Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1942 — Page 4

Subdeb Club Members Will Be Among Guests at Lake Maxinkuckee Party

: AMONG THE MOST ACTIVE members of the young set this summer are the young women who belong to the Subdeb club. Four of them will spend the Fourth at Lake Maxinkuckee while others are away at camp or completing summer vacation plans.

Edward Dunn, son of Mr. and

Mrs. Francis W. Dunn, is enter-

taining this week-end with a house party at his parents’ summer home at the lake. Among the Subdebs who will be his guests are Miss Barbara Bradley, daughter of the C. Harvey Bradleys; Miss Jane Sewell, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm C. Sewell; Miss Lillian Fletcher, daughter of Mrs. Jesse Fletcher, and the Fred-

erick Hollidays’ daughter, Lucy.

Other guests will be Miss Ann Atkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Atkins, and Henry Morgan, Robert Dedaker, Paul Ragan and Henry, Bennett. The party left Indianapolis today and will return

here Sunday.

8 8 8

Miss Marjorie Baxter, another Subdeb, also was tofleave Indianapolis today with her parents, Maj. and Mrs. Emory R. Baxter, and brother, Robert, to spend the week-end at the Baxter home at

Lake Maxinkuckee. R. Baxter, also are at the lake and

Marjorie’s grandparents, Mr. and

Mrs. Arthur will have as guests for the holi-

' day week-end their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. R. Nor-

man Baxter, and their son-in-law W. Fifer Jr., and their familjes.

d daughter, Mr, and Mrs. Orien r. and Mrs. Charles B. Ford of

Ft. Lauderdale, Fla, Mr. Arthur Baxter's brother-in-law and sister,

also will be there. Club members attending camp

and summer school are Miss

Emily Flickinger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dan W.'Flickinger, and Miss Adeline Kadel, George W. Kadel's daughter. Miss Flickinger is at the Northampton Summer French School for Girls at Northampton, Mass., and will be at home the middle of August. Miss Kadel

is at Camp Nagawicka, Wis. On Aug. 1, Miss Susie Murray, her father, James L. Murray, for th

another Subdeb, will leave with eir summer home in Pentwater,

Mich. Mrs. Murray already is in Pentwater. The Murray's son, Bill, may join them there later in the summer.

Spend Week-End at Lakes

LAKE AND RESORT HOMES will attract a number of Indianapolis families for the July 4 week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Boone will have their annual Fourth of July house party at their Petoskey, Mich.,, summer home. Mr. Boone left yesterday to join Mrs. Boone and her mother, Mrs. Charles E. Hall, who already are there. Their guests will be Dr. and Mrs. Philip B. Reed, Misses Ruth and Helen

Sheerin and Henry Severin.

Mr. and Mrs. Walker W. Winslow and their daughter, Miss

‘Eleanor Winslow, will spend the week-end at their Lake Maxin-

kuckee home, “Green Leaves.” . daughter, Miss Ann Cantwell, will father, Capt. Cantwell. ;

. . Mrs. J. Frank Cantwell and her

go to St. Louis to visit Ann's

Mr. and Mrs. Eli Lilly are at their summer residence at Lake

Wawasee. . . - Mr. and Mrs. William - few days, returned today to their kuckee where they have been since

C. Griffith, in town for the past summer home at Lake Maxinearly in June. Also at Maxin-

kuckee for the season are Mr. and Mrs. Elmer A. Steffen and their

_children, Pauline and Elmer Jr. staying here with her grandmother,

Another daughter, Susanne, is Mrs. Pauline Maass, during the

summer and “commuting” to Maxinkuckee for week-end visits. « + « Mrs. Paul D. Hinkle was in Cincinnati this week to visit her hus-

band, Lieut. Hinkle, U. S. N. ‘The Fourth at Highland

WAR STAMPS will be given as prizes in contests to be held tomorrow in connection with the celebration of the Fourth at Highland Golf and Country club. There will be no fireworks. Bert C. McCammon, the arrangements chairman, points out both patriotic

. gestures are a part of the club's effort to help win the war.

