Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 289, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1931 — Page 6

PAGE 6

STATE COUNCIL WILL HOLD CONCLAVE AT BLOOMINGTON

Program Is Announced by Chieftain Mrs Edna E. Pauley, president of the May Wright Sewall Indiana Council of Women, has announced the convention program for the annual session of state chapters, to be held next Tuesday in Bloomington. Mrs Joseph Neill, president of the Blomington council, and other officers are in charge of arrangements. The meetings Tuesday will be held at the Graham hotel. The executive luncheon will be held at 1, followed by officers’ reports. At 3, reports of the following standing committees will be read: Citizenship, education, immigration, industrial relations patriotic instruction and permanent peace. Mrs. Louden to Speak Mrs. T. J. Louden, delegate to the national convention in Vienna last June, will speak on the convention. The council dinner will be held at 7. Mayor Joseph H. Campbell will extend greetings and Mrs. Pauley will respond. Professor J. J. Robinson of the Indiana university law school will make an address. His subject will be “The Indeterminate Sentence.” “The State and Underprivileged Children” will be the subject of an address by Mrs. Florence Reddick Boys, state probation officer. Delegates and visitors will be taken for a drive around Bloomington at 8:30 Wednesday morning. At 10 further reports, including that of the president, will be heard. Mrs. H. L. Smith will speak as a visitor to the international meeting at Vienna. Luncheon to Be Held The luncheon will be held at the Christian church where the days sessions will be held. In the afternoon, Mrs. Felix T. McWhirter will speak on “Better Homes in America,” followed by an anniversary hour in charge of Miss Mercia Hoagland, which will commemorate the tenth year of the founding of the state council. Her committee includes Mesdames David Ross. R. Earl Peters and Olive Brown. Following are other convention committees: Program—Mesdames Neill. Louden and Edna Hatfield Edmondson. Credentials —Mesdames Homer J. M'ller. chairman; Allen T. Fleming and Miss Emma Mav. Registration—Mesdames Sadie Stephens, chairman: Spann Waymire and S. C. GibMesdames George Edwards, chairman; J. F. Matthews and Kate TayTlme and Place—Mesdames A. B. Gltck, chairman; Pearl Krause. Ella Bagot Kehrer. , , , Courtesv—Mesdames John Kenour. chairman: Marv Haley and Edith Sheridan. Publicity Mesdames Bloomfield H. Moore. Peter Burkhalter and Miss Virginia Hill - Dinner—Mrs. Claude G. Malotte: luncheon. Mrs. Ford Hall: music. Mrs. D. R. Major; flat’s. Mrs. William Lake. Hospitality—Mesdames John Huntington. Will R-ogers. A B. Mosier. John Harrell. J. B. Wilson. Erie Showers. Chester Tourner. Albert Kohlmeirr; George Purcell, E K Buzzaird. E. T Weir. WUlfam Hoadlev C. F. Reed. B. V Sudbury, Irank Owens. Fred Beck. H. L. Johnson. Carrie Gehrhart. Martha McFaden Albert Hoadlev Frank Hope and Miss Shirley Hawes.

Junior League Names Ushers for Symphony A committee of more than thirty members of the Junior League, which will act as ushers for the season closing concert of the Indianapolis Symphony orchestra at 3 Sunday at Caleb Mills hall, has been appointed. The committee includes: Mesdames Charles Latham, chairman; Herman Wolff. Sylvester Johnson Jr., Eugene C. Miller. Harald Taylor. Robert Winslow. Robert A..-Adams. Frederick TV Holliday. Henry C. Atkins Jr.. Noble Dean. Jesse Fletcher. Theodore B. Griffith. Louis H. Haerle. William Higgins, J. J. Daniels. Benjamin D. Hltz. William M. Rockwood. Paul Fisher. Anna Marie Gall Sayles. Russell J. Ryan. Ralph Vonneguet. Chares L. Nicholson. Edward 8. Norvel. Phillip T. White. G. M. Williams. Samuel Runnells Barrel. Mises Rosamond Van Camp. Hilda Hayward Hibben. Elizabeth Haerle. Adele Pantzer and Josephine Rockwood. The directorate of the newly formed orchestral association, which will guide the orchestra through the next season will hold a dinner meeting Wednesday night at the Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. Carl T. Lieber Jr. is head of the invitation committee, assisted by Mrs. Isadore Kahn and Mrs. Milton Steinberg. Delegates Hold Meeting Delegates, alternates, and members of Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, D. A. R., who will attend the continental congress April 1925 in Washington, met at 11 this morning at the chapter house. Transportation slips were issued.

