Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 95, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1933 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Great Work in ‘Shaping Young Idea’ Done in Her School by Mrs. Lieber City Woman Makes Thorough Study of Psychology and Applies Her Knowledge to Benefit Youngsters. Thii U th* *e*ond of ■ irrieo which telto the storie* of Indtanapolii women •he hare arromlUhed mmethlnc In Hfe. who have foreed their war to promlBence hr their own Initiative and ambition. mam mam BY BEATRICE BI’RGAN Time* Woman'a Pae Editor ** A WOMAN Is not a success as a wife unless she grows mentally with ■Lm. her husband." decided Mrs. Richard Lieber early In her married life. This conviction, together with early welfare activities with l|er mother. Mrs. Phillip Rappaport. guided her into studies and experiences which resulted In founding of the Claire Ann Shover Nursery school, the only institution of its kind in Indianapolis and one of about 103 in the

United States. Only recently the management of the school was transferred to the Indianapolis branch of the American Association of University Women, but she will continue as honorary consultant. After her children were grown and her husband was building Indiana’s extensive park and game preserve system, as director of the state department of conservation. Mrs. Lieber was giving her services to protect futures of individuals. “The influences were many, mostly personal,” recalls Mrs. Lieber. “The scientific and psychological elements in the training of my children always interested me. When one of them in infancy was stricken with infantile paralysis, I realized, in aiding his physical convalescence, how Important it was not to permit my overanxious care to make him a dependent, helpless child. “Sustained psychological treatment enabled him

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Miss Burgan

to grow into a strong, self-reliant Individual. ’ • Without Mr Liebcr’s encouragement of my study, I never should have advanced to the idea of establishing my school,” reminisces Mrs. Lieber. "I started to keep abreast of the times simply to make myself

an interesting companion to him. "When my interests broadened, he encouraged my ambitions and approved my decision to open the school.” It was that experience with her own child and activities with her mother in juvenile court that urged her to take up child psychology in a serious way. Followed in Mother’s Path She followed the footsteps of her mother, who was the first woman to serve as a volunteer probation officer for the juvenile court .started in 1917 by Judge James Collins. As she worked with sympathetic understanding to re-adjust delinquent children, her discerning nature was noting their psychological processes. She was laying the groundwork for later studies. As Mrs. Lieber diverted interest of a child in her nursery school from some undesirable inclination, convictions drawn from this early experiences were reflected. She didn t accept psychologists’ theories blindly. She decided from her personal contacts that a child Is not born with morals; he learns them from education. Studied at Columbia She went to Columbia university to study and met Dr. Frank Maxfield. who encouraged her to found a school. She returned from the university and private study with Dr. Maxfield to engage in probation work. In addition to the encouragement of Dr. Maxfield. Mrs. Lieber was inspired to found her school by a bequest of a friend. Miss Claire Ann Shover, who willed her SI,OOO to use In the interest of children. “She was a mother who never became a mother,” is Mrs. Lieber s tribute to her friend, who was interested in child education. She rented a house at 3265 North New Jersey street, and under the supervision of a representative from the famous Merrill Palmer school of Detroit, she selected the most modern equipment. Teaches Child Responsibility With the idea of making the preschool child happy and independent, she encouraged expression of individual personalities. “You must teach a child to stand on his own feet mentally as well as physically.” she explains. “Parents too often forget that a child is an individual: they are too likely to be dominated by possessiveness and an insistence upon expression of their own will.” In Mrs. Lieber’s school, which she directed until transfer to the asociation. the child learns to adapt himself to a group. He becomes independent, learning to put on his own galoshes, to hang up hi* toothbrush, and to wash his glass after a drink of milk. He learns rhythm, music and cooperation. He comes to do the right thing often because It Is expected of him. He sees other children eating their spinach* and no one notices his own dalliance over his dish. He soon follows their behavior. Often such a child will go home and refuse to eat, with an anxious mother pleading and coaxing.

