Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 112, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1933 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Civic Will Open Doors on Oct. 21 Season’s Inaugural to Be Big Event for TheaterGoers. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN Timn Woman ■ Par* Editor Indianapolis heater-goers are circling Oct. 21 on their calendars. Socialities are red-lettering the da'e on their engagement books. The Civic theater opening is accountable lor the day’s importance, and it is

the event as notable to Indianapolis as a Hollywood premiere. And that’s not a ballyhoo boast, either. The opening play, "Once in a Lifetime,” by George Kaufman and Moss Hart, is a burlesque on Hollywood, and the premiere idea appropriately carries out the idea. Town celebrities will be on hand, and a half-hour before the curtain

planned to make

Miss Kurgan

rises their names will be announced in a radio broadcast. Which means, if you're a celebrity,” you won’t slip in unheralded and unnoticed. Floodlights will make the entrance as bright as New York’s "White Way.” Hale McKeen gathered his cast together Monday night, and Mrs. Oscar Baur will give her subscription campaign staff its official sendoff Friday night at the theater. Oldtimers will observe the offices, newly i painted inbeige with a green-blue trim. Goal Set at 3.000 They'll welcome back Mrs. Lucille Bomgardner, business manager; | Francis Sonday, publicity director, and John Every-Clayton, accountant. They’ll find Dick Hoover, stage manager, and Charles Wells, stage j carpenter, with their heads to- j gether discussing the settings The I Civic theater is intact, with many j of the annual workers campaigning the city for new’ members. Their goal Is 3,000 and already 300 are striving to sell ten books j each. If they do, they will receive ; a free book and for ten more | another book will be given to them. ; Campaign workers are soliciting al ltheir friends. "Any one can belong," they insist in an effort to j destroy the impression that the i theater is a closed organization. And to any one interested in campaigning. team captains invite them to offer their aid. Athenaeum Is Busy The Athenaeum will be a busy center on Monday, Wednesday and j Friday noons until Sept. 30, when! the teams will meet to report their results. For the first time the Children’s 1 theater is combining its drive with th’ Civic, and Mrs. George T. Parry is directing this division. "Once in the Lifetime” will be notable, for it will include one of the largest casts in the theater's history. Sixty people will share in the production, and five different sets will be designed by the theater staff. There's no professional designer to plan the sets, but ideas of the staff will be combined to the best advantage.

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. Grier M. Shotwell are visiting in Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Walter WicklifT and sons. Maurice and Lloyd, have returned from a visit in Bedford. Mr. and Mrs. William M. Madden. 1436 North Alabama street, are attending A Century of Progress exposition in Chicago and will go to Milwaukee Monday to attend a meeting of the American Society of Certified Public Accountants. Mrs. Charles J. Lammers and granddaughter. Angela May Eckstein. have left for Chicago to visit A Century of Progress exposition. Mrs. William E. Tinney and daughters. Alice and Claudia, have left for a motor trip to the Berkshires. Miss Claudia will enter Mt. Ida school at Boston. Mr. and Mrs. D. V. S. Glubka. 5365 East Washington street, have returned from a trip to Winona, Minn., and the Dells. Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Beveridge Jr. will come to Indianapolis to make their home after a visit in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Orbison have returned from Washington to make their home in Indianapolis. Mrs. Orbison formerly was Miss Beatrice Baity. Miss Ruth Landers spent the week-end in Cleveland as the guest of Miss Madge McPherson, who will return to Indianapolis late in October. Miss Katrine Bucher of Peekskill. N. Y., and Miss Andronica Lamproplos of Latrobe. Pa., arrived Monday for the opening of Tudor Hall Wednesday. Miss Sutton Hostess Miss Ernestine Sutton. 1005 West Thirty-second street, entertained on Sunday night with a dinner and bridge party. Her guests included Misses Florence Druley. Marjorie Siefert. Gwendola Montague, and Messrs. Herring Neat. Oscar Headlee. Oliver Neiman and Kenneth Dinsmore.

A Day ’s Menu Breakfast — Sliced peaches with cereal and cream, creamed dried beef with browned tomatoes. pop-overs, milk. cpffee. Luncheon — Open tomato and ham aandwiches, tapioca cream pudding, milk, tea. Dinner — Lajnb pie, creamed new turnips, honeydew and ■tuffed pepper salad, plum cobbler, milk, coffee.

