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The Amarillo Globe-Times from Amarillo, Texas • Page 11

Location:
Amarillo, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAM It IETY Harmony Club Meets at Home Of Mrs. George M. Waddill "The Violin Family" was the les- 6on subject at the meeting held by the Harmony Club Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. George M. WaddJll.

Sr. Mrs. Evelyn Price and Mrs. L. B.

Newby were hostesses. Mrs. Otis Trulovc, the club's delegate to the annual convention ol Texas Federation- of Music Clubs held recently in San Antonio, gave a report, Mrs. B. B.

Holland was in charge of the program and read an Interesting paper on the lesson subject. Roll call was answered with the names of celebrated violinists. Musical numbers Included: piano solos. "Agcrla" (Grig) and "Alg Weln" (Godowsky), Mifs Margaret Harris; violin solo, "Meditation" (Thais). Mrs.

E. S. Burnett; musical readings. "Home" (Edgar A. Quest) and "In the Usual Way," Mrs.

L. M. Fischer, accompanied by Mrs. Lester Blakemore; piano, "Scherzo" (Chopin), Miss Enid Mayer; vocal, "Moon Behind the Cottonwoods" (Cadman), Mrs. R.

N. McKitterick, accompanied by Mrs. R. C. Martini; violin, "Romance" (Beethoven).

Mrs. E. S. Burnett, accompanied by Mrs. C.

O. Stinson; piano. "Au Matin" (Godard), Mrs. George M. Waddlll, a guest; "Passage--Birds' Farewell," Harmony Club sextet, composed of Mesdames L.

B. Newby, L. E. Mason, N. D.

Bartlett, J. L. Mclaughlin, E. W. Little, and Lester Blakemore.

accompanied by Mrs. Martini. Representing the junior club was a violin quartet composed of Misses Geraldinc Warner, Ruth Thornton, Virginia Mlddleton and Roberta Cohea. accompanied by Mrs. B.

B. Holland. Refreshments were served to Mes- Bartlett. Burnett, Blakemore, Holland, Little. E.

R. Mayer, Martini, McKitterick, Newby, Trulove, H. N. Wheeler, G. C.

Simpson, Fischer, Wynona Payne Frost, C. W. Seibel. Ruth Ford Smith, members, Mrs. Waddill and Miss Mayer, guests; and the junior club "iolln quartet.

Tea Is Given By Sorority Attractive in detail was the formal tea given by the Texas Alpha Alpha Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sunday afternoon at the home of Miss Lois Smith, Talmage Place. Members of the Texas Upsilon Chapter of Pampa and Miss Eugenia Lueders, rushee of the local chapter, were honor guests. In the receiving line were Mrs. Ardellc S. George.

Misses Virginia Leigh Bull, Ruth La Fon and Mary Katheryn Uttc 'jack. The entertaining room, were attractively decorated with spring flowers. Tea was served Irom a lace covered table centered with a bowl of yellow flowers and tall black tapers. Other refreshments were dainty yellow cakes, yellow mints topped with the black Greek letters, and let r.ream molded In the shape of a yellow rose, the sorority flower. Those pouring were.

Mrs. Wcs Izzard and Mrs. W. W. Rusk.

An interesting program was given by voice pupils of Mrs. George, including a group of ballads by Ray Johnson, a group of negro spirituals by Mrs. Roy Ratcliffe. "La Habnera" from "Carmen" and "When Day Is Done," by Weatherly, sung by Miss Ruby Thompson, and AAUW Elects New Officers At Luncheon New officers for Amarlllo Branch of the American Association of Vnl- versity Women were elected at the closed luncheon meeting held at the Amarlllo Country club. Mrs.

W. W. Husk was named president. Others officers chosen were: Mrs. Earl Barnt.

first vice-president; Mrs. R. V. Cartwrlght. second vice- president; Mrs.

Everett Carpenter, recording secretary: Mrs. John Parrell, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Lyle Montgomery, treasurer; Mrs. J. D.

Thompson, parliamentarian; Mrs. M. D. Snyder. historian; Mrs.

F. A. Coffey. educational chairman; Mrs. W.

B. Klingcnsmith, membcr- at-large; Mrs. Don Hughes, financial chairman; and Miss Abbie Ruth Hayman. auditor. M.uslc was furnished by Mrs.

Clarence Sale, pianist. Those attending were: Mesdames T. C. Craig. H.

N. Wautenpaugh, W. A. McDavW. Jack areenman.

Floyd King. John Maynard. L. J. Vick.

