Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 9, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 May 1933 — Page 6

PAGE 6

City Makes Readv for Race Day Annual Speed Classic Is Drawing Card for Sport World. BV BEATRICE BLRGAN limes ttnman’i I*a*e Editor OPEED marks the tempo of the times, as social and sports leaders anticipate the 1933 Speedway classic here Memorial day. Hopes of broken records, cross-country trips of friends, dinners, dances stand out as the pacemakers of thought. Clubs, hotels and hostesses busy

them selves in preparation for the annual test of automotive prowess and invention. The hound of fashion sends milady to the shops. makes ready to greet r lebrities. Governor Paul V. McNutt and Mayr Reginald Sulivan pause in heir duties to ! n v i t p friends for their boxes.

'liss Borgan

A Model T comes puffing to v jerking halt. A limousine rolls in with purring hum. A private coach is switched on the track. A flashy j plane taxies down to earth. All the world with all its classes is corning to the race. Many Guests Arrive Many guests already have arrived fop visits before the event. Miss Joan Skelly of Tulsa, Okla., will attend with Mr. and Mrs. T. Harry Bedell. Mrs. Henry Newell Beer and her daughter Eunice have come from the east to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W A. Atkins. With Mr Beer, who will join them Memorial day, they will be among the spectators. The Indianapolis Athletic Club prepares to be host to Colonel Eddie Rickenbacker of New York. and William J. McAneeny of Detroit, both luminaries in ihe motor world. Annual Dance at Club Mr. and Mrs. Frederick T. Holliday await the arrival of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Ford Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Henry, all of Detroit, whom they will entertain at the - races. Mrs. Albert Goepper will be joined by her daughter. Mrs. Edward Anderson of Chicago, and Mr. Anderson, for a party. Members and guests of the Indi- . nnapolis Athletic Club will be entertained at the annual Speedway j dance. The Columbia Club will pro- i vide entertainment with a supper dance. Country clubs anticipate their members for dinner and dancing. Bride-Elect Is Entertained at Buffet Supper Mrs. Arch N. Lawson gave a buffet j supper Sunday night at her home. j 5666 North Delaware street, in honor of Miss Marian L. Brown, a brideelect. The marriage of Miss Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Martin E. Sipe, 3216 Pennsylvania street, to Seymour Madison, son of Lieuten-ant-Colonel and Mrs. Irving Madison. 2929 Washington boulevard, will take place June 14 at West Point. Ten guests were entertained. Mrs. Gray Stalev will entertain at her Jiome. 2806 Washington boulevard. Wednesdav for Miss Brown, and Mrs. Everett C. McGriff will have a party next week. Mrs. Madison entertained with a luncheon bridge at her home Fri-.. dav in honor of Miss Brown. Appointments were in phik and white. Covers were laid for Mesdames Robert Ferridav. Thomas Jerkins. Roy Hagertv. G. E. Kraul. Clyde Parmalee. William Latfcimore, Everett McGriff, Fred Shaw, John Vincent Stark. Grey Staley. Mrs. Sine and Miss Barbara Shaw. Out-of-town guests included Mrs. McDoran of Muncie, Mrs. Robert Machary of Toronto. Canada, and I Mrs. Leif Nepnid of Newport, R. I. TRIANONS SENIOR BANQUET IS HELP Miss Doris Arnold was toastmaster at the annual senior banquet held by Trianon Saturday night at the Spink-Arms. Recently elected officers were installed. Guests included Mrs. Thomas G. Wesenberg. Miss Emma Colbert, Miss Gladys Banes, Mrs. Karl S. Means. Mrs. Merwyn Bridenstine of Butler university; Mrs. Marvin Curie and Mrs. E. R. Shoemaker, patronesses, and Miss Ruth Emhardt, national president.

