Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 110, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1932 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Springer Is Speaker at G. O. P. Club Judge Raymond Springer of Connersville. Republican nominee for Governor, voiced his views on legislation and the economic situation Thursday at a luncheon meeting of the Woman's Republican Club of Indianapolis at the Columbia Club. He described the tax limit law on real estate as a “long step in the right direction,’’ and as a means of inspiring the younger generation to build, to develop and to march in progress. He promised “if elected as the state's servant” to see to it that the $1.50 limit law should be given a fair trial. He asserted that in the matter of economy the government must act as leaders of the home. ' When there’s no money, you must quit spending; when there's no promise of more, you must limit yourself.” He continued, “There have been lots of bank failures, but after the institution of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and the home loan bill, the failures ceased. The laws must be stringent, complete to the. end that depositors shall be protected in the future.” Miss Mary Sleeth of Rushville, candidate for state treasurer, introduced Judge Springer. Seated at the speakers’ table with Mrs. Walter Krull, president, were: Mesdames E. E. Neal of Noblesville, Frank Lahr. Lucille Steingraf, Helen Johnson Karns, Beryn Holland. Ralph E. Kennlngton, Charles Shaw, Albert L. Pauley, Walter Pritchard. Archie Bobbitt and Misses Dorothy Cunningham, Genevieve Brown and Miss Sleeth. Sigma Kappa’s Alumnae Group Meets Saturday Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Sigma Kappa sorority will open its meetings for the year with a luncheon-bridge at 1:30 Saturday at the home of Mrs. Jack Oldham in Greenfield. Officers will be installed and the year’s program outlined. The new officers are: Mrs. E. D. Taggart, president; Mrs. Frank H. Willis, vice-president; Miss Fern Midciff, secretary; Mrs. Paul R. Summers, treasurer, and Mrs. William Hutchinson, Fan-hellenic representative. The committee on membership will report and plans will be made for the annual fall banquet. Bridge will folow the business meeting. A bonus of 250 points will be given to those on time to the meeting. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Hutchinson and Mrs. Hazel Stuart.

MAN N£RS* nd AAOI\ALS! ’By jANt Jordan /pi

ARE you unhappy? Do you long for a sympathetic ear in which to pour your troubles? Write to Jane Jordan and read your answers in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l went steady two years with my husband before we married. Our passion got the best of us and our baby was born seven months after our marriage. It died shortly after birth. When my mother died, we moved into a vacant apartment above my father's home. My sister did not want us to move in and she tries to boss us. She throws my son up to me all the time. She even tells my relatives lies about us. They know’ of our marriage experience and form their opinion accordingly. I feel that I should stay here until my father tells me to move. We haven't much money and we save some by living here. Do you think we should move before rnv lather asks us to? And do you think i we ever will stop hearing of our marriage misfortune? It gives us the blues, for we had good reputations before, and still have some friends left. A. D. Dear A. D.—Sometimes peace of mind is more valuable than money. With rents as low as they are, it is quite possible that a little searching will bring to light a place where you can live as cheaply as you do now, with less unpleasantness to bear. It is not wise to live in close proximity with one's family unless an unusually sympathetic relationship exists. No one can be more cruel than the membtys of your own family if you go against their dictates. Your sister would be amazed if she knew that envy and not virtue motivates her condemnation. You have a husband and she has not. You were swept off your feet by love. You knew ecstasy and pain. Sister Is For love’s sake, you flew in the Consumed face of convention. by Envy The piper presented his bill and you paid. It is more than an unloved woman can bear, so she takes out her envy in petty persecution. Yes. people will forget your experience if you do not cause them further grounds for gossip. It won't be long before they are stirred up over a fresher scandal. Somebody else will set theif tongues to wagging and divert their attention from you. You sit tight and pay no attention to malicious slander. It can’t go on forever without something to feed on. You have done your best to rectify your mistake. You're married now and you are no longer interesting to scandal mongers, unless you break out in a fresh place. • a a v Not* —The following Wtr is from "Monsieur 22" to an "Old Maid at 22 " I have printed that part that contains his prayer for the right kind of woman. It is an luteresting masculine viewpoint. Dear Old Maid at 22—1 will give you a personal prescription of how I feel myself about my ideal woman.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Baked apples, cereal, cream, cinnamon toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Stuffed eggplant, sliced tomatoes, graham rolls, blackberry pudding, milk, tea. Dinner — Lamb loaf, scalloped potatoes, buttered carrots, ginger ale pear salad, chocolate cake with sliced peaches, milk, coffee.

