Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 126, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1928 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Reports on Campaign of Theater Final reports on the 1928 membership campaign will be made by the team captain's and assistants at a meeting of the Indianapoils Little theatre to be held this evening at the Playhouse, Nineteenth and North Alabama streets. Mrs. George T. Parry, executive chairman of the drive, which has been conducted from Sept. 24 to Monday, announces that will be an open meeting, to whiclj, not only drive workers are invited, but the entire membership. George Somnes, director of the theater, who returned to the city Monday after two months abroad, will attend the meeting, and will make preliminary announcements concerning the 1928-29 season and the opening production of “Hay Fever,” which was the closing feature of last season and which will be revived the last three nights of this week, in response to requests from teachers throughout the state, who will be in convention in Indianapolis the last of this week. Announcement will also be made rs the winners in the membership campaign. According to reports turned in at the Plaghouse Monday, Mrs. Mortimer C. Furscott’s team obtained the largest number of memberships. Mrs. Ralph Lieber’s team second, and Miss Helen Coffey’s third. Other team captains who assisted in the campaign are: Miss Mary McMeans, Mrs. Satnley M. Timberlake, Mrs. Isaac Born, Mrs. Lehman Dunning, Reginald Garstang, Edward Green and Harold Victor. Despite the conclusion of the contest, memberships will be received throughout the winter. Any cne interested in the Little theatre who has not been personally solicited during the drive should call at the Playhouse, where Miss Jane Ogbom, executive secretary, will be glad to answer any questions concerning the activities of the organization and its coming productions. Memberships may also be given to anyone on the executive board of the drive, consisting of Mrs. Parry, Mrs. Everett M. Schofield, Mrs. J. A. Goodman, Miss Anna Louise Griffith and Wallace O. Lee.
Bridge, •Shower for Miss Fuller, to Wed Oct. 25 A luncheon bridge party and miscellaneous shower was given at the-Indianapolis Athletic club Saturday by Mrs. Walter B. Haislup, In honor of Miss Ida Fuller, whose marriage to Herschel E. Halbert will take place the evening of Oct. 25 at the Irvington Methodist Episcopal church. Decorations were carried out in the rainbow shades with yellow predominating, which the bride has chosen as colors. Tallies in bride and bridegroom designs were attached to photographs of the home of the couple, 333 North Kenyon street. With Miss Fuller and her mother, Mrs. Albert Fuller, were Mesdames S. S. Talbert, Carl W. Boersig, Raymond S. Dean, Herbert A. Fehr, J. F. Heddrich, Leo M. Ostheimer. Ella Staub, Carl J. Winkler, Misses Josephine Ostheimer and Hortense St. Lorenz.
Shower Honors Miss Jackson, to Wed Oct. 25 Mrs. C. G. Marlowe entertained with a linen shower Monday evening in honor of Miss Laveme Jackson, whose marriage to Wilbur Phillips will take place Oct. 25. Yellow and white were used in appointments. At serving time a table was centered with an old-fashioned bouquet of flowers in the bridal colors. Ribbons from the bouquet led to the shower girls. With the guest of honor and her mother, Mrs. Clarence Jackson, were Mesdames T. A. Smith, Archie Ludlow, Roy Brown, Ray Wilhite, J. A. Wilhite, Loren Brinker, Otto Hannah, H. W. Smith, Charles Barbe, Raymond Atkinson, L. E. McLeon, Louis Jackson, Fred Richards, Louis Eskew, Sarah Marlowe, Leonard Crane, Fred Shelby and Ora Clearwater. ANNIVERSARY FETE BY KAPPA PHI GAMMA The anniversary dinner of the Kappa Phi Gamma sorority will be held at the Columbia club Wednesday evening, when the following new officers will be installed: President, Miss Kathryn Lux; vice-presi-dent, Miss Irene Parrish; secretary, Miss Cornelia Packer; treasurer, Miss Margaret Crow; pledge captain, Miss Theora Terry, and ser-geant-at-arms, Miss Mary Bristow. A table will be decorated with bowls of Pernet roses, the sorority flower, and the sorority colors, green and gold, will be carried out in appointments and favors. Inter-City Meeting Tonight Members of the newly organized Business and Professional Women’s club of Montpelier will be hostesses to members of the Portland, Bluffton, Hartford City, Ft. Wayne and Huntington cluba at an inter-city meeting this evening. Dinner will be served, followed by an initiation service by the Bluffcon club, sponsors of the Montpelier organization. Dispense With Meeting On account of the meeting of the State Federation of Women’s Clubs to be held in Indianapolis Oct. 23 to 26. the members’ day meeting of the , Woman’s Department Club, to have ‘been held Tuesday, Oct. 23, has been canceled. Sorority Meeting ' Tau Gamma Sigma sorority will hold a meeting at 8 Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Kessler Truelove, 5819 Central avenue.
