Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 108, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Program of City Club Completed Announcement of the program for the commg season of the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women's Club, is made by the program committee. There will be eighteen meetings during the winter and spring, beginning Oct. 6, with President's night. The program committee is composed of three sections, as follows: Section 1, Mrs. Nell C. Warren, chairman; Mrs. Bertha A. Dixon and Miss Mamie D. Larsh; Bection 2, Mrs. Marie M. Bowen, chairman; Mrs. Izona Shirley and Miss Forba McDaniel, and Section 3, Mrs. Margaret D. Marlowe, chairman; Mrs. Adah O. Frost and Miss Agne3 Cruse. The first section is in charge of the meetings from Oct. 6 to Dec. 15, inclusive; section two of the Dec. 29 to March 19 meetings, and section three of March 23 to June 1. The meetings will be held at 8 in the evening, at the Woman's Department club house. The program follows in detail: SECTION i Oct. 6 —Presidents' night. Dinner. S'3o. Loulws R. rora, ilrst vice-president, premtiing. Dinner music. Gertrude rree, pianist. Virginia Levenoerger. cello; Georgia Baumann, violinist. Soloist, Miss Jeanne Jackson. Responses lrom past presidents. '1 ne Ten-Year ODjective,” Mrs. Adah C\ Frost. state preside in. President’s message. Miss Lucv £. Osborn. Oct. 20—" Mysteries oi tnc Orient,” Professor John J. Haramv. Music, male quartet. Indiana Central college Nov. o—Frolic, stunts and style show. Music, Marv Ann Kullmer. violinist; Mrs. Geo. Kullmer. accompan.st. Dancing. Nov. 17—" Chinese Women Past and Present,” Dr. Amv Ling Chen. Soloist, Mis. Ruth Sterling JJeviu. Dec. I—" Dealing With Crime,” Frank P. Baker. Music, male uuartet. Butler College Glee Club. Franklin Tavlor, director. Dec. 15—Christmas party. Program by Technical high school bovs’ chorus j. R. Paxton, director. "Christmas Customs,” Mrs. Leriore Coffin Christmas carols, club membership. Mrs. Camille B. Fleig, leader SECTION IX Dec. 29—Holiday party. Cards. Jan. 12—Debate; Resolved. "Tnere Shall Be Equal Rights for Woman anu Men. Affirmative. Miss Mamie D. Larsh, Miss Theta M. Bvrkett. Miss Bess Robbins. Negative. Mrs. Nell C. Warren Miss Beulah Humphrey. Mrs. Florence K. Thacker. Jan. 28—" The Business of Art." Elmer E. Taflinger.* Music. Fine Art trio. Feb. 9 Grand opera. "Samson et Delilah” fSaint Saensi; Marv Traub Busch, contralto; Marv Noller at the piano. Feb. 23 —"Patriotism.” Paul V. McNutt. Patriotic songs. Vaughn Cornish. March 8-19—-Public relations. "Collect,” B- P. W. Glee Club. Speaker. Mrs. Bonnie K. Robertson, second national vice-presi-dent. "Indiana.” B. P, W. Glee Club. SECTION 111 March 23—“ The Biography of the Average Person.” Dr. John G. Benson, superintendent Methodist hospital. Music. Girls’ Concert Club. Technical high school. April 6 International relations. Speaker. Miss Lena Madesin Phillips. Soloist. Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs. April 20—Book review. Mrs. Katherine Turnev Garten. Xylophone. Miss Imogene Pearson. May 4—Club talent. Mrs. W. D. Long. Mrs. Camille Fleig. "Cuckoo and Sue.” May 18—" Indiana Tax Problems." .1. C. Hoffman. Music and monolog, Mrs. Richard C. Fielding. June I—Banquet. Installation of officers (speaker to be announcedi. Music, Indianapolis Business and Professional Women's Glee Club. Bride-Elect Is Entertained at Shower-Party Miss Flora Selig, whose marriage to Stanley Rammelsburg will take place at 1 Sunday in the Columbia Club, was entertained Tuesday night at a bridge party and personal shower given by Mrs. Max Selig at the Lockerbie. Pink and blue decorations were used. The hostess was assisted by Mtsdames Paul Scharffln and Arthur E. Rose. Guests with Miss Selig were: Mesdames Lee Greenburg, Herman Chalfie. Ben B. Blieden, David Sablosky, Harry Joseph, Archie Falcnder, Wililam B. Sebel, Leo Neuschotz, Sam Yaver, Joe Yaver, David Yaver. Sam Solotken, Sidney Weinstein, Jack Goldberg. Phillip Stepper, David B. Lipp. David Essel, Harry E.tcol, Sol Gold, Joseph Koor, Arthur E. Rose, Elmer Wqhlfeld, Jacob E. Weiss, Leo Selig, Paul Scharffin, Bessie Rothbard, Louis Selig, David Berman, Aaron Friedman, and the Misses Ann Hirsh, Lucia and Eleanor Wild, Etta Rammelsburg, Ruth Frand, Ida Solotken, Lillian Rothbard, Henrietta Rothbard. Lillian Kobv. Beatrice Mentser, Rae Davis, Frieda Selig. Ruth Wcisman and Pearl Goodman.