Knows Nd of Health As Mrs. Lieber planned the children's meals and arranged a regular program for rest and sleep, she followed the knowledge that a healthy body is necessary for a harmonious mental adjustment. "Delinquency can be prevented in the normal person to a great extent if a child has the proper training in early years,” contends Mrs. Lieber. ••The difference in a child destroying a neighbor's flowers at 3 and stealing a pistol at 13 is only a matter of degree. He must be taught temperance by education.” At various times during the sixyear period of the school's existence. Mrs. Lieber traveled to Europe for studv and observation at universities and schools similar to her own. She studied with Dr. Alfred Adler at the University of Vienna and visited established habit clinics and nursery schools in England and Switzerland. Daughter Is Interne While Mrs. Lieber was educated at girl*’ schools with no plan for a career, she encouraged her own daughter's ambitions for a profession. Her only daughter. Mrs. Norman Baker, now of Fergus Falls. Minn., was the first woman interne at the Robert Long hospital, after studying at the Indiana university school of medicine. Mr* Lieber has been the center of a very vital family life. She devoted herself to her three children until they were ready for college Then she began her career. Beside* affiliation with the school, she i* an active board member of the Children's museum and has served on the sex education committee of the state board of health. “Adopts” Her Grandchildren This summer she has spent most of her time at the Lieber cabin in Brown county, doee to the state

park which Mr. Lieber developed. While their parents were abroad, Buddy and Betty Lieber, children of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lieber, were “adopted” by their grandmother. Buddy and Betty were students at their grandmothers nursery school, and their aunt, Mrs. Walter Lieber, designed the miniature diplomas that have been given to children on their “graduation.” “My hopq is that every public school may have its nursery school department,” concludes Mrs. Lieber. She expresses pleasure in the university association’s management of the school, because “it has been a dream of the organization to manage a nursery school.” Perfect Appetizer Caviar makes the perfect appetizer and has a de luxe air, even though you now can buy it at the Five and Ten. Serve two tiny triangles of toast, spread with caviar on a salad plate garnished with parsley, or put the toast bits on hearts of lettuce. Then add to the plate a tablespoon of finely chopped Bermuda onion and two fancily cut slices of lemon.

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C O V Q tern No. D I V Size Street City State Name

CHIC DINNER GOWN

If you can look romantic without looking as if you were dressed for a costume ball; if you can look fragile without looking wispy; if you can look alluring without seeming coy—then, you have learned the secret of real chic this season. And by real chic we mean the sort of due you find in this delightful lace dinner gown. Everything about it is new. But. more important still, everything about it is simple and graceful designed to make the most of lovely feminine curves. Note how the full sleeves fairly melt away from the dropped shoulder lines, and how the sweeping fullness is introduced low in the skirt They are such simple details that any beginner will find them easy to handle. Size 16 requires 5-\i yards of 36inch allover lace. 1 yard ribbon. Width about 3% yards. Send for our new fall fashion book. It contains the latest, easy-to-make fashions for every occasion. Patterns No. 5279 is designed for sizes 12, 14. 16, 18, 2d years, 30. 32, 34. 36. 38. 40 bust. Price for pattern, 15 cents. Our new fashion book is out! Send for it —put check here () and enclose 10 cents extra for book. iCowrrigbt, ÜBitetf features

City Woman Maintains Her Interest in School

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Mrs. Lieber and one of her pupils. While Mrs. Richard Lieber is acting as honorary consultant of the Claire Ann Shover Nursery school, now being conducted by the American Association of University Women, it was her dreams and ambitions that gave Indianapolis its only nursery school. Mrs. Lieber is seen sitting on the doorstep of the school with one of the boys, who is typical of the children who have been educated in accordance with the school’s progressive ideas. The entrance gate to the school is inviting to the children, who delight in its paintings of Mother Goose characters.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

