Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 122, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1933 — Page 5

SEPT. 30, 1933

Hunters of State Eager as Date for Opening of Fall Season Draws Near Devotees ‘Brush Up’ on Rifles and Rules, Anxiously Awaiting Arrival of Time for Bagging Native Game. BY BEATRICE BURGAX Tim** Woman'* Pass Editor HUNTERS are keeping their eyes on the calendar, as assiduously as a child marks of! the days until Christmas. They are on tiptoe Until the crack of the rifle sounds the opening of the hunting season. In their eagnerness to begin their participation in the sport, they must beware of mixing their dates. It’s flirting with trouble to hit a quail when the conservation department says "no quail shooting until Nov. 10." Dr. and Mrs. Gayle B. Wolfe are getting

ready to leave for Michigan on Oct. 16, when they’ll lodge themselves in a cabin at a lake near Traverse City. They'll hunt duck and grouse, and have visions of bringing home a bag as worthy of a "story" as any fishing trip , Dr. and Mrs. Wolfe should Have good fortune on their trip, which Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cox contemplate making. They’ve had a summer of practice on their skret range at their country home on White river near Carmel. The Wolfes have a regulation range and their friends have found it a delightful place to satisfy their interest in shooting during the closed hunting season Mr. and Mrs. Cox are good shots, but their experience has amounted mostly to actual hunting. Randolph Coats is a frequent visitor. Mrs. George Denny just began shooting recently with George Denny Sr. and George Denny Jr., who match in magnitude

Miss Burgan

their shooting interest with their fishing instinct. Miss Ethel Swartz Is a guest often of the Wolfes as are Po Denning, Hathaway Simmons, Albert Smith. Warren Tressler of Sheridan. Dr. Glenn Pell, Dr. Robert Biakeman. Dr. Kemp Westfall and Colonel Walls. Mrs. Simmons anticipates joining in the sport when she returns from a vacation.

Later in the season. Dr. and Mrs. Wolfe will go to Bloomington, near Mrs. Wolfe's family home, and Brazil to hunt quail. They won’t begin duck hunting in Indiana until Nov. 1, when they will take river trips. For prairie chicken they journey to the northern part of the state. "On our trips down the river, we never return without a duck or two,” Mrs. Wolfe said. However, duck shooting isn't as profitable in Indiana as in other states." Week-End at Lodge The Wolfes spent the summer at their country place with its many sports facilities. With Betsy and Walter in school now, the family spends Wednesday afternoons and week-ends at the lodge. Betsy and Walter received their first guns this summer, and their interest in the sport is mounting. Mrs. Wolfe arouses an appetite when she describes her favorite prune dressing which with a bit of lemon sweetens the duck meat to a delicious flavor. And she warns, "Bake your duck, breast down so the juice will drip down from the back and prevent dryness.” Recipes Call for Wine She suggests that if you object to the gamey flavor, parboiling with an onion will remove the distaste. She adds, “Don’t rely on a cook book for the length of time of cooking. Simply cook it until you think it’s done." Duck eating will become more palatable to many when wines become a part of every complete dinner. Hunters say a bit of Burgundy helps wash down the duck. Some particularly delectable recipes call for a glass full of red wine poured over the properly seasoned game to make it the "piece de resistance” it should be.

‘Beauties of Night’ to Be Topic of Professor Minor

Professor Howard D. Minor of the Park school will give an illustrated lecture on "Beauties of the Night” at the opening meeting of the art department of the Woman’s Department Club at 2 Monday at the clubhouse. Mrs. Irving Blue has arranged a musical program to be presented by Thomas Poggiani. Miss Georgia Baumann. Miss Virginia Leyenberger and Beldon Leonard. Tea will be served with Mrs. Edward A. Brown in charge, assisted by the following hostesses: Mesdames George A. Brown. Louis A. Fleury, Elizabeth Fair King. Clarence Wy-

COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN TO MEET

Mrs. Isaac Born will direct the program of the Indianapolis Council of Jewish Women when it meets at 2:15 Monday at Kirshbaum Center. Mrs. Robert Blake, contralto, will sing, accompanied by Mrs. Simon Kiser. The remainder of the program will be in the form of a surprise. Other members of the program committee are Mesdames Jack Goldberg. Allan Bloom. Isaac Marks. I. E. Solomon. Cyril W'einberg and Fred Fishman and Mrs. Kiser. Products of the board of industrial aid to the blind will be sold before and after meetings.

