Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1942 — Page 5
SATURDAY, FEB. 7, 1942 Sororities—
Alpha Phis Set Feb. 21 as Date For State Day
Luncheon and Danee Are Scheduled
Sorority groups in today’s news are planning a state day, dance and regular meetings. Mrs. T. O. Philpott has been appointed general chairman of ALPHA PHI State Day, to be held Feb. 21 at the Columbia Club, by Mrs. Alfred Evans of Bloomington, state alumnae president. Her assistants will be Mrs. Richard J. Boatman and Mrs. Mason King. Mrs. Ralph Strader, national vice president and director of extension and rushing, will come from Evanston, Ill, to address the Indiana alumnae groups at their annual meeting following the luncheon. Her subject will be the place of the woman's fraternity in the national emergency and the problems that will face such groups in the future. Special guests will be presidents of Indiana alumnae clubs. Reports of the year’s activities will be brought from Terre Haute, Greencastle, Gary, Ft. Wayne, Crawfordsville and Evansville. Miss Sharlee Mayer, president of the DePauw University Gamma Chapter, will discuss her group's activities and] Mrs. Walter W. Talley of Terre Haute, president of the House Board, will report on the progress| P D: > of her committee. | r esent d)
Mrs. Eqward Zink will make the|
annual presentations of scholarship H awards to the freshman making the | lub to car Capt. Miller
highest grades and to upper-class-men showing the most improvement. KAPPA ALPHA THETA MOTHERS’ CLUB will meet for a noon
Chairmen of the committees assisting in arrangements include Mrs. luncheon at the chapter house Tuesday, following which Dr. Her-
John Clymer, invitations; Mrs. Thomas P. Jenkins, hospitality; Mrs. man Morgan, secretary of the Indianapolis Board of Health, will
Robert Horn, decorations: Mrs. Robert Seastrom, dance; Mrs. Arthur talk on “Guarding the Community Health.”
Dixon, program, and Mrs. Bruce McMrs. Donald Graham and Mrs.
Intosh, scholarship awards. Eight local chapters of BETA SIGMA PHI will sponsor a ValenCharles Shirk are co-chairmen of arrangements. Cards will be played immediately following the program.
tine dance next Friday evening at the Columbia Club. They are DELTA, CHIL PSI, OMEGA, BETA ZETA, BETA ETA, BETA PI AND BETA THETA. Bud Stone and his orchestra will play. Assistants to the general chairman, Mrs. George Fowler, will be Mesdames Donald Byers, Harold Carter, I. H. Schedker, Lester Hanson and the Misses Helen Basey, Thelma Valentine, Margaret Farmer, Tressella Murphy, Regina Bauchle, Betty Van Camp, Marian Wood, Lucille Dodd, Patricia Phelps and Helen Salter.
“Democracy Begins at Home” will be the subject of Mrs. R. S. Hiatt { following a 1 p. m. luncheon meet{ing of the IRVINGTON CIRCLE of the CHILD CONSERVATION LEAGUE of AMERICA in the home of Mrs. W, E. Adkins, 760 Campbell Ave. Monday. Ten-minute talks on how to teach our children to recognize the philosophy of “Naziism,” “Fascism” and “Communism” will be given by Mesdames J. H. Clendenin, E. J. Miss Lillian Schuck will be host-{ Rennoe and Claude Watson. Mrs. ess Monday night to members of H. L. Hasbrook will assist Mr. DELTA ZETA PSI at her home on Adkins.
Edgewood Ave, | ab : i Capt. Clifford S. Miller, liaison of“What Is Civilian Defense” will ficer for Col. Walter Drysdale at Ft. be the subject of Mrs. Bert Mc-/ Benjamin Harrison, will talk on the Cammon of the Marion County Army in the present conflict and Civilian Defense Council Wednes- Selective service at a meeting of the day at the monthly educational and PRESENT DAY CLUB Monday at
St. Louis.
Church. (W. Hurley Ashby Photo.)