Daily Recipe OLD - FASHIONED APPLE PIE 6 or $ tart apples 1-2 to 3-4 eup sugar ... 1-2 teaspoon cinnamon . 2 tablespoons butter '2 teaspoons lemon juice 1-4 teaspoon salt Pare, core and cut the apples in eighths. Put a row around the plate L inch from the edge, and work toward the center until the plate is covered. Mix the sugar, cinnamon, salt and lemon juice together and sprinkle over the apples. Then pile on the remaining and dot with butter. Wet the edges of the under crust, cover with the upper crust, which has been slit or pricked with a fork to allow steam to escape. Press the edges together, trim nd bake in a hot oven (425 degrees F.) for ten minutes. then reduce the heat to that of a moderate oven <350 degrees F.), and bake until the apples are tender, about 20 minutes.

Have a Hobby— Camera Club Members Display Excellent Work

BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON To add to my "developement” To give me snap” and glow And an •'exposure” to the sun I'll kodak as I go. For as the "film” Is rolled away So eyes can wonders see My camera will register The joy it "lens" to me. T ESS than a hundred years ago, in 1839, Louis Jacques Daugerre discovered a process for producing an image on a sensitized silver plate. The following year John W. Draper of New York university made by this method the first portrait photograph. The next half century saw gradual and important developments and, in 1884, George Eastman perfected a roll film of paper. Edison, in 1893. invented the first moving picture machine. Within this comparatively short time, such wonderful progress has been made in photography that today those who call themselves amateurs can make beautiful and distinctive pictures. This fascinating and satisfying field for a hobby naturally attracted those artistically inclined and the Indianapolis Camera Club is composed of members who enjoy various phases of photography. The club is essentially an organization of men and women interested in photography only as a hobby, for even the few professional members delight in experimenting and in developing ideas from a noncommercial standpoint. An exhibit of pictures by members of the club, showing at the John Herron Art museum this month, demonstrates the varied and artistic possibilities of the hobby, as a means of individual expression. Herbert Solinger's interesting treatment of circles and shadows in a picture of Atkins’ saws and T. A. Green's exhibit in mechanical setting were awarded the coveted honorable mention. Green's “Acetylene Welder” is illustrated here. Among the many beautiful prints hung are bromoil landscapes by Herman Shearer and Brandt Steele; a charming portrait of his small son by E. M. McNally; R. A. Kurtz’s view of the Indiana Sand Dunes, and the portrait of a modern young woman by Stanley Brooks the club president. a a a IN the five years of its existence. the club has made a name for itself among amateur photographic organizations of the country as well as the national federation, the Associated Camera Club of America. The attractive clubrooms at 110 East Ninth street are spacious, with a lobby, lounge, darkroom for use of members .and exhibition gallery, where competing sets of prints are hung during the year. These exhibits are open to the public every Wednesday evening from 7:30 to 9:30. Every three months the members I hold a competition, and each year an inter-club contest is conducted by the Associated Camera Clubs. This year, for the third successive j time, pictures by members of the Indianapolis club have received ; awards in this contest, a very high | honor. The club also holds one-man shows | and hangs exhibits of merit from ! other organizations. At present inj tcresting prints by members of the

Card Parties

Members of the Altar Society of Cathedral parish will give a card i party Tuesday afternoon at the K. : of C. hall. Thirteenth and Delaware j streets. Hostesses will be Mesdames R. J. McManus, William L. O'Con- ; nor, August F. Krieg, J. J. Fitzgerald. John J. Clancy, Arthur O. Wanger. N. A. Patterson. John Gaughan ; and Misses Nora Walsh, Frances Fox and Julia Lynch. . Young Ladies Sodality of Holy i Cress church will give a tea and ! card party at Banner-Whitehill, 1 auditorium next Saturday afternoon. Miss Mary Florence Sullivan is , chairman. Banner Temple 37. Pythian Sisters. will hold a card party at 8:15 Tuesday night at 119 East Ohio I street. All games will be played. Mrs. Eugene Steigerwald is chairman of the luncheon and card party ; to be held by the Little Flower Altar 1 society Tuesday noon at the Little Flower hall. Fourteenth street and j Bosart avenue. PI LAMBDA THETA XI MES PRESIDES T Mrs. Francis B. Rankin is the newly elected president of Pi Lambda Theta, national honorary educational sorority. Other officers are Miss Florence E. Day. vice-pres-ident; Mrs. Waler Titus, secretary; Miss Mata Bonlse, treasurer, and Mrs. Oscar Eller, member-at-large. Mrs. Rankin will be the delegate io the national biennial council meeting of the sorority June 29 to July 2 in Chicago.

