Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1944 — Page 18
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Meridian Hills Country Club Lists Activities Program for Next Month
. A PROGRAM OF ACTIVITIES for next month at E the Meridian Hills Country club and the committee chairE men for a number of the events have been announced. A buffet supper Sunday night at the club will conclude the
activities for June. Reservations for Sunday night's party have been made by Messrs. and Mesdames Vern Trask, Paul Burkholder, I. Richards f Wagner, Joseph P. Merriam, Willard Whipple, Charles Arensman, | Conoly Bartlett, Harry Berry, James Newcomb, C. R. Miller and Paul Loser. Others are Messrs. and Mesdames Robert Becherer, James Beatty, Irvin Malsch, Forrest Barden, J. Floyd King, C. E. Lapenta, Donald Ream, Edward Van Riper, Robert Eaglesfield and R. Kirby Also Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Rice, Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Call, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Kerr, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Foreman, Mrs. Myra Briggs and Mrs. Richard Hill
July Fourth Party Planned
MR. AND MRS. WHIPPLE will be the chairmen for the club's Fourth of July party. They will be assisted by Messrs. and Mesdames O. W. Bogda, Melvin A. Hansen and Victor Seiter. The day's activities will include a golf tournament and a buffet supper followed by entertainment. The evening of July 7 there will be a swim-party and wiener roast for the 10 to 13-year-old group. The committee for the event will include Messrs. and Mesdames Becherer, Roach and Trask, Dr. and Mrs. Kerr and Mrs. Arthur Pittenger,
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A noon picnic and swim-party for children under 10 years old has been scheduled for July 14. Mrs. Beatty, arrangements chairman. will be assisted by Mesdames Call, Albert Campbell, Richard lockton and Armand Baxter. ‘ The club members will celebrate Meridian Hills’ 18th anniversary with a birthday party July 16. Mrs. Arthur Krick, wife of the club president, will cut the birthday cake following the buffet supper. Miss Marilyn Hull, club swimming instructor, will be in charge of a water ballet to be presented during the evening. Mrs. G. B. Taylor will be the chairman for a luncheon-bridge on July 18 and Mrs. Charles Harrison will be the chairman for a ladies golf tournament on July 19. : On- July 21 there will be a swim-party for the high school group followed by a buffet supper and dancing and the annual Calcutta sweepstakes tournament is scheduled for July 22.
Marilynn Wasson to Entertain
MISS MARILYNN CLARE WASSON who will become the bride of Pvt. George Shibley Vosburgh in a ceremony Saturday afternoon in the Broadway Evangelical church will entertain her wedding attendants at a breakfast Saturday morning in the Columbia club. Miss Connie Doran will be the maid of honor and the bridesmaids will be Mrs. Bayard Lutzhoff, Miss Mary Ann Morrison, Miss Mary Geyer, South Bend, and Miss Nancy Young, Lakewood, O. Miss Wasson was the honor guest this morning at a breakfast and bathroom shower for which Miss Betsy Medlicott was the hostess. Guests for the party in the Arthur Medlicott home were the members of the bridal party.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Evans will be the chairmen for a dance to he given Saturday night at the Hillcrest Country club. There will be a wiener roast for members at 1 a. m. Sunday following the event. Serving on the committee with Mr. and Mrs. Evans will be Messrs. and Mesdames Frank Parrish, Roy L. Davidson, Robert Potter. H. M. Jones, C. J. Pettinger, Carlton Klaus, C. A, Rosasco, 1. M. Vogler and A. H. Wall Jr., and Mrs. A. Dean Peters.
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Mrs. Harry T. Pritchard will give the program for the garden tea to be held Tuesday by the Civic theater affairs committee at the home of Mrs. R, Hartley Sherwood. Mrs. Pritchard will read the “White Cliffs of Dover” (Miller). Prospective women members of the Civic theater have been invited to the party. Additional members of the tea arrangements committee will be Mrs, R. G. Lazarus and Miss Anne Davis.
