Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 175, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 December 1930 — Page 6

PAGE 6

VELVETS TAKE COMMANDING POSE IN STYLE SPOTLIGHT!

Wide Variety Is Shown in New Fabrics BY JEAN PATOU Written for NEA Service PARIS, Dec. I.—The use of velvets is almost inevitable in the creation of a winter collection, but this year they figure more conspicuously than ever before. Despite this preponderance of velvets, however, the fabric is in itself so varied in its different presentations that there never can be the slightest hint of monotony about, it. Beside weight and weave, there also are degrees of suppleness and brilliancy in the various kinds of velvets and all these features are important There are certain models for which only velvets woven in a particular way can be employed and in many instances the weight of the fabric has a direct Influence on the style. Adds Welcome Variety For winter wear, velvet alone is capable of bringing a decided change from the usual woolens and dull surfaced clothes reserved for daytime wear. An added advantage is that almost any kind of fur harmonizes with it and for that matter, it can very well be combined with any other fabric. Ermine is set off best by a valvet gown or ensemble, sables gain even more sumptuousness if used to trim a velvet coat. The vogue for lingerie sets on afternoon gowns is seen at its best when the gown is of velvet. On the other hand, a collar and cuffs of real lace or finely handworked lingerie lend that touch of fantasy indispensable to such fabric, in which the more intricate details of cut are not so easily discernible. For Formal Day Wear The long afternoon dress of velvet is, to my mind, the perfect type of present formal afternoon wear. Less formal, but just as becoming, is the afternoon ensemble of velvet consisting of a dress and coat, the former with the required touch of lingerie at the neck and sleevea and the latter, preferably short, banded with fur. This, as a matter of fact, is a type of afternoon ensemble adopted by the smart but practical woman. The increased use of velvet in clothes has led to its wider use in hat modes, with the difference that anything that passes through the hands of a Parisian modiste invariably acquires all the fantasy she is capable of. Velvets lend themselves admirably to all the intricate work of rucking, honey-combing, and incrusting that is being put into these rather reduced hats this season, besides completing the harmony of the ensemble.

SPANISH PAINTER IS PARTY GUEST Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Cunniff of the Spink-Arms entertained Friday night with a dinner party in the Green room in honor of their guest, Jose Drudis-Biada, well known Spanish painter. Senor DrudisBiada, whose paintings have been on exhibit in Chicago, is en route to Lost Angeles, where he will hold another exhibit. Dinner guests included Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burns, Dr. and Mrs. Robert I. Blakeman, Miss Constance Coleman, Miss Hope Pfafflin, Edgar Richardson and Bernard M. Cunniff. MUSIC ALE SORORITY HONORS FOUNDERS Sigma Alpha lota, national musical sorority, observed Founders’ day today at luncheon at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Miss Frieda Klink, an honorary member of the chapter, was a special guest. The program included songs by Mrs. Glenn Friermood, and group singing led by Mrs. Elmore M. Putney. Mrs. Harold Arnholter was toastmaster. Responses were made by Mesciames Bernard Batty, Frank B. Hunter, Arnold Spencer, Frank W. Cregor, Henry Schurmann and Miss Lucille Stewart. LITERARY CLUB TO HEAR E. R. LEWIS Edward R. Lewis will speak on “The Making of Nations” at the meeting of the Indianapolis Literary Club tonight at the D. A. R. chapter house. Ladies’ night will be observed. Evans Woollen Jr. heads the program committee for the year, assisted by Herbert W. Foltz, William F. Landers Jr., W. Rowland Allen and Guy A. Wainwright. Daughter Is Guest Mrs. Stanton C. Peelle, Washington, D. C., formerly of Indianapolis, entertained last week with a luncheon for her daughter. Miss Betty Peelle, and Misses Katherine Hall and Sylvia Meredith. Covers were laid for twenty-eight guests. Mrs. James Parker Nolan assisted her mother.