Ft. Dearborn Camera Club of Chicago are on the walls. a a a SEVERAL members have brought distinction to Indianapolis and the club. Hillary G. Bailey was made a Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society of London and W. Huntley Ashby was awarded an associate fellowship. Herman Sheerer is considered one of the leaders of the country in bromoil photography, a process similar to lithographing. In other specialized fields, D. J. Angus processes moving pictures, Neil Campbell has done some interesting work in color photography, and Herbert Solinger's picture, in the exhibit, of St. Mary's cathedral with the rising sun silhouetting the twin spires, was made by pinhole photography, an interesting method. The true hobbyist always carries a pocket camera, so that no choice scene will escape him. Asa consequence, many of the most beautiful of the exhibition pictures were taken with a small camera and then enlarged and developed by different methods. All this elaboration sounds expensive, but a member of the club says that, for him, the cost of one year of golf would pay for many years of photography.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

If you need more light on your problems, write to Jane Jordan, who will study your case and advise you in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl of 19, madly in love with a young man who is married. This man is 20 years old. He has no children, but is deeply in love with his wife. About a year ago he separated from her and I was the first girl he came to for dates. As all girls will do when they are in love, I gave myself to him and now I have a baby boy 8 weeks old. About six weeks after he and his wife separated, they went back together again and still are living together. His wife does not love him. Her friends say she always is saying things about him. She cheats on him, but he does not know it. She does not want him and has no children by him. She is in love with someone else. I love him and have a child by him. I could get him if only he knew how she was doing. I am going to try to get him and I'm pretty sure I can, with the help of my father, who will take it to court. I am almost insane and want to know what to do. I need his love badly and I do not want anybody but him. THE UNKNOWN. Answer—l do not believe any man's love ever was won by a court order. Neither do I believe that he ever is grateful to the people who tear down his belief in the woman he loves. Os course your child has

a right to his father's support. Perhaps you can j get that bv going j to court, but love j is one thing that !y o u jus t can't | legislate. Wouldn't it be | better for you to j wait until his eyes I are opened by the natural course of events? If his wife | is as bad as you i say she is, it won’t i be long until he

