Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 202, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1933 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Cupid Reigns on City Social Stage in 1932; Many Smart Weddings ear Further Featured by Visits to Hoosier Capitol by Nationally-Known Women; Clubs Sponsor Big Projects. Cupid reigned on the social stage of 1932, leading many men and Vomen to the altar in spectacular, and simple, ceremonies. Many returned from wedding trips to establish home in the city, while others left Indianapolis for residence in other cities. The first bride of the year was Miss Adcle Pantzer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Pantzer, who married Joachim Westendarp on Jan. 15, and went to New York to live. Following close was the picture wedding on Jan. 20. of Miss Eileen Hollis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon F. Hollis of Denver, to Cortland Van Camp Martindale. *

Miss Nadyne D. Cravens chose Valentine’s day to wed Robert H. Schleicher. On Feb. 22 the engagement of Miss Anne Daugherty to Robert Hunter Slate rof Louisville was announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Daugherty. Miss Mary Eugenia Yant, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Yant, went to Riverside, Cal., to marry Harry P. Fenton this month. Many Society Weddings March was chosen as the date for Weddings of several socially prominent young women. Miss Florence W. JLupton became the bride of Alva [Whitcomb Graham, March 26, after p series of prenuptial parties. The marriage of Miss Martha Gibson Adams, daughter of Mrs. Reilly C. Adams, to Woods A. Caperton, was a brilliant affair the same day. The next day Miss Clara La Von phalfant was wed to Lee O. Nicholson. April saw the unions of Miss frtancesca Deering of San Francisco o Thomas Carr Howe Jr., Miss Josephine Harriet McCray and parry Warren Oakes, Flora Hunter pnd Donald Mote, Margaret Barrett pnd Fdwin S. O'Neill, Mary Roberta MeClurg and Frederick William (Nichols Jr., and Mary Ellen McJNamee and Stanley W, Shipnes, Marriages in Leedy Family May brought several lovely ceremonies. Miss Frances Krieg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Felix Krieg, became the bride of Dr. Paul Conley perguson, when a special blessing (was bestowed by the Pope. Following her wedding to Malcolm JMacNiven Davisson, a professor at the University of Southern California, Miss Dorothy May Leedy, the daughter of Mrs. Ulysses Grant left for residence in Berkley, (Cal. Two other weddings in the Leedy family were events of the year. (Miss Julia Bowman, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. George Bowman, was married to Hollis Leedy in a lovely July Ceremony, while Miss Mary Isabelle [Leedy became the bride of Calvin (Charles Hampton, New Year’s eve. Other May weddings were those Cf Miss Margaret Mahan of Martinsville to J. Kurt Mahrdt and Miss (Dorothea White to Leroy Hunt.

