Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 107, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1929 — Page 20

PAGE 20

Engagement Should Not Be Lengthy RY MARTHA LF.F Among the questions bothering voting men and women since young men were aware of the fact that there went young women is the advisability of a long engagement. The way to solve that problem is 'he same method used in the solving of any problem. In the first place, take the advantages of a lengthy troth. After a girl has promised her • oun*' man she is willing to spend the rest of her life in his company, he is reasonably assured of the fact 'hat, barring accidents, he is to have ? wife to support, and a home to maintain. And the long engagement giver him ample time in which to save money, buy furniture, and change his mind in the event he so desires. Chance of Misunderstanding The girl has time to collect, a prepossessing hope chest, embroider tea towies, have showers and the like. But the disadvantages also must be considered. There are the chances of misr understandings brought, about by the million and one incidents that come up during the betrothal. The hazy, indefinite time when the marriage is to culminate makes the engagement seem only a deep friendship. Aryl then, therp is the possibility of the romance wearing down until it has last all its beauty and glamor. A young girl has bombarded me with questions, the mast impqrtant of which I am going to answer. D*r Miss Le** -Not lonp apo T took '■our advira on a problem and it worked out lovely. Now if you. will answer thenquestions I will be grateful Do you think boy respects * pul more If sh“ does no* smoke? What Is your opinion of long enpapements? Does 11 seem to you that bovs are mo'j. interested in a cirl who is rool toward h’m and .keeps, his cuesslng. or one that, pushes over him. one be is sure of’ / SHORTY. To begin with. Shorty, T do suppose It depends a great deal upon the type of boy whether he would respect a girl or fail to respect her because she smoked. There are boys who rather would see a girl dead than with a rigaret, in her mouth. There are others who think no more of it. than if she w-re a man. I can not imagine a boy setting his standard of respect or disrespect, on anything so superficial. Long Engagement Taboo A long engagement is taboo as far as T am concerned. If there must be a question of length, it should boa long friendship. The only excuse for a long engagement is to learn more about the boy to whom you are engaged, and that should be done before the engagement is made a fact. The second reason would be flnan- j dal. and no man has a right to ask , a girl to marry until he is financially able to support her. Concerning gushing, it never is in j good taste, for any purpose what- j -oever. A girl does not have to ! plan a guessing game with the boy ■ rhe goes with. There are much ipore satisfactory ways of letting a | '•'<yy know he is approved of than by gushing over him.

OTTO FIFIELD WILL TALK TO WOMEN

' Otto Fifield, secretary of state, 'h ill be speaker at the luncheon •’..eeting of the Women's Repub<can Club, Thursday. Sept. 26. at Columbia Club, it was anounced Thursday at a meeting of executive board of the club. At the meeting Sept. 26. nominating committee of five will be elected. Mrs. Tracy Whitaker will be in charge of musical program. Catherine Bray Weds Loir ell (r risso at U arsaw Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Bray. St. Louis, formerly of Indianapolis, announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Catherine Bray, to C. Lowell Grisso. son of the Rev. and Mrs. C. C. Grisso. Warsaw. The ceremony took place Monday Sept. 2. at the Brethren church at Warsaw, the bridegroom's father officiating. They will be at home after Oct. 1. at 1512 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Bray attended Butler university. where she was a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Grisso was graduated from De Pauw university. where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Celebrate Birthdays Birthday anniversaries of Mrs. Pearl Carson. Mrs. Robert Koeper, and Mrs. Edward Overdorf were observed Wednesday with a dinner party at the home df Mr. and Mrs. Overdorf. Birthday Js Celebrated Mrs. J. F. Quigley entertained with a party at her summer home at Ravenswood today in honor of the thirteenth birthday anniversary of her granddaughter. Miss Margie Stanciil. Chicago. Rush Party Planned First rush party of the season of Theta Chi Omega sorority will be given at the home of Miss Feme Bruce. 1062 West Thirty-third street at 8 tonight. Alumnae to Meet Mrs. Robert J. Wilde Jr. will re!*>rt the Pi Beta Phi national con- ' ention held this summer in Pasadena, Cal., at the luncheon meeting of Pi Beta Phi Alumnae Association. Saturday, at the Woodstock Club. Awarded, Fellowship Miss Martha McFadden. daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Walter C. McFaden, Shelbvville. associate director in the Arthur Jordan Conservatory o£ Music, Indianapolis, during the gst year, has been awarded the annual fellowship of the Chicago Musical college. Benefit Party Planned Maple Circle. No. 7. U. A. O. D., will give a benefit card party Saturday night at 2541 North Illinois street.

