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Show WILDERNESS CLUB TO BE FETED BY MRS. RICHARDS By CLAIRE MORRIS suggestion of Mrs. Stanley Mc-Lachlan, Mc-Lachlan, who had just moved to East Mill Creek from heavily populated pop-ulated Pennsylvania. She said she always had a yen for the wide-open spaces, and Mt. Olympus Park was the answer. She thought it would be interesting to band together as a club and so' the Wilderness club had its origin. They serve dessert as soon as J the guests arrive and then proceed with their needlwork. Mr. Richards says now the thing she notices most when driving home at night is the prominence of lights in the fast-growing area. Three yeare ago one could drive for a mile or so without even seeing see-ing a lighted window. Not so now. Members of the club include Mrs. Richards, Mrs. McLachlan, Mrs. Parley L. McMillan, Mrs. C. Mont Mahoney, Mrs. Robert E. Hansen, Mrs. Marvin S. Taylor, Mrs. H. M. Draper, Mrs. J. F. Litzo and Mrs. Karl B. Hale. The other original member has moved o California. Twice each year the women entertain en-tertain their husbands and have loads of fun "hashing over" old times of three years ago. Mrs. Stephen C. Richards, 3993 Parkview Drive, is entertaining the Wilderness club at her home tonight at 8 p.m. History of the origin of this club dates back three years ago when all was wilderness on the foothills east of East Mill Creek proper. Ten brave families lived in the wilderness of the barren hillside I so they could keep up on the wilderness gossip and do their mending at the same time. What changes three years have wrought. There are many beautiful beaut-iful homes of all different styles of architecture including modern, colonial, flat roofs and steeply-gabled steeply-gabled roofs. The Wilderness club was the called Mt. Olympus Park to build luxurious homes and so bandad themselves together in neighborly fashion to keep each other company. com-pany. The wives formed a sewing club |