Assisting him with plans are Mr. and Mrs. Victor Kingdon, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Consodine, E. M. Gass, Dr. William Kemper, Miss Helen Kemper, Miss Marian Consodine and Mrs. McCammon. It will be a big day for the children of members. Much of the program has been designed to appeal to them. Al Romeiser, the club's swimming director, is arranging a swimming race for 3 p. m. and children are to be divided into age groups for various other

contests. The youngsters will march in a before the clubhouse at 6 o'clock clown. A dinner for them will follo _ elders will have a buffet supper in th "eluding comics for the children, will

special parade to the flag pole

led by two drum majorettes and a

w in the main lounge and their e main dining room. Movies, in-

follow.

Exhibitors at Junior Horsemen's Show NUMEROUS OUT-OF-TOWN ENTRIES have been made for the

Junior Horsemen's association’s

third annual charity horse show

tomorrow and Sunday at the Thomas stables on Davis road south

of Road 52. Among them are those

of Miss Harriet Johnson, Wina-

mac; Misses Marilyn Jo Mahoney, Nancy Ann.Moore, Barbara Spurgeon and Mary Jane Stetles and Revere Reese Jr., Yorktown; Misses

Sally Ann Leonard, Denise and Delores Thom,

Bloomington; Miss

Barbara Smith, Muncie, and Miss Mary Jane Hindman, Yorktown. Indianapolis exhibitors will be Misses Barbara Ernsting, Gloria Jean Gentry, Jane Abraham, Alice Verman, Mary Anne Pearce, Sue Reeder, Marilyn ‘Richards, Mary Sue Fisher, Dolores Covert, Anne

Resor, Jo Ann Thomas, Ann Kennedy, Bowen, Natalie Ann Griener, Barbara Hess,

Sally Ann Hammond, Joan Patricia Fuller and Mary

Catherine Lyday and Bill Ernsting, Oscar Mutz, Bob Perine and

Jimmy Aikman. :

American Humor in Literature

Will Be Studied

Next Season

By Woman's Advance Club

American humor in literature of various periods and sections of the

United States will be studied by the

' coming season.

Woman’s Advance club during the

The club’s president's day will be Sept. 9. Mrs, H. C. Stringer is its new head. On Eept. 23 humor of “The Down East Yankees” will be dis-

cussed by Mrs. John R. Norris. She will draw on Breakfast Table” (Holmes) and “The Bigelow Papers”

trations. «Tales of Uncle Remus” (Harris) will be used by Mrs, J. H. Lamar in her talk on humor of the southern sages Oct. 7. Mrs. J. A. Hood will be the hostess. Mrs. James J. © Cook will speak on Irvin S. Cobb's

“Speaking of Operations” Oct. 21, Roy

and members will discuss radio humor, Mrs. E. K. Zaring will entertain. Mrs. W. E. Call will be hostess for the Nov. 4 meeting, when Mrs. Charles W. Scott will speak on Mark Twain's “The Notorious Jumping Mrs. Call's topics for Nov. 18 will be “Bill Nye’s Adventures in Politics” (Wilson) and “Mr. Dooley in Peace and War” (Dunne).

hostess. Mrs. A. L. Kessler will entertain at the Christmas party Dec. 9, when Mrs. Bohnstadt’s talk will be on Robert Benchley.

To Talk on Will Rogers

Mrs. Fred B. Keuthan will draw ‘on Will Rogers’ witty remarks for

her talk on Jan. 6 in the home of

Mrs. Norris and Mrs. W. G. Boyd

* will discuss “The Face Is Familiar” (Ogden Nash) at the Jan. 20 gathering in Mrs, Keuthan’s home.