W. R. Kllngensmith. Ned O. Miller, p.

A. Coffey. Don Dobbins. F. A.

Tips. W. E. Routh, W. B.

Burkhalter. Mesdames Jewell Davis. Gordon P. Tomkins, E. E.

Kicnker, Clarence M. Sale, J. D. Thompson. C.

Don Hughes. Georgia Short, W. W. Rusk. E.

H. Ashcraft, B. M. Jacoksen, R. V.

Cartwrlght and Jack Collins. Misses Ruth Ann Tolbert. Ethel Jackson. Juanita Henderson. Louise Russell.

Cora Russell, Ida Mae McClure, Katherine Chapman. Emma Chapman and Mayme Oliver. I Announcements and Invitations Engraved or Printed New, Correct Southwestern Printing Co. Oliver-Eakle Bldg. ESSES Take i Honors They'll stand out in any graduation bat they rate their biggest appearance as 'delightful i a I a i for those gay parties a a Organdies, Laces, Chiffons and other smartly fashioned materials in variety of colors.

$7.95 to $14.95 Also To Walk With Charm Is To Walk With New, Beautiful PIECE GOODS Net. Lace. Chiffons in Prints and Roman Stripes. Taffetas and Marquisette and we'll be happy to show you new, distinctive patterns to plan with. C1 Prr Yard McDAVID BROS 808 POLK STUKKT "Retrospection" was read by Julian Dorfman.

Miss Wanda Fauquet presided at the guest book. Those registering from Pampa were: Misses Clotllle McCallister, Lois Martin, Ann Johnson, Myrtle Faye Gilbert, Fraribes Stark, Josephine Lane, Pearl Ward, Maxine Biuris, Larene Nicholson, and Mrs. Faye Wooley. Ray Johnson, Mrs. Ratcliffe, Miss Ruby Thompson, Julian Dorfman, Mrs.

Izzard, Mrs. Rusk, and the hostesses' mother, Mrs, Smith, were guests. Members present were: Misses Ruth La Fon, Esther Allnutt, Lois Smith, Mary Katheryn Utterback, Theresa Gorman, Wanda Fauquet, Hflllie Reeder, Virginia Leigh Bull, Lillian Mead, and Mesdames Esther Welch, Augusta Diven, and Ardelle S. George, director. Don't Sacrifice Home For an Infatuation By ANNE HIRST "Dear Anne Hirst: "My husband has admitted he in in love with somebody else.

I learned this six months ago and I don't know how much longer I can go on. "He doesn't want me to leave, and I don't to do anything I might regret later. "Until this happened we had been Ideally Iiappy. Even about this we don't quarrel--we never hare--but I have shed many bitter tears alone. I feel I've done everything a woman can do to keep her husband, but all that doesn't seem to have been enough.

"Do you think this is only an Infatuation and that he'll get over it? "He admits nil this, says no man could have a better wife. He says I have been perfection himself and that he doesn't know why this hap pened, but that he Just couldn't help it. "I love my husband, Anne Hirst, more than anything else in the world. "We have been married over a dozen years, I am in my early thirties (am told I look even younger) and we have one child. "Shall I stay here and try to act as though nothing were wrong? That Is what I have tried to do.

M. That is exactly what I would advise 'you to krep on doing. I am glad you nrc already in your stride. For this, of course, is the only thing: you can do that you will not regret. If you forced your husband to choose between you two women and he chose you--he might regard you for the rest or his life as a judge who forced him to "be good" and held the big stick of morality and the law over his head--which is the last thing you'd want to invite.

Whereas, if you let him pursue his own devious way now. saying nothing (and I mean just that), keeping your own counsel and living your life as though no other influence had entered it. then when he comes back to you (which he probably will) he'll acknowledge you as not only the smartest woman he knows but as the mother-wife who understood deflections and forgave and took him back again. And then you will have a husband who adores you he has never adored you before. Nothing can be gained by scenes, you know.

They get you nowhere and leave Indelible scars in both lives. You can't argue with a man who's In love with somebody else; he doesn't think, he only feels You'll just have to let this infatuation wear itself out and It will wear itself out far more quickly if it is unmolested. Between you and your husband Is a bond which almost no other woman can wcr.ken--the bond of a dozen years of marriage, home, child, community life--all those influences which weld a man to his accuMomod life and all of which he would have to lose if he set his wife aside and took another woman. Few men are willing to risk this, few even want, to. Rospectability and reputation mean too much to them: all this quite apart from the I fact that most of (hem.