£

Jane Jordan

discovers her perfidy. When he is disillusioned completely, possibly he again will become dependent upon your sympathy and understanding. I can't guarantee that patience will win his love for you. I only know that force is worse than useless. You may as well recognize that you have been used as a sort of consolation prize by a man of weak character and no proper sense of his own responsibilities. I do not blame you for putting up a fight for the father of your child. But I don't think you have a chance in the world to win with machine gun methods. You’ll have to engage in more subtle warfare to get him. Even then I'm terribly afraid he won’t be worth having. Marriage was instituted for the protection of women, to prevent just such catastrophes. Without marriage, men can love when they choose and leave children whose mothers have no legal redress against them. You haven't availed yourself of the protection which the wisdom of the race designed for your benefit. I am not condemning you. I’m saying you made a very bad bargain. If you were a reasoning human being, you would pace no belief in a young man who already has proved so unstable. But you're not. You're governed only by your emotions. They got you into trouble once,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Mrs. Leedy Will Honor Daughter Supper to Mark First Anniversary of Wedding. Mrs. U. G. Leedy will entertain with a buffet supper at her home, 5206 Grandview drive, Tuesday night in honor of her daughter, Mrs. Malcolm Davisson, and Dr. Davisson of Berkeley, Cal., who are celebrating their first wedding anniversary. Dr. and Mrs. Davisson are the house guests of Mrs. Leedy. Spring flowers will be used throughout the receiving rooms and in the dining room. Thirty guests will be entertained. Those who will attend will be Dr. and Mrs. George W. Bowman, Cecil Strupe. Mr. and Mrs. E. Carl Watson. V. A. Hampton. Miss Virginia Hampton. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McCullough, Miss Marguerite Hamm, Thomas Bunch, Mr. and Mrs. James Brocher, Mrs. J. C. Sipe, Carl Sipe, Charles Sipe. Miss Helena Sipe, Mrs. Helena Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Huff, Harold Bredell and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wolfskill. Mrs. Leedy will have as special guests her daughter. Mrs. Calvin Hampton of Worland. Wyo.. who will leave for Columbia university next month, and her son, E. Hollis Leedy and Mrs. Leedy. Mrs. Hampton. Mrs. Leedy and Mrs. Hollis Leedy received at an informal tea Sunday. Mrs. Davisson and Mrs. Hollis Leedy poured. Miss Hampton assisted in the dining room. The tea table was arranged with ivory tapers in fivebranch candelabrum and crystal bowls of pastel garden flowers. ORDER GUARDIAN IS HONORED AT PARRY Mrs. Jessie Pruitt, grand guardian of Order of Job’s Daughters, was honored at a tea from 3 to 5 today at the home of Mrs. H. B. Millspaugh. With her in the receiving line were Misses Marie Wilde, Laura Duffy. Opal Mary Watts. Farietta DeVault and Dora Watts. Past queens poured. Members of Bethel 3 arranged the tea. attended by all bethels in tne city. DETROIT GUEST IS GIVEN LUNCHEON Mrs. Harry R. Kerr, 5774 Washington boulevard, was hostess for a luncheon bridge party Saturday in honor of Mrs. Robert F. Miller of Detroit. Guests included Mrs. Harlam Foulke of Columbus, Mrs. Arch Erehart of Anderson and Mesdames Harry L. Foreman, O. C. Hedrick, Q. G. Noblitt, O. P. Oblinger, C. R. York, William E. Gabe, Ray Helm, Paul Spa rick and T. Loden Driscoll.

and will do so again and again until you bring them under direction of your intellect. Even though lam not very hopeful, I do hope you win out. tt n u Dear Jane Jordan—This letter is to the crippled girl whose letter appeared in The Times. When I was 3 years old 1 had typhoid fever and inflamamtory rheumatism and have been crippled ever since. Part of the time I have been able to walk on crutches and the rest of the time I've had to sit in a wheel chair. lam crippled and deformed from my ears to my toes. I went to school until I was 9 years old, but got worse and had to quit. My legs drew up until they were in a sitting position. I went to the Robert W. Long hospital in 1931 and was put in casts. I now am so stiff that I can’t walk and have to sit in my wheel chair. I can't even sew on the sewing machine as I could before. At first I felt so self-conscious that I cried when any one looked at me, but I gradually overcame by backwardness. When I feel this coming over me, I force myself to meet and make friends with people. I have several nice friends who always are trying to make my life pleasant. In spite of all this attention, I get blue and feel that life is not worth living. If I had good use of my hands, I could make most, if not all. of my own living, and could endure the loss of my legs. I have learned to make crepe paper butterflies, owls and dolls. They are easily sold. Every one who sees one wants one. If you will put your mind on . something like this, you soon will forget your handicap to a great extent. Have your folks bring you out to see me some time and I will show you the things I am making. I live on lona road, between Brookville road and the Berman pike. Z. H. Answer—Your letter is a docuj ment of human courage which I | shall not soon forget. If the young i lady whose letter you are answer- ! ing will send her address, I will for- ; ward your letter for her to read. I She will find more complete instructions on how to find your house in j your letter. Thank you a thousand times for | writing. Nothing that I can say j is worthy to be added to your his- | tory. That speaks for itself.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Unhulled strawberries, cereal, cream, scrambled eggs, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Tomato succotash with bacon, baking powder biscuits, pineapple and rhubarb jam, milk, tea. Dinner — Veal pot pie, French fried onions, head lettuce with Russian dressing, baked sponge cake and custard trifle, milk, coffee.

