Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 December 1941 — Page 4
ocliety—
Traders Point Hunt Will Have Its Annual Dance Tonight at Woodstock
THE CURRENT TREND toward greater simplicity in social events will be marked tonight as the Traders Point Hunt holds its annual dance at the Woodstock Club. This year a dinner-dance is superseding the tra-
ditional hunt ball. In previous years, the ball has followed numerous cocktail parties and dinners in private homes; this year guests will gather at the club for a cocktail party before the dinner-dance. As part of the plan to make the event smaller than heretofore. hunt members were permitted to invite only one local couple who were not Traders Point members—although no limit was placed on the number of out-of-town guests who might be invited. Ac a result, an attendance of about 200 is expected. The colorful features of a hunt ball, however, will not be missing. Gowns worn by the women will be of traditional hunt ball colors—white, red, gray or black—and the men will wear their “pink” (scarlet to us) evening coats with robin’s egg blue satin facings and burgundy velvet collars. Mr. and Mrs. Julian Bobbs will attend with Mr. and Mrs. F W. Dunn as their guests. With Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bookwalter will be Mr. and Mrs. Lothair Teetor of Hagerstown, Mrs. Jesse Fletcher and Joseph J. Daniels.
Lieut. Sutphin to Entertain
MR. AND MRS. RUSSELL Li. WHITE of Carmel will have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. William A. Atkins. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Sutphin will have no guests with them, while their son. Lieut. Samuel Reid Sutphin, U. 8. N. R, will entertain Miss Evelyn Beard of Lexington, Ky, and Mr. and Mrs. John B. Morse
of Lake Forest, Ill With Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mayer will be Mr. and Mrs. Albert Zoller. Guests of Miss Hilda Hibben will be Mr. and Mrs. Harry Reid Jr, formerly of New York, and Henry Severin, Miss Madeline of “Foxcliffe,” Martinsville, and John W. Gamble will attend together, John D. Tebben will entertain Mr. and Mrs. William B. Ansted Jr. and Miss Ruth Fishback. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Rhoads will have with them Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Kuhn, Mr. and Mrs, Graydon Henry Weaver will be guests of Mr. and Mrs, Rhoads Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard MecGarrah Helms are entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah L. Cadick. Attending with Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ball, Muncie, will be Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crapo, Muncie, new members of the hunt, and Mr. and Mrs. Edwin R. Culver, St. Louis; Col. Edward Gregory of Culver Military Academy and Col. and Mrs. Alvin M. Owsley. Mrs. Barrall Woods, Hamilton, Mass, and Warner Atkins, Cinecinnati, will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus. Mr. and Mrs. William C. Griffith's party will include Capt. and Mrs. Raymond McClung of New York and Mr. and Mrs. Charles }arvey Bradley. Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Liongsworth will be entertained by Mr. and Mrs. A. Kiefer Mayer,
Among Other Parties
IN MR. AND MRS. EARL B. BARNES’ party will be Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Durham, Kokomo, and Mrs. Donald M. Nixon and Mark C. Honeywell, Wabash. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert M. Woollen will take their house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Quigg of Rich mond. Ind. to the club. The Quiggs are members of the hunt. With Mr. and Mrs. Perry E. O'Neal will be Mrs. O'Neal's
brothers, William J. Holliday of Chicago and Frederick T. Holliday, and Mrs. Frederick Holliday. Mrd. Hortense Rauh Burpee's guests will be her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. David Laurance Chambers Jr., and Blaine FH. Miller. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Burford Danner will be Miss Mary Lou Cooper, Aurora, Ill, and Sylvester Johnson Jr. Among others at the club will be Messrs. and Mesdames Cornelius O. Alig, Frederic M. Ayres Jr, August C. Bohlen and Russell Fortune Sr. Mrs. Griffith was chairman of the committee arranging tonight's dance Her assistants were Mesdames Kurt F. Pantzer, Bowman Elder. Louis H. Schwitzer Jr., Frederic Taylor, Samuel B. Sutphin, O'Neal, Alig, Woollen, Ruckelshaus, A. Kiefer Mayer and Helms. The hunt was to ride this afternoon at 2:15 o'clock from the Kinken Valley Farms, near Royalton, of Mr. and Mrs, William H. Wemmer,
