Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1942 — Page 24

FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1942

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 23

Defense Will Be the Theme of Flower Show Included in Annual Garden Tour

ments of tulips in two colors; the pair class, arrangements in twin

THE UNITED NATIONS—in keeping with a defense motif—

will be featured in arrangements connection with the Park School

shown at the flower show held in Garden tour May 2 and 3. Small

groups of furniture, accessories and flower arrangements will typify

the several countries.

The defense theme will be repeated in a patriotic class of flower arrangements in national colors and in a small victory garden outside the doors of the school gymnasium. There also will be fruit and veget-

table displays.

In the united nations exhibit,

Mrs. Allen Miller will furnish a

Norwegian booth; Mrs. Eli Lilly, an early American booth; Mrs. Shirley D. Murphy and Mrs. Richard Fairbanks, an early French provincial booth; Mrs. Royer K. Brown, Mexican; Mrs. K. K. Chen and

Mrs. Arthur Herrington, Chinese

Society—

William Hamerstadts Will Entertain Tonight for Daughter and Her Fiance

booth, and Mrs. Robert Smith, a

MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM DIEHL HAMERSTADT will entertain tonight at the Columbia club with a bridal dinner honoring their daughter, Mary Jane, and George Estes Bardwell who are to be married in a 4:30 o'clock ceremony tomorrow afternoon in the Advent Episcopal

church.

Guests tonight with the betrothed couple will include Mr. Bardwell’s mother, Mrs. R. N. R. Bardwell, and his sister, Mrs, Leonard . E. Murray, both of Atlanta, Ga. Other guests will be Mr. and Mrs.’ William B. Stokely Sr., Newport, Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson F. Howard, Winston-Salem, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bardwell Jr, Birmingham, Ala., Mrs. William S. and Mesdames William J. Hamerstadt, Paul W. Scheuring, John

B. Stokely and Alfred J. Stokely.

Dorothy Andrew Chooses Sister as Attendant

MISS DOROTHY ANDREW of

Miss Sarah N. Andrew, to be her only attendant when she is married May 15, to Lewis E. Morrison, son of Mr. and Mrs, Donald A. Morrison. The ceremony will be at 4:30 p. m. at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Andrew, in Lafayette. Mr. Mor-

rison’s brother, Donald A. Morrison ley Rhodehamel will be an usher.

The bride-to-be’s sister will give a dinner party tomorrow for the couple at the Andrew home. Mrs. H. Forbes Antrim will entertain at luncheon for Miss Andrew May 2 and a cocktail party will be given the same day by the bride-to-be’s cousin, J. E. Bixler, and

Mrs. Bixler, West Lafayette. On

Swezey will be hosts at a dinner party and the following night a dinner will be given by Mr. and Mrs. Oliver W. Peirce Jr. The bride's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse C. Andrew, will entertain with the bridal dinner May 14 at Pine Farm, West Point. Recent parties for Miss Andrew were a dinner given by Miss Patricia H. Potter and a kitchen shower for which Misses Mary Smith, Mary Alice Grandstaff and Helen Jean Schweidler were hostesses.

Honor Ann Chapman and Fiance

MISS ANN CHAPMAN and Pvt. John G. Egger Jr. will be honored tonight at a bridal dinner given by Miss Chapman’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Chapman, at their home.

at 7:30 p. m, tomorrow in the First

for the ceremony will follow the dinner. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Egger, the prospective bridegroom’s parents, will be among guests at the dinner. Others will be Mr. and Mrs. Donald Alberty, Mr. and Mrs. Donn Rudd, Miss Martha Egger, Miss Janet Chapman, Charles Grinslade and Reid and Robert F.

Chapman.

Two Indianapolis girls at Stephens college, Columbia, Mo., will leave this week to attend the national convention of Phi Theta

Kappa, national scholastic honorary

are Misses Joan and Joyce Smith, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Smith, 1111 Pomander place. They are juniors at the school and will attend the convention as junior delegates.

Mrs. William E. Gavin, 5879 Central ave. is visiting in New York. She is expected to return the middle of next month.