DOROTHY SEGAR TO BE CLUB HOSTESS

Mu Alumnae Club of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will hold its opening business meeting at 7 Monday night at the home of Miss Dorothy Segur. 120 East Twentyeighth street. Invitation is extended to all Mu alumnae of the sorority. Miss Betty Hisey, bridge chairman. will give a report. The following committee heads have been named to serve for the year: Mrs. Knode Brown, telephone chairman; Miss Jean Coval. program, and Miss Jean Underwood, publicity. Officers are president. Miss Elizabeth Carr; vice-president. Mrs. E. E Linegar; secretary. Miss Segur, and treasurer. Miss Adelaide Gould. Supper meetings of the club will be held monthly at the Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter house, 821 Hampton drive. State Meet Scheduled Sigma Alpha Chi sorority will hold its state convention Sunday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club with a business meeting, luncheon and bridge on the program. The committee in charge is composed of Mrs. Charles Laidle. Misses Mary Clayton, Jean Bunin, Anne Lepple and Helen Kiasing.

Alumnae Club to Study Two Musicians’ Art Mrs. Lutie Gruber, 647 Middle drive. Woodruff Place, will be hostess for the meeting of the Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, at 12:30 Wednesday. Miss Mary Moorman will be in charge of the program which will include a survey of composers from Berlioz to Wagner and a study of their compositions. Miss Grace Hutchings will talk on these composers and their contributions to A Century of Progress in music. Others taking part in the program include Mrs. J. R. Thompson, Miss Berenice Reagan. Mrs. Nell McMurtrey and Mrs. Asel Spellman Stitt. Mrs. McMurtrey will be the accompanist. The evening section of the Alumnae Club will meet at 6:30 Wednesday night at the home of Miss Mabel Rose at the Marott. A covered dish supper will be served. Miss Ruby Winders will be in charge of the entertainment which will be presented by Miss Hutchings, Miss Reagan and Miss Louise Swan, pianist: Mothers to Meet Lambda Chi Alpha Mothers Club will meet at 2 Wednesday at the chapter house, 4721 Sunset avenue, with pledge mothers as honor guests. Mesdames J. Paul Robinson, H. T. German and R. B. Straughn will be hostesses.

son, Dan V. Goodman, John A. Simmons. W. A. Nowland. Roscoe Leavitt, Charles F. Remy, Jerome A Ferguson. J. H. Hellekson. G. M. Williams and Dr. Mabel Bibbler. Monday night, after the program, the members of the department will view the constellations from the grounds of the school on Cold Springs road. Mr. Minor will use a four-foot telescope, magnifying up to 120 diameters. A memorial exhibition of paintings by Miss Emma B. King will be held during September and the nrst week of October, and an exhibit of oil and water colors by Edward K. Williams will be on view during October. Mrs. Eugene Fife will present a musical recital and reviews of recent plays at the literature drama section meeting at 2 Wednesday. Mrs. Frederick C. Albershardt is section chairman, and chairman for the day will be Mrs. Charlton N. Carter, assisted by Mesdames H. Alden Adams. Russell E. Adkins, C. H. Beckett. Isaac Carter, Lewis A. Coleman. Earl R. Cox, Orion B. Ent. J. C. Hardesty. John E. Messick. Q. G. Noblitt. J. H. Orndorfl and Miss Bertha Edwards. Community Welfare department will visit the Indiana State School for the Blind and the State School for the Deaf. Friday morning. Luncheon will be served at 1 at the school for the deaf. Motor cars will leave College avenue and Thirty-eighth street at 9:30. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Ora Maude Hardie. chairman of the tour or Mrs. Forest W. Danner, vice-chairman.

SEEKS MEMBERS

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Mrs. Herbert Woollen

Mrs. Herbert Woollen is membership chairman for the fourth annual drive of the Indiana state symphony society, which will present the Indianapolis orchestra in concerts at the Murat theater this winter.