Pinch, Pull, Tug! One Final Big Squeeze; and Miss 1932 Wears Miss 1872 Costume

'4ft ~ w s W-vHHHk ihe||Bj|in9p Bift 1 1 w9§ w"Vv-" --‘Mm G * . Mr ■HKIm sflrcSL Ml % .. ■ y. Wmm fmp f V; . w Kg r;t Up;vr Left -Miss I.ucmda Smith. | j \ iI&U : ii; a !D:,2 dinner dress of L S. Ayres. ■ Wi*B Center 'left to right) The fj ‘jC aMT twenty-two inch waistline of 1872 \ t iPfiX;:.! H and the twenty-seven inch line of ' '.lyptm* WM mm * " : ylyil- sixty years later. iSi "vy® W -TpS ' * J&L ~;£&} |r f\ a Upper Right—Miss Smith concludnrj her battle with the hooks ' * W&M WMb and eyes of 1872 j|fl||pL,

Grappling hooks are the only things to do it, Bill . . Gosh! this Blondie's flesh won’t give. I’d discard a full house for deuces to have a dame with a waist and bust of 1872 in here long enough to put this t dress on . . . “How’re we going to lace up the back? There’s no laces in the store like this . . . Try the baby ribbon counter . , . It works, good . . . How’re we going- to get this hump in the back . . . Pillows . . . Get them, then . . .” And that’s what a Peeping Tom saw in the L. S. Ayres Company store as they prepared papiermache models for window display in the garb of “aw T ay-back-when” the store was known as the “Trade Palace.” The models are in the store’s window to celebrate its sixtieth anniversary Saturday. The clothes they wear come from trunks of pioneer city residents, redolent with the sachet of the past and the sandalwood days of frills, large busts and wasp waists. tt tt tt TAKE a jaunt past the store’s windows and you hear the

First of all, I am grateful to Divine Providence that I am not a woman, for then I could not love her, adore her, admire ter any more. Woman is my religion, my God. Without her, I am nothing. I am lost. I depend so much on her and owe her so much that I am rather her slave than her master in my realm. Daily my prayer ascends to the heavens to God to give me a vibrant flame of a woman for a mate. Make, her, I pray Thee, a woman of merriment. Fill her with a master love for Give Her the strenuous. , a <nirit Give her a A pm l compounded of Elemental strength and symmetry. Send surging through her a spirit elemental. Fill her with a love of the open air, the high hills, the winding streams, the storms that send snow and sleet across the wastes. Make her vibrant with the joy of the lightning flash and the crash of the thunder. Let her ever be a silent worshiper of the stars. Fill her with the love and the desire for wisdom suiting her as a mate, a companion, a wife and mother for my children. Make her, I pray Thee, a sweetheart of the natural. I would have her frank and fearless and gentle. Fit to play her hand in the game of life in the manner of a master. And when, in Thy goodness, Thou hast given this woman unto me, Let Her let me ever find * 1 r„ in her something Alwajs Be elusive, something Elusive that ever shall keep me searching joyously and with wonder. Give me, God, a woman who will demand more of me than I have dared to demand of myself, who will help me liberate that creative energy necessary for the realization of my dreams. And if it be Thy will that this woman be not given to me in the flesh, give her to me as an ideal woman who will lead me daily to render my great love for her; and may she never permit me to find the final goal. MONSIEUR TWENTY-TWO. Does any woman among our readers feel in her heart that she fills this bill? INSTALL MRS. COOK AS CLUB CHIEFTAIN Mrs. C. A. Cook was installed as president of the Woman's Advance Club at the preisdent's day luncheon held at 1 today at the Avalon Country Club. Mrs. H. C. Stringer is retiring president. Other officers are Mrs. Roy Evans Price, vice-president; Mrs. E. K. Zaring. secretary, and Mrs. Robert L. Phythian, treasurer. MARY KINNEY TO BE PARTY GUEST Miss Kathryn Ellwanger will entertain tonight with a bunco-bridge and miscellaneous shower for Miss Mary Esther Kinney, whose marriage to Robert Howard Patterson will take place Sept. 21. Guests with Miss Kinney will include Mesdames Walter Maloy Stanley Shaffer, Claude Williams and the Misses Edna Jones, Waneta Watson. Mary Bray, Boneda Mitch, Gladys Saunders, Trena Wyckham, Kathryn Hartley, Violet Rawlings, Lena Fredrick, Laverne Klusman and Ruth Forbis.

