Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 85, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 August 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Phi Betas to Attend City Party A garden party for members of Upsilon chapter, Phi Beta, national honorary dramatic and musical sorority of Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, will be given Sunday afternoon at the home of Miss Martha Plttinger. Members may invite guests. • A program in charge of Miss Alberta Speicher will be presented. It will include a marionette show by Miss Maxine McKay and Harry Fowler, and readings by Miss Bernice Van Sickle. Special guests will include: Mcsdamex L. H. Millikan. Ruth Gentry Edwards, Park A. Cooling. H W. Rliodeham*l. Robert Ferriday, W. D. Long, Victor Hlntze, Julian Fix. Arthur Madison, G 8 Foederer. Frank Weimer, Finley Wright, Albert Fcssler, Walter Treanor, Herbert Adkinson, Chic Jackson, Gerald Hyde. Carl Lieber. Lois Volkert, Fred Pettijohn; and Misses Helen Coffey, Ruth Bradford, El.-.le Hancock. Marietta Coval, Katherine Budd, Gwendolyn Schort, Janet Morris, Irene Bishop, Myrna Celete, Conauelo Couchman. Betty Likely, Elsie Adams, C. Mary DeSchlpper. Hortense Guthrie, Delia Vanderberg. Thelma Dyklna. Emily Mae Johnson, Mary Louise Minnick, Marian Green, Marie Bhaner, Ann Spears, Fanchon Fattig, Eleanor McCollum, Helen I.esher, Martha Pettijohn and Betty McFadden. Members of the chapter were entertained at a pajama-bridge party given Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Thomas Nelson. 1117 College avenue. H. A. C. to Give Special Roof Garden Fetes Hoosier Athletic Club will entertain with special roof garden parties for members and guests on Saturday nights, Aug. 20 and 27. It previously was announced that no more dances would be held this summer. Hosts and hostesses will be Messrs, and Mcsdames J. Edward Clemens, Carl Patterson, Walter Dolk, L. H. Riggs, W. E. Cleveland and Mr. Walter Lauritzen. Otto , Ross is chairman of the entertainment committee for the club. Following these two dances, the ballroom will be closed for redecorating and alterations until the opening of the fall and winter season, Saturday night, Sept. 17. Linen Shower to Be Held for Recent Bride Miss Phyllis Thorpe, 26 North Irvington avenue, will be hostess tonight at a linen shower to be given by the Alpha chapter of Pi Sigma Tau sorority in honor of Mrs. H. J. Sering, who was Miss Shirley Bartlett before her marriage on July 9. Appointments and decorations I will be in the sorority colors of orchid and green. Mrs. Sering is a member of the chapter. Guests will be: Misses Lois Buchanan, Mary Branham, Margaret Arnold, Mary Quigley, Lela Ottensmyer, Mae Bannacher, Marifrancea Smith, Jerry Dorman, Jean O'Brien, Margaret Bridge, Juanita Carmichael, Grace Danner, Ernestine Bledsoe and Ruth Bryant.

Personals

Dr. and Mrs. William Campbell Hall and children have returned from Wequetonsing, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Isaacs, 3630 North Meridain street, will leave Saturday for a two weeks’ visit in Wisconsin. Mrs. Isaacs formerly lived in Milwaukee, where they will visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Ritz. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Forry, 4401 North Meridian street, will spend the remainder of the summer at their summer home at Roaring Brook, Mich. Miss Ernestine Hubbard is the guest of Miss Geraldine Johnson at Richmond. EPWORTH LEAGUE SPONSORING FETE A lawn fete will be given Friday by the Broadway M. E. church Epworth League at Fall Creek boulevard and Broadway. The social service department, headed by Mrs. Charles Coy is sponsoring the event. The proceeds will be applied to the Methodist hospital pledge. Mrs. George E. Hoagland Jr. is chairman. Entertainment and music will be provided by the Darnell Stompers. Dallas Pierce will have charge of a "country store.’’ TRAVEL-STUDY TO OPEN CLUB YEAR The International Travel-Study Club, Inc., will hold its first meeting of the club year at 8 Tuesday night in the Lincoln. Mrs. J. W. Thornburgh, acting president, requests all presidents or their delegates to be present. Princess Mary chapter gave the second of a series of swimming parties recently at the Hcosier Athletic Club. Dinner and bridge followed. Miss Edith Allmeroth, hostess, was assisted by Mrs. D. V. S. Glubka, president of the chapter. . Plan Afternoon Meeting Prospect auxiliary, Order of the Eastern Star, will have an afternoon meeting at 2 Friday at the Masonic temple, State and Prospect streets. Sorority to Entertain Beta chapter of Delta Tau Omega sorority will entertain at the Antlers Friday with a miscellaneous shower for Mrs. Lawrence Klepper. formerly Miss Dorothy Langer. Lawn Fetes Planned Lawn fetes scheduled on Wednesday night by the St. Paul Episcopal church and the Carrollton Avenue Reformed church were postponed until tonight because of rain. Marys to Hold Party Annual reunion of the Marys will be held Thursday, Aug. 25, at Broad Ripple park.