COLOR FOR BRIDAL GOWNS
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The pink brocaded gown at the left has a circular skirt with train made in one with the back bodice panel. The veil is of Alencon lace. At the right is an off-white velvet gown featuring a novel sleevetreatment and a tiered skirt.
GIRL ABOUT TOWN BY MARILYN
The incredible weather we have been having of late, together with the football season, have been causing a serious decrease in the city’s week-end population. Everybody who wasn’t at French Lick went to the Navy-Notre Dame football game. Miss Mabel Gasaway, Dr. Howard Mettel, Louis Fletcher, Theodore Severin, Francis Brosnan and Edson Wood went with the general exodus to Chicago. Mrs. Frank Fishback is with her mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Carter, at French Lick. Wednesday Niles Chapman motored down with Mrs. Chapman and Mrs. Carl Walk and Miss Helen Fleischer. Julia Fletcher is down there in charge of Ayres’ apparel *shop which, by the way, is a very cute place and not at all exorbitant as to prices. Naturally sports clothes predominate with clever little felt hats and scarfs and hosiery. Interesting things are being done this season in the way of using chenille for sport hats. Another bit of minutiae is the use of a scarf ring instead of knotting the scarf. They look like large finger rings and the ends of the scarf are slipped through. Some of them are jeweled and some are carved out of wood or bone. The most attractive sweaters shown are soft and subdued in color with a leaning toward the modernistic in weave Delicate blues, beiges and soft greens are the most popular colors. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cox spent the week-end hunt’.ig on the Tippecanoe river. Dr. and Mrs. Wynne Owen have motored east to attend a medical meeting in Boston. Mrs. H. Maurice Angell has gone to Chicago to join her husband at the Edgewater Beach hotel. nun Saw Abram Parry on the street not long ago and he told me en passant that Mrs. Parry and his two sons are at Lausanne, Switzerland, where the boys are in school. They spend the fall and spring months in Lausanne and the winter months at St. Moritz where they have the advantage of> the winter sports. His two daughters, Cornelia Catherine and Letitia, are in school near Lausanne. He is staying here until November when he will join his family abroad for another year. n tt Mr. and Mrs. Robert Winslow returned today from a motor trip to his class reunion at Mercersberg where their two young daughters, Peggy and Barbara, accompanied them. SORORITY CHAPTER WILL BE INSTALLED Initiation of Indiana Gamma chapter, Pi Beta Phi sorority, Butler University, will be held at the chapter house, 706 W. Forty-Third street, Friday evening. Following the initiation service a dinner will be held in honor of the new members. Covers will be marked with roses for Misses Alberta Alexander, Dorothy Behmer, Beatrice Burgan, Hilda Lou Carroll, Virginia Hill, Hazel Lambkin, Katherine Murdoch, Marthalou Schoener, Lois Sherill and Virginia Whitlock, Indianapolis, Helen Fisher, Frankfort, and Emily Barnes, Logansport. Card Party St. Mary’s Social Club will meet at the school hall, 315 North New Jersey street, to entertain at cards and lotto at 2:30 Thursday afternoon. Hostesses will be Mesdames Margar#-* Aukenbrock, Henry Artman, Mary Brandis and Elizabeth Seiner. Masked Ball A masked Halloween dance will be given Friday evening, Oct. 26, by the Sahara Buds at Haddon hall. Miss Pauline Burnett is chairman, assisted by Misses Frances Herrick, Eleanor Saunders, Marie King and Edna Schardt.