High-Neck Made for High-Style Girls

BY JOAN SAVOY NEA Srtl Writer HIGH-STYLED girls take kindly to the high-necked modes this fall. Besides appearing suave and chic, there is something about a dress with a smart high neck which gives a woman that certain something—otherwise defined as self-confidence. W’hether you take your high necklines plain or with a tiny turned-down collar, or with a pert little bow tied under your chin, you're going to love them. Time was when high necklines went hand in hand with street or sports things. Nowadays, you go to tea, dinner, the theater and to formal functions with your throat, no matter how lovely it may be, well covered up. Here's a lovely informal afternoon frock of Schiaparelli blue in petit point crepe. It's the kind of a dress which will make your bridge hostess more than glad that she included you in the party. And your luncheon host w’ill be sure to fumble for a pencil to mark you down as a sure partner for further dates. With its high little collar and crisp bow, it follows closely the mode for higher necklines. The vestee of self material, collar and epaulettes are all cartridge pleated. The epaulettes stand out in intriguing manner over the little circular caps which top the modified leg-o‘-mutton sleeves. Two seams from the waist to the hem make the softly circular skirt gracefully mold the hips. It is a medium, just-below-the-calf length, making it ideal for allround afternoon wear, with or without a coat. An interesting gold buckle fastens the soft belt and dees much to add to the attractiveness of the frock.

NAME COMMITTEES FOR BELMONT CLUB Mrs. M. Stanley McComas Jr., will serve as chairman of the membership committee of the Ward Belmont Club, which is headed by Mrs. Fred Dopke as president. Other committee appointments, made at the monthly meeting Saturday, include Mrs. Ernest Congleton, assisted by Mrs. Grace Schulmeyer and Mrs. A. Hernley Boyd, telephone; Mrs. Fae Patrick, and Mrs. John Taylor, charity, and Mrs. Robert Patterson, publicity. The group will hold its next meeting on Oct. 21.

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C O ft *3 tern No. o^oo Size Street City State Name

||j 5263 W *

CAPE FROCKS It's smart on every one and it locks •different” on every one—the cape-frock is almost universally becoming. Part of its great success is due to its practical virtues: it is as cool as a tennis dress, as dignified as a town ensemble, as flattering as a frilled frock . . . and it does double duty in a limited wardrobe. The model sketched here uses a tie-sash as anew note. The surplice bodice and panel effect of the skirt are becoming features, particularly if you're anxious to camouflage your weight. The small view shows a longsleeved version without the cape, smafrt for alpaca or the new ribbed wools. Make the cape version in a printed or ribbed sheer. Size 16 or 34 requires 3‘s yards 39-inch material. Width of frocs about 2 1 * yards. Our new fashion magazine is full of other easy-to-make designs for sports, home, afternoon and evening wear. Also models for the children and simple instructions for home sewing. Pattern No. 5263 is designed for sizes 14. 16. 18. 20 vears, 32, 34, 36, 38. 40. 42. 44. 46 bust. Our new fashion book is out. Send for it —put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern 15 cents. Copyright. 1933. bv United Features Syndicate. Inc.t Alumnae Will Elect Officers will be elected at a meeting of the Chi Omega Alumnae Association at a meeting tonight at the home of Mrs. J. E. Kiefer, 4710 Centrjd avenue.

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Manners and Morals

Every one knows the help that comes from talking over one’s problems with a sympathetic advisor. Brine: yours to Jane Jordan and read your answers in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l have been married for nineteen years to a woman in whom I have no confidence. I have been faithful to her, but I do not love her. Our life together has been tempestuous. She holds a long record of lying, deceit and infidelity. In order to gain her point, she will pout, cry or feign sickness. Even when I know I am right, I give in to her for the sake of peace. What makes ms do that? What is there in my makeup that makes me give in when I know I am right? I just can’t make myself happy or contented. Do you think I shall ever be happy at home, or even that I can make her happy? Is there anything to be gained by continuing this marriage when there are no children? HOPEFUL. Answer The only reason for living together that I can see is the desire of two people to join in the fellowship of love. Affection rather than law provides the matrimonial foundation we have the right to respect. When one or both of the partners fall out of love, the union

is dead. The attempt of society to hold it together after the reason for its existence is gone is futile. The community at large has a school girl attitude toward love and marriage. The average citizen has a deep seated emotional conviction without the slightest foundation in fact, that “real” love