( Interprets Os course, an ensemble! Why not this green woolen coat, trimmed in Hark fnr, with two-piece dress of georgette >'U)urr ovd satin skirt! (Courtesy of Mag-Helly, Paris.) ||j) {JMART coats for next win- " w " ter are going to favor the \ i -s. princess line rather strongly. \ \ Very “dressy” models often l \ (S)J will be of rich fabrics, such as \ 1 brocades and velvets, and will \ 1 be of elaborate workmanship. ) I And while the princess silhou- ■ / / \ efte wall be the guiding-point, of v / // \ \ inspiration, we shall see it treated f f\ \ \ in a thousand and one new ways. '' / / \ \ These coat models will be intri- / / \ \ cately trimmed with bands of flat jW fur or with ruchings at collar and V

CMART coats for next winter are going to favor the princess line rather strongly. Very “dressy” models often will be of rich fabrics, such as brocades and velvets, and will be of elaborate workmanship. And while the princess silhouette wall be the guiding-point, of inspiration, we shall see it treated in a thousand and one new ways. These coat models will be intricately trimmed with bands of flat fur or with ruchings at collar and cuffs. Fullness will be given these models in a number of ways, sometimes simply through skillful bias cutting, but more often through carefully planned incrusted point, and through shirrings. tt tt tt WE also may note for winter the probability of a decided departure in sleeves, which up to now have molded closely the shape of the arm. In a word, balloon sleeves will make their appearance, both for coats and dresses. In many cases the dress will be of plain material and the sleeves printed in harmonizing colors. The draped sleeve also will make its reappearance, but in order to avoid' a bunchy loek the draping will be between elbow and wrist only. And speaking of draping, we might add that draped dresses and coats are commencing to make their appearance. Truly, the days of simple simplicity are over—for the time being! ana Clever Fingers Contest DIDN'T you tell Mary just the other day over the phone how to make that cunning little gadget she wanted to know about? Write it down on paper, with funny looking illustrations to help us get the knack—and alors! maybe you’ve won the first prize, or the second prize or even one of the Clever Finger Booklets, that you’ll be so pleased to own. Isn’t this just the nicest, easiest contest you have ever entered? Hurry! tt tt tt SO little is really understood about color! We use it everywhere—in our clothing, in our home, in food, in amusements—yet we fail to appreciate its significance, fail to grasp the fact that correct color knowledge is a matter of study, not just a matter of luck or of talent. n n n In this week’s illustrated leaflet we give you the simple fundamental rules of color knowledge which any one can know and understand. SHOULD know and understand. Send a 2-eent stamp to the Dare Department of The _ Times for it! a tt tt \ LIGHT green woolen fabric L\. coat trimmed with flat black fur, worn with a light green georgette blouse and matching satin skirt, has every reason to be successful if it is a Mag-Helly ensemble. For there are other things that make it lovely! tt tt tt Au Revoir!

PERSONALS

Miss Mary Louise Hobbs. 4120 North Pennsylvania street, will leave today for Rochester. Minn., to join her mother. 'Mrs. Harry W. Hobbs. Miss Louise Tynan, 2001 North Pennsylvania street, returned today from New York. Mrs. Charles H. Smith, president of the Indianapolis Council of Camp Fire Girls, has returned from the national convention of Camp Fire Girls, held in Omaha. Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Canaday. 1602 Prospect street, and their daughter Miss Charlotte Canaday. have returned from a three months’ tour of Europe. Miss Pearl Steers, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Edwin Steers. 432 Riley avenue, has gone to Bloomington, where she will enter Indiana university. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Newnan and family, who been visiting Mr. and Mrs. John M. Newnan. 620 East Thirtieth street, have returned to their hcfme in Houston, Tex. Mrs. Addfson Coddington was hostess for a card party given by the Maennerchor Ladies' Society this afternoon at the Maennerchor Club Miss Marie Leppert was chairman of the entertainment committee. I