E J a”
Two New Centers
Miss Lucille Bush, until recently
Miss Lucille Bush
Supervising Director Is Named By Day Care Services; ep an ta
Meadville, Pa., has joined the staff of the Indianapolis Emergency Day Care services as superviging director of the seven local day care centers for children of working mothers. ®* Her appointment was announced by|403¢ Madison ave.. The Rev. Ernest Gonard A. Felland, executive secretary of the services. Miss Bush, who received her B. S. and M. A.‘degrees from Teachers’
The bridal scene includes shower notes and the announcements of attendants, a wedding date and recent marriages, A crystal shower honoring Miss Virginia Belle Mittendorf will be given by Miss Claribel Hall, 2841 N. Talbot st., at 8 p. m. Thursday. Miss Mittendorf will be married to Midshipman Robert Underwood Sautter, U. 8. N. R, at 4:30 p. m.
Theodore and Clifford Ernst, Misses Mary Jo Funkhouser, Jean Ober, Shirley and Leslie Canning, Mary Anne Griffith, Jean Hipple, Georganna Galloway, Mary Ann Kibler, Stanis Strong and Elizabeth Ann Simmons.
chosen her cousin, Mrs. James McKenzie as her only attendant for
Are Sought her marriage to Dale Lloyd Chand-
director of child care programs In|ler. The wedding will be at 2 p. m.
July 2 in Mrs. McKenzie's home,
W. Nugent of the St. Paul Methodist church will officiate,
college, Columbia university, has specialized in pre-school age and kindergarten training and teaching of children.
dents for work with young children and has done kindergarten and first grade teaching in public schools in Illinois and Michigan. Worked in New York In New York state she served as director of the nursery school of Elmira college and at Albany with the city program of child development and parent education. At Vassar college she was demonstration teacher in the Institute of Euthenics. Miss Bush also was assistant state supervisor of nursery school and parent education under the WPA program in New York and has- served as instructor in child care at the University of Iowa.
New Centers Sought
The day care centers operated by the Emergency Day Care services— a member agency of the war and community fund-—are now running to capacity, Mr. Felland reports,
adding that efforts are being made to find two additional locations for centers, one near the downtown district and one on the East side.
Democratic Women Plan Annual Picnic
will be the guest speaker, Her sub-
Presbyterian Group To Hold Annual Tea | Kindness”
The Women's association of the Memorial Presbyterian church will, To H old Open House
have its annual June tea at 2 p. m.|
son and Miss Patricia Mason. | Mrs. Jesse Fischer,
of the Indianapolis Presbyterial | Rose Ellen Gray.
{ ject will be “Stewards of Loving
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar 1. Gray, 351}
Wednesday in the church parlors. N. Hamilton ave., will hold open ments chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. Randall Copen will lead the house from 2 until 5 p. m. Sunday Mesdames devotions and special music will be celebrating their 25th wedding anprovided by Miss Laurel MacPher- niversary. They will be assisted by Mrs. George Miss Emily McAdams, president Holmes, Miss Edna Burke and Miss
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moran, 1925 | | N. Pennsylvania st., will be the | hosts for the annual picnic of the | Seventh Ward Democratic Wom- | n’s club at 5 p. m. tomorrow at their | nome.
Mrs. Motley wh She also has been & mene | 1 0 Eontertain Poets Group”
president of the Indiana . Poetry Society, will entertain society members at 3 p. m. Sunday in her home, s 8 =
retiring and incoming officers. .
Ralph W. Inyart will be Mr. Chandler’s best man.
Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Reimer, 1133 S. Kenwood ave. will entertain with a bridal dinner for their daughter Mildred, and her fiance, Robert B. Koschmann, 2t 6:30 p. m. tomorrow in Catherine's restaurant. Miss Reimer and Mr. Koschmann Mrs. Josephine Duke Motley, day in St. Paul's Evangelical Luth-
eran church.
1726 N. Alabama st. Original poems will be read by members and Miss Mary Jane Edington will sing, accompanied by Mrs. M. D. Didway. Mrs. Olah P. Toph, historian, will speak on “The Society's Accomplishments and Possibilities.” Reports on war activities will be made by Miss Florence Marie Taylor and |© Mrs. Emma Murray. al Miss Anna Hosea and Mrs. Charles Laut will be in charge of a question period. Also appearing 2 = 8 on the program will be Mrs. Mae Smith Dwyer, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Clarence Dillenbeck, soloist, and Mrs. Carolyn Ayres Turner, pianist.
university.
Mrs. Sullivan Powell, Toledo.