Figure Prominently in City’s Social Whirl

M Photo b^PhJtlraft. | ; ■■ ■ ■ ''-% -Photo bv Photocraft. ■r ’w* i mUF ■ ,:■ m IMH Miss Margaret Mary Quinn |||| The marriage of Miss Helen riage Sept. 19, was Miss ElizaOakes to Dillon Huder was read beth Fowler Andrews, daughter of 9B§bPv A #' Saturday at the home of the Mr. and Mrs. Jesse C Andrews of Up £ m lilßi 3055 North Meridian street. The engagement of Miss Lillian K. -< V B 4. j|fll Mr, and Mrs. Harry Calland, Rothbard to Lou Leventhal. son |P|i' TA W jro| ‘ Jill 3840 Graceland avenue, announce of Mr. and Mrs. I. F. Leventhal of . • IbL en s a K emen t of their daugh- Terre Haute, has been announce^ *"•' „ spend the winter in Aiken, The wedding”date*'ha? n m™ H „H.r Mis. William Post II s. c . Mrs. Post, before her mar- set. Mrs - Dlll " n Hudtr —Photo by Photocraft. —Photo by Photocraft.

Miss Mary Jane Calland —Photo by Photocraft.

Jewish Juniors to Hold Social Meeting Sunday Indianapolis section of council of Jewish Juniors will begin its session’s activities with a tea and social hour Sunday at the Kirshbaum Center. Miss Lucia Wild is in charge of the entertainment, and Miss Louise Yeager, honorary president: Miss Dorothy Krish, president. Miss Krish will give the welcoming address; Mrs. Sultan Cohen, president of the Senior Council, will extend greetings; and Mrs. Charles Efroymson Sr., representative arid sponsor of the junior council, will be speaker. Other features of the program will be recitations by Mrs. Fred Fishman and a musical monolog by Mrs. Cyril Weinberg, accompanied by Mrs. I. E. Solomon at the piano. Miss Helen Kahn will give the prayer and the current topics. SORORITY CHAPTER TO BE ■INSTALLED Delta Gamma chapter of Phi Pi Psi sorority will be installed at a dinner tonight at the Charm House, given by Alpha Tau chapter. Guests will include members of Delta Rho and Omicron Nu chapters. Miss Ruth Lanham, Mary White and Irene Gimbel are in charge. Miss Anne Porthouse, grand president, will be installing officer, assisted by Misses Ann Toomey, Bernice Zelinn and Mrs. Grace Keane. Decorations will be in orchid and white and the sorority flower, sweet peas, used as decorations.

Card Parties

Liederkranz Ladies will sponsor a card party Sunday night at their hall, 1421 East Washington street. Mrs. Paul Kulke will be chairman.

Sororities

Indiana Beta Delta Sigma sorority will make plans for its annual open bridge party at a meeting Monday night at the home of Miss Marie Wurster, 5331 North New Jersey street. Miss Jewel Hopkins will be a special guest. Beta chapter, Theta Nu Chi sorority, will meet at 8 Monday night at the Claypool. Indiana Alpha chapter, Delta Theta Chi sorority, will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 Monday at the Lincoln. Alpha chapter, Rho Delta sorority, will meet Thursday at the home of Mrs. Merle Denney. 2931 North Denny street. Miss Dortha Dotson is the new president. Alpha chapter, Kappa Phi Delta sorority, will hold its monthly business meeting Monday night at the Y. W. C. A. Beta chapter. Omega Phi Tau sorority, will elect officers Monday night at the Spink-Arms.

Personals

Miss Jewell Hopkins of St. Louis is visiting Misses Anna Marie and Charlotte Kendrick, 136 North Denny street. Mr. and Mrs. Royer K. Brown. 5868 Carrollton avenue, have returned from a ’lsit in Chicago. St. Joan Gives Party St. Joan of Arc Woman's Club will sponsor a card party and bake sale Saturday afternoon, Oct. 21, in the school auditorium. The committee is composed of Mesdames Maurice Early, James Sweeney, Armin Leich. Earl Curtis, Paul Goldrick, Joseph Spalding, William P. Miller, Charles Joline and Edward Steffen. A card party also will be held that night.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

The marriage of Miss Helen Oakes to Dillon Huder was read Saturday at the home of the bride’s father, Warren D. Oakes, 3055 North Meridian street. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Calland, 3840 Graceland avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Mary Jane Calland, to Charles B. Retmier. The wedding will take place Thanksgiving day. Mr. and Mrs. William Post II are on a wedding trip in South America, and upon their return wall spend the winter in Aiken, S. C. Mrs. Post, before her mar-