What's wronr with your life? If you are having a hard time figuring out your problems, ask Jane Jordan to help you. Sign an assumed name if you like, but write your letter today. Dear Jane Jordan—l am 21 years old and have a baby 2 years old. Every day I feel more miserable than the day before. There Is ‘only one thing that is making my marriage hold together and that is my baby. I love him better than life, and I couldn’t support him and myself alone. I have no parents, so you see I would have to be the mainsail. I never loved my husband and we’ve never oeen happy. We have nothing in common whatsoever. Although he is young, he seems like a very old man. He never wants to go anywhere and we hardly ever converse. The only conversations that take place are arguments. My life is at a standstill; nothing happens. I feel that I should be at my happiest age, healthy and full of pep, but it is wasted on nothing. I can’t think of anything to do to fill my life. Without love, I’m without everything. My life is empty, wasting, and I live only forfmy baby. H. K. Answer—The economic factor plays an overwhelming part in holding a woman to the marriage bond after love has flown. When a wife finds herself in this position,

she likes to believe that she is a victim of circumstances, sometimes asserting, as you do, that her love was pretense from the beginning.) She forgets that when a marriage ; fails it never is one partner alone who is responsible, but both., Sometimes one is more to blame than the other, but it is | unfair to excuse oneself completely on this score.

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Jane Jordan

You have muffed the love problem, and you begin by assuring me that you can’t solve the economic one. You can’t think of anything to do to fill your life. From your viewpoint the only possible solution is to be rescued by some fairy prince ala Hans Christian Andersen. You want things to happen to you without the slightest effort on your part to make them happen. Your whole attitude is one of defeat, and, unless you replace it with one of courage, you are licked for sure. You can start with something, no matter how small, to fill your time. If you can't do anything else, you can worry about someone who is worse off than you are. Whatever you do, you must rid yourself of a passive attitude toward your problems. A resourceful woman always will worm her way out of the most discouraging difficulties. She will seize upon the first thing at hand and work at it. For example, I know one mother who gave birth in middle age to a crippled child. In her zeal to develop the shrunken muscles of the cripple by rubbing, she learned so much about massage that she became an accomplished physical therapist, supporting herself and her child after the father was disabled. I do not mean that you need give up hope ever of finding love to fill the emptiness of your life. I only mean that the cards are all against you as long as you are convinced thoroughly that there is absolutely nothing you can do for yourself.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Chilled tomato Juice, cereal, cream, codfish balls, muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Stuffed onions, tomato and banana salad, toasted muffins, chocolate milk shake. * Dinner — Baked ham, scalloped po- ' tatoes, chard with lemon sauce, watermelon an 4 green pepper salad, blackberry cobbler, milk, coffee.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Dear Jane Jordan Nothing that happens matters very much for very long. It’s only the way we take it that matters greatly. After all, which union is the purest, love without marriage, or marriage without love? JUST ME. Answer—l agree with you that it isn’t so much what happens to an individual that matters as his attitude toward It. For example, some of the world’s most outstanding personalities have resulted from the most tragic marriages. As someone else has put it, “Is not living together without charm or delight more indecent than the most immoderate ecstasy?” I put this question up to our readers in the hope of getting some interesting answers. Get out your pencils again! ana Dear Jane Jordan—l’ve known my boy friend more than a year. I used to run around with a crowd in West Indianapolis that has the reputation of being tough, but I’ve broken away from them entirely this summer. Last night the boy friend got fresh, just to see if the things he’d heard about me were true or not. They were not. He said I'd gone way up in his estimation. He then asked me to go with him next Sunday. What I want to know is if I go will he try this rough stuff again? Will I go down in his estimation if I go with him after what has happened? I cried myself to sleep last night, because I really like him so much. S. B. Answer —Give him one more chance to prove that he is sincere. If he is not weep no more my lady. He isn’t <vorth it.

Sororities

Opening social meeting of Chi Beta Kappa sorority will be held tonight at the home of Mrs. Harvey Clark of the Spink-Arms. She will be assisted by Mrs. Charles Arnold. Miss Helen Ramey, 313 West Thirty-first street, will be hostess Thursday night for a meeting of Rho Delta Tau sorority. MISS HOCH WILL BE GUEST AT SHOWER Preceding the wedding of Miss Gertrude Hoch to Harold A. Davidson Sunday at Broadway M. E. church. Miss Virginia Stout •wall entertain tonight for the bride-elect at her home, 1703 Park avenue, with a kitchen shower and bridge party. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. George W. Stout. Guests will be the bride-elect’s mother, Mrs. Gertrude B. Hoch, and sister, Miss Alleene Hoch, and the bridegroom-elect’s mother. Mrs. Lincoln D. Davidson. Others will be Mesdames Russell Ihne, Gertrude Candedo and Dorothy Tobey and Misses Laura Holden, Jess Bass. Lois Young, Elva Brakenseick, Myrtle Mize. Ola and Bertha Endley, and Mary Rose Lowry, Helen Jane Lowry and Elizabeth Whetzel, all of Fortville.