Fat Man Walks Ten Miles I don’t care how- fat you are or how much you hate to get out and walk a couple of miles. If you will take one-half a teaspoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water every morning for 4 weeks and cut out pastries, sugar and fatty meats — You will feel so good—so energetic and the urge for activity will be so great that you will immensely enjoy a daily walk of several miles—and lose fat. Why will Kruschen Salts make this great change lor the better in me—it is natural for you to ask. Because Kruschen is a blend of the 6 vitalizing salts your body should have to keep every organ, gland and acrv* lp the body buoyantly healthy. While you are losing fat you will be gaining in energy—in endurance—in ambition. Your skin will grow clearer and your eyes will sparkle with the good health that Kruschen l>r*ngs. Juat try one Ssc bottle of Kruschen Balts: It will last you 4 weeks. After you have taken one bottle the old arm chair won’t hold you any more—you'll want to bo tip and doing—you’ll enjoy work and active recreation and you’ll oleep Ilka a top. You'll lose fat t<nd probably live year longer. Get Kruschen at Hook a Dependable Drug Stores or any live druggist In America with the understanding that you must be joyfully satisfied or money back—Advertisement,

What’s in Fashion?

Feminine Garb for Business Directed By AMOS PARRISH

NEW YORK, April 14.—‘ What I really need is something practical—not too fussy—but smart looking.” We’ve heard many business women say that. And many other women, too, even though they don’t go to offices every day. Every woman needs at least one costume that looks business-like — even if only to wear to her stock broker’s office. And the tailored suit—smart though it is—isn’t the only solution to the problem. There are plenty of fashionable dresses today that don’t have the frills, bows and loose* sleeves which

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis. Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- . tern No. b U 1 Size Street City Name State

Hi-SJy) A ill SNAPPY JACKET SUIT Today's snappy little jacket suit is adorable. It is fashioned of a navy blue rayon crepe in a tweed pattern. The bindings aro midnight blue. The sleeveless tuckin blouse is light blue eyelet batiste. Several tubbable blouses may be made to wear with it at small outlay and offer such a definite change to the wardrobe. The jacket is the comfortable collarless type. Jabot revers soften its effect, falling from the shoulders at the front. The circular skirt attached to a shaped hip yoke, gives it new sophistication. Style No. 601 is designed for girls of 6,8, 10, 12 and 14 years. And to copy it in the 8-year size takes but 2 1 s yards of 39-inch material for jacket and skirt with % yard of 39inch material for blouse and 6 yards of binding. Printed or plain flat crepe silk is lovely for “best.” Wool crepe, wool jersey, tweed - like cottons, mesh cotton with angora finish and linen are other delightful smart fabrics to select. Order a copy of our new Fashion Magazine. Attractive styles for women, misses and children. And instructive lessons in sewing. Price of book. 10 cents. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coi|t carefully.