Personals

Gordon Stringer, 2451 Guilford avenue, has gone to Bloomington to enter Indiana university. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Malott Fletcher and son John, 26 Meridian place, will leave this week on a motor trip to Ashevillle, N. C. They also will tour the southern mountains before returning home. Mrs. Jesse J. Garrison. Hamilton. N. Y., will leave Thursday for her horna, after spending some time with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Fletcher Hodges, 3160 North Pennsylvania street. Mis3 Evelyn Mendenhall, daughter of Dr. Bnd Mrs. A. M. Mendenhall, 3304 Broadway, who returned recently from the University of Missouri summer session, has gone to Richmond to be society editor of the Richmond Palladium. Mrs. Bertha Bailey. 430 Massachusetts avenue, will be hostess at a card party to be given at 8:30 tonight by the drill team of the Indianapolis chapter. Women of the Moose. Mrs. Elizabeth Austin, 3514 East Washington street, will be hostess at a card and bunco party to be given at 2:30 today. Mrs. Robert Elliott of the Marott will return Thursday from Walloon Lake, Mich. Miss Helene Pleasance has left for Oberlin, 0., to be a student in the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert H. Pleasance, Marott. Visitors at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York are F. A. Butler and Miss Barbara Jane Butler, 4835 Central avenue, and Miss Sara Jane Marcellee.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Chilled melon, cereal, cream, creamed cottage ham with broiled tomatoes,'toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Corn fritters, mustard greens with lemon butter, apple crisp, milk, coffee. Dinner — Meat loaf, potatoes browned with meat, kohlrabi in cream sauce; carrot, celery and orange salad; elderberry pie, milk, coffee.

Campus Clothes Are Gay and Debonair

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—Lord and Taylor. A swagger coat of tweed to match a tweed suit gets along with the skirt as well as the jacket does. A knitted sweater, with a crew neck, and a felt hat make this ensemble at home at any sport event, on any campus.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- /? o/I tern, No. o^4 Size Street City State Name

624 i \

SPORT FROCKS

This little linen frock favors the smart wrapped arrangement at the front. It is carried out in smart blue and white print. The bone buttons match the fabric. The rolled collar, cuffs and belt are plain white, a most pleasing combination. Style No. 624 is designed for sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Si.ze 8 requires 1?* yards of 39-inch material with 4 yard of 35-inch con- ! trasting. The three-piece skirt is circular, j It is attached to the bodice, that j also cuts in three sections. Other attractive fabrics for its development are pique, wool crepe. I gingham and tweed-like cottons for j early fall and school wear. Our Fashion Magazine will help l you economize. Price, 10 cents. Price of pattern. 15 cents, in i stamps or coin (coin is preferred), j Wrap coin carefully. Miss Ruth R. Rowe of Terre Haute is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Heze Clark, 2005 North Delaware street.

BRING THIS COUPON j* • c i cn on Good for y **3” \ COMPLETE PERMANENT WAVE overv day in thy tvook and on Monday. Wednesday and Friday Nights. CENTRAL BEAUTY COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Yellow Bldg. Lincoln 0138 Monday Is Free Finger Wave I>ay

EVANS’ FOR ALL PURPOSES

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—Lord and Taylor. For campus wear, nothing is more ideal than a rough tweed suit, worn with an angora scarf that flaunts two long, wide ends. A beret hat completes the ensemble.