Two Entertain for Miss Roller, Bride of Week Misses Leila Belle Shipman and Gertrude Wysong entertained Monday evening with a bridge party and boudoir shower at the home of Miss Shipman, 4716 Broadway, in honor of Miss Irma Roller, whose marriage to George Walker, Evansville, will take place Saturday. Pink, blue and orchid, the bridal colors, were carried out in decorations and appointments. Hostesses were assisted by their mothers, Mesdames Reece Wysong and Harry Shipman. Guests with the bride-elect were: Mesdames Charles W. Roller, S. B. Walker, Joseph Buck, Harold Barclay and Kurt Ehlert; Misses Thelma Roller, Elizabeth Anderson, Dorothea Berger, Virginia Curtis, La Donna Lamb, Betty Barclay, Eleanor Coryell, Dorothy Patterson, Virginia Cottingham, Alice Claire Hollingsworth, Katherine and Lucinda Smith.
Lois M. Rushton, Bride-Elect', to Be Entertained Miss Lois Mona Rushton, whose marriage to Thomas M. Schumaker, Richmond, will take place Oct. 28 at her home in Plainfield, will be the honor guest at a number of parties to be given for her during the next two weeks. Miss Katherine Fosley, 3540 North Meridian street will entertain this evening in her honor. Friday evening Miss Ann Burkert will give a party for Miss Rushton, and Oct. 26, Gurney Mann, Richmond, best man, will be host at a party in honor of the bride and bridegroom. Miss Elizabeth Stout, Vincennes, entertained with . a dinner party Sunday evening at the Columbia club in honor df Miss Rushton and Mr. Shumaker. Mrs. Stout was hostess at a dinner party Saturday evening at the Columbia club for the couple.
PERSONALS .
Mr. and Mrs. Bailey G. Willeford, Miami, Fla., and Dr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Willeford, 108 East Thirteenth street, motored to Washington to visit their mother, Mrs. George Willeford, and sister, Mrs. Cora Rollinson, who have been in Washington for the past month. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey Willeford will leave for Florida after spending some time with Mr. Willeford’s father, Dr. G. W. Willeford, 1304 North Pennsylvania street, and other relatives in Indianapolis. Dr. and Mrs. W. G. Hughes, 4025 North Meridian street, are in St. Louis, Mo., where he is attending the Academy of Eye Surgeons. Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Holmes, 3046 North Meridian street, have as their guests Mrs. Lawrence G. Holmes and little son Donald, Hollywood, Fla. Miss Evelyn Hahn, 3540 North Meridian street, has as her guest Miss Ruby Weil, New York. Mrs. Rowena Smith, 15 West Twenty-seventh street, has returned from a two weeks’ visit in southern Indiana. She attended the inauguration of President G. Bromley Oxnam at De Pauw university. Phillips-Miller Announcement is made of the engagement of Miss Beulah Phillips and Hary Miller, 714 Parkway avenue. Miss Phillips was formerly of Terre Haute. The marriage will take place there. Mr. and Mrs. Miller will reside here. Lodge to Meet Past Pocahontas association No. 1 will meet evening at the home of Mrs. Nettie Morgan, 1145 West Twenty-eighth street.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Miss Volz Wed Today in Church Miss Bertha E. Volz, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Volz, 1454 Union street, became the bride of Anthony F. Badinghaus, Glendale, 0., this morning at the Sacred Heart church, the Rev. John Joseph Brogger reading the nuptial high mass. The altar was decorated with chrysanthemums and lilies and lighted with white tapers. In the chancel were palms and ferns. Miss Teresa Badinghaus, niece of the bridegroom, was the bride’s only attendant. She wore a gown of brown velvet with hat to match and carried AarOn Ward roses. Raymond Volz, brother of the bride, was best man. A program of bridal airs was played preceding the ceremony. During reading of the service, Bernard Zimmer sang “O, Salutaris,” by Saint Saens and “Ave Maria,” by Percy Kahn. The bride wore a gown of blue velvet with hat to match and carried Briarcliff roses. Following the ceremony, a wedding breakfast was served to members of immediate families at the home of the bride’s mother. Mr. and Mrs. Badinghaus have gone on a trip and will be at home after Nov. 1 at Glendale, O.