Dalecarlia, Ind.
social fraternity, and Phi Delta Phi,
didate School. Ft. Knox, Ky.
legal fraternity.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 3B
Bridal News Includes Announcements for These Young Women
1. The engagement of Miss Harriet A. Terry to John Morton Williams is announced. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. Nina B. Terry, Louisville, and Mr. Williams is the son of Mrs. Marie L. Williams, The wedding will be Feb, 21, at 2:30 p. m,, in the McKee Chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian
2. Mrs. Agnes Monks Hunter, Winchester, announces the engagement of her daughter, Miss Elizabeth Monks Hunter, to Wendell C. Hamacher, Crown Point, son of Mr. and Mrs. David C. Hamacher, Lake Miss Hunter attended Earlham College and Purdue University and is a member of Tri Kappa and Kappa Alpha Theta Sororities. She was graduated from the Tobe-Coburn School of Fashion Careers in New York. Mr. Hamacher attended Staunton Military Academy, Staunton, Va., and Wabash Coliege and was graduated from the Indiana University Law School.
He is a member of Kappa Sigma,
3. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Parrish announce the engagement of their daughter, Margaret, to Pvt. Frank W. Fisk, son of Dr. and Mrs. Frank B. Fish. The wedding will be Feb. 21. (Photorefiex Photo.) 4. Miss Anne Louise Pfortner, sister of F. W. Pfortner, will be married to William J. Bingle of To-
Pvt. Fisk is in the Officers’ Can-
(Voorhis-Priddy Photo.)
Russell Powell Will Wed
Miss Forrest
Dr. Vale to Perform Rite Tomorrow
Dr. Roy Ewing Vale, pastor of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, will officiate tomorrow afternoon at the wedding of Miss Jeanne M. Forrest to Russell Powell. The ceremony will be at 3:30 o'clock in McKee Chapel of the church. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. John R. Forrest, 4021 Ruckle St., and Mrs. V. T. Wagner, Pontiac, Mich. At the altar, candelabra and spring flowers will be interspersed in an arrangement of palms and ferns backed with a white lattice entwined with huckleberry foliage. A group of Pi Beta Phi Sorority songs will be played before the ceremony by Miss Donna Alles, organist. Mr. Forrest will give his daughter in marriage. Gowns of the bride and her attendants will be of pastel sheer wool in street length, fashioned with bracelet length sleeves and high necklines. The bride will be in .ice blue worn with navy accessories and she will carry Briarcliff roses. Both the bride and her attendants will wear small pompadour hats of ribbon and flowers matching their frocks. Miss Josephine Forrest, her sister’s maid of honor, will be in gold; Miss Geraldine Getz will be in pale green, and Mrs, George Vickery will wear rose. The three will carry bouquets of jonquils, iris and tulips. David McQueen is to serve as Mr. Powell’s best man and ushers will be Emerson Powell, Piqua, O.; William Geyer, Earl Gibson and Robert Leslie. Gardenia corsages will be worn by mothers of the couple, Mrs. Forrest has chosen a gown of defense blue with which she will have black accessories and Mrs. Wagner will wear aqua with brown accessories. :
Reception to Follow
Following a reception at the home of the bride’s parents after the ceremony, the couple will leave for a trip to Chicago. For traveling, the bride will wear a green print frock beneath a fur coat, black accessories and an orchid corsage. They will be at home here after next week. Both Miss Forrest and Mr. Powell attended Butler University where she was a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority and he of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity. Out-of-town guests will include Mr, Wagner, Pontiac; Mr, and Mrs. C. H, Forrest, Frankfort; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Meutman, Misses Barbara Lee and Patricia Jenkins and James Wright, Cincinnati; Mrs. Emerson Powell, Piqua; Mr. and Mrs. Pleas Greenlee, Shelbyville; Mrs. Joseph Harris and her son, Joe, Muncie; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bates, Acton; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Parker and family, Bargersville, and Mr. and Mrs. W. G, Burton,
Couple to Take Trip to Palm Springs
The Columbia Club ballroom will be the scene of the wedding of Miss Florence Lustgarten, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Edward Lustgarten, to Philip Fogel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Fogel, tomorrow at 4:30 p. m. Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht will officiate. The bride and her attendants will enter through an aisleway marked by tall cathedral candles entwined with smilax and flowers. The canopy under which the ceremony is read will be made of southern smilax with roses and spring flowers over it. Behind the canopy will be a background of palms, woodwardia ferns, two seven-way candelabra and two tall blue vases holding quince blossoms, gladioli, pink roses, iris and jonquils. In the foyer there will be bowls of spring flowers. George Strandt, organist, will play bridal music including “I Love You Truly,” “0, Promise Me,” and “Serenade” (Drago). Miss Joan Weiss, maid of honor, and Miss Janet Cooler and Miss Sylvia Maierson, bridesmaids, will wear dresden blue and apple blossom pink |dresses fashioned on bouffant lines | | with basques of sheer jersey and net | iskirts. Their pompadour hats will be made of matching net. They will carry pink roses interspersed with loops of ribbon contrasting with
their dresses.