Cupid Busy in June Miss Betty Helm was the first fcride of June, marrying Paul R. Frowning on June 4. Others to take jvows in the month of brides were iMiss Naomi Adams of Beech Grove and Floyd H. Harlan, Miss Mary Jayne Benham and Dr. Reinhold O. poehl. Miss Dorothy Ryker and Dr. Russell J. Spivey, Miss Lorrine Collins and william R, White, Miss Florence Moore and Floyd James Meeker, Miss Lorinda Cottingham nnd Dr. Robert D. Howell, Miss Edna #tunnicutt of Greensfork and Hugh Henry Hanna 111, Miss Bernice Mull and Ralph H. Thompson pf Crawfordsville, Miss Frances SJosephine Walters and Lewis Hornjaday Pickett of Denver, Miss Ellen McFadden and William Forsyth, Miss Elsie Null and Charles Kay Blue, Miss Martha Ehle and James E. Lesh, Miss Dorothy Jane Sutherland and Adolph F. Grossman of [Yonkers, N. Y., Miss Dorothy Muir end James W. Bowman of Toronto, iand Miss Naydne Cook and Don Emerson Warrick, and Miss Ann •Cooper and Russell E. Hanson. July Popular Bride’s Season July rivaled June as a popular bride's season. Miss Agnes Kalleen, [daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Kalleen, was wedded to Jacob Guire >Vilcox in a lovely ceremony. The wedding of Miss Phoebe Heath of Noblesville and Herman M. Stoker of Syracuse, N. Y., and Johannesburg. South Africa, was attended by many local people. Miss Jean Schnd and John T. (Thatcher, Miss Betty Mclntyre and Harry Ice, Miss Helen Moffett and Raymond S. Hiatt, Miss Dorothy [Welborn of Evansville and Milford Mortimer Miller, Miss Lucille Wild}ng and W. Dale Evans were wedded In July ceremonies. Weddings in August included those Pi Miss Winnette Jennings and Charles H. Bradley, Miss Lydia Louise Paul and Henry E. Todd, Miss Beatrice Worley and Tracey W. [Whitaker, Miss Mary Wanda Allison and Dr. Urban F. D. Stork. Miss Johanne Perrin of Thorntown and [Jack Gulling, Miss Nancy Estelle Rarvey and William Whitly Foster, Miss Helen F. Kreber and John M. Burke, and Miss Louise Adams and (Carl H. Donner of Summit, N. J. Louise Sherwood Married Miss Louise Sherwood, daughter {if Mr. and Mrs. J. Hartley SherVrood. became the bride of Gustav W. Klumpp of Boston, Sept. 1. in a Jovely garden wedding. Miss Dorothy Fife went to live in Chicago ffter her marriage to J. Franklin . lies in September. Misses Gertrude and Susan Delbrook, sisters, were brides of the year. the former becoming the bride pf Guy Curtis Dixon. Sept. 1. and the latter of J. Frank Maurer of Brazil, earlier in the season. Later September ceremonies were those of Miss Gladys Hooker and Howard A. Troy of Gary, Miss Kathleen Hottel and William Weaver Perrin. Miss Frances Kirkpatrick of Rushville and Thomas Rhoades, Miss Jeanette Parker of Denver and peter C. Reilly Jr. of New York, pnd Miss Mary Mulvihill and James A. O'Connell. Brilliant Rites in September Some of the most brilliant weddings of the year took place in September, including that of Miss Florence Efroymson to Harry B. Smith of Lowell. Mass., and Miss Sarah Margaret Moore to Fletcher Hodges Jr. The marriage of Miss Elinor West Durbin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher M. Durbin of Chicago and granddaughter of Mrs. D. Thornton West of Indianapolis, to Sartell Picnt.ce Porter was an event in (Chicago society. She is the grand-

daughter of the late Governor and Mrs. Winfield T. Durbin. October weddings included those of Miss Dorothy Ruth Dank!, and Thomas Edward Fisher, Miss Betty Baker and Bruce Lynn Kendall, Dr. Marie B. Kast and H. Theodore Kuhlman of Philadelphia, Miss Marian Whetstine and Andrew F. Ross, Miss Louise Bloomer of Rockville and Robert Butterworth, Miss Gladys Cochrane and John Cromie, and Miss Frances Wingard to Claude A. Mahoney. Ceremonies Are Colorful Among the loveliest of the larger ceremonies of the month were Miss Anne Speer’s marriage to Grier Moore Shotwell, Miss Delight Baxter's to Orien W. Fifer Jr., and Miss Omie Harris’ to Nick Mayer of Little Rock, Ark. November saw the marriages of Miss Martha Lou Folk and Ralph A. Seal, Miss Martha McFarland and R. L. Sellridge, Miss Mildred Cooke and Albert Ehlers and Miss Mary Helen Tolle and Robert Maney. One of the most colorful weddings of the year was that of Miss Mary Louise Minnick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Ira Minnick, to John Bertermann 11. The marriage took place Nov. 9 at All Saints Episcopal cathedral, whictp was elaborately decorated in white chrysanthemums and cathedral tapers. Wed on Thanksgiving Prominent among the Thanksgiving weddings was that of Miss Joy Taylor, secretary of the missionary education department of the United Christian Missionary Society, to the Rev. John P. Sala, pastor of the University Church of Christ, Buffalo, N. Y. The ceremony was performed by Miss Taylor's father, the Rev. W. D. Taylor, in his church in Jackson, O. Another Thanksgiving wedding was that of Miss Margaret Warner to Frank McKinney. On Nov. 26, Miss Clara V. Foxworthy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton K. Foxworthy, became the bride of Richard Barrett McDowell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. McDowell, in a candlelight ceremony at the Westminster Presbyterian church. Newlyweds to Manchuria Other November weddings were those of Miss Hester Robins to Herman T. Cox, Miss La Donna Lamb to Alfred E. Kristufik, Miss Leona Rahn to William Ennis, Miss Ruth L. Thoms to William Schulze of Chicago, Miss Catherine Murdoch to Burchard Carr, and Miss Ruth Dale to Robert Watkins. The first of the December weddings were those of Miss Roberta Cramer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Cramer, to Christian E. Carlsen, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Carlson, and Miss Ava Louise Reddick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne A. Reddick to Lloyd D, Newlin. On *Dec. 14, Miss Dorothy Marie Patterson was married to Robert J. Mack of Trenton, N. J. Following their marriage on Dec. 20, Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Fox left for Mukden, Manchuria, to make their home. Mrs. Fox was formerly Miss Lorena McComb. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Kemper McComb. Noted Visitors to City On Dec. 24. Jeanie Paton. daughter of Mr. and Mrs, George G. Paton, was married to Arthur H. Wcodstock of Detroit. A Christmas wedding ceremony united Miss Dorothy Stephenson Pier and Willis Lester Jackman. They will make their home in Peoria, 111. The year was featured by visits of nationally known women. The political campaign brought the famous Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth. who was guest of honor at a reception given by Women's Republican clubs of Indiana. The next week Indianapolis was paid a visit by Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, sister of Vice - President Curtis. Many Projects of Interest Dr. Mary E. Woolley, president of Mt. Holyoke college, and a leader in national projects; Mrs. Arthur Brin of Minneapolis, president of the National Council of Jewish Women; V:cki Baum, famous author of "Grand Hotel"; Countess Marget Bethlen, Emily Newell Blair, literary critic; Margaret Ayers Barnes, author, and other famous women have been brought to the city by - ’own Hall, Tudor Hall. American Association of University Women, the Jewish Council, and other groups. Several projects of interest and worth were sponsored for the first time during the year. The arts and interests committee of the Junior League held its first exhibit of Indiana artists. The league with the A. A. U. W. held symphony lectures by Ferdinand Schaefer before performances of the Indianapolis Symphony orchestra. The Ohio State Alumnae organ-