4 4 nGßEfivJlj I sis * Big moments at Bridge . . . when you hold 100 Aces . . . when you score a Grand Slam . . . and when you break the seals on crisp new packs of CONGRESS PLAYING CARDS

ENSEMBLE FOR AFTERNOON

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For the afternoon function, Patou makes this aramath red velvet ensemble. The little frock, left, has the short sleeves that new things sponsor, a scarf neckline and the new tunic skirt. The jacket, right, has the same upward movement in front that the tunic skirt shows, and bands of beaver outline both the collar and the jacket hem.

Council of Women Will Hold Meeting, Luncheon at Church

The Indianapolis Council of Women will hold its regular meeting and luncheon Tuesday at the Capitol Avenue Methodist church, Thirtieth street and Capitol avenue. The business meeting at 11 is open to delegates from all affiliated clubs. Luncheon will be served at 12:30. The program in the afternoon will be opened by Dr. T. B. Rice of

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- /? Q C rt tern No. O O U Size Street City Name State

rmth $!;:$ 1 l Ah j

WORK PAJAMAS

In the model here pictured, comfort and convenience cleverly is expressed. The plaited trousers portions fall in pleasing plait folds, and appear quite like a sports skirt. They are joined to a hip yoke, shaped in a point over the front, and straight in the back. This yoke is to be buttoned to or fastened with snap fasteners to the waist portions. The square neck is outlined with a yoke band. Cotton prints, linen, cotton crepe, sateen and if one fancies it. silk or satin may be used for this style. Cut in five sizes, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. To make the garment of one material in a 38-inch size requires 4% yards 35 inches wide. To make side, front and back of waist portions of contrasting material requires one yard. Price 15 cents. Send 12 cents in silver or stamps for our up-to-date fall and winter 1930-1931 book of fashions. Business Meeting Set Mrs. J. E. Gordon entertained members of Beta Gamma Tau sorority Friday nignt at her home, 535 Carlyle place. She was assisted by Mrs. Wilbur Watts. The sorority will hold a business meeting Monday night at 1002 Meyer-Kiser bank building.

the Indiana University extension bureau, who will speak on “The Need of Tuberculosis Segregation.” Eugene Foster, executive secretary of the Indianapolis Foundation, will speak on “Foundation,” and explain its purposes. Judson L. Stark, prosecuting attorney, will address the group on “Crime Prevention.” Mrs. A. B. Glick, president of the council, will preside. A special musical program will be given during the afternoon.

Bridge Party, Dance Is Held by Miss Krause Miss Katherine Krause, entertained thirty-four guests with a bridge party and dance at her home, Elmhurst, on Cold Spring road Saturday night. Roses and poinsettias were used for decorations, and tea roses were given as favors. Guests were: Misses Betty Tainsch, Betty Stoutenburg, Juliette Speyers, Annabess Snodgrass, Mary Tichenor. Laura Haight. Irma Drake, Evelyn Muntisy, Ilene Driscoll. Cozette Scholl. Mary Hislop. Dorothy Jane Atkins, Mary Elizabeth Driscoll. Katherine Driscoll, Marie Montani, Mary Parker and Jane Kraus: Messrs. Kennard Ong. Charles Barry Jr.. Joseph Rogers. Judson Moschelle. Paul Shilling. Charles Ticl enor, Walter Mazelin, William Betermann, Vincent Ryde, Harold Geisel. John Hozayfe! Thomas Meeker, Kenneth Dugan. Charles Ebner, Robert Ford. Robert Ruske, Wayne Geisel and Jack Krause. Wedded Fifty Years Mr. and Mrs. G. H. McWilliams, Columbus, Ind., observed their golden wedding anniversary Sunday with open house at their home. Mrs. John Phegley, 711 North Sherman drive, Indianapolis, a daughter, atl tended the celebration.

