for their young and tender skins and that fhe jobs of applica-
Robert H, Katzenberger, who were
mann, 1221 Spruce St.
born St. As she left by motor after the wedding ceremony, the bride wore a summer brown suit with white accessories and a gardenia corsage. The marriage service was read by the Rev. R. H. Benting before an altar banked with palms and ferns.} Altar vases were filled with pink asters and baby breath and candelabra stood at either side. A program of bridal airs, including the Intermezzo, was played by Miss Betty Jean Hoff, organist, and Miss Maxine Realey sang “O Promise Me” and “Because.” The bride, who entered alone, wore candlelight faille taffeta made with a sweetheart neckline, short puffed sleeves and a train. Her fingertip length veil was held by a coronet of orange blossoms and she carried a bouquet of Johanna Hill roses. Sister Is Bridesmaid
Her only attendant, her sister Wilma, was gowned in mist pink net with lace bows. appliqued on the full skirt. She wore matching net bows in her hair and carried a sheaf of pink asters and blue delphinium. The bridegroom's brother, George A. Katzenberger, served as best man and ushers were Archie Cutshall Jr. and Charles Spellman. White accessories and gardenia corsages accented the costumes of the couple’s mothers. Mrs. Schumann chose a beige and green printed sheer redingote and Mrs. Katzenberger wore black and white sheer. Reception Held
Assisting at a reception at the home of the bride’s parents following the ceremony were Misses Lois Snyder, Evelyn and Lois Swoboda and Katherine Gillick.
R. H. Katzen bergers Are on Trip To Virginia Following Wedding; Will Be Home Here Aug. 1
Spending their honeymoon in Virginia Beach, Va., are Mr. and Mrs.
Saturday in St. Mark’s English Lutheran Church. Mrs. Katzenberger was Miss Florence Schumann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schu-
Mr. Katzenberger is the son of Mrs. Marie Katzenberger, 926 N. Dear-
married in a 7:30 p. m. ceremony
wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. Katzenberger will be at home at 3548 Balsam Ave. Out-of-town guests for the ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. Paul DeWalt and Clarence DeWalt, Marion; the bride’s grandmother, Mrs. W. E. DeWalt, Ft. Wayne, and Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Buchanan, Youngstown, O.
Club Aid Asked By Mrs. Born
An appeal for clubs and church societies throughout Indiana to devote one meeting during the coming season to the subject of health, including a message on cancer control, has been made by Mrs, Isaac Born, Indiana commander of the Women’s Field Army for Control of
Reading Club's Program to Be On America
“This and That in America” will be the program theme of the Monday Afternoon Reading Club for the 1941-42 club year. Mesdames William H. Hampton, Clark Griffith and Arthur C. Hoffman formed
the program ccemmittee planning the year's study. Opening the season Oct. 6 with a President's Day Luncheon at the Sun Dial Tearoom, club members will participate in a: program on “Summer Memories.” Two weeks later they will swing into the American theme at a meeting held at the home of Mrs. Lewis J. Riddle. Talks on “Romance of the American Map” and “American Traditions and Superstitions” will be made by Mrs. Royce Bertram Stokes and Mrs. John N. Hobbs. Mrs. Emmet Ireland and Mrs. Lee Welker will be hostesses for the Nov. 3 and 17 meetings. At the first Mrs. A. M. Welchons will talk on ‘National Highways” and members’ responses will be on “My First Automobile Trip.” At the meeting Nov. 17 Mrs. DeWitt S. Morgan will discuss “Smoky Mountain National Park” and Mrs. Clark C.
Cancer. ; She reminds clubwomen of the Field Army's slogan, “Health Defense Is National Defense,” and suggests that a local physician or a Field Army officer be asked to give the cancer contro] talk. Further information may be obtained from state headquarters, 362 Claypool Hotel, Mrs. Born said. The final date for receiving returns on the 1941 enlistment campaign is Thursday, headquarters has announced. The books will be closed on that date and a detailed report compiled and published. Incomplete returns show that the campaign exceeded the 1940 drive in number of enlistments. A number of counties, including Tippecanoe, Grant, Madison, Clinton and Morgan, haxe exceeded the quota of one per cent of the population which was set at the start of the
Upon their return Aug. 1 from the
drive.