Annual Roundup of Guild Is Set for* October 29 Annual roundup of the Indianapolis branch, Needlework Guild of America, will be held Oct. 29, 30 and 31, at English hotel. Section presidents met at the home of Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood, 2847 North Meridian street, president of the Indianapolis branch. The following new directors and one new section, the Woman’s Auxiliary to All Saint's cathedral, with Mrs. Thomas Spencer, were announced. Section . 16, Mrs. Mina Larch, Mrs. George Lunting and Miss Mary Frances Doeppers. Section 24, Mrs. W. A. Mcßride. Section 25, Circle 3, Meridian Heights Presbyterian church, Mrs. Fred L. Palmer. Section 26, Mrs. Charles Hendrix and Mrs. J. E. Hall. Section 28, Mrs. Harold Bachelder. Section 31, Mrs. A. L. Taggart.

Your Child—— Give Thought to How Child Takes Care of Allowance

BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Giving children a small allowance each week is nothing out of the ordinary nowadays. Parents are realizing more and more the necessity of children learning the value of money, and the limitations of its buying power when they are young. I believe this is several steps in the right direction beyond the oldfashioned bank that stood on the end of the mantelpiece. But isn’t the old money-pig, or Mandarin’s head, or just plain bank, getting to be rather too obsolete? It's been too long a time since I’ve seen one to know. Os course, they may have gone modernistic, and difficult to recognize, but I have “ma doots.” That isn’t the kind of slot that Johnny’s nickels are most familiar with now. When Father Weakens On the other hand, are these weekly allowances the discipline they are supposed to be, or merely bonuses? If Johnny says, “I want to go to the movies tonight, but my allowance is ail used up,” isn’t his father likely to dig down for another quarter? The only way to put son John on an allowance basis is to sit down and figure up approximately what his needs are from Saturday to Saturday. An allowance that you know won't half cover what he spends each week certainly is missing the mark altogether. If he is to learn budgeting or dividing his income into fractions for his various expenses, his allowance should cover everything; that is, everything you allow him to buy tor himself. Needs Many Things Say that he is young and you j still will wish to reserve the matter of clothes for your own judg- | ment. All right then. What is he going to need outside of clothes, discounting amusement and a sundae or two? There will be pencils and little l school necessities. Or he may need fish hooks, nails for his building, medicine for his sick dog. bird seed, mucilage to fix a toy, a birthday present to give a friend, church, school contributions, car fare to a picnic and so on. This may all be classed under necessities. Find a weekly average and mark that down. Yqu know how much you want him to

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Life Better Because of Struggles BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON A wise young Wellesley senior says that college girls have few ideas about life ahd she advoertes that they visit the slums and do some social service work. Even then she is something of an optimist. Because, while visiting the slums and gazing with round eyes at the poverty and sorrow and misery of another helps some, none of us ever knows much about life until we have lived it. College girls, as the young lady points out, arc likely to be snobs who actually know very, little. And so are college boys, we might add. And a lot of fat stock-brokers, and Rotary members and social service workers. Life is a magnificent adventure. And while one pities the povertystricken slum dweller, one save a bit of pity also for the very rich man or woman who never has known the surging joy of struggling for the goodies of existence. Farm Woman Sees Life The hard driven farm woman, with a sore heart and too busy hands, gets something splendid out of life, if she is a real and worthwhile person, that does not come to the rich and padded city apartment house dweller who docs nothing but waste her days. This is why girls like the little Wellesley senior make these jaunts into the slums, and -why in increasing numbers the daughters of the rich are doing spectacular and unusual things. They are tired of vegetating. And who can blame them? The best way for a girl to experience life, however, to feel it, taste it and be washed in floods of it. is to marry some worthy young man who loves her and set about denying herself for the sake of a future home. Struggle Is Needed It’s rather a pitiful thing that all of us long so ardently for lots and lots of money—so that we may do what? —“Go places and see things.” Quite so. But the really happy people of this or any other country are those who live simple lives from which a certain physical or mental struggle never is eliminated. If you would find genuine content and normal living, you must search for it among the middle classes who are obliged to do a certain amount of work.