Your Love Problems BY MARTHA LEE

Dear Martha Lee—l bring my trouble to you hoping you can help me. I am the mother ol three children. I try j hard to be a good wife and mother, but S set only cruelty from my husband. He i is not only cruel to me but the babies. He wants me to go to work, but I feel j that If I give up my babies for work. I’ll give up the curses and all that goes with them. too. If I would leave and place my children in a boarding house, could he be made to pay their board? A WORRIED MOTHER. Stop and think things ove.. You’d be a lot worse off if you left your husband. Surely you wouldn’t be any happier separated from the children. If he refuses to support you, refer the matter to the proper authorities. Dear Marthta Lee—My husband left me more than a year ago to serve time In prison. I was going with another man at the time I married my husband, and hurt him when I married. The man 1 married knew I had a baby, but I was afraid to tell the other. When my husband left. I wrote the first man and confessed everything. He still cares for me and •wants me to get a divorce and marry him. My husband cared for another’s child for four years. May I have your opinion? My husband still loves me, but I still love the other—CHARLINE. Loving him or not, you married your husband. If you have any loyalty, you’ll stick with him in his trouble. He overlooked your transgression. Show your gratitude, at least. Dear Martha Lee —I am the mother of three children, two by a former marriage. My husband to whom I have been married two years, expects me to run the house on my children’s support money of *lO a week. He makes good money And all he pays at home is rent and fuel. He goes out two or three times a week, and since the baby came, won’t take us any place. Do you think it is Tight to use all my children's money for the house? „ „ ' , A. D. E. You must make your husband contribute to your support. The courts will do it if necessary. Your children’s support money should be used only for them and a little saved each week, if possible, for their education. Dear Martha Lee—l am 19. married and J have a little girl. I am very dissatisfied. ; My husband Is Jealous, has a terrible temper, and makes my life miserable. We j live with his parents because his mother j will not allow him ta.go. Other men have

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Make Your Dessert and Meat Match ’ BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer Since first and last impressions are considered the most important, it behooves the home-maker to choose her dessert with care. There are luncheon desserts and dinner desserts, “company” desserts and ‘ family” desserts as well as the “party” dessert, which is quite elaborate. Both the type of the meal and the variety of meat served are determining factors in the choice of desserts. A simple farmhouse dinner would be incompatible with a fussy

Daily Menu BREAKFAST —Grape fruit, cereal, cream, scrambled eggs, crisp bacon, graham and raisin muffins, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Cream of tomato soup, croutons, sweet potato salad, whole wheat bread and butter sandwiches, lemon pudding, cocoa. DlNNEß—Flounder in parsley sauce, twice baked potatoes, buttered spinach, jellied celery and cabbage salad, apple dumplings with cream, milk, coffee.

French dessert, and by the same 1 token a formal meal demands a ‘smarter” dessert than apple pie. Light Desserts Needed Rich meats like pork, beef, mutton and goose require light desserts free from fat and, especially in the case of pork and goose, with a tendency toward tartness. Fresh fruit in season, fruit in gelatine, fruit flavored gelatines and ices, deep-dish fruit pies and perfectly baked fruits are excellent selections for these dinners. Light meats like veal and lamb need a more nutritious dessert. Since veal itself is rich in gelatine, the dessert should not be jellied unless it is a natural fruit jelly. Veal is lacking in fat, so this can be supplied in the dessert. Lamb, however, does not require a dessert particularly rich in fat. Since the flavor of both these meats is mild, this, too, must be taken care of in the dessert. Carmel Custard Good Carmel custard is a good choice for veal; chocolate or fruit souffles, one-crust pies, seasonable fruit used in puddings with a rich sauce, almost any flavored ice cream made rich with cream and eggs—these are excellent for either veal or lamb. Tradition has much to do with the dessert preferred for poultry and turkey. These usually appear on festive occasions when a fancy concoction is in order. Frozen puddings, bavarian creams, charlottes and French pastries all go well with poultry of any sort. The dessert that perfectly finishes the meal should form as great a contrast In flavor and texture with the courses preceding it as possible. Errors Easily Made There are a few mistakes easy to avoid. To serve a fresh fruit after a fruit salad, to follow an omelet with a custard or a meat pie by pastry, to serve a jellied dessert after a jellied salad—these are simple errors in judgment that break the first rule for choosing the right dessert. % The season of the year also influences the choice of the sweet course. Spicy steamed puddings are appetizing for cold winter days, but would fail to please during hot summer weather. Aside from all this, the dessert should have a definite, active part in the meal, not just something added as an afterthought because it is sweet or tastes good.