YOUR CHILD Don’t Be Deaf to Questions
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Suppose you were suddenly to be transported to another planet. Suppose, stepping off your skyboat you should behold such wonders that your five special senses were incapable of comprehension. People, without doubt, would be different in this new world, and so would animals, and flowers, and even the very grass. The grass, if there were any, might be blue, or red, or pink, owing to the chemistry of the soil. The people might have six or eight legs, lige spiders, and eat twice a year insted of three times a day. Buildings might be elastic, vibrating like bowls of gelatin near a motor. Where you had known placement and solidity an Old Friend Earth, there you might find everything in motion—floating, fluid, restless. What would you do with all these wonders passing round you? Stand three and a are and remain mute? Not unless you were dumb, and deaf and blind. You wouldn’t wait to go to an information bureau. I doubt if you would even tap the corner policeman on the shoulder and begin politely, “Will you please tell me—” No. You’d blurt out to the first person within earshot: “What have these people go so many legs for? Why do they need four eyes? Why don’t they walk instead of bounce? Why is your grass blue? Why don’t your buildings stand still? Why do your cows have wings, and why do you milk your birds?” No doubt the Old Timer you tackled would glare at you cut of his four green eyes and bounce huffily off on his eight feet and snap over his shoulder: “Don’t ask so many questions. Can’t you see for yourself? I didn’t know any one could ask so many questions!” Children are just as new in this world as you would be in that planet. They learn in three ways: By asking questions, by reading and by experience. By asking questions they get their greatest fund of information. They should be answered, always. If your child possesses this quality, encourge it all you can.
Bridal Dinner to Be Given at Club Tonight Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Warrender, 4554 Broadway, will entertain this evening at the Indianapolis Athletic Club with a bridal dinner in honor of their daughter. Miss Catherine Margaret Warrender, and George F. Hilgerneier, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Hilgerneier, 426 North Pennsylvania street, whose marriage will take place Wednesday evening at the First Baptist church. The table will be decorated with a plateau of yellow roses and lighted with yellow tapers in silver hoiders. Appointments will be carried out in yellow, the bridal color. Covers will be laid for Mr. and Mrs. Warrender, Miss Warrender, Mr. Hilgerneier, Mr. and Mrs. George Hilgerneier, Mrs. Francis Feeney, matron of honor; Miss Mildred Piner, Muncie; Misses Rosemary Clune, Rosalind Hammond, Lucile Tyner, bridesmaids, and Miss Maurie Liebman, New York, house guest of the Warrenders; Edward Hilgerneier, best man; Messrs. Bradley Haight, Robert Greeley, Marcus R. Warrender and Gordon Kelly, ushers. Hallotveen Party . Members of the Epsilon Pi Delta sorority will be entertained at a Halloween party Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Ollie Hite. Business Meeting A regular weekly business meeting of Sigma Sigma Kappa sorority will be held Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Margaret Heidt, 207 West Twenty-ninth street. To Hold Regular Meeting Mrs. William Engle, 19 South Gray street, will be hostess to members of Sigma Phi Delta sorority for a regular meeting at 8:15 Wednesday evening. Chi Delta Chi Meeting Miss Mary Stevens, 2725 North Meridian street, will be hostess Wednesday evening for a meeting of Alpha chapter, Chi Delta Chi spprity.
MRS. ED JACKSON TO ENTERTAIN WITH TEA Women of the Indianapolis Home for Aged Women and members of the Welfare Club will be guests at a tea to be given from 2 to 5 p. m. Thursday by Mrs. Ed Jackson at the governor’s mansion. Assisting Mrs. Jackson will be Mesdames George Coffin and Omer Hawkins. Mrs. D. B. Sullivan, program chairman, will have as her assistants Mesdames James E. Berry, R. Klinghalz, O. A.'Hobbs, Roy Hartz, Mary Maxwell, George Dickson and John Avery. LEARTRUS BECKMAN WED TO JOSEPH COLE Word has been received by friends in Indianapolis of the marriage Sunday at St. Patrick’s cathedral. New York, of Miss Leartrus Beckman, 3510 N. Meridian street, and Joseph J. Cole, son of Mrs. Joseph J. Cole, 3766 N. Pennsylvania street.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Indianapolis. Ind. . Enclosed find 15 cents for -which send Pat- 5 2 4 6 B tern No. Size Street City Name
JAUNTY SUIT FOR SMALL BOY
5246. Boys’ suit. Cut in three sizes: 2, 4 and 6 years. A 4-year size requires one and five-eighths yards of forty-inch material •with one-quarter yard of contrasting for collar and vest portions. Every day The Times prints on this page pictures cf the latest fashions, a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. Obtain tfiis pattern by filling out the above coupon, including 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week.
