Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Miss Cooper to Be Bride of Ohio Man Miss Ann M. napolis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Cooper, Anderson, will become the bride of Russell E. Hansen, Cleveland, 0., in a ceremony to be solemnized at 4 this afternoon in North Methodist Episcopal church. The Rev. W. W. Wiant will officiate. Mr. Hansen's parents are Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Hansen, Nye, Wis. Organist on Program The ceremony will be performed before an altar banked with palms, ferns and summer flowers, lighted at each side with cathedral candles in seven-branch candelabra. Miss Betty Jjne Garber, organist, will play “I Love You Truly,” “Liebestraum” and a group of Delta Gamma songs preceding the en- . trance of the bridal party. Only the immediate families and a few friends will attend. The bride, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear a white suit of crepe Biarritz, made along tailored lines, and a rough straw hat with aureole brim. She will wear all white accessories, and carry a shower bouquet of Johanna Hill roses, lilies of the valley and gardenias. Leaving for East Miss Ruth Cooper, Anderson, sister of the bride, and her only attendant, will wear an aqua marine blue gown of Roshanara crepe with pink accessories, and will carry pink roses and blue delphinium. William Douglas, Chicago, will be best man. Mr. and Mrs. Hansen will leave immediately after the ceremony for a two weeks’ motor trip through the east. They will be at home after July 10, at 11857 Cliston boulevard, Lakewood, O. The bride attended Butler university, and is a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Mr. Hansen is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin. A wedding breakfast for the bridal party was served this morning at the home of Mrs. Ivan T. Rogers, 4303 North Capitol avenue. The table was centered with a wedding cake, with appointments in the bridal colors, pink and blue. Garden flowers were arranged about the house. Mrs. Benson to Fete Visitors at Tea Party Mrs. John G. Benson will entertain this afternoon at her home, 3663 North Delaware street, with a tea for her sisters, Mrs. Louise J. Strong and Miss Margaret Jordan, and her niece, Miss Margaret Strong, all of Seattle, who are her house guests. Mrs. Benson has invited women in the city, who are former classmates and sorority sisters of Mrs. Strong and Miss Jordan, who attended De Pauw university, and are members of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. During the afternoon a program of music will be presented by Mrs. Charles Woodson, pianist. The house will be decorated with baskets of garden flowers. Several other parties have been given for the visitors during the past week. misYhuber to~ BECOME BRIDE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huber, 3109 Jackson avenue, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Amelia Huber, to Carl Wilking, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wilking, 230 North Addison street. The wedding will take place July 2 in the rectory of St. Anthony church with Miss Mary Huber, sister of the bride-elect, and Fred Meyers as attendants. The couple will go on a wedding trip to Lake Michigan. ELIZABETH BOWEN TO WED IN MIAMI B;/ Timex Special MIAMI, Fla., June 30. Miss Elizabeth Bowen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Crate D. Bow'en, formerly of Indianapolis, will become the bride of John Graves Thompson at 8:30 tonight at the Boulevard Christian church. Mr. Thompson entertained at a bachelor luncheon today at the University Club. A reception at the Bowen home will follow the ceremony. MADISON GIRL Is GUEST AT BRIDGE Miss Helen Holtzhauer, Madison, Ind., is the house guest of Mrs. James Sullivan, 2268 Kenwood avenue. Mrs. Sullivan entertained Wednesday night with a bridge party m her honor, assisted by her mother, Mrs. Theresa Hill. Guests were: Mrs. touts Roll. Mrs. Roy J. Burke; and Missss Christine Hahn, Lillian Uphaus, Helen Uphais, Loretta Burke and Gladvs Duncan. # MISS HOOKER TO BE HOSTESS AT BRIDGE Miss Gladys Hooker, 3543 Kenwood avenue, will entertain tonight at a bridge party. Her mother. Mrs. Frederick N. Hooker, will assist. Guests will be: Mesdames Philip Miller. Ross T. Ewert. X. !u ?., w .? lke r:, Marvin L. Lugar, Herbert W- Harold B. Maaee. Georso Walker, G. Schuvler Blue and Robert Bover and the Misses Maude Ann Searcv. Jean Richardson. Clara Foxwortlw. Frances Woolerv, Martha Baker. Betty Bowman and Alice Elisabeth Harb of Franklin. Arranges Recital Mrs. Alice F. Emerson will present her piano pupils in a recital at 2 Saturday in her studio, 913 East Eleventh street. Those to take part are Joyce Hellenberg, who will receive a certificate for completion of the course in the intermediate department: Genevieve Lee, Edna Wright, Lena and Slodina De Pre and Lillian and Phyllis Moore. Lambda Gammas to Meet Lambda Gamma sorority will meet Friday night at the home of Miss Caroline Hawkott, 812 East Fortieth street. Delta Taus to Meet Beta chapter of Delta Tau Omega sorority will meet at 8 Friday night in the Antlers.