graying grandmas of today whisper to shopping companions: “Mother wore a dress just like that when she was married. She used to tell how she came downtown to the Trade Palace in her carriage and shopped. “Imagine being able to park in front of Ayres now with a car. The old dear, I can see her now, sweeping out of that carriage, head held high, shoulders forced back by bone-stays and padding.” Then the giggles of the cockydressed flapper of 1932, with her hat tilted over one eyebrow as she grimaces at the creations of sixty years ago and wonders how it was that great-grandma didn’t break a blood-vessel, or two or smother to death, getting into the gowns that were as flowing as Niagara Falls. But back to the tough time win-dow-dressers had in bringing 1872 to 1932. tt tt tt AN authority on the whereabouts of clothing of antiquity in Indianapolis was summoned and given carte blanche instructions to bring in all the trousseaus of yore and garments

P. C. Reilly Jr. Is Married to Colorado Girl Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Jeanette Parker, daughter of Mrs. George L. Parker, Denver, to Peter C. Reilly Jr., New York, formerly of Indianapolis, and son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Reilly, 3134 North Meridian street. The ceremony took place Thursday night at the home of the bride's mother, with Bishop Joseph Chartrand, Indianapolis, officiating. He also officiated at the wedding of the bridegroom’s parents, and his sister, Mrs. Erwin Meyer, Boulder, Colo. Attendants were Miss Barbara Custance, Denver, and the bridegroom’s brother, George A. Reilly, Indianapolis. The bride wore a gown of ivory satin, and veil of Venetian lace. She carried orchids, gardenias, and lilies of the valley. After a honeymoon in the south, Mr. and Mrs. Reilly will be at home Nov. 1, In Brooklyn, N. Y. The bride is a graduate of the University of Colorado and is a Pi Beta Phi. Mr. and Mrs. Reilly Sr. attended the wedding. BUTLER SORORITY TO GIVE RUSH FETE Second of a series of rush parties will be given by the Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority of the Butler college of education tonight at the chapter house, 2101 North New Jersey street. Decorations, appointments, and entertainment will carry out the "boudoir” motif. Bridge will be played and a spread served at midnight. Miss Dorothy Thompson, chapter president, in chairman of the committee in charge assisted by Misses Eileen Brown, rush captain; Mildred Inman and Masgaret Isenhower, assistant rush captains; and Elizabeth Kidwell. Honor City Visitors Mrs. Sam Shuman and Miss Jeannette K. Watkins of New York are the guests of Miss Fay Gurvits, 127 North Dickson street, who gave a bridge party in their honor Wednesday night. Club to Give Dance Young People's Social Club of the Assumption parish will give a dance Tuesday night at the Assumption hall. Music will be provided by Hugh McConnell's orchestra. Thomas F. O’Connor will sing.

Daily Recipe COTTAGE PUDDING 3-4 cup butter 2-3 cup sugar 1 egg, ivell beaten 1 cup milk 21-4 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder 1-2 teaspoon salt Cream butter, add sugar gradually, then the egg, mix and sift flour, baking powder and salt; add alternately with milk to first mixture. Turn into buttered cake pant and bake 45 minutes in moderate oven. Serve with vanilla sauce.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

of the milady of ’72 that could be found. It took wheedling, coaxing, promises to return in the same condition as sent, to obtain the garments. One nightgown in .the display, with its almost nun-like modesty, was the honeymoon apparel of a belle of ’72. x And the store’s scout found that orange blossoms and Lohengrin memories of the longago were not persuaded so easily into a store window. Then the next impasse reached was failure of the modes of the past to fit the store’s models. A twenty-two-ineh waist wouldn’t go on a twenty-seven-inch dummy, regardless of the stretching and pulling. So the store ordered special dummies for the anniversary event. But even when these arrived, with their proper waists and busts of 33 j /2 inches and 36-inch hips, the window-dressers were forced to take headlocks on the forms to get them buttoned and hooked. * tt BABY ribbon was drafted as the only thing that could be used to lace up the waspish backs.