" The club's 33d anniversary will

Cook is ) \

Mrs. Charles M. Bohnstadt will be the

(Lowell) for illus-

Mrs. Kessler will talk on “funny women” March 3 in Mrs. Lamar’s home and Mrs. Hood will tell tall tales of the Northwest when Mrs. E. Price is hostess March 17. Dorothy Parker's “Not So Deep as a Well” has been chosen as the basis of: Mrs. H. R. Pierce’s talk April 7 in Mrs. W. S. S. Johnson's home and Mrs. Clarence M. Sones will use “The Book of Humorous Verse” and “The Parody Anthology” (Carolyn Wells) in her discussion April 21. Mrs. Stringer will be hostess. : Mrs. Roy E. Price will describe Negro religious stories May 5 in Mrs. Sones’ home and Mrs. Johnson will use Stephen Leacock’s “Ol’ Man Adam and His Chillun’” and the “Widow Duck” series for illustration at the May 19 gathering with Mrs. Pierce. A party on June 2 will conclude the club’s season.

Yarp to Brighten

If you keep a yarn box, as you do a scrap bag, it'll probably yield plenty of material for small, bright

*|accessories to perk up your ward-

robe. Such as a fringed, tri-color

honor for the wedding and Stine and Mrs. bridesmaids. will be his brother’s best man and the ushers will be Dr. Lidikay. and Messrs. Sexson, Stine and Sartor.

A wedding Sunday will be>that of Miss Norma Virginia Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Smith, to Wesley Ross Darnell, son of Mrs. Florence Darnell. (Randell photo.)

The Bridal Scene— Hatfield-Davis Bridal Dinner Is Tonight

A bridal dinner is a highlight of today’s pre-nuptial news. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Davis, 5531 N. Delaware st., will entertain this evening at their home with a bridal dinner for their daughter, Miss Virginia Anne Davis, and her flance, Jack J. Hatfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D, Hatfield. The couple will be married at 10:45 o'clock tomorrow morning in the North Methodist church. Rehearsal for the ceremony will follow the dinner this evening. Dinner guests with Mrs. Charles C. Davis, the bride-to-be’s grandmother, and the prospective bride-

-groom’s parents, will be Mr, and Mrs. William N. Hatfield, Anderson; |-

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin E. Stine, Shelpbyville; Dr. and Mrs. Edward C. Lidikay, Mr, and Mrs. Hiram Sexson and Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Sartor; Miss Pearl Cartwright, Osceola, Ark., and Miss Barbara Johnson, Knightstown, Miss Cartwright is to be maid of Mrs. Sexson will be William N. Hatfield

#2 #8 = Honor guest at a. luncheon and linen shower to be given Monday at the Marott hotel by Mrs. Harry

E. Riddell will be Miss Eileen White who is to be married this month to aviation cadet James Edward Gar-

wood Jr. of the naval aviation station at Corpus Christi, Tex. Attending the luncheon with the bride-to-be and her mother, Mrs. William Wood White, will be Mrs. C. E. Parsons, the hostess’ mother, and Mesdames Henry Decker, Walter Nolte, Charles Ertel III and Doris Brown, Misses Marjorie Pyke, Lura Webb, Nancy Scott, Eloise Wilson and Ruth Cabalzer. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Edward Garwood of Michigan City. 8 » 2

The engagement of Miss Margaret Burkhard to James W. Baker, son of Mrs. Inez H. Baker, 1132 Woodlawn ave., is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Burkhard, 948 W. 31st st. The ceremony will be at 8 o’clock the morning of Saturday, July 11, in Holy Angels Catholic church. The bride-to-be will be entertained Monday night at a personal shower given by Miss Margery Northrop at her home, 2848 N. Delaware st. -The hostess will be assisted by Misses Margaret Blackwell, Alice Murphy and Rita Tolle. Among the guests will be Misses Mary Alice Whisker, Virginia Gard and Frances Chaffee, Shelbyville; Miss Alice Homan, Lebanon; Miss Lucille Long and Miss Mary Frances Strait, Rushville, and Misses Regina Murphy, Helen and Betty Lyons, Anderson. Others will be Misses Alice G. Murphy, Jean Roembke, Mary Tuohy, Ione Jones, Louise Boland, Kay Pouder, Margaret Uehlein,

“The Autocrat at the) Charlotte Anderson, Mary Wood-

rum, Evelyn Hannon, Mary Jane Rainbolt, Margaret Hutson, Helen Van Benton and Mary Alice Altman.