Plan Outing
¥
Mrs. John Geckler (left) and Mrs. George Maxwell are assisting with plans of the Auxiliary to the Juvenile Detention Home to take over the Riversile Amustment Park on Thursday and Friday for the .
at Riverside
'wwill be hostess for a meeting at
Griffith, “Mountain Ballads.” Holiday Party Set
“National Water Conservation’ will be Mrs. Sylvester Moore's topic at the Dec. 1 meeting at Mrs. Louis C. Ward's home, and Mrs. Eli E. Thompson will talk on “The Changing American Family.” The program at the annual Christmas party, Dec. 15, will be directed by Mrs. Clarence R. Kuss. Acting as hostesses will be Mesdames Morgan, William PF. Espey, John N. Hobbs and Herbert Cortright. The first meeting in 1942 will be Jan. 5 at the home of Mrs. John W. Maltby. Members will hear talks on “R. F. D.” (Smart) by Mrs. Ireland, and on “Change in Rural Life” by Mrs. William H. Herbst. Election of officers is scheduled to take place at a “pitch-in” luncheon Jan. 19 at the home of Mrs. Thompson. Mrs. Charles Young will be the speaker at the meeting and her topic, “Vitamins Versus Calories.” “The Boyhood of Lincoln” will be the subject of a talk by Mrs. Hoffman at the Feb. 2 meeting which is to be held at the home of Mrs. Welchons. “Plastics” and “Cellophane” will be discussed at the Feb. 16 meeting by Mrs. John W. Maltby and Mrs. Lewis J. Riddle. Mrs. Kuss is to be hostess. On March 2 Mrs. W. E. Shively
which Mrs. Charles Muir and Mrs. Espey will speak on “Rayon” and “Recent Memorials.” Program features of the March 16 meeting, at Mrs. Stokes’ home, will be talks on “Famous Historical Homes” and “Homes of Today” by Mrs. J. R. Townsend and Mrs. William G. H. Holley. A guest speaker to be selected later will discuss New Ideas in Home Decorations” at the March 30 meeting at Mrs. Muir's home. The arrival of spring will be noted at the April 13 meeting with Mrs. Townsend, when Mrs. E. W. Bilyeu and Mrs. Herbert F. Courtright talk on “Famous Flower Gardens” and “Conservation of Wild Life” respectively. A guest Day will be held April 27 with Mesdames John C. Teegarden, Hampton, Griffith, Hoffman, Sylvester Moore and Holley as hostesses.
Study Art and Drama
The first May meeting, on the 11th, will be at Mrs. Bilyeu's home. Mrs. Lee Walker will talk on “Artists of Brown County Colony” and Mrs. W. E. Shively on “What's New in Photography.” At the May 25 meeting Mrs. Louis C. Ward will speak on “American Drama.” The day’s hostess will be Mrs. Herbst. The closing meeting of the year will be on June 9 when a luncheon will be held. The program for the day will consist of a “True or False” quiz covering the year’s program. : Club officers for the coming season are Mrs. Teegarden, president; Mrs. Riddle, vice president; Mrs. Kuss, secretary; Mrs. Stokes, assistant secretary; Mrs. Maltby, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Morgan, treasurer; Mrs. Thompson, Seventh
nate; Mrs. Herbst, publicity chair-
Cross through James L. Fieser,
District delegate; Mrs. Espey, alter-|
Office Space To Red Cross
Offices to Be Set Up In Constitution Hall
Times Special WASHINGTON, July 7.—Accommodations for the expanded office personnel of the American Red
Cross have been offered the organization by the Daughters of the American Revolution. Temporary offices in the corridors of the D. A. R.’s Constitution Hall here are being prepared for the Red Cross personnel which has increased due to warring conditions and the national defense program. One hundred workers will occupy the Hall until Oct. 1 when the regular fall and winter season of Constitution Hall opens. The work of transforming the corridors into office space was begun July 4. It is expected the new addition to Red Cross headquarters will be in full operation in about 10 days. In making the offer to the Red
vice chairman in charge of domestic operations, Mrs. William H. Pouch, president general of the D. A. R, said in a letter: “By action of our National Board of Management, the National Society, Daughters of the American Revolution, offers to the American Red Cross the three corridors of Constitution Hall to Oct. 1 to further the work of your organization during this national emergency.”
Offer Accepted
The offer was accepted quickly by the Red Cross. Yesterday workmen were installing electric lighting and telephone wires and were moving desks and office equipment. The corridors can easily accomodate 100 workers. Two of the halls are 136 feet long and 24 feet wide and the front lobby is 168 long and 24 feet wide. The Red Cross and the D. A. R. occupy adjacent sites on 17th St. in the Capital, separated by D St. Thus the additional space is close to the Red Cross group of buildings. Speaking of the arrangement, Mrs. Pouch said, “This is an instance of the ‘good neighbor’ policy which has been in effect between the National Society and the American Red Cross for many years. “We have always been eager to help each other. For a number of years the Red Cross opened its doors to the Children of the American Revolution for the annual convention. “Now the time has come when the Daughters can be of some service to our neighbors and we are glad to have them come over and make themselves at home in the space in Constitution Hall which is available for office room during these summer months.” Mrs. Charles C. Haig, Washington, national chairman of the buildings and grounds committee, completed the arrangements for the use of the corridors. Everything has been worked out she said so that in the fall the equipment will be removed and the Hall will be entirely restored to serve its original purpose.