are feminine, but not very businesslike. The kind of dress which the French call a “morning dress” is just about right. Right for the business woman and anybody who wants to look business-like. The dress sketched at the left Is a good example of the sort of dress, we mean. It might be made of sheer woolen or faille crepe. Either material holds its shape and doesn’t wrinkle too easily. Can’t you see how good this would look in black, navy or brown —three practical and fashionable colors? Fitted Sleeves Good One good thing about it is its fitted sleeve. Loose trailing ends get in the way when you’re working. With a dress of this general type you can make some nice color ensembles. The white collar and cuffs can be changed occasionally for a soft blue or yellow one. And a colorful belt can be worn —preferably one that matches the color of the band on the hat worn with this dress. Here’s another dress, too, sketched at the right, that’s fashionably feminine even though it hasn’t any lace or frills. It’s feminine because of its little flower print and fitted jacket. Soft Collar Fashionable A few seasons ago, if you had bought a dress like this with a collarless neckline, the first thing you’d have done would have been to hurry to the neckwear counter to find a frill for it. This year you know it’s smart just as it is (providing, of course, you have the right kind of neck). But you know, too, that you can wear a soft-looking collar with it very fashionably. A fine costume for the business woman—don’t you agree?—is the new soft dressmaker suit. It’s soft like a dress. Yet it has a neat air about it. It might be of wool crepe or silk. Either material is light enough to be worn under a coat on cooler days. And you can make all manner of changes in such a costume simply by changing your blouse and accessories. And if your blouses aren’t too frilly, you can take off the coat (just as the boss does!) and be comfortable, but still look neat. (Copyright. 1931. by Amos Parrish!

Tomorrow: Amos Parrish writes ,o n fashions particularly interesting j to larger women. Sorority Will Honor Two at Chapter House \ Miss Mary Gertrude Manley, district superintendent of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, and Mrs. Elizabeth DeMott Carter, hostess of the Butler university chapter, will be honored at a tea to be given from 3 to 5 Friday afternoon at the chapter house, 642 Berkely road. Spring flowers will be arranged about the house, with a color scheme of blue and yellow being carried out in the decorations. Mrs. Lester A. Smith will preside at the tea table. Guests will include presidents and hostesses of each sorority at Butler, Mrs. J. W. Putnam, member of the Women’s Council; Mrs. A. B. Carlisle, faculty ally of the ! chapter, and members of the Moth- | er's Club of Alpha Omicron Pi. Miss Ruth McClurg is chairman I of the committee on arrangements, I assisted by Misses Alice Hill and i Marjorie Schaefer. Miss Gladys ; Hawickhorst is president of the | chapter.

MRS. ADAMS WILL ENTERTAIN BOARD Preceding the annual business meeting of the Indianpolis Junior League at the Propylaeum Tuesday Mrs. Robert Adams, chairman of the Junior League Shop, will entertain officers and board members at her home, 4041 North Meridian street, at luncheon. Officers will be elected at the meeting, and also delegates to the national convention in May in Cincinnati. Miss Winifred Conrick, cccupational therapy director for the league at the Riley hospital, will lead discussion in this section at the national meeting. Sorority to Meet lota Chi sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Mary Glenn, 337 Eastqen avenue.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Rhubarb Is Valuable as Spring Food BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer Rhubarb comes so early in the season, when fresh fruits are scarce in most sections of the country, that the up-to-date housewife is on the lookout for ways to use it in her spring menus. Aside from its pleasantly tart flavor, which stimulates the appetite, rhubarb is a good source of important food elements. Phosphorous, that constituent necessary for strong teeth and sound bones, and vitamin C are present in this fruit-vegetable. Some people object to rhubarb on account of its acidity. While the leaves do contain some oxalic acid and should not be used, the stems contain only a very small amount and after cooking the acid content is niL Don’t Overcook Rhubarb Care should be taken not to overcook rhubarb. Vitamin C is destroyed if subjected to too great heat for too long a time. As little

Daily Menu BREAKFAST—SIiced bananas with canned apricots, cereal, cream, bread crumb pancakes, maple syrup, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Cream of celery soup with oysters, toasted crackers, beet and lettuce salad, brown bread, rice pudding, milk, tea. DINNER Baked spaghetti and veal, cream cheese and orange salad, rhubarb sherbet, ice box cookies, milk, coffee.