Tips on Saving on Electric Bill

Keeping a close check on electric light bulbs and fixtures is” one way to'save electricity—and, incidentally, money for war bonds or stamps. If bulbs or shades or globes become dusty and dirty, you are being robbed of light, sometimes of as much as a fourth of the light you should receive. Globes should be washed and dried periodically, shades carefully

portion) with a moist, not wet, cloth. If the bulb has become darkened through long use, it’s real economy to replace it with a bright new one. He

Save Steel Knives

You can ruin a perfectly fine steel knife by trying to pry ‘| off a jar cover or open a can with it. It's a good time right now to start cherishing cute lery—the more steel therefore to go into war industries. Provide a cutlery rack to keep knives in—it will prevent bending and nicking the blades. And don’t try sharpening

dusted, bulbs wiped off (the glass|

A July 31 wedding will be that of Miss Frances Delph, daughter of Mrs. Cora Delph, 923 E. Raymond st., to Maurice A. Brink, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver H. Sickbert. (Photoreflex photo.)

Mrs. Robert Westmoreland was Miss Jean Ludwig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ludwig, before her marriage, May 17, in Yuma, Ariz. The couple will be at home in San Diego, Cal. (Holland photo.)

Entertain for

G. S. Spilvers

Maj. George S. Spilver, intelligence officer in the army air corps and a former resident of Indianapolis, will be a week-end visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Swingley, 1130 N. Butler ave. Mrs. Spilver and children, Jane and David, have been house guests at the Swingley home for the past two weeks. On Sunday evening from 6 to 9:30 o'clock, Mr. and Mrs. Swingley will hold open house for the Spilver family and Verle W. Bennett of Little Rock, Ark. Maj. Spilver and Mr. Bennett were associated in business in Indianapolis for several years. During his residence here, Maj. Spilver at one time. served as sec-

retary of the Indianapolis chapter of the Reserve Officers’ association. For the past two months he has been attending the army command and general staff school at Ft. Leavenworth, Kas. Previously he served as base intelligence officer at Pendleton field, Oregon, and will return to that post upon leaving In-

dianapolis. Bride

Robert Russell This Evening

Miss Cora Schwab, who Is the niece of Mr. and Mrs. Fra 1k B. Thompson, Mars Hill, will be. married to Omer Barber, son @ Mr. and Mrs. James H. Barber. Mars Hill, on July 11. H

Miss Marie Nangle, daughter of

* Mr. and Mrs. James Narjle, be-

came the bride of Pvt. Jojeph P. McGrath Jr. June 13 ai Camp Claiborne, La., where Ff. McGrath is stationed. (Zindred photo.)

Bride's Father to Read Service For Delores Jewel Rice and

4

The. bride’s father, the Rev. William P. Rice, will read the imarriage ceremony for Miss Delores Jewel Rice and Robert Russell, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Wilbur Russell, at 8 o'clock this evening. The altar of the Riverside Pilgrim Holiness church will with palms and ferns for the candlelight ceremony and the family pews will be marked with white tulle bows. )

oc banked

Miss Agnes Holtrop will sing “Because” and “I Love You Truly,” accompanied by Miss M:rie KenKennedy, pianist and couzin of the

bride. During the cerem ny, Miss

Kennedy . will play “Beis of St. Mary’s.” hi A gown of white slifber satin fashioned with a high neckline and yoke of Viennese lace outlined with seed pearls will be wor: by the bride. Attached to the bac:jue bodice with leg-o’'mutton sleeve: tapering into wrist points will be : bouffant skirt extending into a train. A heart-shaped tiara of stziched lace will hold her fingertip veil of tulle in place. The bridal bcuquet will be white roses and b:zby breath with white satin streamg:s knotted with sweetheart roses.