loved me. and I have passed them up. Does it pay to do right? I can’t stand this life much longer, even for the sake of the baby. I am thinking of ending it all. CYNIC. Cynic—and nineteen? Somebody should spank you properly, and rid you of those foolish notions. Now listen to me. Insist that your husband move to a home of your own no matter how small. Learn how to be a wife and mother, and you will be too busy too think of “ending” anything. As for the “men who have loved you,” well—just whom did you promise to love until death do you part? Dear Martha Lee—Can you help me? I am 21. and have been to college a year. I have loved a girl for two years and although she says he doesn’t love me she doesn’t want to lose my friendship, she dates other boys. She entered college this fall too. Tell me what to do? JOE. Until you both have finished college, offer her your friendship. Then will be time enough to think about love. PAULINE TAYLOR IS WEDDED AT HOME Mrs. Pearl Taylor, 733 Parkway avenue, has announced the marriage of her daughter, Pauline Alice Taylor, to Fred W. Glossbrenner. The wedding took place Wednesday night at the home of the bride’s mother, with the Rev. Wilbur D. Grose, pastor of the Fifty-first Street Methodist Episcopal church, officiating. The bride was attended by Miss Aileen Taylor and Miss Josephine Biggins. Mrs. Glossbrenner is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Party Is Scheduled Mrs. George Moody and Mrs. Harry Kolb will be hostesses to the women of the Lake Country Club this afternoon, when they will entertain with a bridge party at the Marott. Mrs. Karl Theising is president of the club. Open House Is Held Mr. and Mrs. John K. Parker, Linden, Ind., celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Sunday with open house.

T ricorns, Bicorns, and Turbans Take First Rank Among Hats of Season

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BY JOAN SAVOY, Written for NEA Service THE winter’s little vanities called hats demonstrate that beauty certainly has gone to the heads of fair ladies. Os all the pretty headgear, two

Glorifying Yourself BY ALICIA lIART

TUST as the end of a rose stem sways gracefully to heighten the beauty of the bloom, so a woman’s wrist is responsible for half the eloquence of her hand. If your wrists are stiff, unresponsive, awkward, your hands will lose that rhythmic, fluid character that makes them hauntingly beautiful. You can cultivate flexibility. The hands of a musician or an artist always fascinate. Their very usefulness has charm. But more

Just Every Day Sense

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

“ A YOUNG Woman Reader” JTVwants to know why I concern myself with prohibition. There are three reasons: Two boys and a girl. I am a citizen of this country and I have three children who one day will be citizens. Therefore, I consider it my duty to be interested in important issues. I believe in temperance with all my heart. I pray, with all my j heart, that my children may be | temperate, not only in drinking, j but in all things. And lam sincere in my conviction that the eighteenth amendment is a false foundation for temperance. , I “A good many people who try to think honestly about this thing are beginning to slip over to the anti-prohibition side because women like Dr. Mary Harris Armor, head of the evangelistic work of the W. C. T. U., will say things of this sort in public speeches: “This is not a battle,” she is quoted as proclaiming at the recent Houston convention. “It’s a world-wide war. God has come to the people of the United States, to the W. C. T. U„ and He says: ‘I have come down to deliver the world from the drink habit and drink traffic.’ We glory in this battle. God is in it.” a tt tt NOW, those who have followed recent happenings in this \ country can not deny that if God has taken a hand in the booze traffic. He has made a signal failure of the job. Dr. Armor reflects greatly not only upon the power of her Divinity, but upon His mental attitude when she says such things. And no matter how right she may be —and I am not saying that her cause is not right—nevertheless battle cries will get us nowhere. One may work for the cause of temperance, but when one begins to fight for it the purpose is defeated. War has taught us this. In strife, neither victor nor vanquished profits. The only way we can settle this or any other question Is to try to understand one another’s motives a little better. We’ll never do anything by battling. Then, somehow, I can’t imagine God carrying a bayonet, even in this great cause. MOTHERS ’ CLUB IS TO HOLD LUNCHEON Phi Delta Theta Mothers’ Club will meet Wednesday for 1 o’clock luncheon at the chapter house. Mrs. Roger T. Clarke will speak on “A Glimpse of the Belgian Congo,” following the business meeting. Hostesses will include: Mesdatnes Mayrae Findley. E. R. Hanna. Albert Ward. Charles V. Raiser and Mrs. R. A. Blackburn, chairman. D. A . R. CHAPTER TO HOLD SESSION Mrs. William Henshaw, 3145 North Delaware street, will be hostess at the meeting of the General Arthur St. Clair chapter, D. A. R., this afternoon'. She will be assisted by Mrs. Chauncey Meier. The program will be in keeping with Christmas, and Mrs. Fletcher Hodges will tell a Christmas story. Visits in Washington Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall, Indianapolis, who is the guest of Mrs. Thomas F. Walsh, in Washington, D. C., will assist Mrs. Dolly Gann Wednesday afternoon, when the Vice-President’s sister and hostess observes her first day at home.