Anderson.
Lecturer
Mai-Mai-Sze
W. D. C. Books Talk on ‘China In Focus’
Guest speaker for a general meeting of the Women’s Department Club Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. will be Mai-Mai-Sze, world traveler, artist and lecturer. Her talk will be entitled “China in Focus.” Miss Sze, who was born in Tientsin, China, is the daughter of the former Chinese Ambassador to the United States. She spent nine years in this country with her father in Washington and was graduated from Wellesley College in 1931. In the summer of 1940, Miss Sze made her first trip home since the beginning of the Sino-Japanese conflict. She visited Chungking and other cities in the interior where she talked with students and workers in China's industrial co-opera=-tives. Mrs. Howard E. Nyhart, program chairman, will introduce Miss Sze. Mrs. Edward Niles and Mrs. E. C. Rumpler will preside at the tea table following the program.
Church News— William Remy Will Address W.S.C.S.
The WOMAN'S SOCIETY of CHRISTIAN SERVICE of CENTRAL AVENUE METHODIST CHURCH will have a general meet~ ing Tuesday at the church. Ses= sions will be opened with a 9:45 a. in. executive board meeting with Mrs. Burton A. Knight, president, presiding. A luncheon will be served at 12:30 p. m. by members of Group 4 under the direction of Mrs. S. D. Bash, president, assisted by Mrs. Clifford Plummer, general chairman, and Mesdames Byron
us S oti - hh 2 sO, . M. . Paul Cathedral. business mesting of ALPHA CHAP- the home of Mrs, John F. Edwards,| ledo, O., at 10 a. m. on April 11 in the SS. Peter and Pau ra Wood, F. M. Meck and Stella Ball.
TER, ZETA BETA CHI, at 7:30 4335 N. Pennsylvania St. { r in Hotel Lincoln. A group of Shortridge High School | |pupils, under the direction of Miss| MU CHAPTER. ALPHA OMI- Eleanor D. Theek, will present al CRON ALPHA, will mest Tuesday skit. The program will follow a 1] at the Spencer Hotel for a 12:30 p. m. dessert luncheon at which | 1 hecn and business meet- Mrs. John S. Lloyd will assist Mrs.
unc
m al.
»
ing.
m ial.
Members of ALPHA NU LATREIAN CLUB will hear Mrs. Elizabeth Patrick of L. S. Ayres & Co. discuss | “spring styles” at a meeting Moniday. Mrs. Charles S. Miller, 6010 {Primrose Ave. will entertain in her|
Butler Votes On Queens
Student Council members at Butler University chose 16 semi-final-ists from a group of 43 coed candidates in the Drift Beauty Queen election this week. They were the Bowes, Dorothy Brown, Marianne Carlsen, Joan Cross, Barbara Fuller, Joan Green, Lois Mathieson, Maribeth Milles, Jeanne Ringle, Mary Lu Robinson, Carol Rogers, Leslie Shippey, Betty Staudt, Mary Wiley, |, : Jeanne Steiner and Jean Thomas. | Trompe Mondsy vis = Judges from the commercial art! : professions will select five coeds, ! whose pictures will appear in the 1942 edition of the Butler Drift. | Se university yearbook. The final judg- a tr Soplie Geiton, Supreme ing will be Wednesday at 3 p. m.| : | in Ayres’ auditorium.