BY HELEN WELSHIMER NEA Service Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 14.—1f you are going to college, remember that the surface view counts for a great deal. You may have a nice disposition, and good intentions, but most people are near-sighted to first appearances. There is something gay and smart and debonair about the campus clothes this year. They are not sweet, or simple, or girlish. They Know their way about the campus. They don’f cost nearly as much as they did when the present seniors were freshmen, as you won’t have to spend much to pack a trunk. Clothes for classes and campus wear are more important than any other costumes. Asa basis for your wardrobe, a four-piece ensemble is splendid. It should include a skirt of ong of the new hardy tweeds, a sweater, a jacket, a beret hat and a regular hat, and a swagger coat. Several sweaters, with rolled-up sleeves, will add variety to this costume. nun BY all means have a sports frock of one of the new, soft woolens. A gay, audacious red, a wine that is so luscious it shines, a warm green, or any tan or brown in the autumn woods, will do. If it conforms to the color scheme of your ensemble, the same swagger coat and hats will be harmonious with it. You will need a, crinkly crepe frock for informal dress wear. See that the frock molds 1 your body, and that the sleeves are large and full. Capelet effects are So are bibs that protect you in front and tie with long streamers in the back. Wide collars make you demure. One velvet tea dance dress is indispensable. Choose one that has glamour. Choose a color that plays up to you—instead of one to which you play up—and choose matching velvet or suede slippers. If you choose a tea dance frock, with a cape or top that comes off, you will be able to use it for an evening gown, too. Let your evening frocks be as intriguingly feminine, yet as smart and simple, as possible. White is lovely. Black may make you appear to know just a little more than you want people to think you know. Evening slippers and bag and gloves and wrap are important. You will need a pair of clodhopper shoes for campus wear, and a pair of pumps that will do duty either with sports clothes or a silk frock that isn't too much of a dressed up affair. Heavy gloves for campus wear and a pair of suede or kid dressup gauntlets, and white gloves for special occasions, are necessary. anu IF you have a fur coat, it will solve a good many problems for you. If you haven't, a cloth coat that features the new shoulder and sleeve effects will do nicely for all occasions. Polo coats

for working, women ...

If you must be on the job every day regardless of how you feel, you ought to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. This medicine is made especially for ailments of women. ... It lessens the cramping pains. ... It relieves periodic backache and headaches. ... It hfclps to correct irregularities . . . makes trying days endurable. Get a bottle from your druggist today. Liquid or tablet form. Its tonic action may be just what you need to give you more strength. “I am a cashier in a department store. I used to suffer from cramps and indescribable pains in my back so I would have to stay at home for a day or two

every month. Nothing helped me until I tried Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Now I have no pain in my back, I do not have the dejected feeling I had before and the cramps are almost entirely eliminated. I have not miamvj a day from my work in the last two months,” BETTY LEWIS, 5664 W. Lafayette Blvd., Detroit, Michigan

Lydia E. Pinkharrfs Vegetable Compound

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

are splendid when you have a more elaborate coat for dress. Two hats for campus and sports wear, a small velvet one for dress —or two if your dresses demand them—and a scarf of silk or lace for evening, will cover your locks with the necessary glory. Crepe or wool sports hose are best for campus wear. Silk hose are necessary for all other purposes. Sheer, cobwebby effects are best. Don't trust to a heavier weave. Chiffon will do more—very much more. If you feel the need of another frock, a jumper dress will usually offer plenty of co-operation. Wear it with blouses that have voluminous sleeves. Satin has a certain sheen to it j that usually catches a man’s eye ! when the early lamps are lighted ! wherever you have gone to tea. Crepe is nice—but satin sparkles. Remember that an understanding of hats has its place as much as a comprehensive knowledge of higher mathematics. BREAKFAST TO BE GIVEN FOR RIDERS Maurice L. Mendenhall, chairman of the stables committee at Meridian Hills Country Club, will entertain riders of the club with a breakfast at 11 Sunday morning at the clubhouse. The breakfast will follow a ride, when the group will leave the stables at 9. Thursday night there will be a moonlight ride, with the riders leaving the stables at 6:30. The same night will be the weekly family night at the club, with dinner at 6, followed by a talk on “Weather and What We Do With It,” by J H. Armington of the Indianapolis weather bureau. Bridge to Be Given Mrs. Leroy Imbler, Zionsville, will entertain members of her bridge club with a bridge party at 8 tonight at the Spink-Arms. Guests will include Mesdames Clarence Able, Robert Blankman, William Lucas, Bryan Sullivan, Misses May Bell, Constance Leeb and Corene Rawley.