Jane Jordan

always is permanent, and that it somehow for the best for married people to stay married. The truth is that there is nothing more impermanent than the tender emotion that impels people to marry. Human love is dominated by the need for change and variety, and the monotonous aspect of the average marriage is not conducive, to longevity in love. When one partner is consumed by the need of change and the other is not, tragedy results. The question is which one of the unhappy pair shall be sacrificed? The one who wishes to maintain the union, or the one who eager to dissolve it? Which path will result in the least human wreckage? The sentimental viewpoint demands that the dissent,er make the sacrifice. It holds that emotional change is some sort of crime for which people should be punished with life imprisonment in wedlock. If a married person falls out of love, society demands pretense in its place. The rational viewpoint argues much more sensibly that neither partner can be happy when one of them is out of love. Since divorce would set at least one of them free to find happiness in other pursuits, it is obvious that less wreckage lies in this direction. The discarded partner usualllv behaves very badly. His (or her) pride can not conceive of such a finale. He can not be reconciled to such humiliating and irrevocable defeat. Many times it is not undying love, but wounded self-esteem that caused the unloved one to hang on with such persistence. If it were love, the deserted would want the deserted to achieve his heart's desire. The worst of it is that the deserted always gets all the sympathy, and is able to cloak the basest motives with a semblance of great virtue. If the deserted is a woman, the economic problem looms large on the horizon. It is not easy' for a woman who has spent the formative years of her life cloistered in a home to become self-supporting. It is not i reasonable or just for the husband to expec* her to do so.

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

(From Franklin Simon, New York)

BY JANE JORDAN

If a woman whose husband wants to marry someone else knew how she would be able to live without his support, nine times out of ten she wouldn't hang on so tenaciously. The tenth time, of course, she would refuse him happiness simply because she could not share it. I imagine that early in your marriage you learned to take the line of the least resistance. The first few times you stood up for what you believed to be right you discovered the utter futility of your stand. I am reminded of a remark of Oscar Wilde’s. “The history of women is the history of the worst form of tyranny the world has ever known—the tyranny of the week over the strong. It is the only tyranny that lasts.” Your real mistake was made early in your marriage when you allowed to get the upper hand because it was the easiest thing to do. Now you have nineteen years of habit to break and an unloved woman to support in or out of matrimony. The course you took, while easy for the moment, was hardest in the 4ong run. MRS. KERCHEVAL ENTERTAINS CLUB Mrs. Clarence Kercheval, assisted by Mrs. Clifford Christena and Mrs. H. V. Woleben, was hostess today at the president’s day meeting of the Tuesday Quest Club. Mrs. Chic Jackson was guest speaker. Mrs. S. G. Huntington, president, took over her duties, assisted by Mrs. O. O. Johnson, first vice-presi-dent; Mrs. E. S. Waymire, second vice-president; Mrs. Christena, recording secretary; Mrs. H. E. Hill, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Albert Ward, treasurer; Mrs. F. W. Dennerline, hostess committee; Mrs. Harry Irwin and Mrs. P. L. Burford, membership; Mrs. D. R. Kellum, program, and Mrs. E. G Garske, publicity. BETA TAU OFFICERS TO BE INSTALLED Beta Tau sorority will hold installation of officers and initiation services Wednesday night at the home of Miss Caroline Nickel. 904 North Denny street. Miss Mary Blacklidge will become a member. Officers are: Miss Dorothy Trager, president; Miss Nickel, vicepresident; Miss Violet Hurt, corresponding secretary; Miss Marie Lueth. treasurer; Miss Mary Hurt, recording secretary; Miss Lucille Ramsey, sergeant-at-arms; Miss Kathryn Spall, pledge captain, and Miss Burta Fay Mayes, chaplain.