GIVE BRIDGE PARTY FOR HOUSE GUEST

Miss Marjorie Johnson, Houston. Tex., was the honor guest at a bridge party Thursday night, given by Mrs. Esther Horne and Miss Leunice Horne at their home, 940 Middle Drive, Woodruff Place. Guests included: Mrs. W. D. Criswell, Mrs. Walter E. Houck. Mrs. Fred Brier, Mrs. Lois Scott, Mrs. Harmon Pritchard, Miss Isabella Eddy. Miss Mildred Keethler. Miss Gertrude Insley, Miss Blanche Harvey, Miss Jane Marsh. Miss Ruth Fox. Miss Beatrice Stultz, Miss Elizabeth Zimmerman. Miss Eloise Shick, Miss Mildred Tyler and Miss Elizabeth Sacre. Celebrate Anniversary Dr. and Mrs. I. N. Brent, Crawfordsville, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Wednesday with a family dinner and reception.

spend on movies and ice cream cones. Mark that down to luxury. Now here’s where the pig’s-liead or modernistic skyscraper on the mantel comes in. Figure in a sum each week to feed the pig or fuel the skyscraper, and I believe I’d mark it down first. Then hand out to John exactly the amount you’ve added up. And don’t give him dividends or bonuses. That’s where his training steps in. He must learn to keep out and keep under. Keep out of debt and keep under his income. If he wants extras let him learn to take it out of the luxury budget. There’s a grand lesson. A last word for the mental ornament. When it gets full let him count the money and put it in the big bank—maybe to go to college, tell him, or to buy his own house when he grows up, or to go into business. A purpose for saving is always an incentive.

Y. W, C, A, WILL OPEN ACTIVITES

Saturday at noon the Y. W. C. A. of Indianapolis will take to the air. Miss Mary Folsom of Advertising studios, looking very much just what the air-minded young girl will wear this fall, in togs from L. S. Ayres’ sport department, will soar above the city in a plane from the Hoosier airport and scatter rainbow hued announcements pertaining to the activities of the Y. W. C. A. After that the lid will be off. The season will be open and the classes of the education department, including dancing, swimming, French, English, Spanish, modern fiction, sewing, china-painting al-d selfexpression and some dozen or so other spendid suggestions for filling in the idle hours of business and home women of Indianapolis, will have swung into their fall term oi fourteen weeks. Ranter Fete Given in Honor of Mizpahs Mrs. George Gamber entertained at her home, 2329 Nowland avenue, with a lantern lete for the Mixpahs. Wednesady night. The house and garden were lighted with Japanese lanterns. Sixty-five guests attended. Miss Kathleen Jefry. Miss Clara LaVon Chanfant and Miss Elizabeth Duncan presented a musical program.

Belt Made Emphatic in New Styles BY FRANCES PAGET Copvrieht 1929. bv Style Sources NEW YORK, Sept. 13.—There will be two schools of thought in silhouettes. according to the Paris openings—the belted and the princess. The latter, because of its comparatively sensational character in the light of the conservative lines that have gone before, has received more publicity. On the other hand, it is fairly safe to say even now, the greatest number of models that will be offered both for exclusive and popular consumption will be belted. Belied dresses require no introduction as a type, for they have been in evidence for several seasons in one version or another. The newest interpretation makes the belt more emphatic, since it is so vital a means of locating the waistline, now' all-important in every silhouette. It is the development of the tuckin shirtwaist and skirt combination, translated to dresses, and then on to coats and suits. Even newer are the coats and suits that are belted and bloused. We have had the belted sports coat which came out of the trench coat, but now formal clothes, even evening fashions, turn to the belted idea. Coupled with this emphasis on the belted line is the bloused treatment of bodices above the waistline. The innovation of suits developed on the bloused principle with tight belt and flare below is certainly interesting as sponsored by Chanel, and is an idea that bears watching for popularity in silk as well as cloth. Besides the silhouette Influence which the belted line provides, the belt itself must be regarded with new feeling. It is repeated so much in the couture collections that it takes rank as the most important accessory. For instance, as an extreme example, one recalls the wide suede belts that are worn in a group of evening frocks, but it is significant of the feeling for leather belts generally. Wider belts, too, make their presence more keenly realized.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents, tor which send Pat- C 9 tein No. 0 o^,o Size ••*••••••••••••••■•••••• Street ••••••••••••••••••••••* City ••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••* • ****mmi;im*****4*>*** NflUlC •t *> •••••••••••••• s•••• • • • •• • •••••••••••*•*••*••••••

