Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1941 — Page 4

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Wives of American Bar Association Members Will be Guests at Parties

{ = SOCIAL ACTIVITY next week will center about the ‘members of the American Bar Association and their 2 ives who will be here for the Association’s 64th annual ~ , Bénvention, Monday through Friday. eh Mrs, Jacob Mark Lashly, St. Louis, wife of the AssoBlation president, will entertain Monday at the Woodstock

ub for more than 50 women active at the convention.

Mr. and Mrs. Lashly gave a- small dinner last night at the Ine polis. Athletic Club preceding the opening of the convention. the week, Col. and Mrs. A. M. Owsley plan to entertain for vention guests from Texas, Col. Owsley’s former home. A tea will be held Thursday from 3:30 p. m. to 5 p. m. at the vernor’s mansion for convention visitors. In the receiving line ¥ be Mrs. Henry F. Schricker, wife of the Indiana Governor; Mrs. "%ashly, Mrs. Roscoe C. O'Byrne, Brookville; Mrs. Joe Rand BeckBit, wife of the general chairman of the convention, and Mrs. ClarJoe B Martin, general chairman of women’s activities during the 1 dg oy on. : Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Loucks and Miss Mary Williams fi. Sie Chicago, will come tomorrow to be guests of their cous-

, Miss Carolyn Thompson and Mrs. Blanche Maguire. Mr. Loucks

to attend the convention. : ® fF z tf J 8 2

" The engagement of Miss Margaret Taylor to Kurt E. Lieber, i of Mrs. Herman P. Lieber, is announced by her parents, Mr. and s. Claude Taylor. The wedding will be in the early winter,

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Rev. Roy Ewing Vale Will Read |S Sipe-Hammond Ceremony by

White Cross Guild Will Donate Services for One Month To the Red Cross

On Wednesday the American Red Cross gains 2500 new workers for one month. They are members of the White Cross Guild of the Meth odist Hospital whose board decided at a recent meeting to donate the

Rare Laces to Be Exhibited at Museum ‘ . RARE HAND MADE LACES from many countries will be on

In McKee Chapel

ne in John Herron Art Museum's textile room on the first floor g tomorrow. The lace is from the permanent collection and resents gifts from friends of the Museum over a period of years. ost of the large pieces were a gift several years ago from Mrs. Lharles Crosley of Indianapolis. : et The exhibit includes the famous Venetian point and gros point, Which was revived at Burano by Queen Marguerite, mother of the : t Italian king, who caused examples of the lace to be searched in convents and other retreats and reproduced. . Included also are various Belgian laces, French Valenciennes pnd Chantilly, English Honiton, Milan “plat” or flat lace, a Spanish 5 tilla and South American nonduti. : There are table covers, pillow "tops, handkerchiefs, panels, unces, shawls and fans together with many small pieces mounted show the different types of lace. i Among the most interesting is a bedspread made by two . famous Belgian lace makers for the Brussels exposition before the 34) World War. The central design depicts the romance of real e, and shows Cupids wielding bobbins, needles and scissors. The flax flower is in the center. One unique item is a handkerchief bearing the crest and initials of Cardinal Boncompagnie of the 38th century. ¢ . In the Crosley collection, in addition to the above items, is an pxquisite Venetian rose point bridal veil.

~ Marian Laut Will Play for D. A. R. Groups

MISS MARIAN LAUT, pianist, will be presented on the program at a. joint meeting of the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, and the Wheel and Distaff Somunites of the chapter, held at 2 p. m, Thursday at the chapter : use. Miss Laut is to be presented by Mrs. William O. Weber, music chairman. Mrs. Frederick C. Albershardt, program chairman of the Wheel and Distaff, will introduce the speaker, Herbert R. Hill, as- . pistant managing editor of The Indianapolis News. He will talk ‘on “The War Today.” : ~~ Mrs, William Dobson, chapter regent, will preside at the regular _ business session before the Wheel and Distaff takes charge of the _ program. ° Mrs. Nathan T. Washburn, Wheel and Distaff president, will describe activities at the three toy libraries the committee maintains at Mayer Chapel, Southwest Social Center and Northwest Community Center. The libraries serve more than 200 under- - privileged children each week and are a part of the chapter’s Amerifanism program. Each child is allowed to keep a toy one week, after which it 4s returned, cleaned, repaired and sterilized before it is lent again. “Respect for public property is stressed among the children and each child is made to feel lw is training for good citizenship. 4 Mrs. O. Harold Hershman and Mrs. Robert E. Kelly, hostesses » for the tea hour, will pour. Assisting in the dining room will be ‘Mesdames Roy K. Coats, Noble W. Hiatt, Heatlicoté R. McIlvaine, oJ. Edwin Aspinall, Francis H. Sinex and J. Francis Madden.