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Tokay grapes. cereal, cream, scrambled eggs, cinnamon toast, cocoa, ccffee. Luncheon — Scalloped oysters, shredded cabbage and celery salad, spice cup cakes, canned peaches, milk, tea. Dinner— Codfish baked in tomato sauce. French fried sweet potatoes, creamed cauliflower, autumn salad. Boston cream pie with strawberry sauce, milk, coffee.

State Officials’ Wives to Assume Social Duties

' W?S CUFF TOWN SEN!?* MRS ELMER STRAUB Ml?s Philip IoTZ, JIR.

Cleveland Girl Is Married to W. C. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. William R. Klingholz of Cleveland have announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Grace Louise Kingholtz, to William Charles Jackson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chic Jackson, 3029 Broadway. The wedding took place in Erie, Pa., Dec. 28. The bridegroom is a graduate of Purdue university, and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. The bride formerly lived in Indianapolis with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson will be at home at 1830 Haldane avenue, Cleveland, where Mr. Jackson is an instructor in the Case school of applied science. AVALON TO HOLD BRIDGE LUNCHEON The Avalon Country Club will entertain Thursday afternoon with the first bridge luncheon of the year. Mrs. Earl C. Hervey will be hostess, assisted by Mrs. J. M. Antrim, and Mrs. Charleton N. Carter. Bonus of 250 points will be given members and guests arriving before 1. Former City Man, Weds Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Buckley of Chicago have announced the marriage of their daughter. Miss Ethel Marie Buckley, to William Edward Foley, formerly of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Foley will be at home at 7872 South Shore drive. Chicago. ization was formed, and Mrs. Charles Harmon was chosen the first president. Political Groups Busy The political campaigns afforded busy programs for the various political organizations, including the Indiana Democratic Club and the various units. The Indiana and Indianapolis Leagues of Women Voters continued their program of educating the voters and sponsoring projects they considered progressive. The Woman's Organization for National Prohibition Reform intensified its fight, for prohibition changes and its membership and influence increased. Clubs of Town Busy Various social and athletic cubs provided a year of activity. The Columbia Club, the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Avalon Country Club, Meridian Hills Country Club and the Woman's Athletic Club have entertained with monthly luncheon bridge parties, as well as dances, open houses and holiday affairs. The Columbia Club inaugurated anew tradition, holding its first "Panhell" dance for fraternity members. The Sunnyside Guild, the Children's Sunshine Club, the Cheer Broadcasters. St. Margaret 's hospital guild, the Junior League, and other groups have continued their welfare work. The Indiana Federation of Womens Ciub. the Seventh District. Indianapolis Council of Women, Irvington Union of Clubs, the Woman's Department Club, have been in the limelight, sponsoring cultural and philanthropic activities. Golf Clubs Popular In addition the social life has been' enhanced by the entertainments of various national sorority and college alumnae clubs, patriotic societies, musical organizations, the Children's theater, the Civic theater, Butler university groups, the Little Knickerbocker and Woman's Contract Bridge clubs. For those who prefer out-door activities. the various riding clubs have proved popular. The Algonquin Riding Club, the Traders Point Hunt, the Meridian Hills riding group, the Arlington Riding Club and polo meets have drawn large groups. The golf clubs were popular haunts of the athletically inclined during the season. i