Club Guest Day to Be Observed With Luncheon The annual guest day luncheon of the Multum in Parvo Literary Club will be held at the Lumley tea room Tuesday noon. The affair will be a mardi gras on shipboard. Mrs. Ernest W. Fullenwider, chairman of hostesses and Mrs. Harold M. Trusler, chairman of the program committee, will present the following program: “My Dream Ship,” sung by Mrs. Basil Vaught, accompanied by Mrs. William H. Polk; "The Story of the Cruise;” reading, “The House by the Side of the Road,” by Mrs. William F. Holmes; a baby ballet by Miss Eva Mae McCoy; De Koven’s “Prelude in C Minor,” and Rachmaninoff’s “Prelude in C Sharp,” by Miss Delores Mainard. Officers of the organization are: President* Mrs. William F. Stanley: vice-president, Mrs. Ernest F. Fullenwider; secretary, Mrs. Basil Vaught, and treasurer, Mrs. Russell Gilmore. Surprise Party A surprise party to celebrate the birthday anniversary of George Wittemeier was given at the home of his parents in Valley Mills, by friends. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. William Renner, Misses Irma Kattan, Charleth Renner, Bettie Renner, Laura May McGill, Matty Schubert, Beulah Scott, Helen Huckleberry, Marie Long, Anita Cunningham, Evangeline Scott, Wiona Scott, Mary Busald, Helen Busald, Therl Martin and Naomi Heath; Mesrs. Herbert Kattan, Fred Kattan, Hugh Francisco, Henry Williams, Jack Hutchinson, Louis Jones, Harry Thibo, Henry Blaschke, John Schubert, Charles Schubert, Earl Kohlmann and Kenneth Foltz. Expression Club Meets Members of the Expression Club met Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. George F. Goldman, 717 Carlisle place. Mrs. Charles E. Teeters was assisting hostess. Decorations, refreshments and favors were carried out in Halloween colors. The program was in charge of Mrs. Vincent C. Vinager. Mrs. F. X. Kinzie read “From Ghent to Aix,” by Robert Browning and “Dora,” by Tennyson. A medley, “The Princess,” was presented by Mesdames C. F. Cox and Mrs. Vinager. Card Party Wednesday Women of St.‘ Philip Neri parish will hold a card party at 8:30 Wednesday evening in the auditorium, Eastern avenue. Mrs. John Ward is in charge of arrangements.
Y.W.C.A. Will Seek Members With announcement of the general membership meeting Monday night at the Young Women’s Christian Association comes that of the appointment of Mrs. Ray W. Grimes as chairman of the membership committee. Miss Laura Reynolds was named secretary. The general gathering is designated a “rainbow” meeting, and each phase of the association work will be represented by a different color of the rainbow. Supper will be served before the time of the meeting, 7:30. Student, Girl Reserve, home, health, education, business and industrial girls, will be represented by talks, and members representing each of these phases will wear hats in their selected colors. “It is difficult,” said Miss Lanham, “to make it clear to the membership that at this meeting we are to proceed under the change in the constitution adopted last January. At that time the final vote was taken which changed the basis on which voting and office holding is decided, and although any one who so desires may be a member, only those who have declared themselves in sympathy with the purpose by signing the declaration to that effect will be privileged to vote at the meeting Monday evening. Mrs. Ray W. Grimes, will be in charge of the meeting and will have a meeting Friday of persons who are assisting her with arrangements. She will be assisted by Mesdames Charles R. Sowder, Frank C. Bopp, Paul T. Payne, J. I. Parker and Miss Laura Reynolds.