Wedding Attendants | : : 1
will be married at 4:30 p. m. Sun-|
The bride-to-be is the daughter f Mrs. R. D. Herron, El Paso, Tex, nd B. W. Lewis, Denver, Colo. Mr. Kettery's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kettery, 5758 Rolling Ridge rd.
Mrs. Isaac B. Smith, 811 E. 46th st., announces the marriage of her daughter, Mrs. Mildred Carnes, and Sgt. Harold Powell, son of Mr. and |
The wedding was Saturday after-
reputation as a beauty to defend.
a warm bath; never a cold one; to
my face. and feeling as cool as marble.”
FOR TRICKS TO REVIVE a wilted face, listen to a photographer’s model, who works under lights as heating as a coal stove and has a
Willing to share secrets is beautiful Laura Routh, who says to take:
Laura's trick of giving herself a pick-me-up facial is to lie down on her stomach across the bed with the lower half of her body on, the upper half off. Then, with head lowered, she reaches for the floor, and “walks” on her hands as far away from the bed as she can stretch while her body remains fixed in position. «When this stint is over, I relax,” says Laura, “and apply pads of cotton, wrung out in witch hazel—kept icy in the refrigerator—to This has an enlivening efféct that leaves my skin looking
¥
mop—never rub—dry after a bath.
request for election in the primary of delegates-at-large to the national
Times |
$40,000 endowment for the state. Mrs. Tryon spoke yesterday a
Miss Jane Caroline Lewis has set the 22d annual state A. A. U. W. next Thursday as the date for her convention at Indiana university wedding to Midshipman Joe Kettery Jr., U. 8. N. R. The Rev. A. Reid Liverett will read the vows at Bend branch for sending a gift of 10 a. m. in Sweeney chapel, Butler
here. She also commended the South
$1500 as a special Pan-American fellowship for next year. “The A. A. U. W. does not support fellowships only for their practical value,” she said. “Since most scientists are engaged in war work or teaching, our present applications are chiefly in the liberal arts field,” Mrs. Tryon explained.
Officers Named During yesterday afternoon's session Mrs. George E. Stevens, Plymouth, and Mrs. John W. VanNess,
Musicale Unit
ciating.
noon in the chapel at Ft. Harrison with Chaplain Arthur Snapp offi-| ond vice president and treasurer,
Valparaiso, were re-elected as sec-
| respectively.
Fellowship Chairman Is Speaker At A. A. U. W. Convention, Two Officers Are Re-Elected
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. June 23.—Mrs, Ruth Wilson Tryon, Washington, secretary of the national committee on fellowship endowment to serve as a delegate to the party's {of the American Association of University Women, praised the work national convention next week in the Indiana division of the organization has done in completing its Chciago.”
vention, and congratulations of the state's Republican congressmen and state officials. : Mrs. Eleanor Barker Snodgrass, federation president and state vice chairman, in urging passage of the resolution changing the system of choosing, delegates - at - large, said that “not one woman was permitted
Special
Officers Elected Mr. Gates and Mr. Capehart, in their luncheon speeches, assured the delegates that greater participation for women in politics is scheduled. Mrs. Lucy Boone, Connersville, was elected treasurer of the fed-
fternoon at the “losing session of
Resolutions passed at the closing session advocated international col-
laboration which would outlaw war eration. Mrs. Snodgrass will con-
as a means of settling difficulties and secure economic and political tine as ‘president, the off 1 ubl vice
freedom for .all nations and that neld by the state Republican special attention be given to the chairman.” Mea problems of women in wartime in.| Other new officers are Mrs. Paul dusity. |Miller, Grifith, and Mrs, Harold Dr. Herman B Wells, I. U. presi: A a and dent, was the speaker yesterday Stevens, Brasil, and Mrs. Audrey morning. “The Indiana A. A. U.|Hess, Kentland, recording and corW. can assist state colleges by responding secretaries, : bringing home to the people of In-
diana the responsibilities resting| Noy ishing Sweet
upon these institutions in the pe-| . Miod ahead and the inadequacy of Honey in milk and on bread conresources with which to meet these tains a great amount of nourish-
responsibilities,” he said. iment and is good at’ any time,
Plans Program
The Indianapolis Matinee Musicale student section will present a program at 8 p. m. tomorrow in! the home of Miss Maxine Patter- |
son, 3059 N. Illinois st. honoring.