home, assisted by Mrs. Leland C. uniting his brother, Paul J. Goo- mentality that characterized those received by grandmother. Huey Jr. and Mrs. Robert R. Pal- tee. and Miss Nellie A. Heitz at vival of bleeding hearts, bows and arrows and doves as symbols of ro-
ner.
at Surveys of Brazil and Argentina Misses Bette and Mrs. V. D. Templeton at a meet{ing of the WOMAN'S CLUB of {WINAMAC, Monday with Mrs. L. (A. Smith as hostess,
The MONDAY CLUB will have a { business meeting in Ayres’ audi-
on acting as chairman assisted by Mesdames Hubert L. Wann, W. D. Pyle and Clarence Kittle. A club institute will be held
: Choral Ensemble will | Poster Contest Ties [CHAPTER P, P. E. O. SISTER{p. m. luncheon will be Mrs. Guy W.
In With Vision Week Seaton and Mrs. William S. Hovis.
A poster contest open to Marion County boys and girls between the; Mrs. Glenn W. Funk and Mrs. ages of 13 and 18 will be sponsored | George K. Vestal will be co-host-n connection with National Save|esses at a luncheon, business. and Your Vision Week, March 8-15, by bridge meeting Monday for the the Women's Auxiliary to the In-!C. I. H. N. CLUB. diana Optometric Association's central zone Subject of the posters is to be “Guard Your Eyes” and entries must be submitted by 4:30 p. m. March 5. Prizes wiil be $15, $10 B $5 In defense savings stamps. ers Will be announced the of March 8. Their posters, with others selected will be 1 display in downtown locations. ! Rules of the contest state that posters must be no smaller that 12 by 18 inches, no larger than 22 bv 28 inches. Three colors on white or two on a colored card may be| Tue JUNIOR AUXILIARY to used. Entries with the name of, pyUBLIC HEALTH NURSING —% "pntestant in a sealed envelope | , gEOCIATION will meet for a 12:30
Miss Ruby Stapp, a supervisor of we Indianapolis Free Kindergarten, (will discuss “Some Standards for {the 5-Year Old” at a meeting of the the GARFIELD PARK KINDERGARFIELD PARK KINDERGARTEN MOTHERS CLUB Wednesday. Mothers of new pupils are urged to attend. Miss Jane Coe, teacher, will introduce her new assistant, Miss Jo [Rita Kernel. Hostesses will be Mesdames Ralph Cox, Howard Carden. {Charles Eacret and Walter Atwell.
in reel lor
will be given by Mrs. C. E. Zellers]
B. spersed with candelabra. John Con-
marriage.
A trio from the Matinee Musicale| entertain |
| HOOD, Monday. Hostesses at the 1] {pearls and she carried a shower
Gootee-Heitz Ceremony Is Performed
The Rev. Fr. Louis Gootee performed the marriage ceremony
5. Miss Martha Jayne Fitz, daughter of Mrs. Olive Fitz, and Richard S. Edwards, Mooresville, son of Mrs. Sarah Edwards, Towa City, Ia., will exchange marriage vows next Saturday.
Homemaking—
(Photo-Craft Photo.)
Refreshments for Valentine Party
Are
in the Romantic Tradition
VALENTINES this year, they say, have returned to the lacy senti-
The re-
‘mance is reflected in table decorations suggested for Valentine parties.