MAN Ntltf^MOltALS ffivßy JAN-& Jordan yV)

IF you’re troubled about the modern viewpoint, write to Jane Jordan, who will help you keep your thoughts straight. Your letters are strictly confidential and she will leave out personal details on request. Dear Jane Jordan—We are a young married couple with a darling baby, very much in love with each other. There never has been any trouble In our home life, and my husband Is kind and good to me. However, there 1* one vital question upon which we disagree We always are happy together until it is brought up. Mv husband claims no one woman is enough for any man. and vice versa and lives his life accordingly. He expects me to live mine anyway I see fit. He is not Jealous nor does he expect me to be. I love him so much that I would feel j ~ that, love debased hhe Admits and lowered were I , to accept relationship I'assir\n for with another man, or men. He feels Othpr \fnn that anything he VMlier -ien may do can not in the slighest affect his love and devotion for me. I can understand how he might become infatuated with another woman. I mvself have been terribly Infatuated with others since my marriage, but I felt it would have lowered my love for my husband, to say nothing of my self-respect, to be more than a friend. My husband, however, has had one affair that I know ot It nearly killed me. for I didn't dream he was like that. He finally dropped her. He is extremely good looking and has loads °i *ex appeal, and I know now the womTo Is illit-i<r T never ' vlll ] *t IS Billing alone. He says he IT . never will pursue a Her Love woman, but if a girl throws herself around cast her aside. hIS ncck hc wUI not can't live all my life with him and i°f V th him J V. st tbP sam c. knowing he is one H ul'fa-modcrns, taking Tiis love as and only. 1 hlm ' 1 want 10 bp his one wo l uld*rii t e hat A i i?. ti j ne i . m J > ' bat , iencp and love would d.r. Already It is making me mean and suspicious. I can’t trust him I can t ?. r ™nd that he live his life the way I think is right, his life is his own. „ “H? , not bl) nd to the way conditions * know very few husbands are true hnH h i r , wivps ' J* Just that my hus{rank and toonest about it, while Ihn°T h S r 8 i ars and h vpocrites. What sha,. I do to find peace of mind? CLAIRE, Dear Clair—There is nothing ul-tra-modern about your husband, unless it is his honesty. Monogamy never has been a reality except among a. minority of individuals. Progress has made monogamy the law, but it never has been able to make it the custom. The man who is honest enough to

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- eQ 1 tern No. J J I Size Street City State Name

DRESS WITH CAPE NECKLINE This dress is pretty in deep blue and white linen print? The binds tone with the blue, as does the leather belt. The butonniere is blue and white. You can use white crinkle crepe tub silks, pale blue silk pique, yellow cotton mesh and striped shirting silk are among the new favorites. Style No. 591 is designed for sizes 14, 16. 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3 s s yards 35-inch. Our Summer Fashion Magazine will help you economize. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Wrap coin carefully.

A. Day’s Menu Breakfast — Pears, cereal, cream, toasted bacon and tomato sandwiches, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Open cottage cheese sandwiches. apple meringue, egg lemonade. Dinner — Mixed grill of lamb kidney chop 6. crisp broiled bacon and eggplant, creamed kohlrabi, cress and radish salad with French dressing, chilled rice pudding, milk, coffee.