water as possible should be used to prevent burning, for the fruitvegetable is very juicy of itself. Adding other materials to rhubarb makes it possible to obtain dishes of increased food value. Rhubarb combines excellently with almost any other fruit beside the foodstuffs commonly used with fruits. The extra materials can be chosen to make up for the lack in the rhubarb. For example, adding raisins to stewed or baked rhubarb adds iron to the dish and increases its efficiency. Good in Frozen Desserts Frozen desserts, hot or cold puddings and gelatin dishes are delicious made with rhubarb. Wellsweetened rhubarb sauce is good with rice and cornstarch puddings. Always add sugar to rhubarb sauce when removing from the fire. Asa “stretcher” and pectin medium in the making of jellies and jams, rhubarb is invaluable throughout the entire canning season. The first rhubarb usually has a very tender skin and if well washed need not- be peeled. When cooked with the skin on it has a delightful pinky color. As the season advances the skin grows tough and should be removed before cooking. st a tt RHUBARB SHERBET Two pounds rhubarb, 1 cup water, 2 cups sugar, whites 2 eggs. Wash rhubarb and cut in small pieces. Put into a baking dish with sugar and water, cover and bake in a slow oven until tender. Strain through cheesecloth. There should be about four cups. Put into freezer and freeze to a mush. Stir in whites of eggs beaten until stiff and freeze until firm. Mrs. Essig to Be Hostess to ' Recent Bride Mrs. Emil Wayne Essig, 3777 North Meridian street, will entertain tonight at the Lumley tearoom with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower in honor of Mrs. Maurice Watson Klefeker, who was formerily Miss Helen Louise Warmoth. Decorations and appointments will be carried out in a color scheme of orchid and green. Guests with Mrs. George W. Warmoth, mother of the brieje, will be: Mesdames James Cunning. Ernest Reiman Stegg. Gilbert L. Small, Oscar A. Jose Jr.. B. W. Kirshbaum, Frank Phroote, Thomas Moore. Misses Emma Colbert, Elizabeth King. Elizabeth Carolyn King, Janice Ryan. Virginia Kerz. Virginia Connors. Miriam King.JJargaret Miller. Juanita Mller, Edith Smith and Josephine Likely. EASTERN GIRL TO MARRY CITY MAN Mr. and Mrs. W. Arthur Saltford, Hyde Park, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Belle Benton Saltford, and Douglas Griest Hoskins, son of Mrs. Walter D. Hoskins, 4239 Park avenue, Indianapolis. The wedding will take place in June. The bride-elect is a graduate of Earlham college, which school Mr. Hoskins also attended. He also is a former student of Indiana university.

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Cadet Ball Sponsor Is Appointed Cadet officers of Culver Military j academy will confer upon Miss \ Ruth Tyndall, daughter of Major-! General Robert H. Tyndall, 2016! North Meridian street, commanding 1 officer of the Thirty-eighth division j national guard, the title of sponsor,; at the annual military ball to be j held April 30 at the Columbia Club, i This honor has been extended only j once previously, to Mrs. Thomas R. j Marshall, wife of the former Vice- ; President of the United States. The ball will open the spring ! season of the unit. Mrs. Harry G. Leslie, wife of Governor Leslie, and Mrs. Norman Perry, wife 'of the president of the ‘Columbia Club, will be hostesses to wives of the officers at the dinner, which will precede the ball. Guests of honor will'be: Major-General Denis E. Nolan, commander of the fifth corps area of the United States Army; Major-General William G. Everson, chief of the United States Militia Bureau; Major-General Tyndall; Brigadier-General George H. Jamerson, commanding officer at Ft. Harrison: Briga-dier-General L. R. Gignilliat, commandant at Culver Military Academy, and ranking officer in the eighty-fourth division of the United States Reserves: and Colonel A. J. Daugherty, chief of staff of the Eightyfourth division. The purpose of the ball is to preserve the relationship between the military and civic units of the army. There will be representatives present from Ft. Harrison, representing the regular army, the national guard, and the reserve officers. Members of the Columbia Club who belong to any of these units will be present. G. A. R. GROUPS TO HOLD SESSION Regular meeting of Federated Patriotic Societies allied, with the G. A. R. will be held at 7:45 Wednesday at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street. Stunts by affiliated organizations will follow the business session. Mrs. Mary Haley, president, will preside, and award prizes for the best stunts. MISS CHAMPION " RECENT BRIDE Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Champion. 101 West Fortieth street, annnounce | the marriage of their daughter, Miss i Frances Champion, to Louis’ Nile O'Neel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter : O'Neql, Shelbyville, which took place Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. O’Neel are at home at 3733 Kenwood avenue.