Clubs—

Final Meeting of Harmonie Club To Be Monday at D.A.R. House; Lutheran Women to Sponsor Tea

The HARMONIE club will hold its final meeting of the year Monday at 2:30 p. m. in the D. A. R. chapter house. Mrs. James M. Ogden and Mrs. William H. Morrison have arranged a program which will be the study of the opera, “Markku” (Tuomela). Mrs. Norman Schneider will be the narrator and members of the club will illustrate the discussion with ensemble and solo numbers.

Mrs. James M. Pearson and Mrs. | Arthur H. Webber will be hostesses. | STUDY

Their assistants will be Mesdames T. M. Rybolt, William J. Stark, Otto Heppner, Clyde E. Titus, Clare F. Cox and Miss Jean Orloff.

A covered dish supper for fathers and sons will be held by the PHI DELTA THETA MOTHERS club Wednesday at the chapter house. Mrs. Bessie Shaffer, housemother, is in charge of arrangements.

Mrs. James C. Morrison will distuss recent books and Miss Dorothy Forsyth will review “As I Remember Him” (Hans Zinsser) before the BUTLER ALUMNAE LITERARY club tomorrow. The group will meet with Mrs®Thomas Lyda, 4037 Guilford ave.

A film, “Unfinished Rainbows,” will be presented by the NATURE

Hall, Ft. Worth, Tex.; Messrs.

Lafayette has chosen her sister,

Jr., will be best man, and Har-

May 9 Mr. and Mrs. Burr S.

The wedding will be Presbyterian church. Rehearsal

sorority, at Gulfport, Miss. They

club of Indiana at the Rauh Memorial library tomorrow evening at 7:30 o'clock. The movie tells the story of aluminum. Sunday, members will travel to Brown county in private cars for an ali-day hike through the hills of Brown county. They will meet in front of Wasson’s Circle store at 9 a. m. Miss Bernice Hussey is in charge of transportation arrangements.

A tea for prospective members will be given from 3 to 5 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the D. A. R. chapter house, 824 N. Pennsylvania st., by the LUTHERAN BUSINESS and PROFESSIONAL WOMEN’S club. Miss Mildred Baumgart, vocalist; Miss Winifrad WYebelhack, pianist, and Miss Edna Phinney, harpist, will present a program.

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Victorian booth. Mrs. Julian Bobbs is chairman of this exhibit, as-

sisted by Mrs. B. E. LaFollette.

The miniature model victory garden is being developed by Mrs. Bowman Eider and Mrs. Eugene Miller. There will be beets, carrots, onions, beans, peas, broccoli, cabbage, corn, squash and “celtuce,” the new cross between celery and lettuce.

$4 9 ARRANGEMENTS of flowers

» 2 = and accessories in shadow boxes

will be prepared by Mesdames Robert B. Failey, Fairbanks, George Falkenberg, J. G. McFarland, Murphy and Jewett V. Reed. Mrs. W. Hathaway Simmons has assisted Mrs. Bobbs on the committee for the class. - Table settings for all meals with appropriate flowers will be arranged by Mesdames Samuel B. Sutphin, Grace Golden, Frank L. Bin-

Plan Tri Delt Tea Sunday

Marvin Lugar.

Mesdames R. P. Frey, J. Russell Townsend Jr. and G. William Raffensperger (left to right) are assisting with plans for the guest tea which the Tri Delt Alliante will give Sunday in the home of Mrs.

Sunnyside Guild

Mr. and Mrs. Guy E. Morrison

Mrs. C. O. McCormick, Capt. and Mrs. Arthur Spivey, Messrs. and Mesdames Morris Crain, Gerald R. "Redding, Hugh Barnhart, George A. VanDyke Jr., Barr Montgomery, Paul Jock, Alvin Johnson, Mrs. Edward Hilgemeier, Mrs. Elizabeth Fenner and John Ludlum. Another cocktail party will be given by Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Perine for Messrs. and Mesdames Robert C. Burnett, A. B. Alexander, Marvin Curle, Fred C. Abendroth, Harold Cheney, Davis Harrison and Robert Stith. Mitchells to Entertain

Dr. and Mrs. J. T. Emhardt and Mr. and Mrs. Burling Boaz Jr., will be guests at the table of Mr. and Mrs. Edward V. Mitchell. With Mrs. Rufus W. Mumford will be her daughter, Mrs. J. J. Lamb, and