Bridge Tournament Play-off ls Monday
MRS. G. H A. CLOWES will be hostess Monday at her home for the play-off in the local semi-finals of the bridge tournament being sponsored by the women’s committee of the Indiana State Symphony Society. Twenty women will begin play at 2 p. m. The tournament benefits the maintenance fund of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. - Miss Joan Stedfeld has the high score among the participants. Others, in the order of their scores, are Mesdames Ieonard Solomon, Thomas Madden, William H. Jungeclaus, M. W. Socwell, B. O. Bruington, Lucia Macbeth, Roger Kahn, J. K. Leasure, H. D. Hartley, Julia Darlington, Earl C. Randles, Fred Wagoner, Willlam T. Burnes, Wayne L. Ritter, T. Cordon Kelly, J. I. Davis, Sigurt Whitaker, Lanie de Got and C. B. Durham, Holders of the four highest scores at the end of Monday afternoon’s play will compete in the final tournament with the four players from outside Indianapolis, each of whom held the highest score in her region of the state. Finals will be held at 1:30 p. m. Monday, Dee. 15, in the Indianapolis Athletic Club, following a luncheon for the competitors, Chairman of the bridge tournament has been Mrs. Clowes, assisted by Mrs. William C. Griffith and Mrs. Joseph E. Cain as chairmen for Indianapolis, and by Mrs. Thaddeus R. Baker as general score chairman,
Museum Has Water Color Exhibit
THIRTY-EIGHT MEMBERS of the Philadelphia Water Color Club will be represented in an exhibition of water color art opening this week-end at John Herron Art Museum. The Cluf is a 40-year-old organization which has enrolled many famous artists. The pictures hang in the special exhibitions gallery, replacing the Jacob Cox show. Ancient Chinese paintings from the del Drago Collection will be kept on exhibit in the stairway gallery through Dec. 14. Among the best known water-colorsts represented are Joseph Frank Copeland, Edith Emerson, Harry Leith-Ross, Thornton Oakley, Violet Oakley, Lobson Pittman, Henry ©. Pitz and Andrew Wyeth, Wilbur D. Peat, Museum director, will speak in the assembly hall tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock on “Trends in Contemporary Water Dolor Painting,” pointing to some of the pictures on exhibit for his illustrations. The tableaux of famous paintings, an annual presentation of the Art Association Ot ndistiapoiis Ay ps inembethip, will be given Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in mbly hall for members exe elusively will be repeated night for the publie.
Shields
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Guild's Dance Will Benefit City Hospital
Proceeds of the annual dinner dance of St. Margaret's Hospital Guild tonight in the Indianapolis Athletic Club will go toward that organization’s philanthropic work, including occupational therapy, at the City Hospital. Mrs. John H. Rau is the general chairman with Mrs. William F, Kraft as her assistant. Programs for the dance will be in Christmas red with silver lettering. Sprays of huckleberry, interspersed with white candles and sil ver and red Christmas tree ornaments, will decorate the tables. Small Christmas trees will be used about the orchestra platform above which will be spotlighted a huge Christmas wreath. Bob McKittrick and his orchestra will play. The Arthur Murray Dance Studios will present a demonstration of ballroom dancing. Readings by a palmist will be another feature of the evening. In one party will be the Messrs. and Mesdames William F. Sandmann, J. R. McNutt, J. B, Lanagan, S. W, Terry, P. I. McCord, H. C. Tyson, H. A. Shumaker, E. N. Gimble, J. N. Rowland of Dayton, O., and Mr. and Mrs. Byron Lutz, Troy, O. Another group will include the Messrs. and Mesdames A. L. Matson, Edward F. Benzel, A. F. Hook, Gregg Ransburg, J. L. Mutz, R. C. Rusby, Miss Miriam Ransburg, John F. McLean Jr, Detroit, and Lieut. and Mrs. Homer Gratz, Dearborn, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Bengzel will give a cocktail party at their home for this group before the dance.