P-T. A News—

A tea honoring mothers of the “new pupils will be given at 2:15 p. m. Wednesday at SCHOOL 10 by the P.-T. A. The Rev. E. H. Klingel, pastor of St. Paul's Evan-

gelical and Reformed Church, will give the invocation.

erine Sobbie.

tea.

Mrs. Charles Jon president, will introduce the new officers and chairmen and mothers of |Evangelical Church. The Rev. F, P. new pupils will be honored at a|Puhlman officiated.

The annual garden exhibit of SCHOOL 72 will be held Tuesday.|costume suit,

The marriage ¢f Mrs. Gertrude Eunter Hammond, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George D. Hunter, and Charles Brown Sipe, son of Mrs. J. C. Sipe, was to be solemnized this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the McKee chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. :

' Dr. Roy Ewing Vale was to read the ceremony before an altar decorated with palms and white gladioli. Miss Mary Catherine Stair, harpist, was to play preceding and during the ceremony. The bride was to wear a costume suit of R. A. F. blue and a brown hat trimmed in beaver. A spray of orchids was to be pinned to her beaver muff. The Misses Sally Ann and Mary Beth Hammond were to be their mother’s only attendants. They were to be dressed similarly in rose beige corduroy suits with hats to match and were to carry muffs of smilax and Johanna Hill roses. Mr. Sipe’s best man was to be his brother, Carroll E. Sipe. and ushers were to be Howard Kimble and Davis Harrison. Mrs. Hunter, mother of the bride, was to wear a black crepe suit trimmed in velvet and a black velvet hat. The bridegroom’s mother was to be in a black sheer wool suit and hat. Both Mrs. Huhter and Mrs. Sipe were to have gardenia and sweetheart rose corsages. A reception at the church was to follow the ceremony. After Nov. 1, Mr. and Mrs. Sipe will be at home at 4735 N. Illinois St. Attending the wedding from out of town were to be Miss Winifred Gregory, Muncie; Mr. and Mrs. Paul V. Brown, Omaha; Mr. and Mrs. Max Williams, Cincinnati; Mr, and Mrs. Paul Tauer, Lebanon, and Messrs. and Mesdames H. W. Gregory, E. A. Gannon, C. L. Burkholder and daughter, Jeanne Ann, all of Lafayette.

Magdalene Burk Wed To Donald Hester

Miss Magdalene Burk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Burk, 75 Fenton Ave. was married to Donald B Hester, son of Mrs. Mollie P. Hester, 332 Lesley Ave., this morning at 10:30 o'clock at St. John’s

Members of the immediate families attended. The bride wore a soldier blue trimmed in dyed

The public is invited to attend the |squirrel, with black accessories. She

Mrs. Bert C. McCammon will dis‘euss “Your Child and Mine” at 1:30( , m. Wednesday at SCHOOL 33. A - tea honoring mothers of new pupils

show from 2:30 to 4 p. m. and 7 to 9 attended Butler p. m. Awards will be presented by|Arthur Jordan Conservatory of William A. Hacker to the boys and [Music and is a ‘member of Sigma girls who participated in the garden|Alpha Iota sorority.

University and

Mr. and Mrs. Hester will be at

Guild Sponsors

Lecture By Betty Wason

Miss Betty Wason, free lance war correspondent and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James P. Wason, will pre-

sent a lecture here Oct. 20 under the|

auspices of St. Margaret’s Hospital Guild, She will speak at 8:15 p. m. in Caleb Mills Hall, Shortridge High School. Proceeds will go to carry on the guild’s various philanthropic enterprises at the City Hospital. Miss Wason landed in New York in July aboard the Excalibur after covering “events: in Europe for a year and a half, She is a graduate of Purdue University and before becoming a correspondent did advertising and radio work. Her experiences range from covering the war in Greece to being held a Nazi prisoner. She was in Vienna at the time of the Munich crisis and traveled with the Hungarian army when it took over a part of Slovakia. ) z Other events at which she was “on the spot” to cover the news include Chamberlain’s visit to Rome, the invasion of Norway and the assassination of Codreaunu in Rumania. She also did broadcasting work for William L. Shirer for the Columbia Broadcasting System. The guild’s ways and means committee, which is arranging for the event, includes: Mrs. Robert M, Stith, . chairman; Mrs. John R. Brayton and Mrs. William LaRue Byron, assistants, and the Mesdames Paris C. Pierson, Lyman R. Pearson, Willis E. Kuhn, Mark Enright, Robert C. Becherer, Harold C. Feightner, G. I. Seybert, Marvin E. Curle, Edward F. Boleman, L. D. Grisbaum, Robert Burnett, William F., Sandmann, Ken M. Mosiman and Howard T. Griffith. :