tell his wife about his extra-mari-tal adventures accomplishes nothing but the unhappiness of his wife. That is why most of them lie. Please understand that I am not defending men for their love of forbidden fruit. I am speaking of facts, not ethics. If you divorce your husband in the hope of finding a man who is naturally monogamous, the chances are against your success. Many a man who is faithful to his wife until death isn’t half Spoiled for as pleasant to live ~, , with as the hus- More Stolid band who cheats Male Type a little on the side. Life with such a charming personality probably has spoiled you for a more solid type. If you are to preserve your happiness in marriage, which I can see is far above the average, you must stop stressing the letter of the law and concentrate on the spirit. Try to be so satisfactory to your husband that he will not want any woman but you. When hc falls from grace, try to realize that the extra woman is a mere biological incident in his life, not connected with love at all. Fidelity never can be promised. It is valuable only when it comes without conscious exertion. If outwardly your husband overcomes a temptation while he is still filled with the desire for the woman, has he really avoided adultery? Not according t o th e \ great Christian Bot h Break teacher, who said c . f that whosoever vbpiilt 01 lusteth after a Life’s Law woman in his heart already has committed adultery! Spiritually speaking, there is not much differece between your husband's conduct and your own. You admit to an infatuation for other men while you still were in love with your husband, and you understand how such a thing can happen. You kept the letter of the law. He did not. But both of you broke the spirit of it, which is the only thing worth preserving! Robert Louis Stevenson once referred to marriage as a kind of friendship sanctioned by the police. Those who trust only compulsion to keep their partners in line have gained nothing of any value. That is why I tell you to turn your thoughts away from the letter “which killeth” and strive only for the spirit which “giveth life.” Your Pride, In other words, XT * t pay no attention fNot l.<ove, to your husbands Is Injured in and is cr e t ions. What is hurt when he is unfaithful,'your love or your pride? Would you really mind an occasional infidelity so much if you were quite certain no one else would ever find it out and pity you? Every time you are mean and suspicious you widen the rift between you and endanger your happiness. Never make a bad matter worse by nagging a man for something you can’t possibly cure by that method. Be more subtle in your attack against the enemy by being so charming and so satisfactory that gradually the desire for outside adventure falls away, leaving you the only woman in his life of w'hose sympathetic understanding he feels absolutely certain.

Card Parties

Ladies Society, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, will entertain with cards at 8:30 tonight at McClain hall, White street and State avenue. RICHMANNS TO BE HOSTS TO VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Richmann and daughter, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Ramier, 26 South Arlington avenue, will have as their guests over the week-end Mrs. H. C. Gellatly and daughter, Miss Pauline Gellatly, Lincoln, Neb., formerly of Indianapolis. They will receive informally in their honor from 3 to 6 Sunday afternoon at their home. There are no invitations. DINSMORE FAMILY TO HOLD REUNION The twenty-seventh annual Dins-; more reunion will be held Sunday | at the country heme of Edward Wiley, near New Brunswick, in Boone county. Noble Dinsmore is president. Included in the afternoon entertainment will be Edward and Le Roy New, radio artists. L UNCHEON-BRIDGE GIVEN FOR VISITOR Mrs. J. Edward Keller entertained 'today with a luncheon-bridge at the Marott for Mrs. H L. Garrison of Chicago. Mrs. Garrison is the house guest of Dr. and Mrs. H. L. Whisler of the Marott. I’. I!'. C. A. TO HOLD 'OH-LYMPICS ’ FETE An “Oh-Limpics” party will be given by the Y. W. C. A. from 7:30 to 9 Friday night for the regular swimmers and their friends. The party to be a “take-off” on the Olympics, and will include form swimming and comic events- Miss Mildred Alyce Oland is chairman. Reunion to Be Held Ninth annual reunion of the Barnard family will be held Sunday at Riley Memorial park in Greenfield.

A 35c Value for QB* .. A lb. can wonderful BANQUET TEA /w " ftgg# and one 3 or. jar U U % MeCORMICK’S f Pure Prepared MUSTARD Schnull & Cos., Distributors