Just Every Day Sense

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

AFTER publication of his book, “Woman Have Been Kind,” in which he details his many love affairs, it was to be expected that Lou Tellegen would say, “T have the greatest reverence for women.” This is the usual glib phrase on the lips of men who make girls walk back home. Mr. Tellegen calls himself a Great Lover. In that, I think, he overestimates his talents. Robert Browning was a great lover because he remained all his life faithful to one woman, but it is a little far-fetched, using the word in its highest sense, say that the Don Juans, the Casanovas or even the Tellegens of the world were great lovers. By their own confession, they are philanderers and nothing more, tt st ss MEN of that type usually know very little about love. In the first place, a person incapable of a reasonable amount of fidelity also is incapable of feeling the highest devotion to another. By that I do not mean that it is not possible to love fervently and romantically more than once in a lifetime. But it seems to me impossible to boast that one could love greatly a dozen times and get by with the idea that this was in any way remarkable. Men who have been made much of by women often become superegoists. With that one -can find no fault, since it is a human failing. But we should object when they take the name of love in vain. For love in its best sense implies constancy, and constancy is something that the Don Juans of the world know something about. It is all very fine to strut and prance, but if I were a man I rather would have had the firm faith and the true devotion of one woman in my life than the memory of light kisses lightly given and lightly received.

Phi Beta Phi Sorority Wins in Book-Donating Contest

Fraternities and sororities at Butler university, which have been conducting a campaign for the last six weeks under the auspices of the student council, to obtain books for the university library, have completed their work. A total of 7,146 volumes has been collected. Pi Beta Phi sorority heads the list with 2.115 books, including a collection of 219 volumes of Greek

PARTY CHAIRMAN

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Miss Mary Ryan

Miss Mary Ryan is a member of St. Catherine’s Dramatic Club girls’ drill team, which will sponsor a skating party Tuesday night at Riverside skating rink. The committee includes: Miss Catherine Cleary, chairman. Mises Ryan. Mary Spellman. Anna Custard. Helen Lee, Alma Gootee. Elizabeth Ley, Inez Custard. Sarah Boland, Helen Ryan. Mary Feeney. Mabel McGovern, Cecelia Bauman. Marie Braun and Carrie Dwenger. Card Carnival Is Planned by Disc League The Collegiate Card Carnival, to be given Thursday night in the vestry rooms of the Beth-El Zedek temple, by Disc, league for Jewish women at Butler university, will in-

elude a varied program. Miss Irene * Smulyan will be the mistress of ceremonies, and will introduce the entertainers. Those on the program will include Misses Libby Mauer, Esther Leffkowitz, Bess Gerstein, Ida Sack, Sylvia Ecktman, Elsie Pomush, Myra Auerbach, Dcrothy Cohen, Rose koor, Frieda

Brill, Miriam Eleanor Forman, Dorothy Forman, Vivian Friedman, Messrs. Seamon Brodsky, Alex Levin and Harry Alpert. Stunts will be presented by members of Disc and Avukah. Decorations and entertainment will carry out the college motif. Miss Helen Davis is in charge of arrangements and ticket sales. PEN WOMEN WILL ELECT OFFICERS Indiana branch, League of American Pen Women, will hold its annual election of officers at 11 Saturday morning at the Propylaeum. A luncheon for members and guests will follow at 1, after which a program will be presented. Miss E. Lena Wright, accompanied by Mrs. Harriet Burt, will sing a program of early English, Irish and Colonial folk songs in costume. Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson, president of the branch, wall preside. Reservations may be made with Mrs. L. D. Owen, chairman of the luncheon. Sorority in Bridge Miss Elizabeth Goldrick, 2231 North Delaware street, will entertain members of Theta Sigma Chi with a bridge party Wednesday night. Sorority to Meet The regular meeting of the Alpha chapter, Delta Tau Omega sorority, will be held at 8 Wednesday night at the Antlers.