A SMART SUIT FOR A LITTLE BOY 6623. As here pictured this model was developed in brown velveteen. Flannel, jersey tweed and firm wash fabrics are also recommended. Pongee is serviceable, as is also linen. The left front of the blouse laps over the right front in shape outline and is finished with a serviceable pocket. The sleeve is a comfortable blouse sleeve. The trousers are a regulation model, with side closing and ample pockets. The pattern is cut in three sizes: 2, 4 and 6 years. To make a 4year size will require 21s yards of 3-inch material. Trouser pockets and inner waist bands may be made ol lining or coarse muslin, and will require % yard 32 inches wide, cut crosswise. To finish neck, and shaped front edge with bias binding will require 114 yard lVs inch wide. Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of lc in silver or stamps. Send 12c in silver or stamps for our UP-TO-DATE FALL AND WINTER 1929-1930 BOOK OF FASHIONS.

BRIDE-TO-BE IS PARTY GUES.T

Mis. G. P. Davidson. 2423 Park avenue, entertained with a bridge shower Wednesday night in honor of Miss Lenora Archibald, whose marriage to Claude E. Davidson will take place Oct. 6. Guests, with the bride-elect and her mother, Mrs. Lillie Archibald, included Mrs. Pauline Miller. Mrs. Verne Porter. Miss Marie Rehm, Miss lona Rue, Miss Mildred Charters, Miss Ruby Havens, Miss Helen Reedy, Miss Ethel Ferrand. Miss Madge Wood. Miss Mona Griffith, Miss Dojothy Jeffries and Miss Tack Teckenbrock. Observe Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. John K Nallev, Oxford. observed their sixtieth wedding anniversary Monday at their home.

Parents Honor Bride-Elect and Her Fiance With Dinner

Mr. and Mrs. George R. Avels, 4870 Guilford avenue, will entertain with a bridal dinner tonight at 6:30 at the Rosemary tearoom. 2539 Broadway, in honor of their daughter. Miss Dorothy Avels and her finance, Paul L. Morton, Lebanon. The wedding of Miss Avels and Mr. Morton will take place at 4:30 Saturday afternoon at the Sutherland Avenue Presbyterian church. The table will be centered with a low plaieau of asters and other fall flowers in shades of orchid and yellow'. and lighted with yellow tapers iu crystal holders, tied with orchid tulle. Place cards will be miniature brides.

Mrs. Samuel Ashby Hostess Monday to Y. W. C. A. Board

Opening the fall season with a formal board meeting, members of committees and staff of the Y. W. C. A. will be invited to spend Monday at the country home of Mrs. Samuel Ashby, president of the board of directors. The morning will be devoted to reports of committee chairmen and business of the board. Luncheon on the lawn will be served at n?on with Mrs. George W. Coombs, chairman of arrangements. The afternoon will be devoted to

Bridge Luncheon Given in Honor of Bride-Elect Miss Elise Martin entertained with a luncheon bridge party today at her home, 3015 North Meridian street, in honor of Miss Marilla Lemaux, who will marry Donald Meredith Ream Sept. 21. Luncheon tables were lighted with white tapers tied with white tulle, circled with garlands of orange blossoms. Guests with Miss Lemaux were Mrs. Rudolph Stempfel. Miss Louise Goepper. Miss Frances Lemaux, Miss Sara Tice Adams. Miss Eunice Dissette. Miss Martha Fitton, Miss Mary Adelaide Rhodes, Miss Virginia Cox, Miss Sarah Thomas and Miss Elizabeth Brow'n. Mrs. David Kahn, 1839 North Meridian street, will entertain Saturday with a luncheon bridge party in honor of Miss Lemaux.