—WHA T’S IN FASHION—

Dining-Room Migrates to Porch Directed by AMOS PARRISH

NEW YORK, June 30.—1f you read Riley’s child poems when you were very young, you probably ate up the one with the refrain, ‘‘we et out on the porch.” All children like the idea . . . and we find that most grown-ups are children on this point. So much so that a good many porches and sleepy, shaded yards are going to be surprised this sum-

I MAN NtRW’MCms) JokdAn XPi

YOUTH is encouraged to come to Jane Jordan with its mistakes and discouragements. She will help young people to correct their errors intelligently. Dear Jane Jordan—Through ignorance, I did things when I was 16, 17 and 18 years old that have taken all the enlovmcnt out of life for me. Mv mother died when I was 6 vears old and mv father never cared what I did. I can’t remember the time that he ever so much as bothered to know the name of the fellow I was going out with. I know if I had had someone to take anv interest in me. what happened never would have been. I came to mv senses when I was old enough to know and feel in mv own consciousness that I had sinned. I am very quiet anv more and mv heart is broken. There is nothing left in life when you can't marrv and have children. I am desperately in love with a fine fellow, one worthy of the purest kind of girl. I'd never marrv him on account of the skeleton in mv closet. From little things he has said, I know he wouldn't marrv a girl with anv kind of a past. I am a business girl. Could you suggest something that I might get in that would take up mv time and offer wider opportunities? I feel as if my work is about all I have. JUNE. Dear June—To my mind there is something pretty fine about a girl who is able to conquer her own conduct without benefit of father, mother, preacher or pestering reformer. No threat of eternal damnation, no shout of total depravity scared you into an artificial decency. Nothing but the dawn of your own. fastidiousness brought you to the realization of the stuff of which beauty is made. You are the one who has tasted the fleshpots and found them wanting. Now you’ve set your eyes on a higher goal, and to yourself have said, ‘‘That, or nothing.” This shows an innate strength of character that eventually will carry you on to victory, even against these You Show heavy odds. „ , Don’t you real- Real Type ize that ninety- 0 f Courage nine out of a hundred untutored girls who start off on the wTong foot haven’t the courage to break with their easy habits? They drive down the street into the gutter and from the gutter into the depths. . In the early days of man’s confused gropings on the earth, girls of 16 weren’t expected to restrain their sexual impulses. In those days women mated and bore children at the age of 14. In the simplicity of tribal life there were no economic and educational demand to delay mating at the moment of sexual ripening. Today a lengthy schooling and the expense of a civilized establishment delay the date at which a young man can Impulses assume the upFollowed Blindly to assuage his p hy s ical hunger where he will is permitted him, but the girl must starve until the young man has prepared a place for her. Unless the necessity for selfcontrol is explained to her she seeks relief from bodily urge with the same unashamed simplicity that she eats when she is hungry. Try to get a true picture of yourself. Not dirty, not depraved, not essentially wicked at all. Just a simple little animal seeking outlet for the elementary urges of life without instructions from her elders. Our inhibitions are not born with us. They are learned. You learned by trial and error. Thit’s about all there is to this bugaboo which is causing yon so Be Smart much suffering. I „ , ~ can not see your ® on conduct as nasty. Have Him Only natural. What are the chances of your future? Plenty. You’ve narrowed the field from which you may select a husband. The man who is

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Grapefruit juice, cereal, cream, scalloped eggs and ham, popovers, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Casserole of cauliflower and cheese, cress salad, raspberry bread and butter, pudding, limeade. Dinner — Brown fricassee of chicken, mashed potatoes, stewed okra and tomatoes, pineapple salad, blackberry whip, milk, coffee.