Chorus to Meet

A combined board and executive meeting will be held by the Federation of Mothers’ Choruses of the Indianapolis public schools at 1:30

Entries are well over 1000 and indications are that 1500 horses with their riders will be vying for honors in the ninth annual Roundup sponsored by the Indiana Saddle Horse Association tomorrow at the State Fair Grounds. The show, which is dedicated to the amateur rider, will be staged in front of the grandstand and will be postponed one week in event of inclement weather. This afternoon an organized ride over 10 miles of the city’s bridle paths will be made by the members of the Association and the Roundup participants. : At 6 p. m,, the riders will return to the Fair Grounds for a Western Barbecue. Jack Gregg, who has arranged barbecues at dude ranches in the West, will supervise the event. Russel Williams is in charge of the evening party. The Texas Rangers, instrumentalists and singers, from WIRE, will present a program. - The radio station will broadcast a portion of the event from 9:30 fo 10 p. m. The public is invited to the program, beginning at 7:30 p. m., which also will feature a square dance. 1. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schwitzer Jr. are active in arranging the program for the Roundup. Mrs. Schwitzer is shown here on Lance. 2. The Misses Mary Moore, Louise Dickson, Emma Moore and Rosemary Dickson (left to right) will participate. 3. Miss Joan Spivey, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Russell J. Spivey, Shown here with Prince of Peace, is eagerly anticipating the Roundup. 4. Gordon B. Sutton is chairman of the committee on old vehicles in the parade. Mr. and Mrs. Sutton ride in one of the victorias. 5. Harold Johnson, chairman of the parade committee, points out the direction in which the parade will assemble to E. A, Crane (left) and P. O. Ferrel. (Hibben Photo.) ; . 6. Miss Alice Boozer will participate. (Hibben Photo.)

Tuesday Club Will |Set Rush Tea

Visit Harrison Home | The Beta Chapter of Omega The Irvington Tuesday Club win|Xappa Sorority will have a rush

x tea from 3 to 5 p. m., Oct. 5, in the meet at the Colonial Tea Room, : : 1433 N. P Ivania St, at 12:45 Columbia Club. Miss Charlotte

p. m. Tuesday for luncheon. Twietmeyer Will be chairman, as-

Guild's services to the relief srganization. The temporary conversion into a

Red Cross chapter was made possible by long hours of extra work during the summer months to amass a reserve of hospital supplies, Mrs. Lee Nicholson, chairman of the project, said. he Red Cross will send sewing out daily to the White Cross working center at the nurses’ home, where each day two or three chapters will be at ‘work. In addition, the majority of White Cross members will be engaged in Red Cross knitting. To further this enterprise, a special knitting contest will run until May 1, and the chapter which completes the most knitting will receive a prize award at the annual luncheon May 12, : Keeping the records of Red Cross work will be the third vice presidents of the 42 White Cross chapters. They will return to their usual routine of sewing and making dressings for the Methodist Hospital on Nov. 1. At the executive board meeting, Mrs. Carl Ploch, president, reported that the White Cross has completed the furnishing of three hospital rooms with wood furniture, rugs and drapes. In charge of this project were Mesdames Henry Leonard, J. M. Milner and William Laufer. Because of the demand for special accomodations at the hospital, they now have about fifteen homelike rooms such as those just furnished. As it has for several years past, the board again voted to continue recreations activities for students of nursing at the Methodist Hospital. This includes sponsorship of an orchestra, a choral ‘club and dramatic anid athletic activities, Plan Benefits Coming benefit events which different White Cross chapters will sponsor to finance their hospital welfare work include: North Methodist Church chapter, book review in the nurses’ home, Tuesday; Children’s Cheer Guild, card party, Oct. 7 at the Riviera Club; music Club, book review and style show, Oct. 14, in. Block's . auditorium; Garden Guild, book review on Oct. 30 and ‘a card party Nov. 29, both in Ayres’ auditorium; Perry Township chapter, book review, Nov. 13, at Indiana Central College; Alpha Omicron Alpha card’ party, Dec. 1, in Banner-Whitehill - auditorium; | Mother Guild, book review, Dec. 5, in Ayres’ auditorium; and St. Paul Methodist chapter, dinner at the Food Craft shop, Jan. 14.