Pass on Awards for Camp Fire Girls
In preparation for the Christmas Council Fires of Camp Fire Girls next week, a committee of awards met this morning in the social hall of the Y. W. C. A. to pass girls on their wood gatherer, fire maker and torch bearer ranks. Miss Kathleen Klaiber was in charge. Her assistants and the examinations in which they were in charge included Mrs. Adelia Brier, symbolism and headbands; Mrs. Frank Burns, thrift charts; Mrs. Jesse Barker, health charts; Mrs. L. 8. Kirch, songs, and Miss Pat McGuire, first aid.
Talks on ‘Conditions In England Today’
“Conditions in England Today” will be the subject of a talk by F. H. Junk when he speaks before the adult forum of All Souls Unitarian Church at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning. Mr. Junk, who is connected with the Allison Division of General Motors, returned recently from a trip to England.
Auxiliary to Lunch
A Christmas pdrty and luncheon will be held at the Canary Cottage
by the Auxiliary of the Fraternal Order of
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1. Miss Madelaine Speers (left) will pose as “Oda lisque” by Matisse against a backdrop painted by Miss Lucey M. Taggart (right) in the tableaux of famous paintings to be presented by the Art Association of Indiafapolis Tuesday and Wednesday nights in John Herron Art Museum.
2. These children shown here with Miss Ruth Ga rver, teacher, will be among the little patients at Riley
Hospital who will present a program at the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild party on Dec. 16.
are Jerry Berneche, Miss Garver, Eddie West and Janet McCowen.
3. Baroness Catherine de Hueck, a member of th e former Russian nobility, will lecture on “The Tragedy of Russia” tomorrow in the World War Memorial Building under the auspices of the Indianapolis
Catholic Forum. Miss Marilyn Fisher (above) will preside at the lecture and introduce the speaker.
Left to right
Miss
Fisher is president of the senior class at Ladywood School where Baroness de Hueck will be a guest during
her stay in Indianapolis.
4. New officers of the Young Women’s Group of the Episcopal Church of the Advent include Miss
Marjorie Lorenz (left), president, and Miss Susan Taylor, vice president.
5. Misses Virginia Jones, Betty Jean Miller and Mary Elisabeth Gessert (left to right) are on the committee for the Christmas dance to be given by Pi Beta Phi Sorority at Butler on Dec. 19 in the chapter house. 6. Mrs. Gordon B. Sutton is ticket chairman of the Saddle Bag Dance which the Paddock Saddle Club
is sponsoring tonight at the Columbia Club.
(Photo reflex Photo.)
%. Mrs. Benjamin C. Raley will review “Keys of the Kingdom” at the 44th anniversary celebration of Alpha Omicron Pi Alumnae Monday. The sorority will have a dinner in the Marott Hotel Hunters’ Room.
(Photoreflex Photo.)
Program Set By Lois Circle
The Lois Circle of the Third Christian Church will have a devotional Christmas program at the church Tuesday at 2 p. m. “Christmas Chimes from Many Climes,” an illustrated story, will be narrated by Mrs. Thomas A, Bunch. Mesdames David Hedges, George Leonard, Guy Lefforge and C. F. Badger will take part. Robert Barnes will sing several carols, and lead group singing. Mrs. Dorsey D. King, program chairman, will tell the Christmas story. Mrs. Roy Davidson, hostess for the day, will be assisted by Mesdames Cathryn Bowden, Earl Cox, Carl Gakstetter, Ernest L. Huber, Paul Jackson, T. B. Laycock, F. BE. Smith and H. K. Thatcher Sr. Mrs. J, E. Barcus will preside.