mer to find themselves turned into outdoor dining rooms. Very smartly surprised, too ... for the things used for these outdoor meals are colorful and interesting enough to make spinach a gay subject. Yes, you take some of those new heatproof casseroles with brightcolored designs and set them out on a table with gaily plaided and

a slave to traditional ideas will not have you for a wife if he knows the truth. If you’re smart, you won’t tell him. If you’re smarter still, you won’t have him. You’ll strike out for something better than a stupid, conventionally minded male. You’ll recall Bernard Shaw’s remark, ‘‘To the pure all things are impure.” You’ll choose from the small select group of thinking, understanding men. If you find such a man, you must have a well-filled mar% % or you won’t interest him. If you’re a girl of character and Read, Read, ideas, he w r on’t and rhnnen care about the and (.hoose transient experi . Good Books ences your body u has been through. He will not care what you were yesterday, if only it has made you more worth while today. Here s what you’re to do for the next few years. Read, read and read. Read good books. Read Sigmund Freud and Havelock Ellis to understand yourself. Read Bertrand Russell and the poetry of Edna St. Vincent Millay for release from the ordinary viewpoint. Read good magazines Harper’s Scribner’s, The Nation, The New Republic?. Keep away from sentimental trash. You have acquired the wisdom of Eve through undirected freedom. Now broaden the horizon of your tnind to understand what you’ve experienced. In the future make yourself difficult to attain and you can have what you will. P.-T. A. to Meet Parent-Teacher Association of the Garth W. Julian school will be entertained at the Bridgeport Nutrition camp at 4 Friday afternoon. Members wishing to go are asked to notify Mrs. Francis W. Payne, 5345 University avenue.

Helen Beattie, Earl Miller Married in Church Ceremony

Miss Helen Beattie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Beattie, Shirley, became the bride of Earl Miller son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Miller* 3958 College avenue, at 10:50 this morning at the North Methodist Episcopal church. The Rev. W. W. Wiant performed the ceremony. The altar was banked with greenery, interspersed with summer flow-

Personals

Misses Helen Dongus, Dorothy Schaefer, Mildred Kritsch and Edna Kritsch will leave Friday for a visit in New York city. Mr. and Mrs. J. c. Chrisman and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Seitz, St. Louis, and Miss Gladys Gates, Birmingham, Ala., are the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. MacDonald, 639 North Riley avenue. fete bride-elect AT BRIDGE PARTY Miss Jean Schad, who will be married to John T. Thatcher, July 7. was entertained at a bridge party and personal shower Wednesday night by Miss Eleanor Egan, 327 North Arsenal avenue. Gifts were presented to the bride-elect in a rain barrel, decorated in blue and mauve, the bridal colors. Guests included Misses Miriam Schad, Anita Brownlee, Isabel Early, Mary Egan, Dorothy Stoelting, Elsie Calvin and Ruby Robertson. NEWLYWEDS TO BE ENTERTAINED Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Hornbrook, 3257 North Pennsylvania street, will entertain at dinner tonight at the Indianapolis Country Club for Mr. and Mrs. Reginald W. Garstang, who were recently married. The table will be decorated with summer flowers. Following dinner, tables will be arranged for bridge. Plans Charity Dance Arrangements have been completed for the charity dance to be held by the Daughters of Isabelle tonight at the Christian Park Community house. Miss Gertrude Murphy is in charge of general arrangements. The dance i§ being sponsored by the study club unit of the Daughters of Isabella-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

fringed peasant linens . . . throw in a breeze ... and appetites are" whetted right away. Colored Dishes Striking Os course colored service dishes go along with all this, too. Willow ware such as we’ve sketched ... or maybe plain-colored pottery. Or polka dots to pop out at you as you eat to the bottom of your plate. We’ve seen French Quimper ware with cheerful peasant figures, looking very much at home in such a picnicky atmosphere, too. When your china gets really riotous with color, it’s better to have a plain cloth . . . natural crash or the new Deruta linen mats that are inexpensive these days. Iced tea tastes even better in a ruby red goblet . . . and entirely different from cobalt blue. These colors often fit in very pleasantly with peasant linens and brightcolored china. The new painted glassware . . . with rings or flowers or clever cartoons ... make iced drinks more interesting too. Knife Handles Colored And lots of smart hostesses believe in doing the thing up brown ... or more likely red or blue . . . by using colored handled knives and forks. In fact, folks who really go in for eating outdoors as a regular thing, have special tables too. With stainproof finishes that can’t be spoiled by hot dishes. Or maybe one of those glass top refectory tables. This has a stretcher shaped to hold a pot of flowers. You can look right down and admire the flowers as you eat. And then no centerpiece is needed. For the usual type of table, however, there are all sorts of ways to arrange a different-looking centerpiece. If you'd like to know about them, send the coupon below.