HUe your I husband, still love their wives de- vofodly. So BO your own qufot- way. 5c- cur? in t-hP kiKwitdjic a )brine a pallant lady: a you arp preserving your dlcnlfy. and In FO i far as you can, your husband's too. You are holdine your home foget.hPr --and why sacrifice that for a fool- passion that probably won't last i i months? At any rate, give it time to crys- tallizr into tomrthlnc real, or (n rle- vour by Ms nwn inrlulprnrr, Fi hT -Aay.

you hrtv not any- thinc, ant! ytn will probably A A TONIGHT V. T. W. Auxiliary, American Legion Hall. 8 o'clock.

Family Night coveted dish oupper. Hall of First Christian Church, 6:45 o'clock: workers conference follows the luoorr. THURSDAY Delta Kaopa Chnptcr of the Delphian Society. Parish House of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church.

9:30 o'clocK. Pierian Club, Mrs. Alvln Hill. 1P02 Harrison Street, 3 o'clock. Athenaeum Club, Mm.

P. R. Underwood. 2412 Hayden Street, 2:30 o'clocK. MacDowell Club, parlor of Polk Street Methodist Church.

3 o'clock. Ooldenrod Club. Mrs. Charles Mcllor. 315 Fairmont Street.

2:30 o'clock. Recent graduate sroup of A. A. tT. Mrs.

J. H. Otis Apartments. 2:30 o'clock. Sunshine 12 Needle Club, party for husbands, Mrs.

R. E. Anthony, 203 Georgia Street, 8 o'clock. Help Your NelRhbor Club. Bryan Da- all-day meeting.

Arclnleca Club. A. M. Dickey, 410 North Hays Street, 3 o'clock. Trio Division to O.

I. tea for benefit of flower fund. Mrs. Jim Harmond. 1606 Van Burean Street, 2:30 o'clocfc.

J. tT. a Club, Mrs. John Ward, 1500 Polk Street, 3 o'clock. Entre Nous Club, postponed until May 13.

ProKresBivfl Child Study Club. Mrs. W. M. Sarpent.

822 Sunset, 2:30 o'clock. Homecraft Club, meeting postponed. Mary Hard In Baylor College Club, Mrs. Gilbert Ridings. 1500 Bonham Street, 3 until 5 o'clock.

Beryl Needle Club. Mrs. R. S. Branum.

Tenth Avenue, all-day meet- Ing and covered dish luncheon. Y. W. Sewing Club. Mrs.

Ted Bippus, 823 Louisiana. Street. Story Book Recital. McDanlel Studio or Music, 1207 West Nineteenth Arenuc. 8 o'clock.

Mlzpah Club. Mrs. Frank J. Warren. 2200 Polk street, 3 o'clock.

El Navegar Club, party postponed. Victorian Class of Central Presbyter- Ian Church. Mrs. R. B.

Miller, 3912 Cheyenne, 2:30 o'clock. Mrs. Ida Elliott Is Hostess for LaCostura La Costura Club was delightfully entertained yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. B. Dean Kirk, 1900 Tyler street, with Mrs.

Kirk's mother, Mrs. Ida Elliott, as hostess. An attractive a a of spring flowers furnished the decorations. A plate lunch was served to Mes- damcs Elizabeth Donaldson. Blokes.

John Ward and Boyce. guests: Mesdames a Armstrong, Walter Blackburn, E. C. Britain. C.

J. Brummctt, T. W. Gotten, J. W.

Collins. J. W. Burks, J. B.

Dixon, M. C. Hancock. C. S.

Hatchctt. E. S. Langdon. M.

Lemons, D. A. Park, C. A. Robertson.

Prank Sattcrflcld. J. L. Scott. S.

P. Vineyard, a. M. Waddill and the hostess, members. PAMPA CLUB TO GIVE PROGRAM HERE The Treble Clef Club of Pampa will present the program at the meeting of the MacDowell Club Thursday afternoon In the parlor of the Polk Street Methodist Church.

Hostesses lor the affair will be: Mesdames M. W. West, A. C. Bangs.

J. M. Webb, O. D. Newell, Owen Langseth.

E. A. Hllleary, Henry Alken, L. b. Travis, T.

B. Sullenberger. J. M. Keelln.

E. C. Britain. H. H.

Price and T. S. Sullenbergcr. Patrons of the MacDowell Club are Invited and may take one guest each. Members of the club may take two guests.