1 Card Parties

Social Club of Sacred Heart church will sponsor a card party at 2:30 Thursday in its hall on Union street. August Circle of St. Francis Social Club will give a card party at 8:15 tonight in the school hall. Mrs. Nellie Cook is chairman. Mrs. Mary Stehlin is chairman of the September Circle of St. Patrick's Social Club, which will sponsor a card party at 2:30 Friday afternoon at the school hall. Holy Cross Alar Society will hold card parties and a food sale Thursday afternoon and night in the school hall. Mrs! James Powers is chairman and Mrs. Patrick Ward is in charge of the food sale. TRAVEL STUDY CLUB GROUP WILL MEET Mrs. J. J. Steuerwald, 330 Burgett avenue, will be hostess Friday for a luncheon of the Lincolnian chapter of the International Travel Study Clubs, Inc. She will be assisted by Mrs. B. F. Hollingsworth. A violin program will be presented by Miss Ruby Steuerwald, and piano numbers by Miss Louise Übi, ■* 1

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Gertrude Hoch to Be Shower Honor Guest Mrs. Julius Caesar, 4181 Guilford evenue, will be hostess tonight at a miscellaneous shower to be given by Delta Sigma sorority in honor of Miss Gertrude Hoch, bride-elect. Decorations will be fall flowers. The table centerpiece, in the form o‘s a cotton powder puff, will hold the shower gifts, which will be tied In the bridal colors of tearose and blue. Sorority colors, pink and lavender, will be carried out in appointments. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Earl T. Stucky, Mrs. Harry Reinhardt, and Mrs. William C. McCrory. Miss Betty Green gave a miscellaneous shower and bridge party Tuesday night in honor of Miss Hoch.

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wemmer, 5744 Washington boulevard, are staying at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York. Mrs. Eugene DuCasse of Los Angeles and her mother, Mrs. Mae Hamilton of Venice, Cal., have been guests of Mrs. Harland Alverson, Suburban Hills. They left today for California and will stop at St. Louis and Denver. They recently visited the exposition in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. William Umphrey, 4531 North Meridian street, and sons, are visiting iln New York, staying at the Lincoln. Mrs. Nora Fields, Miss Ruby Stemm, and Paul Stem, 22 West Nineteenth street, have returned from a motor trip to Owasso, Mich., where they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. Cornell. Miss Wilma Lee Taflinger, 1514 East Twelfth street, will leave Friday for Chicago to attend A Century of Progress exposition. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McCready and children, Virginia and Richard, left Monday to spend a week at A Century of Progress exposition in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Emery Deputy, 5660 Madison avenue, returned today from Chicago, where they attended A Century of Progress. Miss Helen Ramey, 313 West Thirty-first street, will be hostess Thursday night for a meeting of Rho Delta Tau sorority. MARJORIE BELL TO BE HONOR GUEST Miss Harriett Haworth will be hostess tonight at her home on Shelbyville road for a bridge party in honor of Miss Marjorie Bell. Miss Bell will enter Indiana university Sept. 5. Guests will include Misses Shirley Collier, Evelyn Draper, Dorothy Huffine, Evelyn Henschen and Mrs. J. A. Bell. The hostess will be assisted by her sister, Miss Louise Haworth. Appointments will be in shades of yellow and brown. Gives Bridge for Sister Mrs. Russell Lamkin, 812 North Campbell avenue, entertained today with a bridge party for her sister, Mrs. Sidney E. Bowman of Odon, her house guest. The guests were Mesdames John Freeman, De Witt Brown, Everett Hotl, Orville Moore, Jack Martin and Toby Brocker.

Daily Recipe TWOPENNY SALAD 1 package lemon flavored', gelatin 1 pint warm, water 1-2 teaspoon salt 1-2 teaspoon celery salt 3 tablespoons vinegar 2 tablespoons tomato ketchup 1 cup cabbage, finely shredded Dissolve lemon flavored gelatin in warm water. Add seasonings, vinegar and ketchup. Chill. When slightly thickened, fold in cabbage. Turn into individual molds. Chill until firm. Unmold in crisp lettuce. Garnish with mayonnaise. Serves six.