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Mrs. Paul V. McNutt of Bloomington, wife of Indiana’s new governor, will have as her associates Mrs. Phillip Lutz Jr., of Boonville, wife of the new attorney-general; Mrs. Elmer Straub of Indianapolis, wife of the new adjutant-general; Mrs. M. Clifford Townsend of Marion, wife of the new lieutenant governor; Mrs. Frank Mayr Jr., of South Bend, wife of the secretary of state, and Mrs. Floyd E. Wil-

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Ar you caught In an emotional Jam? Write to Jane Jordan, who will help you see what to do. Dear Jane Jordan—l don’t know which way to turn nor what to do. I am 30 years old, and have been married for twelve years. We have a boy and a girl. We are buying our home, and have a car, just common people, but we always were happy. Now I have found out that my husband is running around with other W’omen. He says he doesn’t care for them, but just goes for the fun in it. But it nearly killed me, for I loved and trusted him above all. I just feel that life isn’t worth while any more. He said that it wasn’t my fault, that he loved the children and me just the same. I never worked outside of our home, so I don't suppose there would be any chance of work for me, and yet I don't feel that I can go on, letting him support me. If you can help me. please do it. The children must not be hurt, for they think there is nobody like their daddy. HEARTBROKEN. Dear Heartbroken— You can depend on it that your husband is telling you the literal truth. He does not love the women with whom trifles, and forgets them five minutes after he has left them. His actions do not have a thing in the world to do with his love for you. After twelve years of married life he is seized with the taste for variety, exactly as a man who has had quail for dinner for twelve years feels that- he needs a change of diet. The majority of men go through the same thing, although few of them are as honest as your husband. Throughout the ages women have tried to get men to take the act of propagation seriously, with slight success. Most of them seem temperamentally incapable of endowing a simple biological instinct with any great and powerful significance. ... Women, on the ’’ OltM*n r ail other hand, are , „ . incapable of sep- ®\ei arating sex from y iew p oint love. Like most other women, I believe that the highest happiness is to be found in monogamy* and I understand perfectly what a shock your husbands attitude is to you. There are two things you can do about it. and either method requires patience on your part and the highest order of courage. First, you can ignore his behavior and make a determined effort to provide more variety and spice at home. You can look on his fault with the indulgence of a mother. The emptiness of instinctive gratification, apart from love, may dawn on him and he may tire of cheap excitement mere quickly than he tired of domesticity. Many a marriage has been saved by a wife wise enough not to antagonize her husband when the first crises appeared. Second, you can gradually work out your own economic independence and leave. W ork Out You can start „ with an avocation \ our o>'n and develop it Freedom a t vocat * n ; Pick out your best asset. If you can bake a cake better any anybody else, or sew a seam, take a snapshot, write a verse, design a gown, decorate a room, compose a ietter, or act a part, develop your talent patiently over a period of years. Tfhen seize the first opportunity to escape with your children. Most women find either method too tedious. It is easier to give way to their feeiuigs and scream and cry

liamson of Indianapolis, wife of the auditor of the state. All of these women will assume new social duties with the exception of Mrs. Mayr and Mrs. Williamson, whose husbands already hold their offices. Lutz took his oath of office at noon Saturday. The inauguration Jan. 9 will place these women in important places in the social and political life of Indiana.

' and upbraid the selfish creature who destroyed their happiness. They are foolish enough to believe that they can cure the situation by force, by revenge, by vituperation. But they only destroy the thing they sought to save, and live to be sour, embittered women. I particularly admire your atttitude toward your children, and your wise decision to preserve their ideal of their father. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young girl very much in love with a man several years older than I. He wants me to marry him, but he has been in the penitentiary for five years. Just got out a few months ago. He also has been married and has three children, but his wife has married again and has the children, although he has to support them. My folks don’t know about these things. He says when they know him better he is going to tell them everything. He is trying to go straight, but my folks just would die If they knew all these things. Sometimes I feel like leaving them a letter. I telling them everything, and run off j and marry him. I love him so 1 much. WORRIED. Dear Worried —I know so little of the man that I can not advise you intelligently. I do not even know what he was in the penitentiary for. I do think, however, that it is far from intelligent for you to trust your own judgment in the matter, and that you ought to value the mature advice your parents could give you. They know the man. I do not.