Sister's Attendat:i

All of the attendants will be in pastel gowns. Mrs, Cecii Caughey, sister of the bride and :matron of honor, will wear aqua :narquisette and will carry a bouqu:; of briarcliff roses, delphinium :and baby breath tied with a peacl: tulle bow. The bridesmaids, Miss Thelma Griffin and Miss Lillian *ietch, will be in yellow and pink fiocks styled after the matron of hcnor’s dress. Their bouquets will be blue delphinjum and yellow daisies tied with blue tulle bows. Two cther sisters of the bride, the Misse: Ruth and Rachel Rice, will be jiialor bridesmaids. They will hay: gowns of bluebird marquisette rimmed in lace and will carry pink spring flowers tied with pink tulle: bows. Nie Rice, the bride’s brother, will be Mr. Russell’s best m:n and ushers will be Glenn and John Russell, brothers of the bric :groom, and Earnest Cardwell and Floyd Hotle.

Reception to I llow

Mrs. Rice, mother ¢ the bride, will be attired in a powder blue

| French crepe dress anil Mrs.. Rus-

sell will wear a navy sheer. The former will have a corsage of white roses and the latter, g irdenias. Immediately followirz the wedding there will be a rec:ption at the Russell home, 1215 N. Pershing st. The couple will the: leave on a short wedding trip wijh the bride traveling in a navy sheer dress with

dianapolis, at 1607 Le ayette rd. | —————————————————

Service Leagt e Will Meet Tuesday The Indianapolis ciiapter 1, National Service league, will have a

business session at 7:3) p. m. Tuesday in the Central Y. W. C. A.

| Rushville Visitors

Mrs. Frank Henthirne and her daughter, Jacquelyn, 20d Mrs. Robert Marlowe and her :laughter, Roberta, have returned ‘rom a week's visit with Mrs. Hentl: rne’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willim Moore of Rushville. Ig

5

California Visitors

Corp. and Mrs. A. F. Kelley of

Mrs. Henry °~ Beuke Jr. before her marriage May 28 was Miss Betty Ann Stumpf, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Stumpf. Pvt. Beuke is with the cavalry division at Ft. Riley, Kas.

Hear Reports On Work at T. B. Hospital

Officers and directors of the Flower mission held a business session yesterday following an outdoor luncheon at the home of Mrs. Harry E. Barnard, 5050 Pleashnt Run parkway, North drive. Mrs. Nell Dixon, supervisor of the tuberculosis clinic of Flower Mission hospital and director of the special milk supply for patients in their homes, talked on the work done by patients in the occupational therapy department under the direction of St. Margaret’s Hospital guild. Specimens of the work were exhibited. Dr. James Peirce, a resident physician at the hospital, reported for the hospital. Among gifts whose receipt was reported at the meeting are a pneumothorax machine donated by the Cervus club and a Swiss musical cake plate given by Mrs. David Ross. The plate is to be used in celebrating the birthdays of patients in the hospital. Relatives of a former patient have presented a card table and chairs for the hospital solarium, a hand vacuum cleaner for mattresses and a gross of special soap. ©

Brady-Spillman Ceremony Is Performed

A wedding breakfast at the Marott hotel this morning followed the marriage of Miss Isabel Spillman to James T. Brady of Bloomington.

The ceremony, at 9 o'clock in St. Joan of Arc. Catholic church, was read by the Rev. Fr. Charles Kilfoil of Bloomington. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Edward G. Spillman, 1013 W. 20th st., and the bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence T. Brady, 4007 Carrollton ave. Edward Krieger, organist, played for the ceremony. Vases of regal lilies and pink daisies were used in decorating the altar for the rite. The bride’s uncle, E. V. Young of Bluffton, gave her in marriage. She wore a gown of white lace and mouseline de soie. The lace bodice had a sweetheart neckline and the mousseline skirt formed a train. A fingertip length veil was held by orange blossoms and the bride carried a white prayer book covered with gardenias, white roses and baby breath from which fell a shower of streamers. } Her only attendant, Miss Betty Brady, sister of the bridegroom, wore a shell pink frock of mousseline de soie. The gathered bodice had a draped V-neckline and short sleeves. The girdle was of matching lace. She wore a matching veil caught at the back of the head with a cluster of flowers and carried a colonial bouquet of pink roses and baby breath. The bridegroom’s attendants were George Dell, best man, and J. Martin Miller ahd J, Waldo Littell, ushers. Mothers of the couple wore gardenia corsages with their costumes —Mrs. Spillman with a navy dress and matching accessories and Mrs. Brady with a lighter blue costume and white accessories.