Mr. Lamb and Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Donlon. Mr. and Mrs. Herman C. Mitten will be accompanied by Miss Cynthia Demaree and John E. Black. Mrs. Attia Malott Martin will attend with Messrs. and Mesdames Fred P. Rusch, B. M. Forbes, R. B. Tuttle, Dr. and Mrs. G. J. Bookwalter, Mrs. Clara McClellan and Miss Dorothy Fisher. At Mrs. William Bartlett's table will be Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Lager and Mr. and Mrs. J. Leroy Davidson. Miss Helen M. Warmoth, Miss Euna Burns and C. R. Wash will be the guests of Rollin P. Ellis. In one party will be Mrs. Florence Knotts, Mrs. Glen Knotts and Corp. Jay Franz. Among guests at the table of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Seidensticker will be Messrs. and Mesdames A. C. Zaring, H. Duff Vilm and Mrs. Wayne O. Stone. Mr. and Mrs. George Hilgemeier will entertain Mes:rs. and Mesdames Waiter Boettiher, Ira Haymaker, Wiliam Schlegel, Miss Grace Huffman and Robert Schlegel.

F. L. Buckleys to Attend With Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Buckley

| will be Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Mullane and Mr. and Mrs. George L. Stalker.

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Shafer will have at their table Messrs. and Mesdames Leroy Martin, William H. Glazebrook and H. C. Kirby. The Misses Eloise Akin, Liois Jane and Barbara Mumford, members of the Cadette corps of the U.S.0. and daughters of Sunnyside guild members, will serve as hostesses with other members of the corps at a table reserved for service men, who are to be guests of the guild. Mr. and Mrs. Ralpn Hardisty will entertain Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Coyle, Mrs. W. L. Densford, Miss Tudi Voyle, C. J. Oval and Arthur Duncan. At one table will be Miss Pauline Gault, Miss Marie Batisti, Walter Lally and Joseph Batisti. Dr. and Mrs. Russell Henty and Mrs. Gaylord Rust also have reserved tables for parties of friends.

Dr. and Mrs. Paul Merrell will entertain informally in their home preceding the dance. Their guests will be Dr. and Mrs. Donald W. Brodie, Dr. and Mrs. John H. Thompson and Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Bales. Additional patrons for the dance include Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Lilly Jr, Mrs. Jaguelin Holliday, Mrs. Albert

a u - ’ ; 1 \ yo wo if JE J Pes £ 7). 5 ,

Parties for Annual Dinner Dance At Columbia Club Tomorrow

Several additional parties have been arranged to precede the Sunnyside guild's annual dinner dance tomorrow evening at the Columbia club. Additional reservations and patrons also have been announced.

will entertain with a cocktail party at the Wall home before tne dance. Their guests will be Dr. and Mrs. David A. Morrison of Kokomo, Dr. and

3. Gyrus Ray and .

Lists Additional

and Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Wall

Sororities—

Mrs. H. T. Ford Will Entertain Kappa Alumnae

Sorority groups featured in today’s news have scheduled social meetings with a tea and open house as highlights. DELTA ALUMNAE of KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA will have a supper meeting Monday at 6:30 p. m. Mrs. H. T. Ford will entertain members in her home at 30 E, 37th st.

Miss Gene Mattick, rush captain of BETA PHI chapter, BETA SIGMA PHI, will be hostess to members and pledges at a tea and open house Sunday from 3 to 5 p. m. The party will be held in Miss Mattick’s home, 1902 Commerce ave.

Members and guests of CHI BETA KAPPA will hold a social meeting Monday evening at 8 o'clock in the home of Mrs. George Stone, 602 N. Riley ave. Mrs. Stone will be assisted by Mrs. Richard Tibbs.

GAMMA chapter, OMEGA CHI, will meet at 8 o'clock this evening with Miss Martha Summeier, 2928 Bluff road.