In the Realm of Clubs

MONDAY Monday Convention Club will observe its president’s day at the Country Squire with a luncheon and program. Mrs. Agnes McCulloch Hanna will review “Anthony Adverse” and “Cecil Rhodes.” Mrs. Robert Gilliland is incoming president. Vincent Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle will hold its president’s day luncheon at noon at the Marott. Mrs. Harry E. Barnard will be hostess for the luncheon and meeting of the Irvington Woman’s Club. Monday Afternoon Club will open its year’s work with a president’s day observance with Mrs. Dewitt S. Morgan and Mrs. H. M. Phipps in charge. Mary B. Knowlton Club will meet at the Charm House with Miss Rosa McNamara and Mesdames Mary Lamb, Anna Navin, Margaret McCarthy as hostesses. TUESDAY Mrs. Orlando B. Settle will read a short story at the first meeting this year of the Writers Club at 8 in the Y. W. C. A. parlors. Plans for next .year will be discussed. Riley day program will be given at the meeting of the Independent Social Club. Mrs. C. E. Day will be hostess for the meeting and program of the Hoosier Tourist Club, and Mrs. H. K. Fatout, Mrs. J. O. Cottingham and Mrs. A. F. Lewis will present the program. Heyl Study Club will hold a luncheon at 1 at the Charm House with Mrs. Don Ayres Anderson, president for the year. Guest day will be observed by the Women’s Auxiliary to Railway Mail Association with Mrs. Charles Bryant as chairman of the dinner

BRIDE OF WEEK

f|l| Wfe A . . % s X Mrs. Paul Brown —Photo bv Photocraft. Before her marriage last Saturday, Mrs. Paul Brown was Miss Helen De Grief, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. De Grief, 5202 North Delaware street. CLUB PROGRAM FOR DISCOVERY DAY SET Discovery day will be observed by the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, D. A. R., at 2 Thursday afternoon at the clubhouse. Albert Stump will talk on “Our Changing Loyalties.” < Miss Grace Greene will present a musical program, and Mrs. Charles F. Voyles, regent, will preside. Hostesses will be Mesdames Edson T. Wood, William N. Wishard, Giles L. Smith and James R. Branson. Camp to Be Aided Mrs. Henry Dithmer Jr. will be in charge of the annual fall dance of the Alpha lota Latreian Club to be given Oct. 13 at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Louie Lowe and his orchestra will provide the music. The proceeds will be used for the Bridgeport nutrition camp.

Miss Margaret Mary Quinn

riage Sept. 19, was Miss Elizabeth Fowler Andrews, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse C. Andrews of West Point. The engagement of Miss Lillian Rothbard to Lou Leventhal, son of Mr. and Mrs. I. F. Leventhal of Terre Haute, has been announced by her mother, Mrs. B. Rothbard. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Quinn, 2340 North Pennsylvania street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Margareet Mary Quinn, to John Barton Griffin, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Griffin. The wedding date has not been jet.

committee. A Riley program will be presented. Irvington Home Study Club will hold its president’s day luncheon at Whispering Winds. Girls Friendly Society of Christ church will met at 5:30 for a dinner and business meeting. WEDNESDAY Mrs. Gordon B. Mess will be honor guest at the president’s day luncheon of the New Century Club at 12:30 Wednesday in the Columbia Club. Irvington Mother’s Study Club will hold a luncheon meeting at 1 at Whispering Winds. Mrs. J. L. Mosley is retiring president, and Mrs. G. H. Marriott, incoming president. THURSDAY “Life Begins at Forty,” will be reviewed by Mrs. J. Blaine Hoffman at the covered dish luncheon meeting of the North Side Study Club with Miss Ruby Hardin as hostess. Ladies’ Federal Club will meet with Mrs. O. A. Collins, 527 North Denny street. Mesdames Ray Morrison, F. L. Haskell and Clyde L. Culbertson will be in charge of the luncheon and meeting of the Eggleston Club in Vevay. “Lands of the Pyramids” will be discussed at the meeting of Beta Delphian at 9:45 in the American National Bank building. Leaders will be Mesdames A. F. Meurer, C. C. Ober, F. W. Shulmeyer, R. I. Renfrew and Max P. Dahl. Pierian Study Club will hold its first meeting at the home of the president, Mrs. Lewis Sebastian, 730 East Twenty-eighth street, with Mrs. Wilson Carey in charge of the program. Mrs. Ronald Foster will entertain Lampas chapter, Epsilon Sigma Omicron sorority, with a luncheon in honor of Mrs. John F. Engelk and Mrs. E. Preston Jones, incoming president. Regular meeting of the sorority will be held Monday, Oct. 9, at the Rauh Memorial library. FRIDAY Indianapolis Woman’s Club will hold its president’s day program with Mrs. D. Laurance Chambers, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Earl B. Barnes and Mrs. Warrack Wallace. Mrs. Philip Zoercher will be in charge of the meeting of the Irvington Fortnightly Club. SATURDAY Mrs. W. J. Sumner will give the invocation at the luncheon of the Magazine Club at 12:30 at the Marott, honoring Mrs. Robert T. Ramsey, incoming president. Hostesses will be Mesdames Rudolph F, Grosskopf, Paul T. Rochford, Roy Thurman, R. A. Nowlan, Albert Henley, Othniel Hitch, George A. Van Dyke, A. M. O’Connell, A. J. Smell and Miss Hazel Howe.