Miss Stuck Hostess
Miss Jean Stuck, 533 Carlyle Place, will be hostess for Sigma
Lambda Chi Sorority at 8 p. m.|R. Bro
, Tuesday at 12:30 p.m,
Monday.
Peace Federation Meets Today
At the fourth annual meeting today of the Ohio Valley Student Peace Federation of the Catholic Association for International Peace, Miss Doris Ann Becker, 1331 W. 34th St, was to act as chairman. The meeting was to be held at Marjan College. Miss Margaret Ann MeCarthy, 1117 Kelly St, treasurer, will assist Miss Becker, who also is president. The keynote address, “America’s Peace Aims,” will be given by Miss Mary Duffy, Rushville, editor of the Marian College newspaper, “The Phoenix.” ’
Arbutus Garden Club Luncheon Is Monday
An exchange of garden gifts and the collection of donations for food baskets for the needy will be features of the annual Christmas party of the Arbutus Garden Club Mon-
day. The luncheon will be in the Indianapolis Athletic Club, Mrs. Paul and Mis. Gerald Albright hostesses.
17th Ward Club Elects Monday
The 17th Ward Woman's Democratic Club will hold its annual Christmas party at the home of Miss Hannah Noone, 733 Pleasant Run Parkway, South Drive, Monday at 8 p. m. Mrs. Roy Green will conduct the business meeting, during which officers will be elected. The nominating committee includes Mesdames Clement Graves, Louis Weiland and Luman Draine. A gift exchange and social hour will follow. Committees in charge are Mesdames Lucille Summers, Anna Staudt, Dorothy Clay, Angela Flannigan, entertainment; Mesdames Anna Hohman, Louise Betzler, Agnes Bush, Madge Sauter, Thelma Hoffmark, Helen Seifried, refreshments; Miss Ann O'Donnel, invitations; Mesdames Caroline Behymer, Edith Fellers, Gertrude Myers, Nettie Walker, Gertrude Heiob, Mary Mathews, Goldie Warrenburg, Frances Shepherd, Claudia Riley,
Mary O'Brien and Myers, assistant hostesses, ¢ :
Meetings Next
TUESDAY
School 86 Study Group — 9 a. m. «Tests of Character,” by Prof. R. £. Cavanaugh of Indiana University Extension Division. 89—Parent Study Group--1:30 p. m. “Our Children’s Health,” by Miss Vincentia Connor, school nurse.
WEDNESDAY
3—2:15 p. m. Business session; Christmas story by Mrs. Carolyn Jackson of East Washington Street Branch Library; musical program by Junior High School choir. 0-2:30 p. m. “How to Save Fuel and Control Smoke,” by George Popp; “The Nativity,” by 5th and 7th grade pupils directed by Mrs. John Commins; community singing of carols. 14-3 p. m. Carols by students. Study Group meeting at 1:16 p. m,, led by Mrs. T. E. Bedell. 15—2 p. m. Christmas story and prayer by Mrs. Leroy Riggle; Christmas pageant and music by pupils. 20-2:30 p. m. Rev. Ernst Piepenbrok speaking; pageant by pupils; music by Mothers’ Chorus. 21-2:30 p. m. “Religion Is Service” program theme illustrated by “Story of the Other Wise Men,” portrayed by pupils directed by Miss Katharine Leonard; music by Junior High School girls. 26—3:15 p. m. “The Reduction of Loss from Accident and Sickness,” by J. I. Cummings of Empire Life Insurance Co.; music by 1st and 2d grades and Mothers’ Chorus. 27—2:15 p. m. Plays and recitations by pupils; music by Glee Club. 28—3:15 p. m. Nativity pageant and tableau by 6th grade pupils. 37—3 p. m. Christmas story and carols by Junior High Boys’ Glee Club, 44—-2:30 p. m. Christmas play by 1A grade; music by Junior High Glee Club. New public address system purchased by P.