Stars n Stripes ana a a a Hollywood Nymphs Are Splashed With Red

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C O o c tern No. £* *5 D Size Street City State Name

* * A./DY / 1 / * 5233 ' * Vlcwl CAPE DESIGN The briefer they are the better we like them—whether they’re the business-like type we dash around town in, or the frivolous ‘‘fichu” affairs we wear on gala night. Daytime capes are smartest in hip length—women are finding them so marvelously becoming that the box jacket will need to look to its laurels. Formal capes have almost reached the vanishing point—yet, as they diminish in size, the greater grows their chic! Sketched are two easy-to-make capes illustrating both " varieties. It’s smart to wear a plain cape with a printed frock, lining the cape with a matching print, thus making it reversible. For the evening frivolity, chiffon or taffeta, if you like them crisp —is ultra smart. For fabric requirements see pattern envelope. Pattern No. 5235 is designed for sizes 16 and 20 years, 38 and 42 bust. New summer fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and inclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern 15 cents.

Sororities

Alpha chapter, Phi Sigma Theta sorority, will meet Monday night at the home of Miss Eleanor Geis. 2532 Madison avenue. A mothers and daughters spread will be given tonight by Zeta chapter, Omega Phi Tau sorority, at the Run Country Club. Air old-fashioned style snow will be presented by members. Mrs. Dorwin Sweet and Mrs. Charles Laware in charge. Kappa Delta Theta sorority will meet Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Glenn Zink. 909 East Main street, Broad Ripple. Play to Be Given “Am? nda's Romance" is the play to be presented by the Daughters of Isabella Study Club at 8:15 Thursday night in the K. of C. hall. Proceeds will go toward the St. Elizabeth Milk fund. Misses Parry Roesch and Joyce Roesch wil present dancing numbers, and Miss Frances Scherrer. Thomas F. O'Connor and Edward Krueger, accompanied by Miss Goldie Taylor, will sing.

Cine-Modes

Gail Patrick

ity XEA Service HOLLYWOOD, May 22.—Many Hollywood girls seem to be seeing red when they go costumehunting. You see a bit of red on many of the best looking outfits. Gail Patrick, diving in for a swim while out yachting, wore a* gray swim suit with gray, white and red stripes for its surplice upper part. It was something new in swim suits, a stunning one, particularly the way the striped top was fashioned. She wore gray rubber shoes and a bright red cap. Mae Clarke, at the El Mirador swimming pool last week-end, wore a yellow backless swimming suit trimmed in blue and red stripes. She was talking with Art Jarett. Grace Bradley, newcomer from Brooklyn, wore a cute new hat, driving her car down the boulevard. It is a pancake of scarlet straw, and sits on the very edge of the left side of her head, held in place by a small band around the back of her head. MISS FLACK WILL BE •GIVEN BLAGUE Miss Thelma Flack will receive the scholarship and activity plaque of Kappa Delta Pi, honorary educational sorority of Butler university, at a formal banquet in the Marott tonight. The award is given each year to the outstanding senior of the College of Education. Other honor guests will be Dr. and Mrs. Walter Scott Athearn, Dean and Mrs. James W. Putnam, Dean and Mrs. Albert E. Bailey, Dean and Mrs. Frederick D. Kershner, Dean and Mrs. William L. Richardson, Dr. and Mrs. George F. Leonard, Professor and Mrs. L. O. Garber, Professor and Mrs. Albert Mock, Professor and Mrs. A. B. Carlisle, Dr. and Mrs. Pleasant Hightower and Don Sparks.

MRS, LEMAUX TO BE LUNCHEON HOSTESS

Airs. Irving W. Lemaux will be hostess for the last luncheon bridge party of the Columbia Club at 12:30 Wednesday. Her assistants will be Mesdames Russell C. Rottger, J. N. Gelman, Samuel Lewis Shank, Charles O. Roemler, Paul Krauss, Charles B. Sommers, Edward E. Petri, Howard J. Lacey. William AL Louden, W. S. Tomlin. B. J. Hanchett. Franklin S. Reynolds of Cambridge City and Miss Dorothy Cunningham. Mrs. J. Hart Laird, club hostess, is io charge of reservations. Both contract and auction bridge will be n’ayed.