NATION’S FOLK SONGS WILL BE SUBJECT

“The Folk Songs of All Nations” will be the year’s program for the Zeta chapter, Sigma Alpha lota, national professional musipal sorority, it is announced by Mrs. Carl B. Moore, vice-president and program chairman. A tea. Oct. 11 at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, will open activities, followed by a vesper service, Nov. 26 at the North M. E. church. The annual Christmas party will be given by the Patroness chapter, with the proceeds to be used for charitable work. Mrs. Clare F. Cox is chapter president. Mrs. Moore is assisted by Mesdames Harold Sw'eeney, Russell Paxton, Rosalee Spong, Robert Blake, Roy Pile and Robert Shultz. Thetas to Gather Mrs. W. C. Brigham, Michigan road, will be hostess for the regular meeting of Alpha Chi alumnae of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority Tuesday night. Mrs. S. F. Taylor and i Miss Gretchen Mueller will assist i the hostess.

Miss Lillian Rothbard —Photo by Photocraft.

Welfare Club Announces List of Committees Committees in charge of the Welfare Club card party, to be given Saturday, Oct. 7 in Ayres auditorium are completing arrangements under the direction of Mrs. Hodge Worsham, general chairman, and Mrs. Raleigh Fisher, co-chairman. The committees are: Tickets, Mrs. Robert Stokes, chairman, Mesdames Blake Stone, Harry Kuhn and W. R. Hatton; prizes, Mrs. Harry E. Watson and Mrs. Elsie Brubaker; opportunity prizes, Mesdames Edith Pantzer, W. S. Mitchell, Hiram Pearce, Reese Wysong, Ray Holcomb, Volney E. Huff, Richard Poole, Clifford Miller, Wililam Birk, Charles Roller and William H. Lyman. Decorations, Mesdames Gustave Schmidt, A. C. Zaring, Elwood Ramsey, James Berry, Oscar Jose, A. G. Wills, John Sawyer and D. B. Ray; cards and pencils, Mrs. Olin Hatton; tallies and covers, Mesdames Harold Dillon, Louis Kriete, Adah Galbraith; confections, Mesdames E. E. Martin, Benjamin Kinnick, O. A. Hobbs, Frank Malott, Harold Haasis, Henry Dithmer Jr., George Stalker, Paul Brown, Nelle Greyer and E. S. Donahue.

SEPTEMBER BRIDE

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Mrs. Victor Lore —Phcto by Moorefield. Mrs. Victor Lore was Miss Florence Quinn, daughter of Mrs. John J. Quinn, before her marriage Sept. 19. Mr. and Mrs. Lore will be at home in the city after Sunday. MAIL AUXILIARY TO HONOR RILEY The birthday of James Whitcomb Riley will be commemorated by the Women’s auxiliary to the Railway Mail Association at its annual guest day meeting at 2:30 Tuesday at the Woman's Department Club. Entertainment will be accordion and piano numbers by Dick Harold and musical monologues by Ethleen Johnson, accompanied by Helen Walden. Mrs. W. H. Vinzant, president, will report the national convention, which she attended in Seattle, Wash. Six o’clock dinner will be served by the following committee, with Mrs. Cht rles Bryant, chairman; Mesdames John Newlin, W. O. Brown, Roy Schepman, E. E. Wooley, Charles Webster, H. S. Walter, J. D. Yoder, Charles Spencer, Frank Wade, Clara Fosdick. W. P. Batchelder, L. E. Ball, Madison Davis. W. T. Coutz. William C. Sipes and Carl R. Manhart. Women to Give Dance Woman’s Club of Christian park ; will hold a dance at 8:30 tonight in I the community house with music by I Frank Ainsley and his band.