9 o'clock this morning in Qur Lsos) of Lourdes Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Heitz, 77 N. Irvington Ave. and Mr. Gootee’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lewis T. Gootee, 42 N. Hawthorne Lane. The service was read before an altar decorated with palms, ferns and vases of white roses, inter-
nor sang a program of bridal airs preceding the rite. Mr. Heitz gave his daughter in Her bridal gown was of white satin, made with a shirred bodice, a net yoke trimmed in seed pearl medallions and long sleeves and train. Her fingertip veil of illution was caught with a tiara of starched lace, trimmed with seed
bouquet of white rosebuds. Mrs. Connor, the matron of honor, and the bride's sister, Miss Charlotte Louis Heitz, bridesmaid, wore taffeta dresses fashioned with tight basques, full skirts and bracelet length sleeves. Mrs. Connor was in dusty rose and Miss Heitz in heavenly blue. Ribbon bows with streamers, in shades to match their dresses, were worn in their hair. Their bouquets were of spring flowers. Brother Ushers
Edward Kammerer was Mr. Gootees best man and George R. Heitz, la brother of the bride, and Harold {Day ushered. A reception at the home of the bride's parents followed the ceremony. After a wedding trip, the couple will be at home Feb, 15 at 3510 N. Pennsylvania St. Among the out of town guests were Brother Ambrose Gootee, New
th 3 | . on the back of each, are to bel m. luncheon Monday in the home
mailed or delivered to the Indi-| M ~q anapclis Power & Light Co. oes. Binns, Wi Be Mrs. Robert G. Ledig, auxiliary ——————————— president, is in charge of arrange-| . Social Club to Have
ments. Mesdames Thomas H.|
Cochrane, E. J. Soland and Rov Valentine Party
Denny will assist. —————————— Mrs. James Thomas Cofer, 1134 Dance Tomorrow W. 35th St, will entertain members A dance and card party will be Of the Independent Social Club at sponsored at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow > dessert luncheon and Valentine by the Bon Ton Club at 322 E [Forty Tuesday at 12:30 p. m. New York St. Dance music will MTS. May VanNatta and Mrs. be provided by Gilly Banta’s or- H. E. Linabury will assist the hostS.
chestra. i a
Alumnae Meeting ‘Sorority Session
Mrs. John Modrall, 4805 Carroll-, The Phi Omega Kappa Sorority ton Ave, will be hostess at 8 pm. will meet at 8:30 p. m. Monday with Monday for the Indianapolis Chap- | Mrs. Richard Marshall, 905 N. Latar of Gamma Phi Beta Alumprae.!Salle St.
§& Miss Faye Ella Hite, 908 N,
Orleans, brother of the bridegroom; Mrs. Joseph Wiggins, Washington, Lo. sister of Mr. Gootee, and Mr. | Wiggins; the grandmother of the {bride, Mrs. Charlotte Heitz, and Mr. {and Mrs. John Crutcher and daughIter, Mary Anne, Louisville.
Mrs. Byrd Hostess
Phi Chapter, Alpha Omicron Alpha Sorority, will meet at 2:15 {p. m. tomorrow at the home of | Mrs. Guy O. Byrd, 6018 Haverford Ave.
Miss Hite Entertains The Sophisticated Swingsters { Chapter, Sub Deb Federation, will ‘meet at 8 p. m. today at the home
Perhaps the head of the family,
away on a business trip, or a fiance
in the Army may want to participate by wiring flowers for a centerpiece.
Snapdragons, jonquils, sweet peas, marigolds and narcissus in a frill of lace decorated with hearts is suggested by one florist. Another offers mimosa, white carnations and pink rosebuds in a heart arrange-
Ice Cream and Cake
Refreshments themselves may be in the romantic tradition. Tiny heart-shaped cakes and melt-in-your-mouth homemade ice cream are sure to appeal. The cakes may be cut from cake layers and frosted with failureproof frosting made with sweetened condensed milk. The ice cream can be prepared for freezing in a few minutes and it needs only one stirring after it’s in the automatic refrigerator. Here are the recipes: ST. VALENTINES ICE CREAM (Automatic Refrigerator Method)
23 cup (72-02. can) sweetened condensed milk cup water teaspoons vanilla cup whipping cream cup finely chopped maraschino cherries eup seeded raisins, finely chopped Mix sweetened condensed milk, water and vanilla. Chill. Whip cream to custard-like consistency. Fold into chilled mixture. Freeze in freezing unit of refrigerator until half frozen. Scrape from freezing tray and beat until smooth, but not melted. Add maraschino cherries and raisins. Replace in freezing unit until frozen. Serves 6. CUPID’S MAGIC FROSTING 21% cups sifted confectioners’ 4X) sugar
: | 15 112 | i$
1
Oakland Ave.
3% cup (7%2-0z. can) sweetened condensed milk
21; teaspoons vanilla Dash of salt Stir sifted confectioners’ sugar gradually into sweetened condensed milk, Add vanilla and salt. Beat until smooth and creamy. Spread on cold cake. Makes enough to cover tops and sides of two (89-inch) layers. This frosting, made stiffer by adding more confectioners’ sugar, may be used in a pastry tube for cake decorating.