AMOS PARRISH (The INDIANAPOLIS TIMES) N. Y FASHION BUREAU, 500 FIFTH AVE., N. Y. Please send your free bulletin on Color Schemes for Blouse and Skirt Costumes. I enclose stamped, addressed envelope. NAME ST CITY STATE

(Copyright. 1932. bv Amos Parrish) Next: Fashion’s sports shoes keep your mind on the ball.

ers. Preceding the entrance of the bridal party Miss Phyllis Hattern, organist, played ‘‘At Dawijing,” and accompanied Miss Susanne Hume, who sang ‘‘l Love You Truly” and “Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life.” Wore Organdy Gown The bride wore ft gown of embroidered white organdy, designed period style, and carried white roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Sarah Beattie was her sister’s only attendant. She wore green embroidered organdy, and carried pink rosebuds. Jan.es F. Miller Jr., was best man for his brother. Ushers were Harold Perry and Hartz Perry. A reception at the Miller home followed the ceremony. The refectory table was centered with a wedding cake, and lighted with white tapers. Leave for Lakes After the reception Mr. and Mrs. Miller left for a ten days’ wedding trip to the northern Indiana lakes. They will be at home in Indianapolis. Mrs. Miller’s traveling ensemble was of brown crepe, with white accessories. The bride is a graduate of the Butler university college of education, and a member of Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority. Mr. Miller attended Indiana university, and is a member of Sigma Pi and Phi Beta Sigma fraternities.

Daily Recipe RICE AND ONION SOUP 2 tablespoons broken rice 1-2 teaspoon salt 1 onion (cut in half) 2 cups milk (evaporated, fresh or dried 1 -4 cup salt pork cut in small pieces Wash the rice and sprinkle slowly into the boilfhg salted water, add the onion and ccok until the rice is tender. Brown the pork until crisp, remove from the fat. Mix all these ingredients except the pork with the milk and heat the mixture. When hot, remove the onion, add the crisped salt pork and serve.

Bride-Elect to Be Feted at Luncheon Miss Edythe McCoy and Cosette Scholl are to be hostesses at a luncheon-bridge in the Propylaeum today, in honor of Miss Agnes Kalleen, whose marriage to Jacob Guire Wilcox is to be an event of Saturday. The bridal colors, pink and blue, are to be used in decorating. Covers are to be laid for the following: Mrs. Walker Knotts, Misses Marcella Moore, Charlotte Twitty, Betty Kalleen and Nancy Kalleen, Betty Jane Barrett, Delight Morrison, Jacquelin McKee and Ruth Peterson. Miss Kalleen and Mr. Wilcox will be honored by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James L. Kalleen, 3841 Washington boulevard, at a bridal dinner to be given Friday night. Mr. Wilcox's parents are Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Wilcox, 2504 North Talbot street. Miss McCoy and Miss Scholl are to be bridesmaids at the wedding, which will be solemnized at 8:30 Saturday night at the First Presbyterian church. Other attendants chosen by Miss Kalleen include her sister, Nancy, as maid of honor, and her other sister, Betty, and Miss McKee of Haddonville, N. J., as the other bridesmaids. The party today and the bridal dinner will be the last of a series of prenuptial events honoring Miss Kalleen, which have been given by her friends, and friends of her family.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- AGO tern No. O 6 Size Street City State Name

DRESS FOR GOLF, TENNIS OR GENERAL WEAR Checks prove a favorite for resort. Today’s model is a yellow linen printed in brown. The attractive collar is plain yellow linen. The bow tie tones with the brown of the print, and is crepe silk. The panel front is decidedly length giving. It makes this youthful model suited for miss or matron. Style No. 462 is designed for sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 3S, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 36 requires 31s yards of 39-inch material with Vi yard of 35-inch contrasting. Another smart scheme is pale blue pique printed in white spots. Make the collar of plain white pique. The belt can be of self-fabric or with a blue leather belt. Our Summer Fashion Magazine will help you economize. Price of the book, 10 cents. Price of pattern, 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. ARTHUR C. COPE IS GIVEN FELLOWSHIP Mrs. E. C. Cope is home after visiting her son, Arthur C. Cope and Mrs. Cope at Madison, Wis. Mr. Cope, a Butler graduate, who received his doctor of philosophy degree in chemistry from the University of Wisconsin last week, has been awarded a national research fellowship in organic chemistry at Harvard university.

Try Lydia E, Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound :ws:v. T too “Worn-Out” to go Another date broken . . . Couldn’t stay on her feet a minute longer! Lydia E. Plnkbam’g Vegetable Compound always relieves T>erlodic pain. Try It

On the Right Side

m llf ’Ay‘ y -% &88KH&S&8& jhbsb

—(Hat bv Lilly Dacfie.) Call it a beret or call it a turban, and you'll be right both times. Os white-ribbed transparent velvet, this interesting model has a rolled brim that comes down low on the right side. A chic bow of the same material trims it. ,

Bishop and Mrs. Edgar Blake Will Be Honored at Dinner

Bishop and Mrs. Edgar Blake, who will leave soon for residence in Detroit, will be honor guests tonight at a dinner to be given by George J. Marott in the Marott ballroom. More than a hundred and fifty people prominent in the religious, social and business life of the city will attend. The ballroom will be decorated withj palms, ferns and summer flow-

Bridge Party Arranged for Recent Bride

Mrs. Garth Marine and Mrs. Robert Armer are to entertain this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Marine, 3777 North Meridian street, with a bridge party and kitchen shower in honor of Mrs. Edward Pauley. Mrs. Pauley was Miss Katherine Reagan before her recent marriage. A color scheme of pink and blue is to predominate in the decorations, which are to consist mostly of summer flowers. Other guests are to bfe: Mesdames Robert Orbison, Washington, D. C.; Cranston Mugg, William Bockstahier, Robert Nipper, Earl Thurber, Howard Kiser, Eugene E. Whitehall, Stanley Allen, Frank Langsenkamp Jr„ Miss Dorothy Hice and Miss Dorothy Pierce.

Card Parties

The Altar society of Sacred Heart church will entertain with its monthly card party Friday night in St. Cecelia clubrooms. All games will be played. Card pasty, sponsored by the ladies’ auxiliary, Ancient Order of Hibernians No. 10. which was to have been held Friday, has been postponed until Friday night, July 15. Mrs. Charles Zeigler is chairman. Capitol City Circle 6, United Ancinet Order of Druids, will give a benefit card party tonight at the Druids hall, 29 South Delaware street. Mrs. Jennie Laux is in charge. MRS. BILYEU NEW HEAD OF AUXILIARY Mrs. Francis Bilyeu was installed as president of the past president's council of Catherine Merrill Tent, Daughters of Union veterans of Civil war, at a luncheon meeting Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Andrew Underwood, 627 Stevens street. Brothers who took office are Mrs. Hattie M. Hopkins, vice-president; Mrs. Nellie McGinnis, secretary, and Mrs. May Mclntyre, treasurer. Mrs. Effie Rogers is the retiring president.

HOLLYWOOD ‘ p p" $2-50 Complete NO EXTRA CHARGE 25c w:::. r 25c ji.oo Part. TIF *3.00 Alvetta Marla 95.50

ers. The guest table will be arranged with pink roses and delphinium with pink and blue candles in silver candelabra. At this table with Bishop and Mrs. Blake will be: Dr. and Mrs. O. W. Filer, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mavr Jr.. Dr. and Mrs. William Scott Athearn. Mr. and Mrs. William L. Taylor. Dr. and Mrs. Jean Milner. Mrs. Samuel Cornell Carev. Mrs. J. M. Dalrymnle. Dr. and Mrs. John G. Benson. Mrs. Carolyn Atherton and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur V. Brown. The invocation will be pronounced by Dr. Fifer. Mr. Marott will act as toastmaster. Several guests will give responses. Letters will be read from Colonel Charles Carlisle and Milo H. Stuart. The Marott trio will play in the ballroom for the occasion. Out-of-town guests at the dinner will include: Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Blake Jr.. Gary; Dr. G. Bromlev Oxnam, president of DePauw university and Mrs. Oxnam, Greencastle: Mrs. Thomas M. McConnell, Evanston. III.:. Gerald Bruce Hamilton. Los Angeles: Judge and Mrs. Benner Jones, Jackson. O.: Mrs. J. Ross Stevenson. Princeton. N. J.; Louis A. Bacon and Miss Honoria Bacon, Greenwich. Conn.: Miss Katherine Friel. Nashville. Tenn.. and Mrs. Helen Shimer. Plainfield.

RETIRING QUEEN

Miss Louise Hollingsworth Miss Louise Hollingsworth is retiring queen of Job’s Daughters, Bethel 4, which is to hold installation of new officers at 8 tonight at Castle' hall, 230 East Ohio street.

Mg 1 AM E SPECIAL PRICE 75 DURING JULY # \J

.JUNE 30, 1932

Vote League Members to Meet July 7 A joint meeting of the state legi lative committee and cxecutlV# board of the Indiana League of Women Voters has been called for Thursday, July 7, when activities during the special session of the Indiana general assembly will b mapped. Members of the legislative steering committee, the general legislative committee and the executive board will attend the opening session. Two members of the organization probably will be present at every session to watch the progress of legislation backed by the league. The work of the league is being concentrated on reduction of public expenditures which is in line with the purpose of the special session. The group also is interested in backing the lame duck amendment should it come before the meeting. A report was sent to all leagues this week, pointing out the provisions of the amendment and reasons for supporting it. The organization's attitude toward various proposals for relief of the tax burden also was expressed in the report. The last meeting of the local steering committee will be held Wednesday morning when the legislative program will be reviewed. Bride-Elect Is Honored at Bridge Party Miss Pauline E. Seiner, whosa marriage to Roose E. Arvin, Logansport, will take place Saturday, was honored at a bridge party and miscellaneous shower given Wednesday night by her sister, Mrs. Ralph A. Shinkle, at the home of her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth H. Seiner, 809 Woodlawn avenue. 1 ' Garden flowers were arranged about he house tr carry out the bridal colors, blue and pink. Guests included: Mesdames Louise Adams. Gayle Arvin. Mary Ashamy. Louise Barton. Mary Eijner. Patricia Hilton. Grace Krohl. Nelli* Ouinlan. Lacy Walters. Misses Clare Mae Barrett. Eva Brown. Lula Crane. Genevieve Crawford. Dorothy Davis. Thelma Eads. Catherine Finnerman. Margaret Gansman. Rosamund Gardner. Gladvs Gieseke. Ger. aldine Gibson. Lois Hudson. Mary Evelyn McFall. Stella Menke. Evelyn Nordloh, Alice and Anna O'Donnell, Antoinette Siener. Marie Siener. Madeline Siener. Marie Siener. Leafv Stiles and Evelyn Wolfe. Riley Hospital Children to Be Party Guests Children at Riley hospital will be entertained with a. fireworks display Monday night, presented by the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild. The Guild entertains annually with the display on the Fourth of July. Mrs. Charles Hogate. chairman of the hospital committee, is in charge of -plans in the absence of the president, Mrs. J. F. Ward. The public is invited to watch the display. The children who are able to walk or be moved in wheel chairs will witness the display from the hospital lawn. The less fortunate ones will be taken to the windows of the hospital. Plans for observation of the Fourth at the hospital sponsored by the guild also include the placing of red, white and blue balloons and patriotically decorated napkins on the children's breakfast trays in the morning. At 10, all those who are able will be brought by the guild to the Circle theater, where they will be the guests of the Photo Indorsers for a special picture and program to be presented there. Arrangements for the observation were made at a meeting of the Riley Guild Tuesday. At this meeting, clothing for the children confined at the hospital during the summer was collected, and delivered to the wards. MRS. SCHWANINGER ’ HONORED AT PARTY. Mrs. Charles E. Sehwaninger, formerly Miss Jessie Wilson, was entertained Wednesday night at a bridge party and personal shower, giveji by Miss Mildred Nordloh. 406 North Riley avenue. The guests included Misses Elizabeth Crowe. Minnie Singer, Ruth Hall. Jennie Shepper. Marjorie Moore, Thelma Alston and Evelyn Nordloh and Mrs. Gene Woodfin. The hostess was assisted by her mother Mrs. E, C. Nordloh.