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Bride-to-Be Entertained at Shower Mrs. J. Herbert Kinney entertained this afternoon with a tea and rose glass shower in honor of her sister-in-law, Miss Mary Esther Kinney, whose marriage to Robert Howard Patterson will take place late in September. Assisting the hostess were the Misses Clara L. Pontius and Marian Miller, who poured. Other guests were: Mesdames David J. Kinney. John D. Kir.ney. Frank Mil.er, James M. Miller. Edward O. Collyear. Charles Hudson. Paul H. Pontius. Bessie Pontius. Martha Scheffel. C, C. Timmons and Misses Ethel Miller •tane and Anne Gilgour. Others to entertain for the brideelect are Mrs. Albert Collyear, who will give a bridge party on Thursday night, Aug. 25, and Miss Marian Miller, who will be hostess at a tea on Aug. 29. Miss Kathryn L. Ellwanger will entertain members of Tau Delta sorority, Sept. 1, with a shower for Miss Kinney, one of the charter members. Bride-Elect to Be Honored at Shower-Party Mrs. Wilbur Phillips will entertain tonight with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower at the home of her mother, Mrs. Clarence E. Jackson, 334 North Colorado avenue, in honor of Miss Helen Ratliff, a bride-elect. Miss Ratliff’s marriage to Lloyd H. Jackson, the hostess’ brother, will take place Aug. 31. Mrs. Phillips will be assisted by her mother. Appointments will be in the bridal colors, blue and yellow. Guests with Miss Ratliff and her mother, Mrs. Harlan S. Ratliff, 2327 Broadway, will be: Mesdames Jack Baker, Robert Berner, Loren Brinker, Ray Close. P. E. Cox. Chine Eddy, Otto Hanna. Walter Hotn, Ed King, Clarence Kittle, Roscoe Ludlow, Graydon Marlow. Horace Matthews, James McHaffey, John Mills, Franklin Russell, J. C. Reynolds, Clem Parish, Fred Richards, Bynum Smith. T. A. Smith, and Harry Wiesehahn. Mrs. Phillips will be the matron of honor at the wedding, which will take place at the First Evangelical Lutheran church. August Bride Is Honored at Bridge-Shower . Mrs. William S. Gansberg entertained with a luncheon-bridge and miscellaneous shower today at her home, 2468 North Meridian street, in honor of her sister, Mrs. Fred E. Zuhlke, who was Miss Louise Wantz before her marriage Aug. 6. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Aloyse Wantz, 2808 South Meridian street. A color scheme of green and gold was carried out in the appointments. Guests included: Mesdames Wantz, Joseph Colbert, Robert Ahern, William H. Polk, Oscar Lentz, Joseph Kohlberg, Stanley Johnson, Frank McEvoy, George Pugh, Aloyse Bodebreider, Misses Lucille Costella and Rosemary Ahern. CATHOLIC GIRLS’ CAMP IS CLOSED The second period of the Junior Catholic Daughters of America annual camp at McCormick’s Creek state park closed Sunday with the presentation of awards. Recognition was given for the following: Camp spirit, Betty Hindel, first, and Rita Walpole, second; tennis tournament, Margaret Rohr and Margaret Barragry, and swimming meet, Ruth Patterson, • first, and Margaret Rohr, second. Activities the closing week were a joint camp fire with the Girl Scouts of Terre Haute, also in camp at McCormick’s Creek, and a pageant, ‘■The Childhood of Hiawatha,” directed by Miss Alice Jane Hessler. GIVES BRIDGE FETE FOR CITY VISITOR Mrs. C. B. Spellman. 721 North Drexel avenue, entertained today with a luncheon bridge in honor of her house guest, Miss Lorena Huston. of New York. Mrs. Spellman was assisted by her daughter, Mrs. Anthony Hassman, and Miss Edith Clary. Other guests were Mesdames L. P. Grisby, Layman Wiese, August Newman, George Logan and the latter’s house guest, Mrs. Amelia Kriegh, of Chicago. , ACTORS’ GUILD TO HOLD LAWN PICNIC Actors’ and Workers’ Guild of the Civic theater will hold its opening meeting tonight, in the form of a picnic to be held at 6 on the lawn at the home of Miss -Mary Louise Minnick, 7701 North Pennsylvania street. Miss Minnick is entertainment chairman for the guild.* Under the direction of Mrs. Oscar Baur, the guild is planning an active year. The program tonight will be a group of dramatic presentations, directed by Hale Mac Keen, director of the theater. Carrs to Hold Reunion Descendants of George Carr will hold its annual reunion Sunday at Garfield park. A dinner will be served near the shelter house. Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Carr of Kokomo is president and Mrs. Hazel Steelman of Danville, secretary.