EJ
Furniture Shampoo
UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS may be shampooed at home with a soap jelly made with one part of neutral soap flakes to five parts of hot water. Let the mixture cool, and just before it is used, beat to a stiff lather with an egg beater. The chairs should be prepared by a thorough cleaning with a whisk broom or the hand attachment of a vacuum cieaner. Remove grease spots, such as those made by heads resting against the backs of chairs, first scrubbing with carbon tetrachloride and a soft brush. Then try the soap suds on an out-of-the-way spot on the chair to be sure that the color is fast If the test is satisfactory, apply the soap suds with a soft brush to small areas. Rinse each spot immediately with cloths wrung out in clear warm water. Overlap the areas to prevent streaking or spotting, and take care not to use enough water to
2 ®
{soak through and rust the springs.
=
The Question Box
Q—Please tell me how to care for my waffle iron after I use it. I have trouble with the waffles sticking to the iron and think that it may be due to improper care after each using. A—After using the iron, remove all particles of batter with a stiff brush, wipe off quickly with a cloth dampened in hot water, and dry with a soft cloth. Wrap carefully or slip into an oilskin bag and put in a clean place. Then the iron is ready for use next time. Double the amount of shortening called for in the recipe next time you bake waffles and gradually diminish it until you use the amount called for in the recipe. This should correct the trouble you have with waffles sticking.
: =
Bride to Wear Satin
The bride, who will be given in marriage by her father, will be gowned in candlelight satin on bouffant lines with fitted basque, square neckline and long tight fitting sleeves pointed over her hands, and edged with Chantilly lace. Her full, sweeping train also will be edged in lace and her finger-tip blush veil will be two-tiered falling from a tiara of tulle and edged with orange blossoms. She will carry a bridal bouquet of three white orchids with freesias, white roses and orange blossoms. Mr. Fogel's best man will be Milton Olshewitz and ushers will be Max Zimet, Edward Goodman, Arthur Londe and Bert Sarber. The bride's mother will wear an ice blue chiffon dinner dress with matching turban and a corsage of pink camellias, sprinkled with gold. Mrs. Fogel wiil be dressed in contrasting shades of blue trimmed in silver with a matching blue hat. She also will have a corsage of pink camellias trimmed in silver.
Reception to Follow
Following the ceremony ga reception will be held at the Columbia Club with Mrs, Max Zimet, Miss Annett Simons and Miss Mary Furscott acting as hostesses. The receiving line will stand before an arrangement of palms and potted plants. The table will be] 3 garlanded with a rope of gardenias| } and greenery surrounding bowls of} pink roses. The couple will leave on a wedding trip to Los Angeles and Palm Springs after which they will be at home at 3140 N. Meridian St. Miss Lustgarten was graduated from Ward - Belmont, Nashville, Tenn., and attended Indiana University and the Arthur Jordan Radio School. Mr. Fogel attended Indiana University Out-of-town guests will include the following from Chicago: Henry, Monroe, Sydney and William Livingston, Messrs. and Mesdames Arthur ( Lustgarten, Milton L. Newman, Robert Lustgarten and David R. Lawrence. Others will be Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lustgarten, Wilmette, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis and Mrs, Sidney Seligman, Richmond, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Morris Gordon, Covington Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Ben Danerwitz, Pittsburgh; Miss Frances Woolf, Bernard Livingston and Arthur Billig, all of New York.
“Poets’ Rendezvous” Is Tomorrow
The monthly “Poets’ Rendezvous” of the Indiana Federation of Poetry Clubs will be held from 4 to 9 p. m. tomorrow in the downstairs parlors of the Young Women’s Christian Association Building, 329 N. Pennsylvania St. During the meeting Miss Florence McDonald will sing two groups of songs and Miss Olive Inez Downing will speak on “Indiana Poetry.” An illustrated talk on verse forms will be given by Mrs. Harriett Scott Olinick and original poems will be read by William Chitwood. Rendezvous committee chairman is Miss Kathryn McPherson who will preside. Serving on her committee are Mesdames Mabel Laut, C. B. Dwyer and Josephine Duke Motley. The hostesses will be Mrs. Dwyer and Miss Florence Taylor.