War Mothers Plan Tuesday Program

. A birthday party for March and April mothers will be sponsored by the Marion county chapter of American War Mothers at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday in the War Memorial building. A short business session will precede the program. Hostesses for the March group will be Mesdames Oscar Lewis, Ida Judkins, Anna Luebking, Susanne Davis, Georgia Scott and Minnie Laycock. Serving for the April] group will be Mesdames J. E. Barcus, Effie Biggs, Robert Fitch, Bertie. Bennett and Daisy Dean Deeds. The musical program entitled “Spring Time in Indiana” will be conducted by Mrs. Bertha Didway, who will accompany Mrs. ©. F. Dillenbeck and Mrs. Ollah Perkins Toph, vocalists. Mrs. J. E. Barcus is general chairman.

Sahm-Armbruster Rite to Be May 4

Mr. and Mrs. Julius Armbruster, 2130 Napoleon st., announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Marie, to Victor A. Sahm, sof) of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Sahm. The ceremony will be performed at 9 o'clock the morning of May 4 at 8t. Catherine of Sienna church. Attendants selected by Miss Arm bruster include Miss Florence Sahm, the prospective bridegroom’s sister, maid of honor, and Miss Virginia Armbruster, her own sister, and Miss Elaine Ritter, bridesmaids. The bride-to-be’s two cousins, Peggy Ann Kritsch and Jerry Matheny, will be flower girl and ring bearer. Mr. Sahm’s best man will be the bride-to-be’s brother, Paul Armbruster. His cousin, Eugene Strack, and another cousin of the

ford, Homer G. Hamer, Alvin M. Owsley, A. Kiefer Mayer and William Griffith with Mrs. Hester Van Landingham as chairman. :

= MRS. H. C.

2 ” ATKINS JR. is chairman for the show and Mrs. Carl

M. Geupel is her assistant. The judges will be Mrs. Clarence Hughel, Indianapolis Garden club president; Donald M. Mattison, John Herron Art school director, and Robert Yohler, orchid-grower. Tea will be served by mothers of Park school pupils to persons attending the show. Mrs. C. W. Spalding, in charge of the tea, will have as assistants a group including Mesdames J. Clifford Courtney, Standish Deake, Reed Garrett and John C. Hanson and Miss Ruth

Coleman.

Ribbons will be awarded for flower arrangements in a number of additional classes, among them the Dutch class featuring arrange-

Special Busses To Take Guests

| To Open House

Butler University To Have Exhibits

Indianapolis residents attending Butler university's 10th annual open house tomorrow evening will be afforded special streetcar gnd bus service to the campus. At 6:25 p. m. and at frequent intervals thereafter, busses will leave the Circle. The streetcar service will begin at 6:28 p. m,, leaving from the corner of Illincis and Washingvon sts. Both busses and streetcars will continue this special service in taking departing guests downtown between the hours of 9 and 10:40 p. m. A band concert, directed by Ellis Carroll, will start the open house activities at 7:30 p. m. in the formal gardens followed by a welcome in the Sweeney chapel, new School of Religion building, by members of the Butler Mothers’ council, sponsoring organization. Department exhibits have been planned by the College of Liberal Arts, including chemistry, zoology, botany, physics and history displays. Faculty and students of the speech department will show guests through the newly completed Jordan radio studio and will assist in making recordings of guests’ voices and playing records back.

Plan Religious Exhibits

“Bible Characters at Home,” scenes from Palestine and Biblical archaeology will be features of the religion department’s display. Other departments having displays are classical languages, physiology and health, mathematics, sociology, romance languages and psychology. Faculty members of the Education and Business Administration colleges will be in classrooms and offices to greet friends, parents and students during the period immediately following the convocation services at 8 o'clock. Butler's general offices will be open to give information to visitors. Other features will include a special edition of the Collegian, student publication, a tour of the School of Religion building and the presentation of a one-act comedy, “The Third Adonis,” by members of the university dramatics class in the Thespis workshop in Jordan hall at 8:45 p. m.

Appointments of five senior coeds in the Butler university home economics department as dietetic interns in various hospitals or university training centers throughout the country have been announced by Miss Kathryn J. Journey, associate professor of home economics. Those named were Miss Frances Collins of Winamac, dietetic intern at Harper hospital; Miss Dorothy Evans, Henry Ford hospital, and Miss Dorothy Marone, St. Mary's hospital, all in Detroit. Also, Miss Eloise Schumacher, Good Samaritan hospital at Cincinnati, and Miss Joan Silberman at the University of Washington in Seattle.