Mrs. Richard Lieber

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The school gate

MRS. SPENCER TO BE PARTY HOSTESS Mrs. Walter Richard Spencer Jr., will entertain tonight with a bridge party at her home, 5829 Forest Lane. She will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. Mabel W. Nelson. Guests will include Mesdames John Bates Thomas, P. R. Browning, K. L. Urich and George Pense, and Misses Janet Giffin, Gladys Pollock, Jane Hamilton, Gabryn Hines, Alice Jane Brownlee, Martha Jane Fromm, Willo Bond, Janet Schuetz of Zionsville, and Polly Moore of Noblesville. THREE CHOSEN BY WOMEN DEMOCRATS Miss Harriet Day, Mrs. Louise Rich, and Miss Estella Creagh will be delegates from the Young Women’s Democratic Club of Indiana, Inc., to the first national convention of the Young Democratic Clubs of America in Kansas City, Mo. The convention will open Thursday and continue through Saturday. The delegates left today for Kansas City. KERNEL LAKE TO BE SCENE OF BENEFIT Mrs. Joseph F. Sexton will entertain with a benefit bridge party Thursday night at the clubhouse of Kernel lake. Proceeds will be for St. Elizabeth home. Mrs. Sexton will be assisted by Mrs. Paul B. Kernel, Mrs. Timothy B. Sexton, Miss Rafaela Montani and Miss Mary Louise Connor. Miss Connor, 2940 North Capitol avenue, is in charge of reservations. RUSH LUNCHEON TO BE GIVEN GIRLS Indianapolis alumnae of the Indiana university chapter of Delta Delta Delta sorority will entertain with a rush luncheon Thursday for girls who will enter the university this fall. Committee for the party, to be held at the Charm House, is composed of Miss Mary Kettler, Miss Jessie Martin, Mrs. Herbert Blinn, and Miss Evelyn Walton. Bride-Elect Feted Miss Margaret Smith, 21 North Vine street, entertained Tuesday night with a kitchen shower for Miss Anita Morgan, who will be married Saturday to T. W. Fletcher of Providence, R. I. Guests were Misses Lora Kysar, Dorothea Martin, Cornelia Young, Inez Hobbs, Dorothy Powell, Aileen Hiatt, Dean Woodall, Ruth Lanham and Mrs. William E. Parrish. Marriage Date Set Marriage of Miss Mabelle Haller to Charles C. Willoughby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Willoughby, 829 South Sheffield avenue, will take place at 8:30 Saturday at the home of the bride-elect’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Haller, 1026 High street..

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EVA MS 9 ilg-‘a2iSirHS fO* All PURPOSES

Screen Favorites Show Widely Varied Tastes in Choosing Their Perfumes Madge Evans Believes in Changing Brands to Suit Her Moods; Chanel’s Gardenia for Joan Crawford. BY HELEN LINDSAY. SCREEN celebrities express their personalities by their choice of perfumes. Joan Crawford has chosen as the proper fragrance to express her own exotic self, Chanel's Gardenia. Jean Harlow waffcs a delicious aroma of Shalimar about the studio. Madge Evans believes thVt perfumes should be changed. She uses one bottle until it has been exhausted; then she chooses another which she believes expresses not only her own individuality, but the mood in

which she finds herself. At the present time she is using Ciro's Surrender. When she tires of this, she will use a special blend, not yet on the market. This i is Volnay’s Pearlette. Two perfumes are holding the attention of the beautiful Myma Loy now. One is No. 12, of the Lentheric perfumes. The other is Le Pirate, a light perfume, but very lasting. If she could choose her own birthday and Christmas gifts, Mae Clarke would select perfumes. Her first preference is Worth’s Sans Adieu. The other favorite is Je Reviens. She considers these two of the most individual and delicate. The time of the day has much to do with selection of the fragrance with which Maureen O'Sullivan identifies herself. During the day, when she is busy working at the studio, she prefers the clean smell and fragrance of Yardley’s lavender water. For evening wear, under soft lights, Maureen indulges in Corday’s