outstanding types of hats have won the greatest popularity and chic. You probably have both on your shelves. First come the almost universally becoming tricorns and bicorns. They are utterly feminine and fiat-

than that, they are themselves eloquent. Every muscle is exercised, the fingers and palm respond easily and quickly to aid and abet the works he speaks or the meanings that his eyes betray. The wrists have their own responsibility in his work and they 100 have that ready ease of movement. a a a GOLF, driving a car, riding a horse or even such mundane things as sewing a fine seams, polishing’beautiful crystal, or even massaging the face—all these exercise the wrists. However, if your wrists stubbornly persist in being stonelike, try the following exercises. Mornings and nights, let your arms limp at your sides and then shake your hands this way and that, commanding the movement with the musflles above the elbows. When your wrists seem loosened by this shaking, stiffen your arms and rotate your hands at the wrists, trying to make complete circles with your finger tips. Next, bend your arms at the elbows and do this same rotary movement, about ten times with each hand. tt U St AFTER this is done, hold your arms out in front of you, horizontally, and shake your hands up and down, quite vigorously, as if waving to someone. Then you are ready for the five finger exercises you may or may not have learned as a child taking music lessons. If you did not take them, the exercises consist in strumming on your dressing table or the arm of a chair, each finger raised in turn and pressed down, in staccato motion, as if you were striking a piano key with each one. Bending the hand backward and then doubling it up is also a good exercise that can be done anywhere, anytime. But have your hand as limp as possible while doing this. The whole secret of wrist grace is limberness. When massaging the hands, always massage the wrists, moving the fingers slowly but firmly up and around, from the hand. At night, leave nourishing cream on the wrists. If your wrists are discolored, try a bleaching ointment. Next—Care of arms.

Personals

Mrs. Paul B. Coble, 3111 North Meridian street, will sail from New York Tuesday aboard the Canadian Pacific liner, Empress of Australia, for a five months’ cruise around the world. Others from Indiana on board will be Mr. and Mrs. Homer B. Talley, Terre Haute, and Mrs. W. R. Dill of Richmond. Miss Margaret West, 2610 East North street, has gone to Chicago to spend the winter with her grandmother, Mrs. Lillian Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Sinclair, Marott hotel, are visiting in New York and are at the Roosevelt. Mrs. Barrett Moxley, 101 East Fourteenth street, is in New York City, staying at the Barclay. Miss Alice Miller, 4025 North New Jersey street, spent the weekend in Chicago. Miss Katherine Barnett, 1433 North Pennsylvania street, spent the Thanksgiving holidays in Cleveland.