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Christen- j sen of Novato. Cal., are visiting Mr.and Mrs. John F. Patton, 941 East Thirty-fourth street. Mrs. B. Fishbein! 3818 Central avenue, has as her guests Dr. and j Mrs. William I. Fishbein of Chi- i cago. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rostand Carl J. Weinhardt have returned from a trip in the east, where they visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry Archey, formerly of this city. Mrs. Homer Elliott has returned to her home. 3930 Central avenue, after spending eighteen months in i Tuscon, Ariz.^ BUTLER’S ALUMNI \ CEREMONY JUNE 10 Dr. Daniel W. Layman, president of the Bualer Aumni Association, has announced June 10 for the annual alumni celebration. John Fuller is general chairman of the affair scheduled for 3 to 9. Members of the 1933 graduating class will take part in the program, ! presenting their class day cereI monies with Ralph Moore, class j president in charge. Other features will include stunts, singing and band contests, alumni supper and formal program. Members of the general commitj tee include J. Douglas Perry, supper tickets; Mrs. Walter Montgomery, decorations: Mrs. Hersel Hudson, supper; William Pearcy, music, and John F. Mitchell, publicity. Frolic Is Saturday The next frolic of tne Little Lambs Club will be at 10 Saturday night at the Indianapolis Country Club. Guild Will Meet Riley Hospital Cheer Guild will meet at 2 Tuesday in the Fletcher American bank parlors.

Mental Attitude Will Be Stressed at Charm School at City Store Auditorium Lectures to Be Given Daily On Etiquet, Styles and Habits by Miss Eve Ve Verka. BY HELEN LINDSAY ALTHOUGH Webster defines charm as "that which exerts an irresistible power to please,” Eve Ve Yerka, in the Charm School opening today at L. S. Ayres, gives it a much more human meaning. “Charm.” Miss Ve Verka says, "is a chloroform, which makes all the operations of |ife painless.” Four days of this week Miss Ve Verka and her assistants will guide Indianapolis femininity in the administration of charm. She will include in her lectures in the Ayres’ auditorium each afternoon talks on books, table etiquette, individuality in perfumes, and various other details of daily habits. The most important of these, she believes, is mental attitude. “Many women just drift through life," Miss Ve Verka says. “What they need to do is to learn to think, to face life gallantly and courageously, instead of with a chip on the shoulder." The school will continue through Tuesday. Assisting Miss Ve Verka

will be a gypsy girl, specialist in perfume ideas, and models who will give fashion shows, exercises, and short dramatic sketches to illustrate the points made in the lectures. a a a Offer Moveable Chaise Longue IF you are looking for a "place in the sun” this summer it's going to be an easy thing to manage with the “wheelbarrow chaise longue" shown at Charles Mayers. It's ideal equipment for lazy hours, for its bright colored cushions are invitingly comfortable. At one end the chaise longue has a pleasing headrest; at the other a wide arm for sun-tan oils and cooling drinks. Wooden disk wheels are at one end, and short “wheelbarrow" handles at the other solve the problem of moving about in the garden. Mayer's are also showing gliders with removable

cushions, folding out-door tables and chairs which are so light that they will be easy to bring in and out of the weather. Deck chairs with or without canopies and footrests for lounging hours, complete the new garden equipment. ana a a a New Toaster Ends ‘ Grouch ’ THERE won’t be any excuse for a “breakfast grouch" if you own a new Toastmaster toaster, equipped with the "flexible clock." With this arrangement, you just can't burn toast. The clock arrangement automatically holds a slice of bread just the length of time necessary to toast it properly. There's no need to pre-heat the toaster; no adjusting between slices; it’s completely automatic. If the toaster is cold, the clock simply works more slowly. When the bread is toasted to just the right degree, up it pops. When the toaster is hot. the clock speeds up its work, and the toast is just as perfect. And so disappears one more of the old-time questionable arts. There'll be no more scraping of burnt toast. The Toastmaster comes in two sizes; a one-slice and two-slice capacity. It is sold at the Indianapolis Power and Light Company.