-T. A. will be used. 52—3:15 p. m. Christmas program by pupils; tea. 54—1:30 p. m. “The Church Looks to the Future,” by the Rev. J. F. Edwards; carols by Mothers’ Chorus; Christmas play by Dramatic Club. ' 55—2:30 p. m. Musical program by 4th grade pupils; business session; Christmas party. 57—1:15 p. m. “The Story of the Nativity,” by Junior High School; double quartet from intermediate grades; carols by primary chorus; Christmas story by a student. 58-2 p. m. Business meeting; Christmas music by the four chorus groups of the school. 62—1:30 p. m. Christmas play, “Brotherhood,” directed by Mrs. Edna Jones, a teacher; Nativity pageant by Junior High School; carols by entire group; short talk by representative of Marion County Tuberculosis Association. 66—2 p. m. Christmas songs and games; a play, “The Elves and the Shoemaker,” ‘by primary class; music by primary choir. 67—2:15 p. m. “Religious Education
Christmas Programs Will Be Features of Parent-Teacher
Week
Christmas programs will claim the stage at Parent-Teacher Associa~tion meetings scheduled for the week.
Young, youth adviser at Central Christian Church; music by Rooms 19 and 20 pupils assisted” by Junior High School pupils.
68—2:30 p. m. Christmas party, carols and a play by pupils; Christmds tree will be decorated by P.-T. A. and decorations given to the school. 69—7:30 p. m. “Fathers’ Night”; “Spiritual Values,” by DeWitt 8S. Morgan, Sity schools superintendent; invocation by the Rev, Stanley Woltjen of First and Second Moravian Churches; carols by students.
72 Parent Study Group—1:30 p. m. Talk by Miss Mary Huey, home economics instructor at Indiana Central College; a third lesson in series, “Defense Begins at Home,” will be “To Market We Go.” Mrs, James Weber in charge.
73 —1:30 p. m. Christmas story by Mrs. Ross Griffith; Christmas program by pupils. 78—1:45 p. m. Talk by Dr. Howard Baumgartel, executive secretary of Church Federation; music by Girls’ Octet from Howe High School. 82—1:30 p. m. Program by pupils of Mrs. Mabel Wallace, Miss Berniece Wire and Miss Sophia Waara; songs by Mothers’ Chorus directed by Mrs. Vera Alyea. 2 p. m. “Walking in Silver Slippers,” by Dr. Roy Ewing Vale; carols by pupils; music by brass
. m, Talk by the Rew. Alexander, pastor of Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church; Christmas story by Mrs. Delight Hinton; music by rhythm band directed by Mrs. Blanche Horner.
sional by Mothers’ Chorus; carols by Parent-Teacher group; page eant by Junior High School; carols by pupils.
- FRIDAY
86—8 p. m. Pageant, “The Native ity,” by pupils; invocation by Dr. Logan Hall of Meridian Street Methodist Church.
Crusader Club’s Dance Is Tonight
The Crusader Club will give its annual Football Dance tonight from 9 p. m. to midnight in the Hoosier Athletic Club. Jack Berry and his orchestra will play. On the arrangements committee are Bill Aust, Francis Moriarty, Vincent Shanahan, John Carroll, Urban Thiennes, Joe Piggott, Jack Sullivan, Ed Werner, Jim Gavaghan, Jim Moran, Ed O'Connor, “Charlie Hornbach, Paul Fisher, George Helmer, Bernard and John Mattingly and Martin Masariu.
Louisville Visitors
Mayor and Mrs. Wilson Wyatt and Mr, and Mrs. Edwin P. Kelly of Louisville, Ky., are the week-end house-guests of Mr. and Mrs,
for Family Living,” by Miss Nellie’ Henry L.
Browning, 50 W, 64th Sty
91—1:30 p. m. Candlelight proces~ y
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