Card Parties

Pledges of Gamma chapter, Gamma Delta Alpha sorority, will hold a benefit bunco party at 8 Tuesday at the South Side Y. W. C. A. Miss Eleanor Graham is chairman. Mrs. J. H. Cain and her committee will entertain at 12:30 Tuesday with a luncheon and card party at Little Flower hall, Fourteenth and Bosart streets. Ladies of St. Patrick's parish will give a 1 o’clock luncheon Wednesday in the school hall, followed by card parties in the afternoon and evening. Mrs. John Schmidt, South State street, will be hostess Tuesday night for a benefit card party to be given by Indianapolis. Circle 8, Druids’ lodge. Games will begin at 8:30. Election Is Slated, Myrtle Temple 7, Pythian Sisters, will meet tonight. Officers will be elected. Obsei've Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Kinder, Noblesville, recently celebrated their sixty-second wedding anniversary with a family dinner.

-Hats from Elizabeth Schoen. New York. tering. They have a way of highlighting your face to bring out your best features. Second come the turbans of distinctly Russian influence. Not every woman can wear one of these, but if you are the type that can, you make no mistake in selecting it. For that intriguing something that makes a woman fascinating, the Russian turban can not be surpassed. Your winter hats may be fashioned of felt, velvet, fabric or suede. If you would be ultra-chic, you might choose a tricorn in a deep green felt (left) that is veiled with the smartest of little mesh veils, in matching tone, with tiny dots of chenille. There is a fine shirring at the base of the crown at the side. Across the back, making a little feminine bow on the neck, is a little trim of braided velvet. It is the perfect hat for wear with a matching green crepe frock, under the ! mink or broadtail coat. If you are born lucky, and can wear a Russian turban, you will immediately picture yourself looking chic indeed in a brown silk tricot shot with metal (right), draped artistically above a face band made of twisting wool yarn in brown. It has that charming nonchalance that a beautifully made little hat can wear so gracefully. It is an admirable hat fqr wear with the winter suit or tweed frock.

Open Forum on Jobs Program Will Be Held

The industrial department of the Y. W. C. A. will sponsor the first of a series of open forum meetings Tuesday night. Problems of workers, such as wage scales, income and legislation will be discussed. Ministers, industrial Workers, and students of economics have been invited to attend and take part in the discussion, and to present suggestions for unemployment relief. Miss Elsie Kinerk, chairman of the industrial committee, will preside at the meeting which will continue through the winter. A candy kitchen for the making and sale of candy is being conducted under auspices of the Y. W. C. A. and managed by unemployed girls of the industrial department. The candy is made and delivered by the girls who use the Y. W. C. A. kitchen as a work-shop, and the lobby as a showroom. Business girls in the association are establishing a loan fund for the aid of unemployed girls. NEW BOARD WILL MEET WITH CHIEF First meeting of the newly elected board of the Indianapolis branch, Needlework Guild of America, will be held Tuesday at the home of the president, Mrs. R. H. Sherwood, 2847 North Meridian street. The officers and executive committee include: Mrs. Sherwood: first vice-president, Mrs. Oscar L. Pond; second vice-president. Mrs. Charles Gerrard; third vice-president. Mrs. F. S. Fishback; fourth vice-president. Mrs, M. E. Clark; secretary, Mrs. Cecil Calvert: assistant secretary. Mrs. R. T. Fatout; treasurer. Miss Lillian Taggart, and executive committee, Mrs. P. C. Reilly, Mrs. J. R. Seotney and Miss Gertrude Baker.

FORT OFFICER WEDS MISSISSIPPI GIRL

Announcement has been received of the marriage of Miss Virginia Jane Bass, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Bass, Grenada, Miss., and Lieutenant George William Rumsey Perry, Indianapolis, which took place Sunday night at the First Methodist church in Grenada. Lieutenant Perry was graduated from West Point last year and is stationed at Ft. Benjamin Harrison. Sale Will Be Held Tau Gamma Sigma sorority will meet Wednesday night at the home of Miss Lucille Creasser, 1130 North Tuxedo street. Plans for a candy sale Saturday night at the Uptown theater will be made. Sorority to Meet Alpha Lambda Chi sorority will meet tonight at the Lumley tea room. Misses Elva Ross and Delpha Raehl will be hostesses. Bridge Club to Meet Del-Le-Nor Bridge Club will meet Tuesday night at the home of Miss Margaret Burnell, 412 Oakland avenue. William Wegener recently war elected president. (TATAR RH of head or throat ii uso&fiy , benefited by the vapor* of—- % visa* OVER 1? MILLION JARS USED YEARLY