Daily Recipe ' CHEESE FONDUE 1 cup scalded milk 1 cup soft stale bread 1-U pound milk cheese, cut in small pieces 1 tablespoon butter 1-2 teaspoon salt 3 egg yolks t 3 egg whites Mix first five ingredients, add yolks, beaten until lemon colored. Cut and fold in whites, beaten until stiff. Pour in buttered baking dish and bake twenty minutes, or until firm, in moderate oven.

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This black velvet tea frock, which molds the body in a slim, straight line, becomes a formal dinner frock, when the cape is removed. Two white flowers add a touch of smartness that just escapes being demure.

Miss Fredriks to Entertain Bridal Couple Miss Lena Ann Fredriks will entertain Thursday night at her home in Pasadena Heights in honor of Miss Mary Esther Kinney and Robert Howard Patterson, whose marriage wall take place Sept. 21. Guests will include: Messrs, and Mesdames D. J. Kinney, John D. Kinney, James H. Kinney, Andrew Johnson, Monis Owens Albert Coilyear. A. W. Radtke, Kenneth Swick, the Misses Lillian Colvin, Ruth Patterson, Kathryn Yeaman, Betty Yeam'an, Ethel Miller, Messrs. Melvin A. Kinney, R. M. Yeaman, F. W. Yeaman Jr., William J. Harris and Mesdames Nellie Patterson, Mary E. Miller. Martha Scheffel and Riner Fredriks. Miss Kathryn Ellwanger will be hostess Friday night for a bridge party and miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Kinney. Melvin Kinney will give a dinner party Saturday night for his sister and Mr. Miss Clara L. Pontius will give a family party Monday night for the bridal pair. Miss teinney will hold open house from 2 to 7 Sunday at her home in Shirley Lake park. She will be assisted by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. David J. Kinney. MRS. JOHNSON TO ■ BE GUEST AT LAKE Mrs. Wilbur C. Johnson, who returned recently from spending the summer abroad, will be honored at a house party to be given this week by Mrs. Clyde J. Roch at her summer home at Lake Maxinkuckee. Mrs. Johnson will leave txiay for the lake with the other guests, Mrs. J. W. Lilly, Mrs. A. B. Conklin and Mrs. James Cunning. s Mrs. Wilson Hostess Beta Tau sorority will meet at 8:15 Wednesday at the home of Miss Virginia Wilson, 720 North Bradley * street. Alpha Tans to Elect Officers will be elected at a meeting of the Alpha Tau chapter, A'.r.ha Zeta Beta, which will meet at 7:45 tonight at the Antlers.

MRS. DREAR AND MRS. CHEER ." V :• it: ■■■'.■ - -I . ” • • -• . •

Mrs. Drear* Those dotted Mrs. Cheers I washed mine last Swiss curtains are a sight week with Oxydol and they’re __j a f ra j<j ag can be to bright as new. Getting at it’s the n. hardest part of housecleaning. •A * • Nothing like Oxydol to gave elbow grease. This marvelous new granulated household the prettiest things as well ag on the hardest-to-wash. It cuts grease, loosens dirt and balls in the dishpa'n and won't make' your fIXYDOL gggP DO THE WORK '