Bride-to-Be
Mr. and Mrs, William R. Kettner announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Evelyne E., to Walter Noffke, son of Mrs. Clara A. Noffke, in St. Paul's Evangelical and Reformed Church at 2 p, m. Feb. 15. Dr. E. Harold Klingel will officiate. Miss Kettner's sister, Mrs. Forrest Pauli, will be matron of honor. Her bridesmaids are to be Mrs. Raymond Durham and Mrs. Richard Hittle, sister of the bridegroom-to-be. Mr. Noffke has chosen his brother, Otto Noffke, for his best man. Ushers will be Forrest Pauli, Richard Hittle, Julius Thorman and Thomas Haynes. Both Miss Kettner and Mr, Noffke are graduates of Butler University where she was a member of Kappa Beta and he was a member of Blue Key.
Legion Auxiliary to
Serve at Canteen
Madden-Nottingham Unit 348, American Legion Auxiliary, will hold a business meeting Tuesday evening at the Post Home, 1130 W, 30th St., with Mrs. Harry Lorber, president, presiding. Following, Mesdames John P. Cook, Sam Jones and William Bernauer will be hostess at a social hour. Members of the Unit will serve at the canteen at the Naval Recruiting Station in the Federal Building Feb. 16. Mrs. Herbert Dunlap, emergency volunteer service chairman, is in charge of this activity
FOR YOUR VALENTINE
At the afternoon session short talks on seiected subjects will be made by Mesdames F. D. Leete Jr., William M. Baumheckel and J. P. Owens. William Remy, teacher of the Men's Bible Class, will discuss “American Traditions of Liberty as Reflected in Literature.” He will be introduced by Mrs. Parker Jordan, program chairman. Mrs. Lee Woods will lead the society in devotional services and Mrs. R. K. Brown, president of Group 5, assisted by members of her group, will be hostess for the day.
Section 5, the Business and Professional Women’s group, will be in charge of a 6 p. m. supper meeting of the W. S. C. S. of MERIDIAN STREET METHGDIST CHURCH in the church parlors tomorrow, Miss Malvin Morton, Girl Reserve Secretary of the Y. W, C. A, will present a verse speaking choir. Frank Nussbaum will lead group singing, Dr, Logan Hall will have charge of the devotional period and Miss Bella Watson will preside.
ST. THOMAS AQUINAS MOTH-~ ERS’ CLUB will sponsor a public card party at 2 p. m. Thursday in Ayres’ auditorium. Proceeds will be used to purchase equipment for the School cafeteria. Mrs. Peter A. Beckiewicz will be general chair= man. Committee members include Mesdames B. C. Schaefer, T. M. Mc~ Donald, William Albrecht and Patrick McShane, tickets; Mesdames Luke Finnegan, Paul Hussey, E. F. Miller, Wayne Kramm and Miss Margaret Sullivan, candy, and Mesdames E. P. Costello, A. E. Coddington, Walter Streicher and George L. Hart, cards and tallies, Serving on the reception committee will he Mesdames Thomas Quinn, John Frigge, Louis Crumb, Thomas Mehaffey, Paul Devening, William Hanlon, Chris Palson, John Baldwin, Robert Gavin and Frank McKinney.
A Sunday School orchestra has been organized under the direction of Ralph Bird at BROADWAY EVANGELICAL CHURCH. Membership is open and rehearsals are held at 7:15 p. m. each Tuesday night. The MOTHERS’ STUDY CLUB will meet Tuesday at 8 Pp. m. in the home of Mrs. B. G. Pippenger, 3720 E. 62d St.
Society to Meet
The Women’s Society of Indianapolis Florists will meet at 6:30 p. m. Monday at the Hotel Antlers. Hostesses will be Mesdames John, Edward and Arthur Heiden=reich, Karl Hack, Clarence Green,
Gag L22,
Myrtle and Edward Grande.
Fowets-
The ALLIED FLORISTS ASS'N of Indianapolis