Hospital Cfiildren Have Own Show and'Enjoy It

BY WALTER D. HICKMAN CHILDREN love to be entertained by children. That I found out yesterday afternoon at the Riley hospital. I went with Bobby and Sammy Tucker, their father and mother, Charles F. Ball, singer and manager of the boys, and Miss Vera Wilson, pianist for Ball, to the Riley hospital Thursday afternoon. Bobby is 13 and Sammy Is 11 years old. The children shouted with joy when they were told that the chief entertainers were youngsters of their own age. On chairs, on roller cots and in wheel chairs more than seventy-five ooys and girls of the great hospital were assembled in the reception room.

MRS. CONNOLLY TO BE BRIDGE GUEST Mrs. John Daudistel and Miss Jane Brady will entertain tonight at the Columbia Club with a bridge party and shower in honor of Mrs. John Connolly. The appointments will be in pink and blue. Guests with Mrs. Connolly will be her mother, Mrs. Ena Wolf, of Marion, and: Mesdames George Connolly, Arthur V/olf, Alex Corbett, A. H. Lindeman, N. M. Talbert, Roland Clark, T. B. Dunnett, Fritz Schneider, Henry Shriver, John Riddle and Elizabeth Green, and the Misses Bessie Russell, Jess Payne, Margaret Ludlum, Ruth Thompson. Virginia Ott, Jennie Shefier, Gertrude Davis, Helen Houppert and Henrietta Jones.

Card Parties

Lauter Mothers’ Club will have its first card party of the season at 8 Saturday night in the'clubrooms, 1309 West Market street. Ways and means committee of Myrtle Temple 7, Pythian Sisters, will give a card party at 8 Monday night at the K. of P. hall, 119 East Ohio street. Miss Mayme O’Connell, 966 Stillweil street, will be hostess at a card party tonight. A card and bunco party will be given at JJ:3O tonight by Camp 3, Patriotic Order of America, at 2914 South Delaware street.

FLORIDA WOMAN IS GUEST AT BRIDGE

Mrs. Neph King entertained Thursday at her home, 1639 Southeastern avenue, with a bridge party in honor of Mrs. Oscar E. King, Sarasota, Fla., who is visiting in Indianapolis. Autumn flowers were used in decorating the home, and the tables at serving time. Other guests were: v Mesdames H. G. Alsman, Edwin Bamberger. Arthur Bender, William Beswick, H. P. German, Roy Gray. P. Lee Harris, William A. Holtz, Edwin King. W. V. Insley, Gene Lemen, Richard Miller. Berry Poole, C. T. Ralphy, E. P. Vance and William Wilson.

MARTHA RUNDELL WEDS STATE MAN The marriage of Miss Martha Ann Rundell to William Starkey Schnaiper, son of Mrs. C. A. Hubbard of Martinsville, has been announced by the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Rundell, 962 Congress avenue. The wedding took place Aug. 20 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Elliott Branch, Champaign, 111., with the Rev. William M. Ealey officiating. Mrs. Schnaiper is a graduate Os the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music and a member of Mu Phi Epsilon sorority. Mr. Schnaiper wr, graduated from Wabash college and belongs te Beta Theta Pi fraternity.

„ They struggled, fumed, sweated, Success! The job was done. But wait! Was it? A demand came that a live model be dressed in one of the “hotehas” of ’72. “That’s easy,” declared a win-dow-trimmer. “Live models give. You can hook a dress on her if she’s got a narrow waist.” ✓. • So Peeping Tom got on the job again. Here’s what happened via the keyhole. “Ctti-h —you’re cracking a rib. . . . Don’t pull it so tight, Phoebe . . . lay off. . . let me rest a minute . . . Now . . . can’t you get that h-o-o-k-e-d . . . ouch! . . Quit it! ... Have a heart! . . . I tell you, you can’t get my 28-inch waist in a 22 . . . “Give me a little more, dearie. . . .Give, give, you’ve got every pound I’ve got, Shylock . . . But just one more pull and we’ll have it laced ... Oh; I-I-please, Phoebe ... my breakfast . . . My ...My .. . Say it! It’s all over. You're 1872, milady. Sez you.” % And thus 1872 was brought to 1932 on the sixtieth anniversary of L. S. Ayres.