To Live in Bloomington

Leaving for a wedding trip, the bride was to wear a waffle weave pique in white with brown and white accessories and a corsage of American Beauty roses and baby breath. After July 10, the couple will be at home in Bloomington at 728 E. 3d st. The bridegroom is a student at Indiana university and a member of Delta Sigma Pi business fraternity. The bride also attended Indiana. Out-of-town guests at the ceremony were Mr, and Mrs. August Merkle, Cincinnati; Mrs. Young and son, Michael, Bluffton; Mr. and Mrs. Ted Comer and their daughters, Mary Jane and Betty Ruth, Vincennes, and, from Bloomington, Miss Catherine Milligan, James Frankenberger, Mr. and Mrs, Dale Stone, Miss Maxine Anderson and Mr, and Mrs, J. E. Patrick.

Visits Sons

Mrs, F. E. Engle has left for California where she will visit her son, Carlos, who is a petty officer in the navy, in San Francisco. She also will visit with her other son, Max,

|Ada L. Peters

To Be Married

| This Evening

Reception at Church * Will Follow

The Rev. Urban L. Ogden will officiate this evening at the wedding of Miss Ada Louise Peters to Howard Frank Rosberg. The ceremony, at 6:30 o'clock, will be in the University Heights Christian church. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Peters, 821° Markwood ave, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Rosberg, 1042 E. Tabor st. For the rite, Mrs. Ogden, pianist, will play “I Love You Truly” and the Lohengrin and Mendelssohn wedding marches. Altar decorations will be summer flowers and ferns. Mr. Peters will give his daughter in marriage. She will wear a twopiece street-length frock of shantung in brown with a white collar. Her tan milan straw hat will be trimmed with pecan brown and she will wear wheat-colored and pecan brown shoes. Her corsage will be of Talisman roses. Miss Jewell King, her only attendant, will wear a summer brown and beige shantung frock in street length, with brown and white accessories and a Talisman rose corsage.

Plan Trip West

John Hoenshel will be Mr. Rosberg’s best man and the ushers will be Billy Hart and Norman Elrod, the bride’s - nephew. Mrs. Peters, mother of the bride, has chosen a printed dress of deep beige and white with which she will wear accessories of brown, wheat and white. After a reception in the church social room,‘ the couple will leave for a wedding trip west. Assisting at the reception will be the bride's sister, Mrs. Charles H. Reser. After July 13, the couple will be at home with the bride’s parents. Out-of-town guests at the ceremony will be Mr. and Mrs. Glee Keltner, Mooresville, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Parrish, Spiceland.

W. L. Cheathams On Wedding Trip

Miss Elenora Hodge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hodge, W. Raymond st., became the bride of

William L. Cheatham in a ceremony at 8 o’clock last night in the Primitive Christian church, The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Cheatham, 823 Chase st. The Rev. Clyde E. Green, pastor of the church, wl read the mar- Mrs. Cheatham riage service. Attendants were the bride’s sister, Miss Florence Hodge, bridesmaid, and the bridegroom’s brother, Richard Cheatham, best man. The couple left immediately after the cereomny for a wedding trip.

Mrs. C. S. Wiltsie Is Club Hostess

Mrs. Charles S. Wiltsie, 5144 N.

Delaware st., will be hostess for the July meeting of the North End Garden club next Friday. Mrs. George B. Elliot will be in charge of the program. She will call on members to answer garden problem questions given to them at a previous meeting. Following, there will be an open discussion.

Returns Home

Miss Pauline Karnes has returned to her home, 2322 Park ave., after spending the past 10 months in Los Angeles. Before returning, Miss Karnes spent several weeks in Cocoa, Fla., with her sister, Mrs. Jared Norsworthry, formerly of this city.