Butler Rush Season Is Under Way Sororities at the Butler College of Education are in the midst of their rushing season. Members of the Alpha Eta chapter of Sigma Sigma Sigma will entertain with a “bon voyage” tea this afternoon at the chapter house, 2341 North Delaware street. The program will include a group of piano, solos by Miss Marian Laut. In the receiving line with the president, Miss Mary Glass, will be Miss Catherine Bowsher. Pi Kappa Sigma will entertain with a “moth and flame” party for its rushees tonight at 527 West Forty-sixth street. The colors, gold and blue, will be carried out in the appointments. Decorations will be garden flowers, and favors will be nut cups and candles with matches attached. Entertainment will include bridge and a short program. Miss Mary Elizabeht Hart. 1401 North Talbot street, is rush captain, and Miss June Kemps. 1431 South Illinois street, is president of the chapter. They are in charge of arrangements. Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority will open its rush season with a deck party tonight at the chapter house, 2101 North New Jersey street. The front of the house will be concealed by a huge boat, with the porch steps as the gang plank. The ship, A. S. A., will be christened by one of the guests, and confetti, serpentine and bon voyage gifts will be presented to the rushees. Invitations were in the form of passports. A feature of the entertainment will be a mock deep-sea 1 diving contest, when each guest will ! be presented with a crested jewel | box. j Delta Sigma Epsilon entertained Tuesday night at the home of Miss Katherine Borman. 576 East drive, Woodruff Place, with a “little red schoolhouse” party. Decorations were in keeping with the motif, as were the entertainment and refreshments. Active and alumnae members of the sorority wore gingham dresses. Miss Marcella Pa den, rush captain, was in charge assisted by Miss Virginia Boyd and Miss Dorothy Esaman.

Card Parties

Ladies’ auxiliary to the Altenheim will sponsor its monthly card party for members and their friends at 2 Friday afternoon at the home. Mrs. William Emrich Sr. is in charge, assisted by Mrs. John Wright, Mrs. Lena Wembrecht, Miss Matilda Emrich, and Miss Edith Emrich. Altar Society of St. Philip Neri church will give a card party at 8:30 tonight in the auditorium. Mrs. | Ralph Peters will be in charge. Past Chiefs Association, Myrtle, Temple 7. Pythian Sisters, will give j a card party this afternoon at the , home of Mrs. Alec Goodwin, 2221 Ashland avenue. Drill team. Indianapolis chapter of the Moose, will have a card party at 2:30 Thursday at the Moose hall, i Mrs. Mary Geise is chairman. Ladies’ Society, Brotherhood Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, will give a card party at 8:30 Thursday at McClean hall, State and Hoyt avenues. Liederkranz Ladies’ Society will give a guest card party at 2:30 Thursday afternoon at the Liederkranz hall, 1421 East Washington street. Five hundred, bridge, euchre j and lotto will be plyaed. Mrs. William Sudmeyer will be in charge. CHIEFS INSTALLED BY STUDY GROUP President’s day was observed today by the Irvington Catholic Woman's Study club at a 1 o’clock luncheon held at the Arlington tearoom. The Rev. Henry Hermann was the speaker. Mrs. J. S. Bray will be hostess at the next meeting to be held Sept. 28, when Mrs. George B. Ewell will give a report of the National Council of Catholic Women. Sorority to Meet Gamma Phi Zeta sorority will have a social meeting Thursday night at the home of Mrs. E. W. Scheier, 1233 South State street. •

MANNt'RWA/OALS) ;fTvßv Jan-Et JokpAn ,/V)

ll* you want an analysis of your problem, write to Jane Jordan. Describe your situation fully and watch for an answer in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am 22. married, and have tvo small daughters. I am very disappointed in mv husband, but I should have known. I formerly was engaged to a dear voung man of 25. who alwavs wUI be mv ideal. I never shall cease to love him. altough he is not aware of mv love for him now. He thinks I did not care. Never a a day passes but what mv mind Is on him. Does he think of me? When I broke my engagement I was infatuated with the man I married and never thought of his not loving me. Now I know that all he wanted was a good wife. I rather think mv former sweetheart still cares for me. because when he met mv brother one day his first and last questions were about me. I love him as his wife never can love him. I would die for him. It if weren’t for mv babies. I would go to him today Mv future was told to me some time ago I was told that I. would marry again in 1933 or 1934 to a man who loves me verv much. Could I put any hoDe In this reading?. SUSIE. Dear Susie: It is too late. You and your lover are not the same people. It is no longer possible for the two of you to take up your lives together at the point you left off. Other actors now have leading parts in the drama of your life, and your fate is bound up inextricably with them. You can t brush aside your lover's wife to correct your unfortunate mistake. You can't put your own husband and children away as if they never had existed. The ghosts of four people you wronged would stand between you and the possibility of happiness with the man you once left behind you. Why should they suffer* to correct your mistake? Is your welfare more important than theirs? This tangle is of your own making. Had you acted when your opportunity came to marry your ideal, it is possible that the two of you Tangle Is might have been * Y olir happy. You would have developed in Own Making, the same direction, subject to the same influences, devoted to the same interests. Your changes would have been made together and your natures would have remained in harmony with each other. As it is, you have developed separately. subject to different influences. You have changed, but not together. If you met again, you would find that the two of you are quite different people, with powerful separate interests. The old harmony which you now idealize would be nonexistent, carried away on the stream of experience like so much water passed beneath the bridge. The world which would have sanctioned your union at the moment when love first flowered will not forgive you for missing your alley. The rights and wrongs of the situation are toe complex for society to figure out. It will not perYour Bridge mit y° u t 0 forget * , the passage of the Is Burned years or ignore Behind You. the responsibilities which you voluntarily incurred. Many of us would give our eye