G. J. Okeys on Wedding Trip
After their return this week from a wedding trip north, Mr. and Mrs. George J. Okey will be at home at 2179 N. Pennsylvania St. They were married in a ceremony at 9 o’clock Friday morning in St. Patrick's Church. Mrs. Okey was Miss Anne Marie Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilburn S. Smith of the Piccadilly Apartments and Mr. Okey is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George B. Okey, 944 Woodlawn Ave. The wedding ceremony was performed by the Rev. Fr. Paul Bernard Gootee at an altar decorated with gladioli and ferns... Miss Helen Colbert, organist, played bridal airs for the rite and accompanied Miss Julia Colbert as she sang Schubert's “Ave Maria” and “On This Day, O Beautiful Mother.” Attending the couple were Miss Gertrude Cockran, bridesmaid; Irven Rohrman, best man; George Fahy
Davey and Terry Rehack, a cousin of the bride, who served the mass. The bride, entering with her father, wore a white gown with lace bodice and net skirt. She wore long lace mitts and a circular fingertip length veil falling from a seed pearl tiara. Her flowers were white sweetheart roses, blue delphinium and baby breath. Miss Cockran was in a bouffant style blue frock with which she wore a Juliet cap of seed pearls and carried pink sweetheart roses and blue delphinium. Mrs. Smith, mother of the bride, chose a white printed crepe and Mrs. Okey, the bridegroom’s mother, a dusty pink costume. Both wore white accessories and red rosebuds. A reception at the home of the bride’s aunt, Mrs. Melville Cramer, 1022 Berwyn St., followed the ceremony. For traveling the bride wore a beige frock and white accessories.
Visitors Return
Mrs. Mabel Burris, 813 E. 66th St., and her son have returned from a trip to Chicago and Terre Haute where they visited last week with
D. A. R. Lends|
Bride
Holland Photo. | A June 7 wedding was that of | Miss Adele Pollak to Leland H, | Wiggam. The bride is the daughe | ter of Mr. and Mrs. Max Pollak.
We, the Women— Homecoming
Of the Tired
Businessman
By RUTH MILLETT EVERY WIFE knows — whether" she puts the knowledge to use on not—just how to meet a tired huse band when he comes home at night, She should be wearing a clean dress, fresh lipstick, and a nicely brushed hair-do. Also a cheerful smile — even though her day has been an sight-hour nightmare. And instead of starting in with, “I don’t know. how I lived through this day,” she just keeps quiet and gives her husband a chance to tell how awful his day was. Yes, women know how they are supposed to greet their returning husbands. But why hasn’t anybody ever told hus bands how to behave when they come home to their families at night? Se the easy way would be* to tell them how not to behave, All right. Husbands, take heed: Don’t come home and say: “What have you got for dinner?” and when you find out, say with disap= pointment, “Oh, that’s what I had for lunch.” Don’t hide behind a newspaper and refuse to talk when you know your wife hasn't had a word all day long with anyone but an 18-monthe old baby and the butcher. Don’t kick because you have to go out, if you agreed to the plan when your wife asked you about it in the morning. ” o ”
DON'T ACT put upon if you are asked to do some small repair job
about the house. Don’t eat a good dinner and fail
to praise it. If it isn’t so good, restrain your
impulse to growl. yo don’t if your wife looks tired and you suspect. she’s had a hard day, sit comfortably in your favors ite chair while she does the dishes
alone.
Couple Is Wed
In California
Word has been received here of
Ruth Millett
Cal., of Miss Mary Ruth Tewell and Laurence L. Schludecker, both formerly of Indianapolis. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Tewell, Loogootee, and Mr. Schludecker is the son of Mrs, Frances G. Schludecker, 1433 Union
and Donald Shick, ushers, and Joe|g¢
The ceremony took plac: at 10:30 a. m. in the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, with the Rev. Fr. Eue gene M. Ivancovich officiating. Attendants were Miss Pauline Walker, Los Angeles, maid of honor, and Arthur J. Burns, Hollywood, best man. Miss Walker formerly lived in St. Joseph, Mich, and Loogootee. A reception at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Burns followed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Schludecker are ag home at 4969 Franklin Ave. Holly= wood, after a wedding trip to Santa Catalina Island and Lake Arrowe head. He is connected with the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. in Burbank,
Church Groups
Join for Picnic
The Woman's Missionary So« ciety of the Memorial Presbyterian Church will meet with the Woman's Missionary Society of Westminster Presbyterian Church for a picnic at Brookside Park Wednesday. Lunch will be served at noon in the pavilion. There will be a spe« cial program. Mrs. P, J. Sertell is
friends and relatives.
chairman for the day.
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man; Mrs. Townsend, contingent Ireland,
fund treasurer, and
o Secret
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tlantic Ocea
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Don’t delay—discover this treat of] ro er Sila 80 an
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the wedding, June 14 in Hollywood,
— PAGE 11]