Hospital Philanthropic Bodies of City Prepare for Start of Activities Sunnyside, St. Margaret’s and White Cross Guilds Map Opening Events; Appointments of Committees to Start Functions. THREE volunteer organizations, whose philanthropic work takes them into hospital centers in the city, will open their year’s activities this week. Sunnyside Guild will begin its year’s program with a president’s day luncheon Monday in the Columbia Club; St. Margaret's Guild will hold a musical Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Jackson Landers, and White Cross Music Guild of White Cross Center of Methodist hospital will entertain with a musicale and silver tea in the hospital nurses’ home at 3 Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Ancel P. Harvey, chairman of the annual card party of the Sunnyside Guild, will announce the committees at the luncheon Monday, when Mrs. Carrie L. Hammel, retiring president, will present the gavel to Mr. Floyd J. Mattice. Luncheon tables will be decorated with dahlias and asters in pastel shades. Christine Rouse will play violin numbers, accompanied by Frances Ry’oolt. Other officers with Mrs. Mattice are: Mrs. Charles Seidensticker, first vice-president; Mrs. D. B. Sullivan, second vice-president; Mrs. William H. Hanning, secretary; Mrs. Ancel P. Harvey, assistant secretary; Mrs. Wayne O. Stcne, treasurer; Mrs. Le Roy Martin, corresponding secretary; directors, Mesdames Carrie L. Hammel, Richard B. Tuttle and A. B. Chapman, and Mrs. Edward Ferger. parliamentarian. Mrs. E. Park Akin is chairman of the luncheon, assisted by Mesdames A. H. Adams, J. E Berry, G. J. Bookwalter, O. H. Bradway, E. J. Braman. J. N. Bromert, Floyd Brown. Fred H. Bruhn, E. L. Burnett and Charles Byfield. tt tt tt Card Party to Raise Fund THIS is the twelfth annual card party sponsored by the guild in an effort to raise funds for their activities at Sunnyside sanatorium. One of the large projects is the guild ball in February, which is attended by society throughout the city. The organization provides clothing lor needy patients with its loan closet, and gives entertainment and refreshments to the patients once a month. Other entertainment features include motion pictures weekly, and radio connections for each hospital bed. Persons interested in the work done by the St. Margaret’s hospital group at city hospital will attend the tea at the home of Mrs. Landers. 5420 North Meridian street. Articles made in the occupational therapy department will be on display. Mrs. G. B. Wolfe, chairman of the entertainment committee, is assisted by Mrs. Jack Adams and Mrs. John Rau, co-chairman. Assisting in hospitalities will be Mesdames # Charles Kotteman, A. F. Head, John Lange, William Doeppers, Marshall Dale, Myron McKee and Lewis Ward. Miss Fa \ lie Kiser, who recently returned from New York where she studied with Miss Mildred Dilling, will present a musical program. a a tt Guild Operates Lending Library THE guild, which has a membership of sixty and an associate and contributing membership of seventy-five, maintains a lending library at 415 East Thirty-fourth street, with Mrs. Louis Thomas, assisted by Mrs. Dudley Griffith and Mrs. Sidney Fenstermaker, in charge. Jigsaw puzzles, made in the occupational therapy department, sponsored by the guild, are for rent and sale in the library. A loan closet also is maintained by the groups, and its annual benefit activities include a card party in May and a dinner dance early in December. Mrs. Preston Rubush is serving her fourth term as president, assisted by the following officers: Mrs. Landers, first vice-president; Mrs. George Grinsteiner, second vice-president; Mrs. William Mullen, treasurer; Mrs. Edward Moore, first assistant. Mrs. L. G. Zerfas is in charge of the therapy department, assisted by Mrs. Francis Sinex, and Mrs. G. I. Seybert is chairman of the hospital committee, assisted by Mrs. Louis Gauspohl. Mrs. W. C. Borcherding is in charge of the tea and musical to be given by the Music Guild, and Mrs. John Benson and Mrs. Felix McWhirter will preside at the tea table. Dr. John G. Benson will discuss “Musical Therapy,” and a musical program will be presented during the afternoon. Mrs. William Hitz is president of the group which provides entertainment for patients at the hospital, and other heads are Mrs. Roscoe Leavitt, program; Mrs. A. M. Hetherington, hostess; Mrs. Charles Yott, ush'ers; Mrs. Harry Nagle, arrangements, and Mrs. Laurence Hayes, publicity.