VISITING HERE flip****

Miss Ruth Sweeney

Miss Ruth Sweeney, Dearborn, Mich., is visiting here with friends and relatives. She will enter the Michigan university in the fall. MISS HESTER TO BE BRIDGE FETE GUEST Miss Myrtle B. Powell will entertain today at her home, 1503 North La Salle street, at an informal bridge party, in honor of Miss Eleanor Hester, who will resume her studies at Indiana university after a holiday visit. Guests with Miss Hester will be Misses Madonna Hessler, Pauline Sumners, and Mae Florence, and Misses Katherine Hamilton and Frances Hiatt of Danville.

125 Celebrate New Year’s at Meridian Hills The New Year was ushered in at the Meridian Hills Country Club with an aitnual formal dinner, followed by bridge. One hundred and twenty-five members and guests were seated at a T-shaped table, elaborately decorated with smilax. Down the center of the table ivory tapers splashed with silver and held in star-shaped silver candle holders lighted the dining room. The holiday decorations were carried out throughout the room, with archways and windows draped with smilax, and the overhead lights tied with red tulle bows and decorated with silver poinsettias. A group of songs was given by Mrs. J. E. Thompson. Just before midnight guests were entertained with a novelty radio broadcast program, arranged by B. F. Kelley, and assisted by Harry J. Berry and Mr. and Mrs. George N. Weaver. The microphones and amplifiers installed in the club brought to the listeners a resume of the 1932 activities of the club, and a skit of club personalities. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Beckert had as their guests at the dinner Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Beschorman. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Pike and Dr. tind Mrs. Glenn J. Pell were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Kelley. Mr. and and Mrs, E. A. Kelley. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Davis were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Parke Cooling. Mr. and ( Mrs. Burnside Smith were enter- j tained by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Grum- 1 me. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Minnick had as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fawcett, of French Lick. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. McVie entertained Mr. I and Mrs. Maxwell Shaw. This afternoon, from 4 to 6, officers and board members of the club, and their wives, will be hosts and hostesses at the annual New Year’s tea to be given at the club. In the receiving line will be Messrs, and Mesdames A. D. Hitz, E. H. Kemper, Howard S. Morse, Earl Beck, Almus G. Ruddell, Ira A. Minnick. Harry R. Wilson, Ben C. Stevenson, Hugh J. Baker, George S. Olive and James L. Murry. Mesdames Baker and Ruddell will preside at the tea table.

FRANCES HAMILTON IS MARRIED HERE Dr. and Mrs. Frank A. Hamilton. Woodstock drive, have announced the marriage of their daughter. Miss Frances Louise Hamilton, which took place Friday, to Henderson H. Wheeler, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Wheeler, 5256 North Illinois street. Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler will sail from New York for Bermuda, and will return about the middle of January to make their home In Indianapolis. The bride is a graduate of Tudor Hall and attended Smith college. Mr. Wheeler attended Dartmouth college. Owl Club to Meet The Ow'l Club w r ill meet Wednesday at the home of Miss Dorothy Jay, 774 West drive, Woodruff Place.

Daily Recipe SHRIMP AND LOBSTER RAMEKINS AU GRATIN Make a cheese sauce of 14 tablespoons butter, 14 tablespoons flour, 14 cups milk and 1-3 cup grated cheese. Season to taste. Add contents of one sMounce can of shrimps, cut in pieces, and the contents of a 6-ounce can of lobster, shreded. Pour into individual, flat, shallow ramekins, cover with buttered crumbs and brown In a hot oven. This serves five persons.

Variety of Programs on Schedule for January of Department Club' Ten o’clock Group Will Hold ‘Memory Garden’ Meeting Jan. 18; Charter Members to Be Honored Jan. 18. January plans of the Woman's Department Club promises a variety . of programs. 4 One of the most unusual will be the meeting of the Ten o'clock group* • with Mrs. Edward A. Brown, 5420 Central avenue, on Wednesday, Jan. 18, when members will bring keepsakes. The program will have for its subject, "Garden of Memories."