Members of the Philharmonic and Harmony clubs and the Mozart Society are invited. DRUM CORPS TO GIVE BENEFIT BRIDGE PARTY The Cowboy Drum Corps of the Woodmen Circle will entertain with a benefit party Friday night at 8 o'clock at the Woodmen Hall. The public Is invited. Proceeds of the affair will be used to help the drum corps to the national convention in Omaha in September. The group will be the official Drum Corps from Texas at the convention.

Reservations for the bridge party may be made by calling 6116, 6798 or 6447. BERYL NEEDLE CLUB IS ENTERTAINED Beryl Needle Club was entertained at the home of Mrs. Carl Larsen with Mrs. H. A.

Williams as Hostess. Attending were: Mesdames R. S. Branum, William Copeland, I. V.

Smith, Ed Putman, Carl Larsen and the hostess. The next regular meeting will be held at Mrs. Branum's home, 506H East Tenth Avenue. Friday night, the club members will entertain their husbands with a party at the home of Mrs. Williams, 1314 Hillcrest.

CHILD STUDY CLUB TO HAVE ANNUAL TEA. The Child Study Club will enter lain with its annual Quest Day tea Friday afternoon from 3 until 5 o'clock at the Arparillo Country, Club. Members may take guests by making reservations today with Mrs. T. B.

Daniel, phone 6461, or Mrs. E. M. Buchanan, phone 2-1847. HALCYON CLUB TO HAVE MEETING.

Halcyon Club will meet at the home of Mrs. H. P. Cochran, 405 Forest Street, Friday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. RIVER ROAD CLUB TO PRESENT PLAY.

River Road Home Demonstration Club will present a play, "How the Story Grew," and a negro minstrel Friday night at 8 o'clock at the River Road School. VM rnot UN PiN Wife fifty Mrs. C. H. VanMeet and Mrs.

A. Pitt entertained with bridge party at the Vanneet home. 'Members of the Mid-Week Bridge Club and husbands were guests. Spring flowers nd potted plants furnished the decorations. Prizes were awarded UMra.JHdon Lewis and Frank Milllgsn.

high; E. C. Oarthwalt and Eldon Lewis, second high; and Mrs. Orace Cline. traveling.

Refreshments were served to Messrs. and Mesdames J. T. Maxwell. H.

C. Harrison, Eldon Lewis. C. A. pyeatt.

E. C. Oarthwait. C. H.

VanFleet; Mesdames Grace Cline, Mazle Snee, L. A. Pitt: Miss Marguerite VanFJeet and Mrs. J. C.

Lilly. Margaret Ann Stone Entertains With Dinner The Thcla Pi's entcrlalned with a dinner at Margaret Ann Stone's home, 1GM Harrison Street. The guests were: Bobble Lee Brown. Mary Stack. Mary Taylor Ball.

Betty Jean Hughes. Mary Klingensmith, Jean Duniven. Roberta Newell. Genevleve Garner, Grace Rogers, and Virginia Lauder. The hostesses were: Patricia Pipkin.

Belts- Tecl. Martha Williams. Jane Gulcke, Jean Florey, Vivian HobcrUon. Ir. a Jean Byrd.

Betty Jane O'Brien. Anne Claire Brannen. Carol Askew, and Margaret Ann Stone. Engineers' have estimated that It would cost more than $250.000.000 to duplicate the Great Wall of China. Mr.

and Mn. Jack Hinemum Entertain With Dinner Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hlnerman entertained with a dinner at the Ama- rlllo Country Club. Games of binjjo furnished entertainment following the dinner.

Guests were: Messrs. and Mesdames Galloup. C. C. Kuhne, B.

Gunn, and Wade Holman. EL NAVEGAR CLUB POSTPONES PARTY. The party, xneduled to be given by members of El Nnvegar Club Thursday night for their husbands, has been postponed. The nffair was announced to be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

John A. Cavln. ENTRE NOUS CLUB POSTPONES PARTY The parly, scheduled to be given for Entre Nous Club Thursday, has been postponed until May 13 when Mrs. J. L.

Adams will be hostess at her home. Miss June Callahaii Is Elected President of Cotillion Club Miss June Callahan is the new president of the Cotillion Club. Other new officers are: Miss Jane Mahuron, vice-president: Miss Bcr- nicc Arnold, secretary; Miss Martha Davis, a Miss Carlie Barnes, reporter; Miss Isabel Box- 1, parliamentarian: and Miss Aileen Ballcw, sergeant-at-arms. The election or officers was held at Miss Callahan's home. The club, composed of a group of the city's most popular girls, was organized six months ago.