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Educators Chosen to Speak Here Teachers to Hear Leaders With National Recognition. Teachers of Indianapolis schools, colleges and universities again will ; be given opportunities to hear speakers of national prominence in the educational field, it is announced by the Indianapolis Coun- j cil of Administrative Women in Education. The group also expects j to meet this winter with parents of j the students. Mrs. Mary S. Ray, president of j the executive board of the local j chapter, has named the following committees for the ensuing term; Program, Miss Maude Price, chair- | man, and Misses Edith Hall, Mabel Keller, Anna Pearl Bedford, Belle Ramey, Elizabeth Kirby and Mabel Goddard; year book, Misse% Bertha Leming, Kate Dinsmore, Gertrude Duscher, Ada Crozier, Florence Hamill, Mrs. Maude Moudy and Mrs. Elizabeth Witt. Publicity Group Chosen Miss Helen Loeper, chairman of the publicity committee, will be assisted by Mrs. Jeanette Knowles and Misses Charlotte Carter, Carrie Francis, Mary McGee, Geraldine Eppert, Dorothy Pennington, Vivian Ely, Evelyn Butler and Henrietta Waters. Mrs. Gertrude Thuemler heads the social group, assisted by Mrs. Grace Granger, Mrs. Georgia Lacey, Mrs. Ida Langerwisch, Mrs. Geraldine Moorman and Misses Wanda Johnson, Angela Moler, Lucy Montgomery, Jessie C. Russell, Fay M. Banta, Louise Bonar, Nellie Chapman, Martha Dorsey, Olive Funk, Frieda Herbst, I. Hilda Stewart, Alice O’Hair, Martha Fitch, Eliza- | beth Scott, Sibyl Weaver and Florence Fitch. Other Aids Named Other committees are membership: Miss Ruth Patterson, chairman; Misses Clara Nieman, Mary Conner, Anna Reade, Ruth Leedy, Margaret McWilliams, Mary E. Morgan, Anna Torrence, Faye Henley, Mary O. Mackenzie and Mrs. Jeannette Williams; fellowship: Miss Lena Swope, chairman, Mrs. Rutty Shull, Mrs. Ida M. Irvine, Mrs. Grace Kimber and Misses Verena Denzler, Jessie Smith, Adelaide McCarty, Ella Pedlow, Leone Stewart, Mary Buckley, Huldah Kern, Flora Torrence, Mildred Weld, Eva Y. Wiles, Ruby Lee and Laura Hanna; condolence: Miss Emma Colbert, chairman; Mrs. Emily Halls, Mrs. Mabel Schmidt and Misses Corinne Rielag, Grace Black, Jeanette Riker and Emma Donnan. Other officers of the administration are Miss Ida Helphenstine, vicepresident; Miss Elizabeth Bettcher, secretary, and Mrs. Lola Eller, treasurer. Misses Virginia Cravens, Elizabeth Chapman, Flora Drake, Cecelia Galvin and Ina Gaul are directors.

War Mothers to Come Here From Most of States Thirty-one states will be represented at the national convention of American War Mothers, which will open Sept. 26 at the Claypool, and approximately 100 room reservations have been made. Announcement has been made by Mrs. E. May Hahn, general chairman, of the conclave. Mrs. Virgil Stone of Lauder, Wyo., national president, will arrive Wednesday from the national headquarters in Washington. Delegates will begin to arrive Wednesday for the national executive board meeting Friday and Saturday. A vesper service at 6:30, Sept. 24, will be held in the assembly room at the hotel, followed by a reception in the Riley room with the state chapter as hostess. Mrs. Hahn, national committee chairman, is assisted by the following: Mrs. W. E. Ochiltree, Connersville, recording secretary; Mrs. Mary I. Huntington, Bloomington, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Carrie L. Root, Kewanna; Mrs. L. C. Boyd, Newcastle; Mrs. W. S. Norris, Frankfort; Mrs. Henry Pearson. Bedford; Mrs. S. C. Gibson, Logansport; Mrs. Ralph Kennington, Mrs. Emma Flick and Mrs. Daisy Douglass of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Elizabeth Carr of Harvey, 111.