Promesse. Florine McKinney feels that she gets an added feeling of confidence from the use of Guerlain’s Mitsouke, which has a heavy and penetrating odor. When she desires a less impressionable perfume, she chooses Coty's L’Aimante, an imported perfume, not yet on sale in the United States. man Monogram Stamped on Pottery INTO the bottom of every piece of Rookwood pottery, the monogram of the company is pressed. The regular mark was invented in 1882. In 1886 a symbol of the company was designed for the marking of Rookwood; an artistic monogram, with a flame-shaped symbol added each succeeding year until 1900, when the monogram was marked with fourteen flames. For the next century the mark of 1900 is continued, with the Roman numeral added to designate the year. It also is customary for purposes of record to stamp on the bottom of each piece of pottery a shape number, with a letter Indicating size, and another letter referring to color of the clay used in the body of the piece. The decorators of Rookwood always have cut their initials in the clay on the bottom of pieces painted by them. Such pieces are not duplicated in decoration; evfen pairs vary somewhat. The Rookwood Pottery Company was founded in 1880 by Mrs. Maria Longworth Storer, who named it after her father’s country estate near Cincinnati. In 1890 Mrs. Storer retired, transferring her interest ta W. W. Taylor, her partner. Taylor formed the present company, remaining its controlling influence until his death In 1913. Then by his will the pottery company was placed In the hands of trustees, for the perpetuation of the policy which had given Rookwood its unusual character as an art Industry. The Rookwood buildings crown Mt. Adams, one of Cincinnati’s hills, and command in every direction beautiful view’s of the river, the city and its suburbs.

No Duplicates Are Made NO printing patterns are used, and no duplicates are made of ’•signed decorated pieces of Rookwood pottery. The decorations are by both men and women, drawn mainly from the art academy of Cincinnati. Decorations are placed upon the moist clay before any firing, the colors mixed with clay, and becoming a part of the ware itself. After the decoration, the pieces are fired, and the glazes are applied with subsequent firings. Only clays procured in America, and largely from the Ohio valley, are used in production of Rookwood. Because of this use of native clays, the color quality necessarily showed a tendency to cling to the yellows, browns and reds. The transparent glazes merge in these in deep, mellow tones. The famous Rookwood “Tiger Eye” first was made In 1884. This is the first of the crystalline glazes, and the crystalline formation lies in the substance of the glaze in sheets of beauty. The mat glazes probably are the most admired of the Rookwood productions. They first were made in 1896. The decorations are flowers or other subjects, broadly modeled. Many of these are derived from American Indian designs. Rookwood pottery has received many honors in museum exhibits and expositions. A most extensive and beautiful collection of the pottery is shown all Charles Mayer’s, in which specimens of the various glazes are to be seen.

PARTIES GIVEN FOR CITY BRIDE-ELECT

The marriage of Miss Barbara Jane Butler to Richard W. Fox is being preceded by parties for the bride-elect. Mrs. William F. Nixon entertained with a bridge tea this afternoon at the Highland Golf and Country club. The 'guests were Mrs. William C. Byers of Detroit, sister of the brideelect, Mesdames M. G. Butler, Russell Pierson, John Pearson, Forrest Hindsley, Lee Fox and Miss Rose Ann Stevenson. INVITATIONS FOR WEDDING ISSUED Invitations for the wedding of Miss Cornelia Dowling and George Sinks Tatman, son of Mrs. E. W. Tatman of Connersville, have been issued by the bride-elect’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry McCabe Dowling, The wedding will be at 4 Saturday, Sept. 16, in the First Presbyterian church. Mrs. Paul P. Hoffman will be matron of honor, and bridesmaids will be Misses Elizabeth and Josephine Tatman of Connersville, Mrs. Hollis Griffin of Chicago, and Miss Sally Reahard. James Tatman of New York will be best man and Dr. Alexander Dowling of Cleveland, Arthur Neal of Connersville, Marcus Mason of Chicago, and Addison Dowling of Indianapolis will be ushers.

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.AUG. 30, 1933

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Mrs. Lindsay

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