Ugly yellow vanishes TEETH WHITEN

If you think yellow, stained, unsight-ly-looking teeth are natural, start using Kolynos—a half-inch of this amazing dental cream on a dry brush twice daily. In 3 days you’ll see your mistake. Your teeth will look 3 shades whiter! Kolynos—unlike any preparation you’ve ever used—contains two important ingredients that clean and whiten teeth remarkably. One —the finest cleansing agent known —erases stain and tartar, foams into every tiny fissure and washes away decaycausing debris. While the other ingre-

JSEPT. 14, 1932

teeth to go back a few years to a point in the road where we made a wrong turn, to make a fresh start in the right direction, but no onff ever has been able to travel backward in time. The bridges are burned, the path is torn up. The only road reaches out into the future. Even though this road leads away from someoha we love, we have no choice but u> go on. You and your lover are no longer journeying a path together. The impassable thorns, thickets and brambles of public opinions, nejv ties and stern responsibilities prevent yQu from finding each other again. No fortune teller can blaze a trail for you. She can only tell you what your heart craves to hear instead of the painful facts. “Look in mv face; m.v name is Might-have-been; I am also called .No-more. Too-laie. FaraweU.” ana Dear Jane Jordan— I am a sir! of IS in love with a bov of 20. He has gone on a visit to another state. I miss him. terribly. I am not much interested in other fellows. Could this be love, or as some say. "puppy love?” The dav he left I cried because he was gone. Every one tells me I'll get over this, but somehow I do not believe it At least not for a while. He savs he is in love with me and when I ask hint hooe. he is sure it is love, he tells me he has gone with girls long enough to know if it is love or just an infatuation. I he.vd' no Idea of getting married, but I just am curious about this love affßlr. „ „ . JUST FIFTEEN. Dear Just Fifteen—Ohly time will tell whether your attack is lasting or not. Most of us look back wiffti considerable amusement to the af3 tachments which we formed at 15. Others look back with horror and wish someone had shot us before we yielded to our adolescent emotions. A few of us were struck down permanently at 15. but so few It’s hardly worthy of mention. TRIO TO PERFORM AT G. O. P. SESSION The Mary Traub Busch trio will provide music at the luncheon meeting of the Woman's Republican Club of Indianapolis to be held Thursday at the Columbia club with Raymond S. Springer, nominee for Governor, as the speaker. Mrs, Walter Krull, president, will preside at the meeting which is open. The trio is composed of Mrs. Busch. Miss Ruth Noller, pianist, and Miss Dorothy Killiom, soprano. cr , City Man Is Married Marriage of Miss Mary Pearcy. daughter of J. W. Pearcy, Martinsville, to Leslie D. Carter, Indianapolis, which took place Sept. 3, ha been announced. The Rev, C. G. Baker, Indianapolis, performed the ceremony, after which Mr. and Mr& Carter left for a wedding trip to Chicago. They will be at home at 1322 Ashland avenue. Bridge Section to Meet ’ Ladies’ bridge section of thai Hoosier Athletic Club will meet ats 2 Friday at the clubhouse. Mrs. Carl Habich will be the hostess.

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