DEC. 1, 1931

17 Seniors Candidates for Degrees Seventeen Butler university seniors have applied for degrees for graduation in January, 1931, according to an announcement by Miss Sarah Cotton, registrar. Applicants are: Bachelor of arts In English. Elinor Howe. Mary Virginia Logan. Lillian Pierson; home economics. Verna Ansorge; hlstov. Wayne Ashley. Edward Ward: mathematics. William. McOaflin: Spanish. Jacob J. Beem; Latin and history. Rosiland Taylor. Candidates for the degree of bachelor of science are: Economics. Wilbur Dawson and Sidney Zler; chemistry. Cloyde Fisher; business administration, Ralph Gery; education. Grace Pitt, and journalism. Marifranccs Lee, Maynard Lcmen and Robert Stearns. Members of the graduating class will receive their diplomas upon meeting the university requirements and will be permitted to take part in the regular commencement exercises in June. They will be designated as members of the class of 1931 on the anniversary alumni list.

Anne Cooper Is in Charge of Bridge Frolic Miss Anne Cooper, 4304 North Capitol avenue, is chairman of the committee on arrangements for the semi-annual bridge party to be given by the Butler university chapter of the Delta Gamma sorority at the chapter house, 269 Buckingham drive, at 2:30 and 8 Friday afternoon and night. Proceeds will go toward the chapter’s building funds. Those who will assist Miss Cooper are: Misses Ina Lawrence, chairman of ticket committee; Rosalyn Reed. Katherine Louden. Mary Virginia Clark, Mary Helen Dunnington. chairman chairs and tables; Aleen Alexander, Ruth Pahud. Virginia Ann Plock, Florence Morris, Rachel Crew, chairman of prizes; Lllyan Braflord, Helen Jordon, Marguerite Dorlot, Bernice Mull, chairman of candy; Margaret Walden. Alice Shirk, Katherine Tinsley, and Dorothy Danner. Reservations may be made with Miss Cooper. Alumnae Club to Meet Alpha Chi Alumnae Club of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, will hold its monthly meeting at 6:30 Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Carl. Lauenstein, 249 West Forty-fourth street. Mrs. Neil Waterbmy and Miss Dale Waterbury will be assistant hostesses.

FREE—MARCEL FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLF This coupon good for FREE Unger wave if shampoo is taken, or good for FREE marcel capably given under expert, supervision on Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday, 9:30 to 5:30 and Monday and Wednesday evening 0 (ft 9:30. A very small charge for all other treatments. CENTRAL BFAUJi COLLEGE ?nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg. LI. OlSt BE BEAUTIFUL

Improve Your Game with Milton C. Work! Auction and Contract Bridge T uesday WFBM 4:30 P. M. PLAYERS South (Dealer) Sidney 8. Lensj New York West Mrs. Wistar Morris Chubb, South Orange, N. J. North Mrs. John Munce, Jr-, Alexandria, Va. East Christian A. Herter, Boston • AQ <7 953 2 O None * K J 108 5 4 2 ♦ KJ94 3 N ♦lO 7* ? A 87 4 W4-E 9 NC “ O A Q 10 W-f-t 86543 1, ♦ A S ♦ 9 763 ♦ 865 <3 K Q J 10 6 OKJ 9 7 ♦ Q Afte ■ “one Heart” by South, what would you say with West’s hand? With North’s? East’s? The final bid is four in what suit? Which player doubles? Does Declarer make contract? Try this hand now, at Auction and Contract, then check your results with the expert’s Radio Game. What’s Your Bridge Handicap? Milton C. Work will tell you. Two easy test questions in every Radio Game. Don’t miss this chance to find out hoar you really rate! A summary of this game will appear in this paper 3