The boys have a good entrance number. Sammy is dressed up like a pretty girl and it was not until the* wig came off that the children in the audience knew that Sammy was a real boy. The remarkable thing about these boys is that they have splendid voices and their harmony is remarkable. Their wardrobe is complete as they make costume changes for each number. The boys and girls at the Riley_ love to see people dance and every time that Bobby and Sammy went into a dance, the audience went wild with interest and applause. They also had a great time watching Sammy and Bobby do a burlesque on a ventriloquist act. Sammy is the dummy. This stunt went over big. The boy’s mother makes their wardrobe and taught them everything but their dance routines. The Tuckers come from Wheeling, W. Va. They open tonight at - the Fountain Square for a two-day engagement. Vs Ball sang several songs while the boys were making costume changes. “I believe this is one of the most enjoyable entertainments we have had because the children were being entertained by children,” one of the nurses told me. , n u a Indianapolis theaters today offer: “Grand Hotel” with Greta Garbo and a great cast at the Palace, George Arliss in “A Successful Calamity” at the Circle, “Chandu, the Magician” at the Apollo, and “Blessed Event” with Dick Powell in the cast at the Indiana. PICK JEAN HANLEY SENIOR PRESIDENT Miss Jean Hanley has been elected president of the senior class at St. Agnes academy. Other officers chosen are Miss Marian Messick, vice-president; Miss Berenice Brennan, secretary, and Miss Virginia Ittenbach, treasurer. Mr. and Mrs. Ferrit T. Taylor, West Eighty-sixtth stret, are at the Barclay in New York. Mrs. Clark Day, 29 West Fortysecond street, is visiting at the new West Newton in New York.

Like a Lipstick/ A brand-new, brilliant idea. WT/ yV Quick. Smart. Effective. Economical. mM PERSTIK OMT H CAM* USTI9 til STOPS PERSPIRATION ODOR X Endorsed by Good Housekeeping / Institute. Used safely even after shaving. Cannot harm clothing. L. S. Ayres & Cos. Toilet Goods Dept... STREET FLOOR Mail *Upktm, *4* fJJU