Visitor in Columbus

Miss Margaret M. Scott returned yesterday from Columbus, Ind, where she has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jesse T. Johnson, formerly of Indianapolis.

Mrs. William B. Wilcox, president of district four of Phi Mu sorority, will attend a meeting of the . national council, general council and program committee of the sorority Wednesday through the following Sunday at Hotel Grand View, Manitou Springs, Col.

Camp Fire Girls To Have Ball at Camp Delight

Camp Fire Girls attending the second session at the Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls’ summer camp, Camp Delight, located on E. 116th: st., will climax their camping activ= ities with a southern ball tonight and an entertainment for parents tomorrow. For the dance tonight, campers will dress as traditional southern belles. tertainment will be a handcraft contest, a dad-daughter baseball game and a patriotic council fire in celebration of Independence day. A total of 101 Camp Fire Girls and Blue Birds from Indianapolis and surrounding towns have been enrolled for this session at Camp Delight. The camp staff is headed by Miss Virginia Samsell, director, who is executive secretary of the Indianapolis council of Camp Fire Girls. She is assisted by Miss Marcella West and Miss Mable Clift. Other members of the staff are Miss Bobby Jo Vestal, Indianapolis, program director; Miss Betsy Ped=erson, Zionsville, and Miss Molly Welden and Miss Barbara Whelden, Indianapolis, swimming; Miss Naomi James, Wichita Falls, Tex, camp craft counselor; Miss Jeannette Zerr and Miss Rosemary Wanner, Indianapolis, riding and

‘| music.

On Camp Staff

Miss Lucille Bischof of Nebraska City, Neb., is the head handcraft counselor assisted by Miss Mary Lou Oleson of Indianapolis. The camp newspaper, which made its initial appearance last session, is edited by Miss Marian McConnell

| of Laramie, Wyo. Also on the cam

staff are’ Mrs. Elsa Struck, nurse and first aid instructor, and Mrs. G. T. Driskell, head of the Blue Bird

| unit.

Cabin leaders for this session have

ly, Joyce Hesler, Elizabeth Yager Marjorie Deutscher, Ruthann Perry, Jane Clark, Joan Reynolds, Joan Krauch, Peggy Percival and Pat Burnett. The third period for campers will begin Sunday and end July 18.

Altar Society Plans Card Party

A public card party will be sponsored by the Altar society of St. Philip Neri church at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening in the Foresters’ hall, 10th and Rural sts.

Visits Here

Miss Marguerite Elizabeth Vernon of Washington is visiting her mother, Mrs. Ruth Endsley Vernon. The Misses Harriet Louise and Rosalie Claire Vernon, who have been visiting their sister and their aunt, Mrs. Julius Billings, in Washington, returned to Indianapolis

with: Miss Vernon yesterday.

WE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY

Features of tomarrow’s en- })

been the Misses Mary Frances Kelx °

TDR ASIEN

TST

ge in,

onmm BtT p F ral A 5 ah

knives yourself unless you real1y know how; having them done by an experienced grinder is much less expensive than replacing with a new one. Also, if the knives have wooden handles, don’t put them in

Stringer will talk on feminine #jokesmiths” drawing on “Laughing Their Way” (Martha Bensley Bruere and Mary Ritter Beard) for : The humor of the

Camp Woods, Indic, Cal, recently visited Mr, and Mrs. E. B. Alexan-

| der; 8031 Rossiyn +7. Polish Trick

; r0Pit 10. 7 BY This idea comes from a firstSoro ty to i eet .+ ~~. |aider: Use colorless polish to cover

. in Loi les. belt for a summer linen dress, 8 Angeles

bright wool bowknots to march down the front of a dark basic frock, a crocheted cover for your beach bag, a twisted band for your hat or hair, a colorful snood. Knitted garments no longer in ‘use

[| finger bandages, keep them fresh and white. A clear overcoat burshed over adhesive will prevent it

i 1X]