WHA T’S IN FASHION—

NEW YORK, Aug. 18.—The rich wine reds worn by stately dowagers of the ’9o’s—the clear baby blues beloved by the unsophisticated Victorian deb —and the mauve tints that gave their name to the decade .... ghosts of the past, they’ll be haunting the highways and byways of fashion again this fall. Victorian colors. They’re the newest color news. Not the most important colors, to be sure ... for black and the browns hold uncontested top places. But the Victorian shades are the more unusual colors . . . more distinctive. And if they’re becoming and fit into your ensembled wardrobe plans, you’ll enjoy wearing them because they’re different. Black Is Fashionable You can’t go wrong on black for your new coat ... if it’s .becoming. It’s fashionable. It goes with many dress colors. Brown is practical, too. And smart. The clear, dark browns go best with the most dresses. But the newest browns has a reddish tinge (especially effective if your hair is red or auburn.) And many, even in this Washington bicentennial year, will join the red coats. For red is the gay coat note for fall . . . some with a brownish cast and some in the Victorian wines. Like coats, black and brown dresses hold first fashion place. Again because they’re practical and easy to wear. And you’ll see more red browns in dresses than in coats. Because this dress will go with the dark brown coat, but the red-brown coat can’t be harmonized with so many color dresses. Claret and Burgundy Claret red is anew dress shade ... a bright, clear tone with a slightly purple cast. (Victorian again.) It’s grand under a dark coat. Burgundy reds, too. Smart even if you don’t carry a “repeal” sign on your automobile. Red plus some brown makes a new rust shade, different from the coppery rust of last season. And one of the new rusts might almost be called mahogany. Bright Green Favored Bright green is another fine dress color if your coat is black or dark brown. And for formal afternoon wear a lighter, yellow-green looks just as well with the same coat. It’s in the evening you find the baby blues, mauves and mauve pink that your mother or grandmother will remember wearing. Or, if you want to be very sophisticated, choose bright flame red, wine, bright blue or dark brown for your formal affairs. But, after all, white is the safest color . . . the most practical . . . and the most in fashion. Do these new colors sound as though they’d be hard to ensemble harmoniously? We’ll make it easy for you. Send the coupon, and a chart showing what color dresses to wear with different color coats will be sent you, free.

iMOS PARRISH ’HE INDIANAPOLIS FASHION tUREAU 500 FIFTH AVE., N. Y. ’lease send your free chart on “Enembled Coat and Dress Colors.” I •ncolse stamped, addressed return iivelope. SAME STREET 2XTY STATE

(Copyright, 1932 by Amos Parrish) Next: Your first fall dress. BIR THDA Y~PARTY TO BE IN GARDEN Mrs. E. Hoyt Young, 5724 Winthrop avenue, will entertain tonight with a garden party honoring the seventeenth birthday anniversary of her daughter, Miss Doris Young. Mrs. Young will be assisted by Mrs. A. E. Lowry. Guests will be: Misses Rachel Cartwright, Betty Belle Lowry, Mary Frances Birdsong, Joan Miller, Mary Lee Richter. Madeline Rardon and Carolyn Hawekotte and Messrs. William Ashley Lowry, Charles Edward Morrison. John Simpson, Carl Grumann, Gene Potter, Phillip Taylor, Robert Muenster and Kenneth Hill. The entertainment will be bridge and dancing.

Daily Recipe MAGIC BLACKBERRY PIE 29 Vanilla Wafers 1 can sweetened condensed milk 1-If. cup lemon juice 1 cup blackberries 1-2 cup cream 2 tablespoons powdered sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla Roll 22 vanilla wafers fine and place in layer on bottom of pie plate. Cut 7 whole vanilla wafers in halves and stand up around the sides of the pie plate. Blend together condensed milk, lemon juice. Fold in blackberries. Pour into wafer lined pie plate. Whip cream and mix with sugar and vanilla and spread on top of blackberry filling. Six portions. Preparation, 12 minutes.

BRING THIS COUPON n is on Good for A PERMANENT WAVE every day in the week and no Monday, Wednesday and Friday Nights. central beacty college 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg. Lincoln (M3* Monday Is Free Finger Wave Day

Furniture—Rugs Draperies Sander & Recker Furniture Cos. MERIDIAN AT MARYLAND

Fall Colors Strike New Note

Directed by AMOS PARRISH

j-’ ■ ■ gx / Y x • i / V- V, - 4 . - .-V' .. .. •••'' ! *

Bride-to-Be to Be Honored at Shower Tonight

Miss Mary Lammert, 820 North Graham avenue, will entertain tonight at her home with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Marie Ruehl, whose marriage to Kenneth G. Swengel will take place Aug. 23. at the Zion Evangelical church. Miss Lammert will be one of the bridesmaids. Streamers in the bridal colors of pink, green, peach and blue will form an arch over the serving table, to be centered with a bowl of Aaron Ward roses. The guests will include : Mesdames Paul Spencer, Lawrence Kloepper, and Misses Kern Porter, Mary Anderson. Mildred Colvin. Ruth Kremer, Margaret Swengel, Irma Buhnshew, Mar-