Committees Are Named for. Season Mrs. Walter P. Morton, president of the Indianapolis Branch of the American Association of University Women, has appointed the following committees for the season now opening: Fellowship—Mrs. J. W. Weddell, chairman; Mrs. Paul Tombaugh. Miss Grace Brown. Miss Virginia Cravens. Miss Mae Orme Mackensie. Miss Florence Morrison, Mrs. J. W. Putnam, Dr. Kenosha Sessions. Dr. Ada Schweitser. Fine Arts—Mrs. James Bawden, chairman: Miss Helen Hartman, Miss Dorothy David. Mrs. John Hewitt, Miss Maude Russell. Miss Belle Scofield, Mrs. Frank B. Shields, Mrs. W. W. Thornton, Mrs. John H. Wheeler, Mrs. Charles Yoke. International Relations —Mrs. A. H. Hinkle, chairman; Mrs. James Bawden, Miss Ruth Milligan. Mrs. O. H. Skinner. Msr. Frank H. StreightoO, Mrs. Fred Terry. Mrs. Ida B. Wilhite. Languages—Mrs. Allen H. Mitchell, chairman; Mrs. Arthur E. Focke, Miss Helen Hartman. Mrs. W. L. Richardson, Mrs. N. Taylor Todd. Legislation—Miss Evelyn Carpenter, chairman; Mrs. A. B. Carlile, Mrs. Walter Greenough, Mrs. J. D. Johnson. Mrs. Albert Stump, Mrs. John R. Thrasher. Membership—Mrs. J. R. Townsend, chairman; Miss Mary Evelvn Bridenstine. Mrs. Charles E. Dare. Miss Nelle Fuaua. Miss Frances Gravey. Miss Jennie Dinwiddie, Miss Minnie Dodson. Mrs. E. J. Kowoalke. Mrs. Robert Moor. Mrs. Jessie C. Moore. Mrs. James E. Soroule. Mrs. George R. Spaulding. Mrs. Edward L. Tomlinson, Miss Dale Waterbury, Mrs. Alvin T. Coate. Pre-Adolescent Child—Mrs. T. Victor Keene, chairman; Mrs. S. D. Bash. Mrs. John Carr. Mrs. Marvin Curie. Mrs. Donald C. Drake. Mrs. M. S. Harding, Mrs. C. O. McCoromick. Mrs. J. W. Ricketts. Mrs. J. W. Weddell. Pre-School Child—Mrs. Nathan Pearson, chairman; Mrs. Wilbur Appel. Mrs. Gordon Batman. Mrs. Charles G. Brown. Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher. Mrs. Harry Foreman. Mrs. Karl M. Koons. Mrs. Carl F. Lauenstein, Mrs. L. H. Rich. Mrs. Frank B. Shields. Mrs. Paul Stokes. Mrs. Gaylord Wood. Mrs. R. B. Yule. Program—Mrs. Marvin 35. Curie, chairman; Miss R. Katherine Beeson. Mrs. Blanche E. Chenoweth, Miss Sara Lois Haber, Mrs. R. S. Sinclair, Dr. Mary Westfall, Mrs. T. G. Wesenberg, Mrs. John T. Wheeler,* Mrs. T. Victor Keene, Mrs. Nathan E. Pearson, Mrs. J. W. Weddell. Mrs. James Bawden. Mrs. A. H. Hinkle, Mrs. J. R. Townsend, Mrs, Merwyn Bridenstine. Publicity—Mrs. Donald C. Drake, chairman; Mrs. Marvin Curie. Mrs. John Mellett, Mrs. Gaylord Wood, Miss Margaret Scott. Radio in Education—Mrs. H. B. Pike, chairman. Social —Mrs. Merwyn Bridenstine, chairman; Mrs. Frederick M. Ayres, Mrs. William Bruner, Miss Sue Blasingham, Mrs. Henry L. Bruner, Miss Charlotte N. Earl, Miss Margaret Follstad, Mrs. W. P. Garshwiler, Mrs. W. J. Hasselman, Mrs. Hal R. Keeling, Mrs. W. M. Louden, Mrs. J. A. MacDonald, Mrs. Bloomfield Moore, Mrs, R. Hartley Sherwood, Miss Amy Colescott. • / Telephone—Mrs. O. M. Helmer, chairman; Miss Jenna Birks, Miss Lulu J. Case, Miss Margaret K. Duden, Miss Beatrice Gerrin, Miss Mildred Harvey, Miss Grace lugledue, Miss Mable Ives, Miss Eleanor Jones, Miss Angela Moler, Mrs. Margaret B. Segur. Ways and Means—Mrs. Wilbur Appel, chairman; Mrs. William Bray, Mrs. Harold O. Ochsner. Miss Mary Ann Ogden, Mrs. George Sladeck, Mrs. J. M. Williams. Bridge Section —Mrs. R. B. Yule, chairman; Miss Nettie Burkholder, Mrs. Loren Harkness, Mrs. John J. Leech, Mrs. M. S. Harding, Mrs. J. R. Spaulding, Mrs. E. E. Swift, Mrs C. O. Skaar, Mrs. Helen Schuller. Mrs. Morton was hostess for the first board meeting of the Indianapolis association Tuesday afternoon at her home, 3434 Fall Creek boulevard. Those present were: Mrs. J. R. Townsend. Mrs. Merwyn Bridenstine. Mrs. Arthur Focke, Miss Mary Rigg. Miss Vera Morgan. Mrs. Paul Tombaugh. Mrs. James Bawden. Mrs. A. H. Hinkle. Mrs. Allen H. Mitchell. Mrs. T. Victor Keene. Mrs. Nathan Pearson. Mrs Donald C. Drake. Miss Evelyn Carpenter, Mrs. H. B. Pike. Mrs. O. M. Helmer. Mrs. Wilbur Apnel and Mrs. Marvin Curie. •Y. W.’ GROUP TO HOLD FALL PARLEY Fall conference of the young business women’s department of the Y. W. C. A. will be held Sunday at Camp Delight, opening at 9:30 a. m. with a period of worship led by Miss Betty Evans. Presiding will be Miss Pauline Mohler, department vice-president. Speakers on a program to follow will be Mias Ruth Martin, new secretary of tne department, and Mrs. S. W. Benham. Afternoon program will be a discussion of the theme, “Looking Ourselves Over,” led by Hazel Morris, department president; Edith Ambuhl, Madonna Hessler and Hazel Smith. Group singing will be led by Miss Thelma Patterson.