Another meeting which will be particularly interesting will be a luncheon on Tuesday, Jan. 24, for founders, charter and life members. Hostesses for this will be Mrs. Leonidas Smith and her committee. Reservations for the luncheon are to be made with Mesdames Edward L. Hall. Thomas F. Davidson, or Charlton N. Carter. Music for the luncheon will be by the OrlofT Quintet. Moving Pictures Shown The art department is entertaining today with moving pictures shown by Dr. and Mrs. Leonidas Smith, and an exhibit of water colors by Miss Carolyn G. Bradley. On Wednesday the Ten o'clock group will meet with Mrs. H. B. Burnett, 4417 North Pennsylvania street. The literature and drama section will hear Professor John Robert Moore at 2:15 Wednesday on "The West in American Literature.” The board of directors of the club will meet on Monday, Jan. 9. Plan Buffet Luncheon Mrs. Victor Kendall will have charge of the reservations, for the buffet luncheon to be given at 12:30 Wednesday, Jan. 11, with Mesdames W. P. Morton and Harry W. Dragoo as hostesses. The program for this meeting, which will be a general club meeting, .will be in charge of the Book-a-Month study group in the morning, when Mrs. Hulbert J. Smith will review "The Sheltered Life,” by Ellen Glasgow. The afternoon program will be "Tallow Dips," by Robert Parker Miles. The community welfare department will have-charge of ft program and discussion luncheon on Wednesday, Jan. 18. Members of the general club will be guests. Mrs. Francis Spaulding will speak on "Our Social Agencies.” Discuss Psychology Mrs. H. L. Brown will have as her subject, "The Garden of the Ages in Washington,” Thursday, Jan. 19. when the garden section of the art department will pieet. The final meeting of the month will be on Wednesday, Jan. 25, under the auspices of the American home department. The program will include reviews by Dr. D. Lee Andrews of "Psychology and the Day's Work,” by Edgar James Swift, and "Social Psychology,” by Floyd Henry Alport. This will be under the direction of Mrs. A. C. Rasmussen, chairman of the applied education section. Mrs. A. C. Breece, chairman of the music section, has arranged a half hour program with stringed instruments, which will be followed by Dr. Paul Leland Haworth of Butler university, who will speak on "Our Defective Training for Citizenship.”

L. S. AYRES & CO. \o u Ate Th e m U p So \\ e \\ ired for More! Rough Crepe Hats at $\ B Gold Bronzeen Green Blue Red Black Brown Anew fashion idea introduced at a ridiculous price. Shallow-crowned, forward-tilting hats,, with the coquetry of Watteau lines, and a bow instead of a wreath of flowers ... or cunning cuff turbans, or brims and shallow “doughboy” crowns ... in the fabrics you love for. dresses, and the colors that match your gowns. AYRES’ HATS-THIRD FLOOR.

JAN. 2, IV,

Book Reviews Program for Jewish Women Miss Mary Eloise Spann and Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will give a | program Thursday afternoon for the Indianapolis section of the Council of Jewish Women, in the Kirshbauni Community Center. The program, which has been arranged by Mrs. Jack Harding, and Mrs. Samuel J. Mantel, will include a group of songs by Miss Spann and 1 the review of "Josephus,” by Fcnchtwanger, and “Forgive Us Our Trespasses,” by Douglas, by Mrs. Garten. Mrs. Sultan G. Cohen will preside at the meeting. Following the program there will be a tea. which wiff ; be arranged by Mrs. Jacob B. Solomon. assisted by Mrs. Morris Dee.

FRANCES HAMILTON’S WEDDING ANNOUNCED

Dr. and Mrs. Frank A. Hamilton. Woodstock drive, announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Frances Louise Hamilton, to Henderson H. Wheeler, son of Dr. and Mrs. Homer H. Wheeler, 5256 North Illinois street. Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler will make their home in Indianapolis following a bridal trip to Bermuda. The bride attended Smith college and Tudor Hall, and is a member, of the Junior League and the In-* dianaplois Dramatic Club. Mr. Wheeler attended Dartmouth college. FICTION CLUB HOLDS ANNUAL RECEPTION The third annual New Year's day reception of the Shortridge high school Fiction Club was held Sunday at the home of Miss Mary Ellen Voyles, 4150 North Meridian street. Decorations were in red and green, with candles on the tables. ’ Assisting Miss Voyles in receiving J were Miss Ruth Louise Armstrong of I the Shortridge English department, | club sponsor; Mrs. C. F. Voyles, Frederick Kershner, president, and the past presidents of the club, Windell Schullenberger, Charles McNaull, James Funkhouser, John David Millett, Leroy Breunig, David Kautz, Robert Deupree, Albert Levi, William Burich, and Cleo Schullenberger. Music was played by Miss Jean Anderson on the harp.