T anight! Entire Store Open Til! 9 P. M. Big 3-Day Event Free Bus Service Free Parking Extra Special Values Throughout the Store SEARS. ROEBUCK and CQ

A handy way to take the /V pause that refreshes \ home with you ■Sn.-mUSS \ \/ Told in thi* little book, “ y *** j*** rrerfoß *ll social occasions— —' containing 122 pages with beautiful illuatraBUY six bottles of Coco-Cola from your dealer in this handy pack- | USE XHIS COUPON age and keep a few bottles ready in g your refrigerator. It always proves ■ Tf 5 E COCA_COLA J? 0 *’ a delightful part of home entertain- H , >or^ hA y^ N - v -y Atlanta, f-*. ing. Surprise your own appetite and delight your friends by serving it ■ book, 'WkeYomEtertain'l, 7 Id* Bailer Alb* with food. ■ THE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. J t INDIANAPOLIS ■ Addra “- MW* mm BHHMHmMMimdi

caret Muesing. Betty Buenting. Mary Louise Roesener, Mary Louise Cooperider. Gertrude Heede. Betty Brown and Helen Peck. Miss Kremer will entertain with a linen shower Friday.

Crisper! more nutritious —because SHOT FROM GUNS and Rice digest Boom go the guns! Like iF magic, hard little grains of (P iCa RH Cilia wheat and rice become super-crisp delicious Puffed ... fifaMra W[|iT WM Wheat and Puffed Rice! ( * Every food cell has been broken open. Every particle of food made completely di-gestible-richly nourishing. R emem ber, a single dish Serve Puffed Grains to with top milk and sugar, grown-ups and children for gives the food energy of a reakfast, lunch, supper, baked potato or lamb chop. Now “Twice-Crisped ”! Puffed Wheat-Puffed Rice

.'AUG. 18, 1932

Draft Plans for D. A. R. 1 State Parley Activities for the state meeting of the Daughters of the American Revolution, to be held in October, are being outlined by the hostess chapter, the Schuyler Colfax group of South Bend. More than 300 Daughters from over the state will attend the sessions. all of which will be held in the Oliver hotel. An outstanding guest will be th vice-president general of the D. A. R , Mrs. W. A. Pouch. New York, who will be one of the outstanding speakers. Mrs. Roscoe O'Byrne. Brookville, state regent, will preside. The arrangements are In the hands of Mrs. Raymond P. Shepcrd, regent of the South Bend chapter. She has appointed a number of committees from the state officers and members of other chapters to assist her. Chairmen of the auxiliary committee are: Credentials, Mrs. William H. Sehlo-ser, FiankUn: door, Mrs. C. E. Francis: banl quet, Mrs. Samuel Parker: decorating and flowers, Mrs. W. J. Learmonth; information, Mrs. Gertrude Chillas Hicks: platform, Mrs. C. A. Metz; pianist, Mrs, George Miller; transportation. Mrs W. H. Walker; publicity. Mrs. Henrv D Wilson. Delphi: reception, past regents of th chapter, and present officers, and printing, Mrs. B. J. Sanford. Other guests prominrnt in the D. A. R. will include Mrs. Henry B. Joy, recordingi secretary-general; Mrs. James B. Crank-Shaw. Ft, Wayne, vice-president-general from Indiana, and Mrs. James McDonald, state regent of Michigan. SHOWER IS GIVEN FOR RECENT BRIDE Mrs. John J. Riddle, a recen 1 - bride. was honored this afternoon at a personal shower and bridge party given by Mrs. Howard Kiser. 37 East Maple road. Mrs. Riddle was Miss Dorothy Cutshaw before her wedding. Guests with Mrs. Riddle were her mother, Mrs. Donald Cutshaw, and Mesdames Hale Dant. William B. While. Frank Roth Jr.. Allan L. Sparks and the Misses Elizabeth Camel!. Alice McMahon, Mary Caswell and Bernice Armstrong.