TONIGHT Entire Store OPEN Until 9 P. M. 46th Anniversary Free Bus Service Free Parking Sewu l SEARS. ROEBUCK aho CO

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department; Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for whifh send Pat- aq a tem No. O O 4 Size ••••••••••••••••••• Street City • State Name

SMART FOR SCHOOLROOM

This one will have real appeal. It’s simple to cut it out and put it togehei( It’s lovely for street as well as classroom for fall. It can be made of sportsweight linen, pique, rayon novelties,, jersey, novelty sheer woolens and wool crepe. Tobacco brown linen with yellowbeige pique collar and brown leather belt is very smart. The motifs of brown pique add a decorative touch. Style No. 684 is designed for sizes 6,8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 10 requires 2% yards of 35-inch material with % yard of 39-inch contrasting. Our Fashion Magazine will help you economize. Price, 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.

‘JUNIOR SWIM’ TO BE HELD AT'Y. W. Swimming as a hobby for evefy child in the interests of body development and good posture is recommended by Miss Vonda Browne, assistant director of health education at Central Y. W. C. A., in announcing a junior swim party to be held at 2 Saturday. Water stunts, races and games w’ill form the program to which parents and friends of the children are invited. Regular class instruction for juniors will be resumed at 4 Monday, Oct. 3, and at 9:30 Saturday morning. Junior plunge hours are Monday and Friday at 3:30 and Saturday until 3 p. m. Special rates are offered for juniors. Miss Fields Elected Miss Norma Fields has been elected president of the Alpha Theta Chi sorority. Others named recently are Miss Eva King, vice-presi-dent; Miss Izetta Smith, secretary; Miss Thelma Spark§, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Elizabeth Groves, treasurer.

Fall Modes Styles are more graceful, BLACK SUEDES more frivolous than ever BLACK KIDS before, yet so clever is the designing of these shoes \ BROWN SUEDES that they are comfortable, BROWN KIDS practical, serviceable. Mod- PATENTS, SATINS erate prices make it pos- XMLfe X MARCELLA sible to choose shoes for 4 ifMAi \ every varied autumn occa- H - cloth sion. U teu? and fy\ Vrn Heel WSm v v All Baby At

Mlf _45 EAST WASHINGTON STREET J

_SEPT. 16, 1932

Officers of Federation to Confer I State officers and district directors of the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women will meet at noon Sunday in the hotel dining room at the Methodist hospital. The session has been called by the state president, Mrs. Adah O. Frost, to appoint committees for the state convention, to be held at South Bend in July, next summer. Plans will also be discussed to make the work of the nine state districts more uniform. The convention, which is usually held in May, has been changed to July for next year, in order that it will come just before the national convention to be held in Chicago in connection with the Century of Progress exposition. Mrs. Frost will preside at the meeting. Others who will attend include: Mrs. Nellie Niestadt. Crawfordsville. first vice-president; Mrs. Ethel Herron, Evansville, second vice-president; Miss Loretta Noltner, Gary, recording secretary; Mug Marjorie Ford, corresponding secretary; Miss Elizabeth Lenfesty, Marion, treasurer; Mrs. Elma Walters, Bedford, member at large, and the following district directors: Mrs. Marie Ferguson Thompson; Clinton, first. Miss Vesta Burks, Bloomington, second; Mrs. Margaret Morton, Rushville. third; Miss Mabel Ward. Union City, fourth: Miss Dora McCalmet, Crawfords, ville, fifth; Miss Bernice Myers, Kokomo, sixth; Miss Elma Irey, Kendallville, seventh; Miss Olga Schroeder, Gary, eighth; and Mrs. Elizabeth Shrimer, South Bend, ninth. Mrs. Ellen Curtis, Greenwood, editor of the Hoosier Business Woman, and Miss Myra Majors, business manager, also will attend. DOUBLE WEDDING IS HELD IN CITY, In a double wedding ceremony at Christ church Wednesday, Miss Chrystal Frank, daughter of Mrs. Edward Mann, 3461 Carrollton avenue. became the bride of Thomas Gockel, son of Mrs. Edna J. Gockel, 4027 Graceland avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Gockel left immediately on a wedding trip and will be at home at Milwaukee. Mr. Gockel attended Purdue university. Miss Kathryn Cooney and Richard Hamilton were married at th<* same time, with the immediate families in attendance. Miss James Hostess Miss Gladys James will be hostess for a meeting of Delta chapter. Alpha Beta Gamma sorority, at 8:30 tonight. Plans will be made for a dinner party to be held soon. Officers Are Honored Recently elected officers of the Huddle Club were honored at a special meeting of the club Wednesday night. The officers are H. H. Lovingfoss, president; B. D. Risk, vicepresident, and J. R. Crabtree, secre-tary-treasurer.

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