Mrs. Leo Shippey Is President of New Garden Club Mrs. Leo Shippey is president of anew Anderson Garden Club, recently organized. Other officers are vice-president. Mrs. Arthur W. Brady; secretary, Mrs. W. C. Gaddis; treasurer, Mrs. E. W. Conney, and librarian, Mrs. W. C. Watterson. Charter members are Mrs. E. C. Toner, Mrs. W. B. Campbell, Mrs. Erwin F. Miller, Mrs. E. C. Morrison, Mrs. C. O. Davisson, Mrs. J. E. Boswell. Mrs. H. D. Dawson. Mrs. W. C. Crisler, Mrs. W. F. Hopkins, Mrs. H. G, Thomas, Mrs. Neel M. McCullough, Mrs. Wade Donnelly, Mrs. M. E. Van Meter, Mrs. G. A. Coburn, Mrs. Edward Pabst, Mrs. Durbin Hollingsworth, Mrs. H. E. Hudson, Mrs. Theo Duvall, Mrs. Max Hillmer, Mrs. J. T. Fitzimmons, Mrs. A. C. Wilson, Mrs. L. Richards, Mrs. Glenn W. Gates and Mrs. E. A. Godfrey. Plan Annual Dinner Members of Alpha Gamma Latreian Club will entertain with their annual President’s day dinner Saturday night at the Propylaeum. Miss Zella Ann Grossman was reelected president for the coming year. Miss Estle Fisk and Miss Myrtle Nize will be hostesses. Bridge Club Meets Members of the Nonpareil Bridge Club were entertained with a luncheon meeting today at the home of Mrs. T. Paul Jackson, 336 North Euclid avenue. Bride-Elect Entertains Miss Marian Neidlinger, whose marriage to Paul H. Thompson will take place Saturday, received informally at her home, 292 West Thirty-third street, Thursday night.

“Don't ask me why!" Excuses a man seems never to understand; explanations that are embarrassing. Women who have learned of Midol avoid these unpleasant experiences! Midol is not a narcotic, but it does banish the suffering which too often attends functional disturbances. It acts quite harmlessly, but effectively, on the organs affected. Safe, but swift; complete comfort comes in five to seven minutes. You will get this relief regardless of how hard a time you've always had. These wonderful tablets do nothing to hinder the normal, natural process, so its only common sense to use them. If you would spare yourself all suffering at this time, get Midol in a trim little case of aluminum for purse or pocket. Fifty cents at any drug store.—Advertisement.

Covers will be laid for Mr. and Mrs. Avels, Miss Avels, Mrs. Morton. Mr. and Mrs. Z. N. Morton, parents of the bridegrom: Mr. and Mrs. Wendel Morton, Lebanon; Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Avels, Miss Grace Avels. Miss Helen Stockton. Miss Norma Blank, Philip Aylesworth and Oren Neal, Laiayette and Maurice Hosier. Miss Avels will present her sister. Miss Grace Avels, who will be her only attendant, with a rhinestone and chanel necklace and bracelet. Mr. Morton will give Mr. Hosier, his best man. a set of military brushes.

a program on the general topic of “Looking Ahead Through Summer Experiences,” when members of the staff W'ill give accounts of their summer conferences as they bear upon the coming year's work. Mrs. Carrie Ada Campbell new general secretary of the Y. W. C. A., will preside. Miss Eleanor G. Hoagland. who took summer school w'ork at Northwestern. will discuss the outlook for the business women's department. Miss Jenna Birks will recount the findings of the Girl Reserve Conference at Camp Gray and Miss Anne Wittenbraker wall tell of the progress of the summer school for women and girls in industry at Bryn Mawr. Miss Gertrude Gamblin and Miss Irene Harris, of the Phyllis Wheatley branch, who have returned from Europe will discuss their trip and Miss Florence E. Lanham, w'ho spent six weeks in a training school in New Mexico, will discuss the Mexican angle of our foreign relations. Mrs. Harry E. Daugherty will be in charge of providing conveyances to Mrs. Ashby’s home for those w'ho have none.