Mardi Gras Note for Guest Party of Club Today Members of the Multum in Parvo Literary Club entertained with a guest party at the Lumley tea room teday. In the receiving line were Mesdames William Stanley, president; Ernest W. Fullenwider, vicepresident; Basil Vaught, secretary, and Russell H. Gilmore, treasurer. A table was centered with a sailing vessel fully rigged. Place cards were hand painted ships with the name of the club and guests in gold letters. Favors were carnival caps and balloons, following out the program for the day, “Mardi Gras on Shipboard.” Mrs. Ernest Fullenwider, chairman of hostesses, was assisted by Mesdames Russell H. Gilmore, J. W. Griffy and Basil Vaught. Guests present yere Mesdames R. O. McAlexander, M. E. Robbins, David Ross, Guy Ross, Elizabeth Smith, I. E. Rush, C. E. Dwyer, Roland Cotton. Margaret Witty, Ethlyn Aimholder, Aletha Land, W. M. Gansberg, Edward Lawson, Adolph Wagner, Frank Reggett, John Marshall, Everett Ryan and Raymond Masters, New York. Bridge Party Wednesday Members of Zeta Theta Psi sorority will be entertained with a bridge party at the home of Miss Reanelle Argus, 4232 Central avenue, Wednesday evening. Benefit Card Party A benefit card party will be given by the Protected Home Circle Wednesday evening at ,Red Men’s hall. Card Party Tonight Capitol City council No. 53, Daughters of America, will hold a card party at Eleventh street and College avenue this evening. Alumnae Club Luncheon The Indianapolis Alumnae Club, Alpha Gamma Delta, will entertain with a luncheon at Hotel Lincoln, Parlor F, at noon Thursday. Tea ferr Church Women Mrs. S. T. Huston will give a tea for women of the Church of the Advent Friday from 2:30 to 5 p. m. at her home, 411 Ruskin place. Bright Window A rather drab dining room was made quite cheerful by painting a flower pot stand a Chinese lacquer red and all the pots holding greenery the same bright red. Tuck-in Skirt A violet crepe de chine blouse with hand-stitched vestee, collars and cuffs, is worn with a purplygray diagonal worsted suit with a tuck-in skirt.
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Martha Lee Advises
BY MARTHA LEE Here is an assortment of letters for individual attention. Read them over carefully. You probably won’t understand why I am printing them, excepting that they are letters written for the express purpose of running in the column. But there is one—honestly. Dear Martha Lee: I am past eighteen and feel as though I am a hopeless case. Ever since I can remember I have been in 111 health. After getting out of school I worked steady for almost a year and now my health is worse than ever. Any kind of work makes a nervous wreck of me. The worst part of it is my parents know that every time I work it means a nervous breakdown and a doctor bill, but all they do is quarrel with me and tell me I am lazy, because I don’t work. It hurts me to have them say those things. Would you advise me to go back to work or take things easy and be raved at all the time? MISS PATIENT. Another: Dear Miss Lee: I am past eighteen. A few months ago I met a fellow about twenty-four. I have gone with many fellows, but I never loved any one like I love him. How. Miss Lee, he is going to another state in a few weeks and wants me to go with him. I would do most anything to keep him. But am undecided as I have never been away from home any length of time and I know none of his friends in that town. I can’t bear to see him leave and still I can’t decide what to do. Please advise me. ALMEDA. And again: Dear Miss Lee: I am nearly eighteen and have worked in a factory for almost two years. Now, Miss Lee. I don’t make very much money and the work is very hard. I get so disgusted sometimes that I don’t know which way to turn next to make both ends meet. I want to learn some kind of a trade, but I can’t decide what would be the best thing to take up. I have never been interested In being a stenographer or clerking in a store. What would you advise me to do? Please help me out as I Just can’t go on if I have to continue working in a dirty factory day in and day out. MISS DISGUSTED. You really should take up fiction writing. Your other two letters | could not be printed for reasons best known to yourself, but of course I received them. Anyone who tries five different times, with five different problems, to make a column really should get in if for no other reason than a reward of perseverance. Os course, I knew these letters were all from the same person. The style is so similar in each, a few phrases too often repeated that, even though there was an attempt to disguise the hand writing, it is easy to see the letters were all children of the same brain. Had the letters been on the same subject, had they been less conflicting, I should have imagined them to be from someone sorely in need of advice. But since there is such a divergence of conditions in each, I can see nothing in it but a desperate attempt to be seen in print. And so I am printing them, so that you may see how they look in a newspaper, but most especially so that you will stop swelling my mail with foolishness. I am willing and happjy to offer advice to those who need it, but can not get particularly boomed up over reading a lot of blurb. If you are really ns vacillating as your letters indicate, j better start taking lessons in “How to Make Up My Mind.”
Prize Recipes by Readers
NOTE—The Times will give $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed In thi column One recipe Is printed dailv t x - ept Frida'’, when twelve are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Prizes will be mailed to winners. Hallowe’en Dainties Allow one orange for each person. Wash, cut off the top, and remove the inside of the orange. Cut eyes, mouth an dnose like jack-o’-lantern in the orange shell. Fill with fruit salad made of any fruit desired, mixed with salad dressing, and serve each orange in a lettuce cup. MISS ROSE GRACE. 429 N. Pennsylvania St., City. Pledge Service Tonight A pledge service will be held at the home of Miss Edna Silver, 2230 College avenue, this evening far members of Beta chapter, Chi Delta Chi sorority. A buffet supper will be served following the service. Miss Silver will be assisted by Misses Allene Armtsrong, Peggy Allen and Bernice Schmidt. Those to be pledged are Misses Carlene Cooper, Lucile Bowen, Alice Emminger, Marie King, Betty Allen, Mary Murray, Lucille Moore and Mary Foxall. Sigma Delta Chi Sorority A meeting of members of Sigma Delta Chi sorority will be held Wednesday evening at Hotel Lincoln, with Miss Renee Brown as hostess.
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Miss Clegg Is Bride in Church Rite The marriage of Miss Kathryn Louise Clegg, daughter of Owen E. Clegg, 410 Boulevard place, and Matthew John Wernsing, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Wernsing, 1720 Union street, was solemnized at 9 this morning at the Sacred Heart church, the Rev. Humilus Zwiesler officiating. Palms and ferns were used in the chancel and the altar was decorated with lilies and white chrysanthemums and lighted with cathedral candles. Preceding the ceremony a program of bridal airs was played by the organist and Mrs. Paul Koesters sang, “Ave Maria” and “On This Day.” Miss Katherine Huff was the bride’s only attendant. She wore a gown of pink georgette and a picture hat of horsehair braid to match. Joseph Clarke was best man and ushers were Paul Wernsing, brother of the bridegroom, and Matthew Gisler. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of bridal satin and tulle fashioned robe de style. Her tulle veil, edged with lace, was arranged with a cap of duchess lace caught with orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of Bride’s roses and lilies of the valley. A wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride’s father, for members of the immediate families. A table was centered with a wedding cake and decorated with pink flowers and tapers. Mr. and Mrs. Wernsing left for a motor trip through the south, the bride traveling in a tan satin dress and brown velvet coat with accessories to match. They will be at home after Nov. 1 at 1637 Spencer avenue, Marion.
Bridge, Shower for Miss Flora , Saturday Bride Miss Zelma Flora, whose marriage to Leon Hicks will take place Saturday, was honor guest at a bridge party and shower given at the Columbia Club Monday evening by Misses Georgianna Rockwell and Kathryn Bowlby. The bridal colors, rose, amethyst and green, were used in the appointments. Tables were lighted with candles in the three shades. The gifts were presented by Miss Rosamond Schlagel, dressed as a bride, in a large decorated basket. Miss Schlagel also entertained with a dance. Guests with the bride-elect were Mesdames Robert Stockwell and Lloyd Rhinehart; Misses Victoria Schreiber, Martha McFadden, Mary Heaton, Sara Powell, Marguerite Billo, Marcena Campbell and Florence Keepers. Called Meeting A called meeting will be held at 8 Wednesday evening at 903 Fletcher Savings and Trust Company for members of Beta Tau Sigma sorority. Plans will be completed for a card party to be given by the sorority. Theta Mu Sorority Theta Mu sorority will hold a meeting Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Margaret Gibbs, 2303 Southeastern avenue. Alpha chapter. Omega Phi Tau sorority, will meet at 8:30 Wednesday evening in the Y. W. C. A. Blue Triangle room.
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