To Name Chairmen The monthly meeting of the Indianapolis Petit Salon Des Chapeaux et Quarante

Lists Council

Of Women

Programs

Milton Bacon, good will ambase sador of station WCKY, Cincinnati, and Dr. James Madison Wood, president of Stephens College, will be two of the early season guest speakers for the Indianapolis Coun cil of Women, ; Mr, Bacon will open the season when he addresses the group, Oct, 7, at the Columbia Club at its President's Day luncheon. Subject of his talk will be “Watch Youre self Go By.” Dr. Wood will speak on “Woman's Role in Democracy” Dec.2 in Ayres’ auditorium at the -Council’s third meeting, Other dates and speakers will be? Nov. 4, Col. Roscoe Turner whose subject will be, “Aviation—Yester= day, Today and Tomorrow”; Jan, 6, Miss Marie Leonard, dean of women at the University of Illie nois will speak on “Pulling Our Weight.” Feb. 3 the Council of Women will celebrate its golden anniversary with a birthday party. March 3 John E. Kleinhenz of the Indianapolis Water Company will present a motion picture and speak on “The Waterway to Health.# April 7 Dr. E. Burdette Backus, minister of the All Souls Unitarian Church, will speak on “Our Debt to Greece.” Election of officers will take place at that time. May 5 officers will be installed. No speaker has been announced for this date. All meetings except the first one will take place in Ayres’ auditorium, Tuesday the council's board will meet at 10 a. m. in the Banners Whitehill auditoriuth,

Dr. Sharpe to Talk

Before Society Dr. Alexander Sharpe, executive

secretary of the Indiana Presbye= terian Society, will be the speaker Huit|before the Women’s Missionary SoFemmes 295|ciety of the Second Presbyterian

has been arranged by .the P.-T.A. Mrs. Hubert L. Allen will preside.

: James Hasch will discuss ; Seay: in General” Wednesday gt| Paved at the evening meeting. 1, - :30 p. m. before patrons off SCHOOL 7 P.-T.A. will hear Judge Sigma Pi SCHOOL 46. The Grade 5 and 6| Wilfred Bradshaw of the Juvenile ir will sing and tea will be|Court speak at 7:45 p. m. Wednes-

project during summer vacation. Garden work will be discussed and a {home in Indianapolis after a short program of orchestra music will be |wedding trip. : .

. 4 sisted by Miss Peggy Buck. The|of the Eight and Forty will be at : : pros. Charles L. Wells, out B0lNg| corority discussed plans for the|8:30 p, m. Thursday i Tio i cawen: Weinesdsy. Tie mesting Childs as in-comin: resident After event at a recent meeting in the|Mrs. Max Gamp, 318 Bicking St. 0 p.m, . the mee ip will visit the home of Mrs. Joe Jenkins. Le Petit Chapeau Mrs. Arthur of the President, Mrs. H. E. Barnard, Has Dance |p..T. A. to Meet Harrison Home. | Miler wil preside and new chair-| 30 FUCRR Sur FITS heen, . . . ; men appointed. . A: x The Indianapolis Sigma Pi Alum-| The first meeting of the Pike To ive Card Part T 0 Elect Officers follow the business meeting. the Society E Missionary j Sangl, rved. day. Mrs. Harry Ware will be the |i Club entertained recently with a Township P.-T. A. will be held 0 Ltve Lard arty The monthly business meeting of eS D..o7 Davin liam R, Griffith, a former presix accompanist for community singing, | dinner dance at the Wharf Club.| Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. in the| The Bon Ton Club, 322 E. New|the Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Indian- Plan Rush P arty dent, will conduct the devotional ez 's etivities y Day . pls presen a plogrém for Shake assisted with the SHnge The program is planned to intro- dance at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow. | held Monday afternoon af 2 o'clock|5 p. m. tomorrow by Sigma Lambda{be Mesdames A, OBTAIN. 2 ie: PUL a Smesiny the St : |proc . The alunn teachers, pupils and |( chestra. will pro-|in Ayres’ auditorium, Officers will|Chi Sorority at the home of Mrs.| James C

p. m. Monday in the Banner-White-hill auditorium. A program and social meeting will follow.