ARCH SUPPORT SHOES $5 and $6 Value, Straps. Ties, Built-up Pumps and Oxfords in Black Kid, Brown Kid, Patent Kid and ,|ilji# Reptile combinations. Nationally Adver- wMHwBMy pMf tised Health Footwear at a wonderful DOWNSTAIRS

classics, donated by Mrs. Demarchus Brown, a member of Pi Beta Phi and wife of the former state librarian. Kappa Kappa Gamma was second among the sororities with 1,403 books, and Kappa Alpha Theta third with 798. Sigma Chi led the fraternities with 657 books, and Phi Delta Theta was next with 499. Other contributions were: Alpha Delta Pi. 101; Alpha Chi Omega. 440; Blue Key, 143; Chi Rho Zeta, 8; Delta Delta Delta, 46; Delta Gamma, 207: Delta Tau Delta. 305; Delta Zeta, 200; Kappa Beta, 26; Kappa Delta Rho, 29; Sigma Nu. 157; Thespis 123; Zeta Tau Alpha. 169,and Trianon. 35. The campaign was conducted by the council on the belief that many many persons interested in the university had books which they never used, and which would be of value to the library. The council plans to hold a similar campaign annually, and hopes to institute among students the custom of donating any books not in use to the library.

Miss Willis Is Bride in Altar Wedding Miss Leana T. Willis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Corvei T. Willis, 1428 South Alabama street, became the bride of John V. Gallagher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gallagher, 554 Abbott street, in a ceremony at 8 this morning at the St. John’s church. The Rev. Clement M. Bosler officiated. The altar was banked with palms, ferns, and Butterfly roses. The bride was attended by ‘Miss Mary Wierauch, maid of honor, and Patricia Ann McNellis, flower girl. Miss Wierauch wore printed crepe, with gray slippers and hat and carried Aaron Ward roses. The flower girl wore yellow over pink satin. Malachi Mulrine was the best man, and James Frederick Blaes. ring bearer. The bride • wore ivory satin and lace, a tulle veil, fashioned with a cap, and carried a shower bouquet of bride’s roses and lilies of the valley. A wedding breakfast at the Hotel Harrison followed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Gallagher have left for a trip through the East, and will be at home after April 25 at 556 North Oxford street.

Mr. and Mrs. Doherty Sheerin will entertain with a small dinner party tonight at their home, 4750 Central avenue, in honor of Miss Martha Ann Taylor and her fiance, Thomas Madden, who will be married April 29. Mr. and Mrs. George T. Purves, 5261 Carrollton avenue, have gone to Chicago and Des Moines, la., for a few days. Their daughter, Miss Mary Alice Purves, has as her house guests Misses Ruth and Rhonda Jenkins, Cincinnati. Miss Isabel Wilkinson, Marott hotel, is spending a few days in Springfield, O. Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Griffith, 3025 North Meridian street, will motor to Detroit Thursday, where they will attend the wedding of Mrs. Griffith's brother, Theodore Sedwick, formerly of Indianapolis, and Miss Dorothy Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fortney, 3959 Guilford avenue, have Mrs. William Fortney, Mr. Fortney’s mother, Chicago, as their house guest. Mrs. William Fortney will motor to Detroit with the Griffiths Thursday. Mrs. Walter S. Greenough, 556 East Fall Creek boulevard, and Mrs. Charles N. Teeton, Hagerstown, president of the Indiana League of Women Voters, have gone to Washington, D. C., to attend the national council meeting of the national league. BRIDE-ELECT GIVEN PARTY BY SORORITY Miss Iris Jones, whose marriage to E. G. Wettlaufer, Detroit, will take place April 23, was honored by Delta Zeta Psi sorority, of which she is a member, at a social meeting held Monday night at the home of Miss Bemiece McCoy, 802 North Chester street. Bridge was played following the business meeting, and Miss Jones was presented with a gift. The sorority colors, green and gold, were carried out in the appointments. Mrs. Elmore Rice is president of the sorority. Miss Jones is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Jones, 1018 North Beville avenue.