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SCOUT DIRECTOR

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—Photo by Dexheimer. Miss Ellen Hathaway Miss Ellen Hathaway is the new local director of Girl Scouts. She is a graduate of the Emerson School of Oratory at Boston and served as field captain at Detroit for one year and has been local director at Pontiac, Mich., for two years. Viola Surge Is Wed in Rites at Cathedral SS. Peter and Paul cathedral was the scene of the wedding of Miss Viola Marie Surge and John A. Bachl of Hartford, Conn., at 9:30 this morning, with the Rt. Rev. Bishop Joseph Chartrand officiating. Cathedral candles lighted the green-banked altar and Mrs. Helen Shephard, organist, and Edward LaShelle, soloist, presented traditional airs. The bride was given in marriage by her father, John Surge. Her gown of antique satin with lace yoke had bouffant sleeves. She wore a lace veil and carried an arm bouquet of calla lilies. Mrs. Clarence M. Allen, as matron of honor, wore a maize crepe gown with matching waistcoat, hat and slippers. Her arm bouquet was of Talisman roses. Miss Beatrice Bostwick and Mildred Summers, bridesmaids, appeared in gowns of blue with matching accessories. Their flowers were Briarcliff roses. Jerry Sheets, flower girl, wore white taffeta fashioned with leg-o-mutton sleeves and carried a basket of rose petals. Jack Wessel was ring-bearer. Charles Lanerie of Hartford, Conn., was best man and Walter Babst of Brooklyn, N.. Y., and Clarence M. Allen were ushers. A wedding breakfast at the Surge home, 634 Udell street, followed the ceremony. The couple left on a motor trip to Michigan. Mrs. Bahl traveled in a black and white crepe outfit. The bride is a graduate of Benjamin Harrison law school. Mr. Bachl attended Trinity college and was graduated from Indiana university law school.

Card Parties

Ladies of South Side Turners will hold a card party at 2:30 Wednesday at their hall, 336 Prospect street. Ellen Mattwig club will meet for a covered dish luncheon and card party Thursday at the home of Mrs. L. S. Swisshelm, 742 North Bradley. Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Indianapolis Fireman’s Association will hold a card party at 2 Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. John Miller, 3253 Guilford avenue. Mrs. George Ream is chairman. Mrs. P. E. Deery is in charge of the card parties to be given Wednesday afternoon and night in St. Philip Neri school auditorium.

j Daily Recipe j j GRAPEFRUIT JELLY ] I Bring 1-3 cup sugar and 1-3 j | cup water to boiling point and j I boil 3 minutes; remove from f j stove and add 11-2 table- | j spoons gelatin which has been | | soaked in 2 tablespoons cold ! ! water; add 3-4 cups grape- j { fruit juice, 1 tablespoon lemon j j juice and few grains salt; j j strain into bowl. ‘ i

Woman Takes Part of ‘Glorified Doorman’ as Innovation at Marott’s Miss Stacey Stanley to Act Part of Guide to Patrons; ‘Courtesy, Common Sense’ Made Motto of New Job. BY HELEN LINDSAY SERVING as hostess in a shoe store that caters to the needs of every member of the family is one of the most unusual jobs in Indianapolis. Yet Miss Stacey Stanley, who serves in this new capacity at the Marott store, feels that it requires only "ordinary courtesy and a bit of common sense.” ... Miss Stanley has been selected by the management of the store to stand by the entrance, as a sort of glorified feminine

doorman, to greet customers, and direct them to the departments they are seeking. "I never try to make a sale, or advise them as to the type of shoe they need, she says, "but just direct them to the salesmen who will understand their requirements." Before her connection with Marott’s. Miss Stanley did office work in the Indianapolis bank clearing house. Here she had little experience meeting the buying public, but she feels that during the days of the banking excitement she met every type of person. "There is one thing I have observed in my experiences here at the store, and that is the difference in the older generation and the younger crowd of women. I never approach customers unless they appear to be needing help in direction. The younger generation has learned that the smoother way to get along in the world is through courtesy; while they may not be as sincere in their actions, they are much more polite,” Miss

Stanley says. Formerly, the Marott store employed a man to greet customers at the door, and direct them. Because so many of these customers were women, and because the management felt that a woman would give a more intimate welcome atmosphere to the store. Miss Stanley was selected for the position. She is possibly the only official “store hostess ’ in the city. u u Chinese Silhouettes Decorative CHINESE silhouette pictures, done in hand-forged iron, and framed in narrow, dull colored, wooden frames, are the newest decorative idea being shown at H. Lieber’s. These pictures are reproductions of ones made in natural colored iron, 200 years ago. Now they are done in both natural iron, and in brightly colored decorations. They are developed in flowers, popular ones being cherry blossoms, chrysanthemums, water lilies, and other flower designs. They are particularly effective against the new wall paper designs. a a a Booklet Explains NRA FOR the host of people who are struggling to understand the workings of the new deal, a booklet has been published, and is on sale at the W. K. Stewart book store. It is called “A Primer of the New Deal." and has been prepared by E. E. Lewis, professor of education at Ohio State university. In the preface, Dr. Lewis explains that the booklet is a result of cooperative effort in which he was associated as leader with a group of persons, in a study group. The group went into the fundamental principles of the new’ deal during a six weeks’ period during the past summer, at Ohio State university. The group took for its motto NRA slogan, "We Do Our Part.” Included in the booklet are descriptions of the acts of congress under the regime of President Roosevelt, and statements from men and women as to what the new deal should be if real prosperity is to be restored to a permanent basis. The cover design is done in the NRA colors, and a listing of the contents is printed on the front of the booklet.