LUNCHEON WILL BE HELD SATURDAY

Invitations have been sent to members of Pi Beta Phi sorority who have settled recently in Indianapolis, to attend the opening luncheon meeting of the Indianapolis Pi Beta Phi Alumnae Club, to be held at the Woodstock Club Saturday. New members enrolleld in the club for the year include Mrs. Donald D. Wampler, Mrs. Herbert Williams, Mrs. R. E. Beggs, Mrs. Paul C. Cullom, Mrs. Lawrence Curtiss, Mrs. Clifton Ferguson, Mrs. William H. Kelley, Mrs. Herschell Milller, Mrs. H. B. Holman, Mrs. Herbert Jenkins, Mrs. Ward Porter of Roachdale; Miss Lucille Bailey, Miss Marie Parkinson. Miss Alice Cobb Mowrere and Miss Isabelle Steele. Sorority Meeting Slated, Regular meeting of Alpha chapter Alpha Beta Gamma sorority, will be held at the home of Mrs. Criss Hoffman, 2702 North Dearborn street, tonight. Plan Card, Party Ladies of the South Side Turners will entertain with a lotto, euchre and pinochle party at Turners hall at 8:30 Sunday night. Mrs. Harry Heflin is chairman of the committee in charge.

SATURDAY SPECIAL SELLING Large Shipment Just Received Growing Girls’ School OXFORDS Famous Edward Possible Only Quality x&c by an Extremely Shoes Fortunate Purchase and Marott's Tremendous I Buying These chic oxfords solve school shoe problems at tremendous savings! Each style takes first honors in the various new modes! And true to Marott requirements, each is distinctive in value . . . quality . . . and workmanship’ Oxfords that have always sold for $7 . . . Black calf or patent . . . Special Saturday at onlv $3.95. THIRD FLOOR cJiaioti Bar Shoe* •• 'JStlfMt StlOftt *-=• th- She shop.’ Wh**lo* -ir-et

.SEPT. 13,1929

Study Club Will Have New Leader Members of the Irvington Catholic Woman's Study Club observed President's day with a luncheon Thursday at Whispering Winds, on the Brookville road. Mrs. Charles D. Mitchell, vicepresident. will become president due to the fact Mrs. J. S. Bray, elected president of the organization for--1929-1930, is leaving soon to make her home in St. Louis. Mrs. Mitchell presided at the meeting. Following a reading of the yearly report. Professor Arthur Beriault gave a dramatic reading, “The Cradle Song.” The program of the year's work for the organization will be “The Christian Family."

Bride-Elect Is . Given Party by Misses Sullivan Miss Mary Sullivan and Miss Mav Sullivan entertained Thursday night at their home, 2437 Shelby street, with a-party in honor of Miss Thelma Cox, whose marriage to Xavier Della Penna, Chicaso, will take place Sept. 16. At serving time, the table wa3 centered with pink and yellow flowers and lighted with pink tapers in green crystal holders. Guests with Miss Cox and her mother. Mrs. James Cox. were Mrs. Mary Gilberti, Mrs. Howard Cox, Mrs. Earl Cox, Mrs. Neal Howe, Mrs. Louis Flynn, Mrs. Eleana Smith, Mrs. Elbert Johnson, Mrs Bernadette Murphy, Miss Pauline Cleary, Miss Lillian Della Penna, Miss Bess Sullivan, Miss Elizabeth Lenahan, Miss Esther Trimpe, Miss Gertrude Lechner, Miss Bridget Meehan, Miss Garguerite Meehan. Miss Magaret Cox. Miss Celestine Craney. Miss Marjorie Everroari, Miss Margaret Forhan. Miss Marguerite Wellinghoff, Miss Thelma Della Penna, and Miss Theresa del Borello, Chicago.

New Yorker to Become Nurses ’ Leader in City Miss Beatrice Short, New York, will assume duties as superintendent of nurses of Public Health Nursing Association, it was announced at, a meeting of the board of directors of the organization Thursday. Miss Short will take the place of Miss Edna Hamilton, who resigned several weeks ago. Board members who attended were: Mrs. Ethel P. Clark, president; Mrs. Robert, L. Dorsey, Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitx, Mrs. Charles F. Meyer Jr., Mrs. William A. Eschbach, Mrs. James A. Bawden, Mrs. Robert Bryce, Mrs. William F. Mill* holland, Mrs. George A. Vandyke, Mrs. Julius H. P. Gauss, Mrs. Louis Burkhardt, Mrs. Alexander Cavins, Mrs. C. B. Coleman, Mrs. B. J. Terrell, Mrs. W. W. Thornton, Miss Helen Sheerin and Miss Deborah Moore.