Miss Irene Smulyan

Personals

APRIL 14, 1931

D. A. R . to Convene in Washington Daughters of the American Revolution throughout the United States are preparing for the continental congress in Washington next week Registration will be held Friday and Saturday at Continental halL Sunday will be given over to sightseeing and visitors will Hew the White House, the Capitol, the congressional library and other sites of interest while others will visit Mt. Vernon, even thbugh an official trip for the latter is scheduled for later in the week. The Indiana meeting will be held Tuesday in Indiana room. Sunday night, the state group will hold a dinner, with candidates for the office of vice-president general as guests, and Indiana’s own candidate, Mrs. James Crankshaw. Ft. Wayne, as honor guest. Following are the delegates and members of Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, who will attend: Mesdames Wilbur Johnson, regent; Jame L. Gavin, vice-president general: Bertram Day. Eugene Dararch. Walter Marmon. Fred Hoke. C. P. Lesh. W. B. Rossetter. Maurice E. Tennant, regent-elect; H. E Fieber. E. L. Kruse. C. F. Voyles and daughter Mary Ellen, who will be a page; Herman Tuttle. Henry J. Raymond Jr and John W. Crossman. Among those who may go are: Mrs. James Ogden and daughter. Mary Ann. who Is to be a page; Mrs. F. EUi* Hunter and daughter. Flora, who also may be a page: Mesdames Samuel Lewis Shank. James L. Kalieen. M. A. Ryan and Walter Green. Mrs. Alfred P. Conklin, regent of the Cornelia Cole Fairbanks chapter, the only one from her chapter to attend, will leave Friday. Mrs. Paul Fisher, regent of the General Arthur St. Clair chapter, will not attend. Mrs. Ernest I. Lewis, a member of the chapter living in Washington, is regent's alternate. Miss Ann Spann was appointed delegate.

Hadassah Will Hold Welfare Fund Luncheon Chicago chapter of Hadassah will hold its $50,000 “Give or Get” luncheon Wednesday at the Stevens to celebrate the completion of its drive for funds to maintain Hadassah’s hospitals and welfare stations in Palestine. Local delegates who will attend are Mesdames Samuel Frommer. Abraham Goodman, H. Joseph Hyman, Louis Sariensky and Milton Steinberg. Miss Henrietta Szold, national founder of Hadassah, who will return to Palestine soon, will be guest speaker. Rabbi J. Marshall Taxay wall be speaker at the Indianapolis chapter meeting Wednesday at Kirshbaum center. His subject wil l be, “Whose Is the Jewish Problem?”

LTY Dr. Pierce's Clinic DR. R. V. PIERCE met with such unusual success in his private practice that he gathered around him a number of eminent specialists and surgeons and established a Clinic and Hospital. Today this Clinic is of the same high caliber as ever. The physicians still find Dr. Tierce’s Golden Medical Discovery a most dependable tonic for patients who are rundown and need their digestion improved and their blood enriched. If you have sallow or pimply skin, lifeless lips, sunken eyes—this is just the tonic for you. It makes redder blood, soothes the nerves and imparts tone and vivacity to the system. It is surprising how quickly you feel the effects of this wonderful tonic. Where before, that tired, logy, dull freely was .frequent, now, the energizing influence of this herbal tonic brings back the pink cheeks, the bright eyes, the buoyant spirits. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery tones up the stomach and is very efficacious in indigestion, while it increases the appetite and is a sys-tem-builder that thousands in every State of the Union have successfully used. It can be had at any drug store. Write to Dr. Pierce's Clinic in Buffalo, N. Y. On receipt of 10c Dr. Pierce will send you an acquaintance package of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery