Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 302, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 April 1932 — Page 6
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Miss Brehob Is Wedded in Church Rite Miss Martha Brehob, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Brehob of West Troy avenue, became the bride of the Rev. C. E. Schick of Philadelphia at a ceremony at 6:30 Tuesday in the Friends Evangelical church where the bride had been organist and director of music. The Rev. Mr. Schick is the son of Edgar F. Schick of Philadelphia, and is pastor of the St. Paul Lutheran church there. The ceremony was read by the Rev. Robert Kuebler before the altar banked with palms and lighted with cathedral tapers. Mrs. Schick wore a tight fitting gown of lace fashioned with a long train and long sleeves. Her tulle veil was cap shaped and caught at the sides with orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of orchids and liles of the valley. Bride’s Gown of Pink Lace The maid of honor, Miss Caroline Ottlng, wore a dress of pink lace fashioned close fitting to the knees with a flare of ruffles to the floor. She wore blue slippers and carried a bouquet of pink roses and delphiniums. The bridesmaids, Misses Elizabeth Miller and Marie Losche, wore dresses of blue fashioned similarly. They wore pink slippers and carried pink roses and delphiniums. The best man was William Brehob Jr., and the ushers were Walter and Alvin Brehob. Mrs. Brehob, the bride’s mother, wore a gown of brown lace and a shoulder corsage of Talisman roses. Jesse Crane, organist, played the “Rustic Wedding • Symphony,” by Goldmaik, the “Liebstraum,” and Wagner’s “Lohengrin Wedding March.” Hold Reception at Church Walter Hoffman, soloist, sang “The Sweetest Story Ever Told,” and “I Love You Truly.” The bridegroom is a graduate of Muhlenberg college at Allentown, Pa., and the Philadelphia Lutheran Theological Seminary. Mrs. Schick was a student of Jesse Crane. Following the ceremony a reception was held in the church. A dinner was given at the bride’s parent’s home for attendants and the immediate family. The couple left immediately for Philadelphia. Their home address will be 351 East Shartmack street, Mt. Airy. Miss Krieg Is Honored at Bridge Party Mrs. Maurice McNulty and her Bister, Miss Helen Carroll, entertained at a luncheon-bridge today for Miss Frances Krieg, bride-elect, at the home of Miss Carroll, 2355 North Pennsylvania street. Guests were seated at small tables arranged with spring flowers and lighted with tapers with appointments in pink and white. Guests were: Mesdames Felix Krieft, John Carroll, William Freaney, Walter Stuhldreher, William J. Mooney Jr.. Leon Desautels, Teagarden Kelly, Robert Kirby, Edward Gall, Harold Bartholomew, Philip Derham, Warren K. Mannon, Russell Pierson and John Darmody and the Misses Helen Barrett, Harriet Thomas and Eileen O’Connor.
Personals
Among those registered at the Edgewater Beach hotel in Chicago are several Indianapolis residents Including Messrs. Herbert J. Buell, 4814 North Meridian street; Paul M. Cook, 4925 Young street; L. G. Ferguson, 5601 Broadway; C. A. Johnson, 2352 North Pennsylvania street, and Wayne Satterfield, 1421 North Dearborn street. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Weidman and ton Stanley, have motored to Los Angeles, Cal., to visit Mr. and Mrs. Edward Castle and son, Dallas, formerly of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burns, 4205 Washington boulevard, are spending a few days in Washington, D. C. SCHOOL 10 TO HOLD VAUDEVILLE SHOW Pupils of School 10. Thirteenth street and Ashland avenue, will present a vaudeville entertainment at 7:30 Friday night at the school, under the auspices of the ParentTeacher Association. The program will also include numbers by dance pupils from the Jac Broderick studios, students from the Christiansen School of Music, and Miss Eleanor Schultz, reader. WOMANS ATHLETIC CLUB TO ENTERTAIN Woman’s Athletic Club will entertain guests tonight at the Hoosier Athletic Club. The entertainment will include swimming from 6 to 8, followed by cards, in the Chinese room. This is one of a series of four guest nights being held by the club. Hostesses will be Mrs. Lula Stuart, Mrs. Charles Dietch and Miss Margaret Wacker.
Daily Recipe CASSEROLE ITALIENNE 2 cups cooked spaghetti 1 can tomato soup 1 can chopped sweet pickles 1 cup grated cheese 1 cup ground leftover meat 1 tablespoon chopped onion, or 1 tablespoon onion juice Combine soup, pickle, meat, onion and one-half cup grated cheese. Mix with spaghetti and put in greased casserole. Cover top with remaining cheese. Put in a moderate oven <350 degrees F.) until contents are thoroughly heated. (The sauce may be made in the morning and put in the refrigerator until ready to use.) —McCall’S.
Job’s Daughters Council Will Convene at Severin May 6
Mr*. Ethel H. Warner, past grand guardian and present guardian of Bethel 3, Is general chairman of the Grand Council of Job’s Daughters to be held May 6 to 7 at the Severin. She will be assisted by Mrs. Mabel Dobbins, past grand secretary, and present guardian of Bethel 1. The following committees have been appointed: Housing. Mrs. Marls Leonard: bsnouet. Mrs. Elisabeth Endsley, chairman, assisted by Mesdtmes Velma Peters, Flora Mae Kretch, Ruth Hancock, Harriet Kiefer and Bertha Lynch: program. Mrs. Jessie Pruitt; necrology. Mrs. Effte Harrison. Clintoft; master of ceremonies. Miss Mary Elisabeth Codes: publicity. Miss Patty Warner, and entertainment, Miss Betty Endsley. Ross A. Smith, adviser of the Order of De Molay, will give an address of welcome at the opening session, and the De Molay drill team will assist with Wayne Ptnce as captain. Mrs. Florence U. Ashley of Ft. Wayne, grand guardian, will preside, assisted by Gay Stammel, grand associate guardian. Other officers taking part in the meeting are Mrs. Beatrice Trusler, past guardian of Bethel 9, grand messenger; Mrs. Eula Griffy, past guardian of Bethel 4, grand secretary; Mrs. Pruitt, past guardian of Bethel 4, grand guide, and Mrs.
(MAN N£RS ani> AAORALSI Jordan XPI
WRITE your troubles to Jane Jordan, who will help you solve your difficulties by her answers in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—How can I overcome the habit of bashfulness? It has caused me to lead a very lonesome life. I am 19 years old and never had a date In my life. I’m not bad looking and love dancing and music. My girl friends do not want me because I have no boy friends. So every evening I stay home and play with the dog while some of my little pals just 15 and 16 years old are out have the time of their lives. BLUSHING BABE. Dear Blushing Babe —Before we set out to cure bashfulness, let us try to see what causes it. You are bashful because you are dubious of your own value. You do not esteem yourself highly enough to believe you can compete with other girls younger than you are. You are not ashamed of your looks, which you admit are good. Then what is it that keeps you from holding your own. Asa rule, the wallflower type of girl is seldom left out of things because she is not good looking. Her trouble usually comes from a lack of any real vital interest in other people and their affairs. Her affection for her fellows is aroused in proportion to their interest in her, but she never makes the effort herself. Now, my dear, your associates never will seek you out unless you have something to offer. With the whole world spread before you, there is no excuse for emptiness within. Being interesting is merely the result of being genuinely interested yourself. Develop an avid curiosity about people and events. Read books, newspapers, and magazines. What interests you deeply is sure to interest others, also. You do not have to be a good talker to be popular. You need only to know how to be a good listener. But, remember, the good listener always is interested thoroughly in what he is hearing. A capacity for earnest attention to the hopes, aspirations, and desires of others invariably attracts an audierfee. A few intelligent questions is all that is necessary to set the majority of people to chattering contentedly about themselves. Throw in a few appreciative remarks that make the person you wish to charm feel pleasantly superior, and you’re on the right road
DIRECTS DANCE
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Miss Kathryn Fern Byrd Phi Gamma Tau sorority will sponsor a cabaret dance Saturday night, May 7, at the Atheneaum, for the benefit of its charity fund. Miss Kathryn Fern Byrd is general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Maurice Healey, Mrs. Jack Cheney, Misses Doris Prater, Catherine Comer, and Beatrice Jullman. Bob McKittrick will act as master of ceremonies, and music will be provided by his orchestra. The dance floor of the Athenaeum will be decorated to resemble a night club, and the music will be broadcast from 11 to 11:30 over WKBF, with Ralph Elvin as announcer. VASSAR CLUB WILL MARK ANNIVERSARY Thirtieth anniversary of the founding of the Indiana Vassar Club and the college Founders’ day will be celebrated by the club at 12 Saturday at the home of Mrs. Henry D. Pierce, 1415 North Meridian street, where the state club was organized, Dec. 30. 1902. New officers are Miss Carolyn Richardson, president; Mrs. Albert Seaton, vice-president; Mrs. Harry R. Fitton, secretary, and Mrs. Byron K. Rust, treasurer. Miss Mona Taggart is the retiring president. Church Plans Dinner Crooked Creek Baptist church, Kessler boulevard and Michigan road, will serve dinner from 5:30 to J itidajr sight at |*w ohuifb, „
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Mrs. Ethel H. Warner Leonard, past guardian of Bethel 1, grand marshal. Job’s Daughters will be guests of the Grand Guardian Council at a theater party Saturday afternoon. Banquet and dance in the evening will close the session.
to popularity. Your cue lies not so much in wanting to tell what you know as in wanting to learn what other people know. Try it! u n Dear Jane Jordan—l am 18 years old and considered good looking. My folks aren’t rich. Neither are they poor. I live In a small town of 250 Inhabitants. I have a good reputation. Why is it I am shunned by young folks? My father isn't a Mason. Whether that is t or not, I do not know. The boys run from me like i w?s poison. They move their chairs so they don’t have to sit close and they say embarrassing things. I have asked my girl friend why they treat me like this, but she says I Imagine it. I feel terribly lonesome and would like to be popular. How may this be done? LONESOME. Dear Lonesome Youth’s inhumanity to youth never will cease to amaze me. I do not know why the idiotic boys treat you as they do, but I know that it is wrong and cruel. They have no business to judge you by your family and its standing in the community, but should estimate you by yourself alone. A change of locale is the best thing that could happen to you. If your parents could send you away to school, it would be excellent. If you’re so situated that you have to remain where you are, follow the advice given to Blushing Babe and see if you can’t make your Influence felt in spite of this silly provincial prejudice. You can rise above it if if you work at the task, but you must be willing to put forth a. powerful effort in self-improvement. * # n Dear Jane Jordan—l know of a boy who is In love with a girl who doesn’t care anything about him. He says if he doesn’t win her over pretty soon, he will go mad. He has tried everything to win her, but has not succeeded. What advice could you give to this boy? He needs It badly. ONE WHO WANTS TO KNOW. Dear One-Who-Wants-to-Know— Tell him to quit crying for the moon. The girl can’t make herself love him and there is nothing he can do about it. Some other girl would give her eye-teeth for the devotion that he wastes on the unobtainable. He has only to try it to succeed. The first substitute girl or the second may not be the one, but, if he keeps on looking, one day he will make the transfer and wonder what in the world held him so closely to an indifferent lady. Remember, there’s nothing eternal about love, in spite of what the poets say. .It’s the most changeable emotion on earth. MRS. eTo. INGSTAD HONORED AT PARTY Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gutzwiller, 3716 Watson road, entertained Tuesday night with a surprise birthday bridge party in honor of Mrs. Edwin O. Ingstad. Spring * flowers were used in decorating. Other guests were: Messrs, and Mesdames James McDermott, Henry Brlnker, John Valdenaire, Edward Ingstad, Mesdames Dorothy Ashiey, Clarence Kissel, John Robinson, Miss Alberta Schakel, Miss Regina Heats, and Edwin O. Ingstad. Past Chiefs to Meet Past Chief’s Association of Myrtle temple, Pythian Sisters, will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Anna Lichtenauer, 439 East Forty-ninth street. Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames Hattie Ryder, May Galloway and Nora Doyle. Dr. Wicks to Speak Dr. F. S. C. Wicks will address the Park school morning assembly Friday. His subject will be “George Washington.” 17115 will be a part of the city-wide observance of the bicentennial in the schools. Guild Will Meet Broadway M. E. church White Cross guild will meet all daf Thursday at the nurses’ home of the Methoist hospital.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Stewed prune* with lemon, cereal, cream, creamed dried beef on muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream of spinach soup, toasted cheese sandwiches, shredded vegetable salad, stewed dried apricots with grated cocoanut, milk, tea. Dinner — Stuffed pork chops, mashed sweet potatoes baked with marshmallows, creamed new cabbage, stuffed apple salad, mock angel cake, canned cherries, milk, ooffee.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mrs. Pauley Again Head of Council New officers and committee chairmen for ths Indianapolis Council of Women were named at a luncheon meeting of the retiring board of directors Tuesday at the home of Mrs. J. P. Thompson. Mrs. Edna Pauley was chosen to serve her second three-year term as president. Other officers are: Mesdames J. P. Cochrane, vicepresident; Charles Mueller, corresponding secretary; C. W. Folz, recording secretary; Walter Geisel, treasurer, and Allan T. Fleming, parliamentarian. Committee chairmen Include: Mesdame* Rex Goodwin. American citizenship; Mary E. Kynett, civic; W. H. Hodgson, court; I. E. Rush, child welfare; Robert McKay, legislative; J P. Cochrane, hospitalisation; Delbert O. Wilmeth, resolutions; W. C. Bartholomew, motion pictures; W. F. Holmes, program; J. F. Edwards, social hygiene, and Charles Smith, visitation. Next monthly meeting of the council will be held Wednesday, May 4, instead of on the preceding Tuesday, because of the primary elections. The luncheon and meeting, which will be the last of the year, will be held at Municipal Gardens clubhouse. Junior League Will Entertain Riley Patients “Mother Goose Follies” will be presented for convalescent patients at the James Whitcomb Riley hospital for children at 2 Thursday afternoon, by the extension section of the Matinee Musicale. Mrs. L. Preston Highley is chairman of the section. The play is being produced under the auspices of the Junior League, which maintains the occupational therapy department at the hospital, with Mrs. Edwin M. McNally as chairman of the hospital committee. The performance will be given in ; the work shop of the occupational i therapy department. A second pre- ! sentation will be given later in the new Indiana Rotary convalescent home. Mrs. Richard Fielding is the director. Members of tfle cast, representing all the most famous Mother Goose characters, follow: Mesdames Louis Traugott, Hazel Silvey Hill, Herbert Grimes, John Edgers, J. A. Duncan, C. S. Dillenbeck, Isabel Geissler, Russell Hatt, L. Preston Highley and Rex Young, and Miss Jo Ann Katt. TRI KAPPAS WILL SEE ART DISPLAY Tri Kappa day at the Hoosier art salon to open May 1 at the SpinkArrns will be held May 7 by chapters in Indiana. Mrs. Joseph W. Walker, 6401 Park avenue, is general chairman. A luncheon at 1 will be followed by a program. Tri Kappas from all over the state and their friends will attend. The exhibit will be made up of the juried pictures from the Hoosier art salon in Chicago and will continue for two weeks. LUNCHEON-BRIDGE HELD AT HIGHLAND Mrs. Harrison Bennett was chairman of the weekly luncheon bridge today at the Highland Golf and Country Club. She was assisted by Mesdames Harrison Bennett, Fred Schumaker, j 5. A. Bell, John Rau, J. A. Brook- j bank, C. A. Jaqua and R. N. ! Dedaker. Spring flowers were arranged on the luncheon tables. Contract and auction bridge were played. AMICITIA CLUB TO HAVE CARD PARTY Mrs. Arthur Bender, 3308 Nowland avenue, was hostess for a meeting at the Amicitia Club Tuesday, assisted by Mrs. Galen T. Doyal. Mrs. W. J. Wonning, chairman of the ways and means committee, reported on plans for the annual card party, which will be held May 24. Mrs. H. G. Alsman gave a report from the Indianapolis Council of Women.
PLAN DANCE
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Miss Hooten and Miss Tumbleson Miss Hilda Hooten and Miss Helen Tumbleson are members of the committee in charge of the spring dance to be held by the Butler university chapter of Kappa Delta sorority, Friday night in the Christian Park community house. * Miss Mary Frances Douglass is the general chairman, assisted by Misses Peg Anderson, Josephine Davidson, Miss Hooten and Miss Tumbleson. Chaperons will be Mrs. Edna Christian, Professor and Mrs. Gino Ratti and Miss Esther Renfrew. Hugh Mason's orchestra will provide music. SKATING PARTY BEING PLANNED Children’* skating party will be held at 9:30 Saturday at the Riverside rink by Phi Sigma, a charity club. Parties are being formed by the children of members. Proceeds will be used for relief work for families investigated by the social service committee of the club. Mrs. Paul M. Fifer and Mrs. Allan Green are in charge of tickets.
EVANS* EWE FOR ALL PURPOSES
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Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- o n n tern No. O U Size Street City State Name *.
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CHILD’S DAYTIME DRESS It has accompanying bloomers, too. And isn’t the double-breasted effect smart? The tiny puffed sleeves are a clever idea. The skirt laid in generous plaits and attached to a brief yoke, allows plenty of freedom for activities of wee These wide plaits are easily pressed into place after the frock’s frequent visit to the wash tub. A printed cotton broadcloth in French blue and white with plain white pique trim made the original. Linen, pique, batiste prints, gingham, percale and dimity prints are sturdy and smart. Style No. 390 is designed for sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4 requires 2% yards 35-inch with % yard 35-inch contrasting. Order our new Fashion Magazine, to show you the way in design, colors, etc. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.
MORE POWER TO YOU SHREDDED ggWH EAT KEEPS YOU ACTIVE NlfSE^^in spring weather 12 BIG BISCUITS A Unmdi Bakers" product
New Accessories for Summer "" Directed by AMOS PARRISH- •
Alumnae Will Be Guests at Lady wood Tea Alumnae of Ladywood school and St. Mary of the Woods at Terre Halite will be guests of the Athletic Association of Ladywood at a formal tea-from 3 to 5, Thursday at the school on the Millersville road. Officers of the association to serve will be the Misses Josephine Dickinson, Marion O’Shaughessy, Betty Trainor, Mary A. Walsh and Kathryn Buche. Miss Catherine Connor, harpist, will play. Decorations of spring will be used with appointments of pink and green. Lighted tapers will be arranged on the serving table. More than 200 guests will attend. OLD GLORY SOCIETY TO GIVE TEA DANCE Thirty-seventh anniversary of the founding of the Children of the American Revolution will be celebrated at a musical tea at 2:30 Saturday by the Old Glory Society of the C. A. R. at the D. A. R. chapter house. Dancing will follow the program and tea. Miss Anne Tennant, librarian of the society, is chairman. The Shortridge Reed quartet will give a program of songs. Members are Miss Betty Humphreys, soprano; Ann Redwine, alto; Jimmie Reed, tenor, and Julian Kennedy, bass. Miss Mary Bon will talk on the life of Mrs. Harriet Lothrop, founder of the C. A. R. Miss Mary Jane Wallace will preside at the tea table, decorated with spring flowers and lighted with tapers. Discuss Rush Parties Plans for rush parties will be discussed at a meeting of Chi Beta Kappa sorority tonight at the home of Miss Esther Robinson, 7001 West Washington street.
Card Parties
St. Patrick’s Social Club will hold card parties at 8:30 tonight and at 2:30 Friday, following a bake sale. Mrs. Mary Murphy is chairman. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Division 11, will hold a card party at 8 Thursday in room 421 of Castle hall, 230 East Ohio street. Social club, Sacred Heart church, will hi ve a card party at 2:30 Thursday at the hall, 1500 Union street. Ladies Society, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, will give a card and bunco party at 8:30 Thursday night at the hall, English avenue and Shelby streets. Harold C. Megrew, Auxiliary 3, United Spanish War Veterans! will have a card party at 8 tonight at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street. Circle 4. St. Anthony’s Altar Society, will give card parties at 2 and 8:15 Thursday at the parish hall,, 320 North Warman avenue. There will also be dancing, from 10 to 12. The committee is Mesdames Harry Smock, chairman; Patrick Joyce, Charles Boyle. Camellia lodge, 121, Ladies’ Society, Brotherhood Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, will have a card party at 2 Friday at the BannerWhitehill auditorium. Mrs. Jack Nowling is the chairman.
NEW YORK, April 27.—L00k for less formality when warm weather evening costumes begin to *how up. Good idea. too. On balmy nights nobody wants to feel loaded down with grandeur. Dresses are airier . . . wraps shorter and gayer. And accessories chime right in, too. So when you start getting ready for summer, one change you may want to make is in your gloves. Os course for very formal affairs, the sixteen-button white kid glove is the thing . . . weather or no. But for ordinary evening adventures. certainly you’ll be more comfortable in shorter gloves. They keep a certain formality by clinging to glace kid and white. But they have piquancy, due to the little wrist ruffles they're apt to display. Mitts Are Cool Mitts and lace gloves (lace gloves with all ten fingers in them) are cool as none at all—and more fashionable. And very short mesh gloves, with several little ruffles at the top, are intriguing the younger set. These lace and mesh gloves look particularly smart with evening dresses of lace or cotton. Change about in handbags is a good idea, toj. If you’ve been carrying a beaded bag this last season, as so many smart women have, you may like the change to a plain silk In a gay color that sharply contrasts with your dress color. Or one in a soft pastel to match the pastel of the dress. Silks in Fashion Both rough and smooth silks are in fashion for summer evening bags . . . ranging from those heavily crinkled combinations of silk-and-wool to the silk so smooth it’s called “angel skin” or “peau dange.” But if you’ve been carrying a plain silk bag this winter, try the change to a beaded one. The tiny seed pearl types are light and summery. So are the crepes embroidered in beads. And for a still more radical change, a lace bag is new. Jewelry, too, can be changed to advantage. Sparkling “court” type jewelry is correct, just as it has been this last winter. But like the winter dress, it has a more formal look. Bright Jewelry Good Especially if your summer evening dress is white, you’ll like bright colored jew'elry—bright red or bright blue. Especially, too, if ycur new evening wrap is one of these colors. And as in handbags, pale pastels can make effective decorative schemes with pale pastel dresses. One of the loveliest combinations we’ve seen o£ late was a dress in a dusty pink worn with dusty blue jewelry. (CoDvrleht. 1932. Amos Parrish) NEXT: Sheer dresses for street wear. IN OPERETTA ROLES!
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Photo bv Hillarv Bailey. Joseph Macy and Vera Sudbrock Vera Sudbrock, soprano, and Joseph Macy, tenor, have the leads in “The Merry Widow,” famous operetta by Franz Lehar, which will be presented lr> Caleb ; Mills hall, May 6 and 7, as the 1932 edition of the annual Fairview Follies of Butler university. A cast of fifty collegians will present the show sponsored by the Men's Union and under the direc- I tion of a committee of ten students. This is the first year that a professional show has been produced, , all previous productions having been written by students. Final rehearsals and ticket sales campaign began this week. Work on the production began Feb. 1. I
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APRIL 27, 1932
Vote League Will Shelve Liquor Issue BY JOHN OWEN rolled Pre* SUIT Correxndn* DETROIT, April 27. Rumors ! that two controversial subjects, pro- ; hibition and birth control, will be I raised today in the formal business meeting of the League of Women Voters were current, although no delegate would admit she planned I to bring up the matter of prohibi- ! tion. Three states are understood | to have resolutions on birth control ready. Miss Belle Sherwin of Cleveland. : national president, admitted she i had heard reports the convention ; would be asked to take a stand on the wet and dry question, if such a motion is made from the floor, she said, she will refer It to committee. The belief is general that if this ’ is done the resolution will not be re- | ported out. The league never has i voted on -the subject. Miss Sher Win w’ould not reveal ■ which states propose to offer birth i control resolutions. Both Parties Flayed Democrats and Republicans were ; flayed before the convention Thursj day night when Ray Tucker, Washi ington political writer; Charles C. I Is'ely, Dodge City (Kan.) grain dealer, and Dan W. Wallace, editor of the magazine, the Farmer’s Wife, spoke. Both parties, Tucker said, will j wage a sham battle this year over prohibition, economic recovery, foreign affairs and taxation while the challenging issues will be lost in political palaver. Isely agreed with Tucker that the major parties would dodge the real issues. W’allace said the farmer is not interested in debt settlements with Europe or even in prohibition. Agriculture Wants Aid “The farmer is concerned chiefly with a national setup which will enable agriculture to function successfully in its relation to labor and industry,” Wallace said. Illinois delegates to the convention are concerned chiefly with education, government and world peace, according to Mrs. Ralph B. Treadway of Chicago, president of the state league. Mrs. E. C. Schmidt of Urbana, state chairman on the committee of international co-operation to prevent war, will offer a resolution asking the United States to cooperate with the league of nations in all matters pertaining to the pact of Paris. MRS. HORN HOSTESS TO AFTERNOON CLUB Mrs. J. R. Horn, 2940 Park avenue, entertained members of the Wednesday Afternoon Club this afternoon at her home, assisted by Mrs. John Horn. Miss Florence Lanham gave the Bible lesson, and the Rev. Herbert S. Weckmueller spoke on “Washington, the Christian.” Joan Duvall sang colonial songs and gave readings in costume, and Mrs. Robert Avels sang, accompanied by Miss Frieda Hari. Players to Meet Meeting of the Brookside Players will be held tonight at the Brookside Community house. Miss Caroline Brown will preside. New members include Miss Myra Rowley, Mrs. Emmalou Nolan, Raymond Hartsock and Eitel Sedlak. Cancel Gallery Talk The gallery talk to have been given by Wilbur D. Peat at the John Herron Art institute tonight under auspices of tte Spanish Club, has been canceled, due to the recalling of the exhibition of paintings by living Spanish artists. Plan Church Dinner St. Matthew Episcopal church in Irvington will hold a dinner from 5:30 to 7 Thursday In the church. Zeta Rhos Plan Bridge A bridge party will be held by Zeta Rho sorority today in the Chinese room of the Hoosier Athletic Club. Miss Grace Rawlings is chairman of the committee in charge. State Parley Mapped State meeting arrangements will be discussed by the Alpha cr.apter of Omega Phi Tau Tau sorority at its business meeting tonight at 110 Chamber of Commerce building. Chapter to Meet Beta chapter, Alpha Beta Phi sorority, will meet tonight at the home of Miss Ruth Beckley. Delta Alphas to Meet Delta Alpha Club of Third Christian church will meet at 2:30 today at the home of Mesdames L. B. and R. W. Lookabill, 5209 Woccside drive.
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