New officers are Miss Cecelia | Mootz, president; Miss Maxine,
Mrs. Herbert Spencer, arrange-
Walter Burke, Julia Perkins, John O'Connor, Mayme Murphy and Julia Zeller and Miss Lee Nora Burke. Guests for the event will be Mesdames John Bingham, E, C. Wake-
{se mothers everywhere are insisting os a shoes that last... give long mile c
and hold their shape - - Poll Farr y nd girls These wear-test
de of durable materials, are built pishment « « « do extra
strain helps shape and service. As
age Shoes for boys &
brands, m3 10 take plenty of pu Reinforcing st : io is <hoes retain theif §1 until their very last day of always, they feature id clever "grown-up styling 3 . > Sm range of scientifically dap A America. All of this assures o a your child . . . proper romeRon room for foot freedom and growth:
points of
lam, Catherine Dunn and John Donnelly, James Beatty and Louis P. M. Adams.
Safety Group Plans Contest
At a recent meeting of the home safety committee of the Chamber of Commerce's safety council, the members adopted a suggestion that the council's next home safety contest be conducted on a yearly basis, The future contest procedure will be based on the idea of seasonal hazards with the year divided into quarters, as recommended by Mrs. Frederick G. Balz. She suggested that all organizations be notified at the beginning of each quarter in order to have safety chairmen ap- | pointed. The incoming contest chairman is Mrs. Donovan Turk. Mrs. Burke Nicholas, state president of garden clubs, urged that the garden clubs conduct the campaign during the
|Critchfield and Miss Joanne Cald- | (well, first and second vice presi-| idents; Miss Mary Ann Gallagher | and Charles Brockman, secretary and assistant; Miss Marti Knauer, telephone; Miss Betty Jeanne Whitesall, program; Miss Betty Jeanne Barker, scrapbook, and Rob-| ert Barnes, Robert Smith and Jos- | eph Guarnery, ushers. Those who will participate on the program are the Misses Adrienne and Joanne Robinson, Joanne Landers, Peggy Yockey, Mary Spalding, Betty Cramer, Charlene Clore, Marcia Hamilton, Mary Louise Clodfelter, Martha Egger and Ann Kahn and Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs.
A smart, handy, natura table finished for ou use—top, 30x30, smoothed
and varnished.
$14.50. Chairs, §T
FOURTH FLOOR
—s
Convention
Will Be Held
Eta chapter of Sigma Delta Tau sorority will be the hostess group for the organization's annual state convention from 2 to 5 p. m. Sunday in the Warren hotel.
Table,
I-bark
tdoor
each.
family. rack, $8,
Get Ready for
“July 4th
We Are Spending the Fourth ~ At Home This Year! al
LEFT: Play croquet—fun for all the
Set for 4, complete with
All sorts of tidbits and delicacies to crunch on day—right from the New England Food Pantry. MAIN FLOOR A sturdy, comfy hammock to sun or
nap in, $2,718 each.
When friends drop in—have fun —consult the” Ouija Board—the mystifying oracle — $1.80 end" $2.00.
Officers will be elected and installed. The grand chapter officers in charge of the installation will be Mrs. Eldon M. Beghtel of Alpha chapter, president; Mrs, Harold Ogborne, New Castle, vice president; Miss Mary Jane Stillwell, New Castle, secretary, and Miss Ruth Miller, treasurer.
summer months when garden hazards occur,
Miss Kay Jordan is the arrangements chairman.
tection.
THESE REFRIGERATORS Keep Foods Fresher!
_ Scientific tests prove that ONLY Modern Ice Res frigerators—with controlled moisture, constant cold and ever-circulating -air—provide correct food proSee the new PROGRESS and "OLY refrigerators reasonably priced at Polar.
PIC
plates. $2.50.
Second Floor
ICE AND
BELOW: Informal party plates of highly glazed earthenware with floral bouquet center. Set of 6
LOWER RIGHT: Glass top serving tray in attractive colors. $3,850,
RIGHT: "Picnic for 2" basket, done in gay Mexican de-
‘sign and color.
Glorious iced drink glasses. Priced from $3 dozen.
FOURTH FLOOR
Aa we
Le tre