YOUR CHILD Youngster’s Health Governs How Long He Must Sleep

BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON There is an old saying that “He lives longest who is aw'ake most hours.” Another that “God gives help to early risers.” Literature is replete with maxims about getting out of bed when “rosy fingered dawn” begins to creep up out of the sea. Tired mothers wish that school would keep from 10 to 5 instead of 9 to 4. Not only would they get another hour to rest, but the children wouldn't be such bears. My sympathy is with the mothers. It always seems to me that I am much more tired in the mornings than at night. But this is not the problem I am approaching here. Tea in Honor of Miss Shea to Be Sunday A bridge tea Saturday afternoon will honor Miss Mary Helen Shea, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah C. Shea, w'hose marriage to James Robert Hilger will take place Wednesday at the SS. Peter and Paul catherdral. Mrs. A. C. Mueller will entertain at the home of her mother, Mrs. W. G. Olin, 2961 Washington boulevard. Appointments will be carried out in shades of yellow, the bride-elect’s colors. Guests will include Miss Margaret Shea, sister of the brideelect; Miss Margarette Hilger of Columbus, house guest of Miss Shea; Misses Mary France Boyle, Mildred Briggs, Mary Catherine Slattery, Mary Louise Connor, Marie Blackwell, Mrs. Herman Winkler, Mrs. Paul McNamara. Mrs. Alvin W. Leeb and Miss Martha Jane Olin, sister of the hostess. Miss Boyle will entertain at her home Sunday afternoon for Miss Shea and Mrs. Leeb gave a bridge party and bridal shower Thursday night at her home, 1930 North Delaware street. Guests included Miss Hilger, MLss Margaret Shea, Miss Boyle, Miss Slattery, Miss Connor, Misses Lois Jackson, and Sara and Margaret Jordan, Cecelia O’Mahoney, Lsabelle Guedelhoefer, Jean Craig, Josephine Ready, Jane Keene, Mrs. | Allan R. Stacey, Mrs. Charles W. Holstein, Mrs. Mueller, Mrs. Winkle and Mrs. Edward Curry. Mother's to Be Guests Mother’s club of the Butler university unit of Trianon will honor mothers of new pledges at a mother and daughter meeting at 8 Wednesj day night at the home of Mrs. Will liam T. Harris, 920 East Fortieth | street. Mrs. Robert F. Claffey is president. Mothers Will Meet The season’s activities of the Phi Delta Theta Mother’s Club will S begin with a 1 o’clock luncheon on | Wednesday at the chapter house 705 Hampton drive. Hostesses will be officers, who are Mesdames ; George O. Stewart, A. S. Johnson j L. M. Langston, Hiram J. Raffensperger and A. E. Coddington. \

PAGE 5

It is the effect of early rising upon children. Better to Rise Early The child who gets ten hours sleep should be rested in that time if he is well. Some children repair and build enough in nine hours, others take eleven. A mother can regulate bedtime according to age and state of health. Little children need from twelve to thirteen hours at night. A tired grown-up eight or nine or even ten. The regulating has to be done in the evening because the family gets up at the same time. That end of it is even. Why is it better to get up early than to lie until later? Oh. yes, because there is school. And because we all think better in the morning. Builder of Character Well —we don’t all think better in the morning. I think much better in the afternoon. Unless we are physically exhausted many of us do. And children, I have discovered, are pretty much like us. No one rule fits them all. However this may be, I think there is a more real benefit to children than that. It doesn’t concern school, or the best pancakes for breakfast, or beating the rest of the family to the bathroom. It concerns character itself. That line on God helping the early riser comes in here. There is something about getting out of bed at a given time, much as one hates it, that adds one more bit of iron to the human makeup. Excellent for Disciplining Overcoming and doing things they dislike is excellent discipline for children. All the better discipline because they do not build up any personal resentment about it. It is simply done, that is all. One thing to do that they can’t argue or question. Os course they do both, but under it all they nurse no grudge. They may not be healthy, wealthy or wise in the end, but w f e usually find early risers people of plan and leading organized lives—successful in some way not mentioned in Richard's almanac. Negrly always people of “character.”

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NU-CURL LIVESTEAM PERMANENT \U Complete with Coeoanut T| Oil Shampoo and J’usli-up fij beacte-artbs g Ml Roosevelt Bid*. With or Without Appt.