TRAVEL CLUB WILL

OPEN ITS SEASON

Mrs. Max H. Norris will resume her duties as president of Princess Mary chapter oi International Travel and Study Club, Inc., at the opening meeting at 7:30 tonight at ■the Marott. Plans for the year’s activities will be made. Others taking up club duties will be Miss Edith Allmeroth, first vicepresident: Mrs. Juanita Wright, second vice-president; Miss Nellie Nierste, recording secretary; Miss Emma ’ Kast, corresponding secretary; Miss Martha Allmeroth, treasurer, and Miss Olga Gibney, historian. MEMORIAL SERVICE IS HELD BY CLUB Mrs. Edmund B. Clark was installed as president of the Woman's Research Club Monday at the meeting at the Propylaeum. A memorial service was held for Mrs. Fletcher Wills, club charter member. White asters and ferns decorated the luncheon table. Club members talked on “Pet Hobbies.” The neM session will be a visit to Foster hall, Oct. 16.

Have a slim W lovely figure M A NATmNM-t-Y known writer has lout . SB . w A. 51 pounds of far in three months a prominent doctor's wife lost 14 pounds in 3". days. Many prominent society women are reducing easily and safely by the scientific Vannay treatment. Vannay is an absolutely harmless tab-

LYNN FRANCIS Famous for her acting in "Passing Present" writes; "I want to acknowledge my gratitude to you for the help I have received from V annay red ucing tablets. I have taken them daily for three months, and I have lost in weight sod especially in measurements. I only needed to lose ten pounds, which I did within the first nine weeks. But where Vannay helped me most was in losing several inches off ffly thighs—and an inch and a half off my hips. "I have tried thyroid, exercise, sod heavy massages unsuccessfully—sa well as strenuous dieting. So I can recommend Vapnay tablets wholeheartedly. They arc the only means of reducing that I have found successful as will as harmless; in fact, since I have been taking Vannay, I have felt infinitely more alive."

A DEPENDABLE ON SALE AT A W drug stores Hear Kay Cameron, R. N., explain how you can reduce safely over Station WFBM each Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 9:15 A. M.. or visit her at our store, Meridian and Washington Streets, any day this week, 10 A. M. to 4 P. M. - 7

.SEPT. 19, 1933

Sororities

Beta chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, will meet tonight at the Washington. Miss Blanche Wiedenhorn, 812 Fairfield avenue, will entertain members of Sigma Beta Chi sorority with a dinner Wednesday night. Miss Thelma Brown, 1033 North Parker avenue, will be hostess for a business meeting of Alpha chapter, Rho Delta sorority Thursday night. New officers will be elected. Miss Mary Hockensmith will be hostess for the meeting of Omega Chi sorority Wednesday night at her home. Plans for a silver tea will be completed. Miss Mildred Marion, 803 North Temple'' avenue, will be hostess for the meeting of Gamma chapter of Alpha Beta Phi sorority tonight. Alpha chapter, Sigma Delta Tau sorority, will meet Wednesday night at the home of Miss Ruth Miller, 1804 Ashland avenue. Alpha Beta Chi sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the Lincoln.

let that contains no Thyroid extract, lodine or laxative drugs of any kind. It was developed by a great physician who has specialized in research with the Pasteur Institute of Paris and famous clinics of America. Now it is absurd for anyone to take dangerous drugs, or a daily dose of laxative salts thaz rushes food through the body half digested, and leads to chronic constipation. Vannay is a safe, natural regulator of the digestive ferment* (Lipases) which control the productioo of fat in all human bodies. You don't have to starve yourself or go through painful exercises. You simply take the tablets each day and continue to eat three hearty meals. The fat disappears at just the places where y<M want to lose it. Start the treatment at once and all yen* fondest dreams of health and slim loveliness should come true.

Mrs. Lindsay