The end of the activities for the first six months was observed with a breakfast Sunday morning at the silver I Grill. Later, the group attended the services at the First Christian I Church in a body. At the breakfast, corsages were presented to the retiring officers: Miss Boxwell. president; Miss Davis, vice-president; Miss Jo Martini, secretary; Miss Mahuron. treasurer; Miss Callahan, reporter; Miss Bestie Lee Gowdy.

parliamentarian; and Miss Dorothy Jane Cook, sergeant-atarms. A special guest at the breakfast was George Wehr Kumpe. Mr. and Mrs. Kumpe, who have been sors of the club, are leaving to make their home in Little Rock, Ark.

TO H08TCgg FOR CLUB Mrs. Gilbert Ridings. 1MO Bon- lum Street, will be hosUw for the Mary Hardln Baylor College Club Thursday afternoon from 3 until 9 o'clock. rRKSBTTERlAN CLASS TO HAVE MEETING The Victorian Class of the Central Presbyterian Church wU! meet with Mrs. R.

B. Miller, 3912 Cheyenne. Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. MIZPAH CLUB TO MEET WITH MRS. WARREN.

Mlzpah Club will meet at the tiome of Mrs. Frank J. Warren. 2200 Polk Street, Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Glut of nut Church held Its monthly tvttaim mnUnf and covered dtah wppcr last nl(ht the church.

five tni tin. R. A. Springer, tewher, tun Ulk. Those attending were: Carl Adanu, Tom Ollley, Qujr flralUv J.

B. Mulkey, R. A. V. Lloyd Roblnton.

T. If. Brown. Curtis Clayburn, H. J.

New, a. M. Sulllnger, W. C. MMk, K.

M. Boone. Beulah St. Cloud, Fred Berg. Hellen Ellis.

L. W. Bytn. P. a L.

L. Jobe, H. L. Hutt, J. F.

Eubanks. Roy Houston. Paul Oott, A. C. Shaw and Oalne: Warren.

if if fframinq OIL SHAMPOO FOR COMfLlTl HAIR CARI OIUIHAtu AT Al Dim DwtaM mi A RISWT SWEET COW IS MANDY FOND OF CHOCOLATE DROPS! SHEll, EAT THREE TOUND3 OR SO OF THEM BEFORE SHE QUITS STOPS! MANDY WAS "A THEY FED HER PEPPERMINTS -THAT MADE HER FOND OF CANDY, BO ER MILK'S SWEET EVER Help Build Your Own Community Drink Milk Fran UK HOME-OWNED PLAINS 60-Year-Old Whisf Club Has Two Ex-Champions LISBON, O. 5 )--Two former national champions nre members ot the 60-year-old Lisbon Whist Club, whose weekly sessions serve to keep alive the once-popular "grandfather" of contract bridge. Dr. J. P.

Steele. a member of the Lisbon club for more than 40 years, claimed championship distinction for five successive years back at thet urn of the century, and C. Wright, whose membership is of only sllehtly shorter duration, latrr the'title. 5: your whole future happiness and his by enduring this erlcf silently. You have handled the whole situation wonderfully KO far.

hope you can find strength t.o keep on. I.KADINO DANCE STUDIO Dftltet-Chararltr-Tap-fUllronni Sylvia THJ- -Johnny WM( ACADKMY OF MUSK; A ART Tavlor Plmnc Z-310!) Hot Weather Desserts Are Quick, Easy and Certain in an Electric Refrigerator You can have a 'different 'dinner 'dessert every night for weeks and still not make all the delicacies that, an Electric Refrigerator can help you prepare. astonished and very pleased at all this modern electrical servant can do to make menu planning easy. And then, of course, there's the economy of an Electric Refrigerator to consider. By preserving left-overs safely it cuts down waste.

You can buy advantageously in quantities when you know that the things you buy won't spoil before you can use them. You'll save more than the original cost of a new refrigerator in waste-prevention alone. Go to your Electric Dealer's store and inspect the new models thoroughly--learn how little they cost to own and to operate. Get yours now--and start the summer rinht. Southwestern PUBLIC SERVICE.

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About The Amarillo Globe-Times Archive

Pages Available:
314,789
Years Available:
1924-1977