Service Group to Hold 2-Day State Session

Hamilton Berry chapter will be j hostess at the state conference of the Service Star Legion Tuesday and Wednesday at the Spink Arms. The conference will open with a luncheon at 1 with Mrs. Janies M. Hitch, state president of Evansville, presiding. Airs. Bruce W. Maxwell will entertain the state officers and delegates with a supper at her home on the Millersville road at 6 Tuesday night. Airs. M. D. Didway will give a monologue. Officers will be elected Wednesday j morning followed bv a luncheon at! the Spink Arms. The arrangements | committee for the luncheon includ°s I Mesdames Nellie G. Winings. O. E. Green and W L. Horn. Mrs. T. William Engle will sing, accompanied by Mrs. Didwav. The Rev. Thomas R. White will talk; Mrs. Ethel M. Rathert will conduct the hour of remembrance and Mrs Frank Nessler will act as installing officer. TUDOR HALL CLUB ELECTS OFFICERS Miss Peggie Ann Williams is the ; president of the student govern- j ment organization at Tudor Hall. Other officers recently elected are Misses Ardith ARdtenet, vice-presi-dent; Carolyn Stelck, secretary; Lucille Borinstein. treasurer; Virginia De Prez of Shelbyville, president of the senior class: Jacoueline Wolf, editor-in-chief of the Chronicle and Crown: Maurine Potlitzer of St. Joseph, Mo., president of the residence; Mary Lou Morris of South Bend, president of the Masquers Club, and Nina Brown, vice-presi-dent; Anne Rauch, secretary; Mary Louise Falender, treasurer, and Josephine Mayer, president of the athletic association. Sports on Program Sport afternoon will be held at Tudor Hall Thursday when final tennis double matches, final baseball games and swiming meets will be held. Aliss Alarguerite Slawson, Mrs. Ruth HutchJnson and Mrs. Gaylord B. Woife are in charge. Honors will be given those students with requirements in swimmg.

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.MAY 22, 1933

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Mrs. Lindsay

BRIDE-ELECT TO BE FETED AT PARTY

Mrs. Kearsley Urich, 5805 Forest lane, will entertain tonight at her home in honor of Miss Marjorie McClean Nelson, whose marriage to Walter Richard Spencer will taka place Saturday. Guests will include the brideelect’s mother, Mrs. Mabel Nelson, Mrs. John Bates Thomas, her only attendant, Mrs. George Schuetz and Miss Janet Schuetz, both of Zionsville, and Misses Janet Giffin, Jane Hamilton, Gladys Pollock. Martha Jane Sromm. Willa Jean Bond, Polly Moore of Noblesville and Eleanor Jane Meridith of Chicago, house guest of Miss Nelson.

ASK FOR! The New Distinctive, Permanent. The Sensational “Dur-O-Listic” (Method nml Profess) of Permanent Waving. Introduced Exclusively in Indianapolis by Beaute Artes Various Styles, including Mae Murray. Spiralette, Personalities. Itound Curl, Push-I'p and Self-Selling. lar method tiie" “Dur-0-Listic” PERMANENT SI.OO Complete With Shampoo and Push-t'p. "Dnr-O-Listic” Tonic and Oil Wave. Complete with Shampoo <p o nn and Finger Wave "Dnr-O-Listic” Exclusive "Leon'’ imported Oil Wave. Complete with Hair Cut, Shampoo CC flfl and Finger Wave OJ.UU Permanents Taken From 8 A. M. to T P M. BEAUTE ARTES 601 Roosevelt Bldg. Illinois and Washington Sts. With or Without Appointment LI. 0610 LI. 0670