Bride-to-Be

Miss Mary Lyons, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lyons, and Lieut. Arlie J. Ullrich, son of Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Ullrich, will be married May 2. The couple will be at home at Edgewood Arsenal, Md., where Lieut. Ullrich will be with the chemical warfare service.

Lucy Murray

Remains on

P.-T. A. Board

Mrs. Lucy (James L.) Murray, retiring president of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers, will remain on the organizations board as a member at large.

Other directors at large elected at a meeting of the board, following the close of a three-day convention yesterday at the Claypool hotel, include Mrs. Logan G. Hughes and Mrs. Glen Bowen of Ft. Wayne.

Mrs. Frederick A. Conkle, new president, and Mrs. Hughes, vice president of region four of the national congress, will leave next week for San Antonio, Tex. to attend the convention of the national congress. Indiana delegates will include Mrs. Thomas Selmier, Franklin, Mrs. Frank Carey, Glenns Valley, and Mrs. Harry Wiest and Mrs. William L. Shirley. At the closing session of the convention, members voted an “emergency fund” for use of Riley hospital, this fund to be available to replace equipment should the hospital be bombed. Mrs. Frank Lentz heads the Riley project.

G. O. P. Candidates To Attend Meeting

All Republican candidates are invited to attend and will be introduced at an open candidates meeting® sponsored by the Fourth Ward Women’s Republican club at 8 o'clock this evening at 2962 Central ave. Mrs. Frederick D. Payne, acting program chairman. will introduce the speaker for the meeting, James M. Givens, whose topic will be “The Responsibilities of Republicans Today.”

vases; miniature landscapes formed of native plant material; miniature,

floating flower, wooden bowl, metal

container and other arrangements.

Competing in these classifications are Mrs. E. G. Grove, Morristown, Mesdames Charles West Jr., Binford, E. F. Winslow and Orland A. Church. Mrs. R. Kirby Whyte is committee chairman for these

exhibits.

Mrs. H. Maurice Angell is chairman for commercial exhibits.

Space for these has been taken by

L. 8S. Ayres & Co., the William H.

Block Co., Banner-Whitehill, Old Hickory Co. of Martinsville, Charles Mayer & Co., L. Strauss & Co., Frankowitz market, Bertermann Broth-

ers Co., Wiegands,

Pahud Floral Co.

Forest Hills Floral service,

John Grande & Son, College Flower shop, Pandell and the Atkins

Flower shop.

Bates-Smith Rite Is Today

Dr. Sidney Blair arry will officiate this afternoon at the wedding of Miss Dorothy Jean Bates to James Dixon Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Smith of Tipton. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Reber, 4602 E. Tist st. The cerembny will be at 2:30 o'clock in the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church. Given in marriage by her father, the bride will wear a tailored blue suit with beige accessories and a rose corsage. Her only attendant, Miss Caryl Gaines, will wear a brown suit with matching accessories and g corsage of roses. Charles D. Smith will be his brother’s hest man. The couple will leave immediatelv after the ceremony for a wedding trip and will be at home after next Friday with her parents. Both the bride and bridegroom attended Purdue university.

Sorority Will Hear Mrs. Wesenberg

An all-day meeting will be held tomorrow at the Propylaecum by Pi Lambda Theta, educational honorary sorority. A feature of the morning program will be a round table discussion of war and post-war problems led by Mrs. Byrl McClure,

{local alumnae president.

Mrs. Alice Bidwell Wesenberg of Butler university will be the luncheon speaker and music will be pro=vided by the girls’ glee club of Manual Training high school directed by Miss Freda Hart. Following luncheon reports will be received from chapters in Dayton, 0O., South Bend, Terre Haute and Bloomingtoi.. The meeting will be open to all Pi Lambda Theta members. The arrangements committee includes Mesdames William B. Wilcox, R. M. Kirk and Henry C. Miller, Misses Helen Loeper, Isabelle Mossman, Florence Schaub, Mabel Loehr and Elizabeth Davis.

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Girl Scout Cookie Day, Saturday, April 25th

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bride-to-be, William Matheny, will

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