Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 213, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 January 1934 — Page 4

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Social Days * Program to Open Friday Department Club Will Provide Informal Gatherings. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN Timet Woman’s Page Editor. WOMAN'S Department Club will begin its custom of social days Friday afternoon. From 2to 5 on the third Friday of each month, the club will be open for informal gatherings. Mrs. Harry E. Watson, house and grounds chairman, devised the idea of attr acting

members of the clubhouse on days when there are no particular entertainments. “Bring your friends for a cup of tea," invites Mrs. Watson. “Per haps you have a committee meeting and are looking for a convenient place to meet. Or would you like to invite a few friends for a round of bridge?”

Miss Burgan

If the open house plan is popular, it will be continued throughout the club year, Mrs. Watson explains. Mrs. Herbert Piel and Mrs. Alfred Piel were hostesses today for the luncheon at the Bob Brown Riding stables, following the women’s morning ride. Lieutenant and Mrs. George Bender and Captain and Mrs. R. B. Machle will entertain a group of friends at Ft. Benjamin Harrison at a dinner and card party Saturday night, Jan. 20. They have Issued invitations for the party, to be held at the Bender quarters. Their dinner party at the Machle quarters will be one of the many to precede the Officers’ Club hop Saturday. ,Jan. 27. Gifts in a ship were presented to Miss Margaret Friedrich at a shower and breakfast given for her yesterday morning at the Highland Golf and Country Club by Mrs. Donovan Moffett, Mrs. Clinton Glascock and Miss Edith Allen. Miss Friedrich will leave later in the month for Bordeaux, France, where she will be married to Alexandre Ruelland of Madrid, Spain. Barbara Brewer and Ruth Campbell carried the ship to the honor guest for the presentation. Mrs. R. E. Mclndoo came from Kokomo to attend the party and Mrs. Robert Fitzgerald, formerly of Indianapolis, was a guest from Anderson.

HOLIDAY WEDDING IS ANNOUNCED

It if Times Special LEBANON, ind., Jan. 15.—Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Adney announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Louise Adney, to Thomas Shepperd Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Shepperd. The ceremony took place during the holidays with the Rev. James D. Martin officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Shepperd are at home at Table Mountain Ranch, Virginia Dale, Col. The bride attended Butler university and was graduated from the University of Wisconsin, she is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Mr. Shepperd attended Purdue and De Pauw universities. MISS STUCKMEYER IS PARTY HOSTESS Miss May Stuckmeyer was hostess Sunday for a farewell party and handkerchief shower, given by Alpha Upsilon chapter. Alpha Zeta Beta sorority for Mrs. Chester Huff, formerly Miss Dorothy Kohlman. The sorority will meet tomorrow at the Washington. Two Attend Conclave Misses Marie Ervin and Marian Ishams attended the Alpha province convention of Sigma Phi Gamma sorority last week-end at Marion. They attended as delegates from Upsilon chapter. Club Dance Slated Municipal Gardens Mothers' Club will sponsor a dance tonight at the clubrooms. The Troubadors will play.

20*" — tp 0 * Photoßeflex is a new and bet* and / fl * ter way. .once you’ve tried l r TiCfi Photoßeflex you'll want to be / photographed no other way, " / B _ you'll want to tell your friend! j S Yoj ft to try it. too ...it sso much / y(1 f U more satisfactory! TRY IT. Photoßeflex is the only wav For G IIITIItSCJ tlfYlO you can be photographed and 8 x 10 am •ee yourself as you'll look Photoßeflex in the finished picture. Sounds Pictures of You </ amazing? It is .. . you can LN OUR FINE SILK FINISH choose the very pose and expression you want ! try it. Regularly 3 for *lO Proof, .SubmmtJ No Appointment Needed PHOTOREFLEX STUDIO. EIGHTH FLOOR L. S. Ayres A Cos.

Fame Quest Revealed

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You can’t keep secrets in Hollywood, take it from “Virginia Pine,” the lovely showgirl w’ho’s smiling at you above. She’s just been unmasked as Mrs. Virginia Peine Lehmann, wife of a Chicago department store executive, and prominent in society, trying to “make good on her own,” starting with a “bit” role. She and her husband have separated.

Manners and Morals

If yon prefer an honest answer to platitudes, put your problem before Jane Jordan. She will answer questions about love, marraige, child training and other problems of existence in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—Would you go on record as saying that a man never willingly marries a girl who he has been intimate with, this is, not just any girl, but one whom he knows he loves? Does he love her less afterwards and then lose the desire to get married to her, even if he had intended to before? I wish you’d answer this. E. D. M. Answer —No, I would not go on j record as saying any such thing, for it would not be true. Any honest person knows that many couples who have been intimate have married and lived happily ever after. However, I would go on record as saying that it is a highly dangerous

experiment, and that it is just as apt to end in disaster as success. Most men have been brought up by i puritanical mothj ers, and try as they | may, they can not | shake off the feeli ing of shame that i attaches to corporeal union. Their love can not transcend the depreciation of fulfillment without comfort of

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ceremony to make is sacred. In many cases intellectual approval is powerless to prevent serious emotional revulsion. Whether or not a man loves a woman more or less afterward depends on the secret psychic ideal he i has of a woman. If it is a “purity” ideal, he will not be able to love tne woman who violates it. Most men have the. mistaken notion that a woman who breaks the rules with him will do with others whenever the spirit moves her. When distrust enters the picture, happiness is doomed.

BY JANE JORDAN

It also is true that many men lose interest as soon as a woman has said yes. The flame burns out before time for the ceremony, and they take flight before the wedding day on diverse pretences. Sometimes a man marries a girl from a sense of duty and hounds her ever after with reproaches. There are exceptions to all rules, of course, but it takes a hardy and independent spirit to gamble with exceptions. Most women are happiest in a life of social safety. B B B Dear Jane Jordan—l met a young man about a year and a half ago. We went together for a year and everything was lovely until a girl came into the picture and ended our engagement. Not because I was jealous, but they were seen so many places that he refused to take me. The excuse was that a girl with high morals would not enjoy such places. He carried on this affair until about a month ago. Then he came back telling me he loved ms and wanted to be forgiven. But the heart-breaking thing was that he told me the girl was in trouble and asked my help. I helped her because he was going to leave town and let her face the scandal. Do you thing I did the right thing by helping her? I love this fellow, I am sure, for this was a terrible sin in my eyes. But my faith in him is shaken. Would I be making a mistake by taking him back? A READER. Answer—Certainly you did right ;by helping the girl. But how on earth can you love the man who so weakly lets you stand between him and the consequences of his own acts? I can understand the force which caused him to leave a girl with “high morals,” temporarily to pursue a physical flame, but 1 can't put up with his running to cover when the piper presented the inevitable bill. I dislike his turning the whole situation over to you to handle. I think the young man would make a miserable husband, and it's an unlucky girl who marries him. BBS Dear Jane Jordan—l am in my late twenties and have been having dates with a gentleman for two years, who is superior to me in many ways. He has asked me to marry him, but I'm hesitant because I feel that if he should learn about some matters after we married it would make a difference. I have had to get out and dig for everything I have, although I haven't lost refinement in doing so. The road has been quite disillusioning to me, and I've lost faith, or the zest of living. My education has been neglected. I speak good English, but somehow it is very difficult for me to talk much, i have no social connections. such as clubs and sororities. He is a university graduate. I was graduated from high school. My family seems to be the type which has no initiative. They never do anything and never make any progress. Also, there are things that have happened in the family that I wouldn't want him to know. His people are just the opposite, very industrious. Please tell me if you would take the chance. TESS. Answer—l could answer more in- J telligentiy if I knew the nature of ! the things you wish to hide. If they 1 are incidents which likely will come : out anyway in the normal course of events, concealment would be folly. Is it difficult to determine in advance whether candor will promote or disturb the happiness of marriage. Possibly honesty is always the safest course, and if the gentleman's love is not strong enough to stand j the strain of knowing the truth, it ! is not worth having. On the other hand, I do not see ! why he is entitled to a complete family pedigree with detailed information. even unto how long your i grandfather’s whiskers were. If

Jane Jordan

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Sisterhood Will Hear Miss Doud National P. E. 0. Head Will Attend City Founding Fete. Speaker at the founders’ day luncheon of Indianapolis chapters, P. E. O. Sisterhood Saturday will be Miss Mabel D. Doud, Chicago, supreme president. Mrs. E. D. Fivecoat, president oi the local group, is in charge of the luncheon, to be held in the Travertine room of the Lincoln. Her committee is composed of Mesdames C. Hylton Eberhard, J. M. Smith, J. D. Karl Matthews and Walter T. White. Miss Doud will tak on “Yesterday’s Trails and Tomorrow’s Highways.” Musical entertainment will be provided by the P. E. G. ensemble of Chapter S. and Mrs. Eberhard, organist. One hundred fifty members from various chapters in the state will attend. The sisterhood was organized in 1869 at lowa Wesleyan college and has a membership of 70,000 women. Chapters sponsor educational, social and philanthropic work. State Council of Clubs Meets in Purdue Hall —\ By Times Special LAFAYETTE. Ind., Jan. 15. Three hundred delegates, representing clubs in seventy-four Indiana cities, assembled yesterday in the Purdue university Memorial Union building for the semi-annual meeting of the State Council of the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs. Miss Louise Ford, Indianapolis club president, and Miss Lucy Osborn, district chairman, headed the local delegation. Nominating committee, which will name candidates to be selected at the state convention, May 18 to 20, in Bloomington, includes Miss Fanny Payne, Indianapolis; Mrs. Elma Walter, Bedford; Miss Elizabeth Hert, Washington, and Miss Margaret Cheney, Lafayette. Cash prizes w r ere awarded to eleven 100 per cent membership honor clubs in the federation, Portland, Garrett, Newcastle, Richmond, Columbus, Anderson. Washington, Tipton, Bedford, Martinsville and Brownstown. Others attending from Indianapolis with Miss Ford and Miss Osborn were Mesdames Gladys Vansant, Jane Carter, Denna Miller, Margaret O’Connell, Ada O. Frost, Nell Thcmas and Myra Majors Wirenius and Misses Grace Beall, Sue Stuart, Marie Stevens, Mabel Kregelo, Fae Harris, Rae McKinnis, Myrtle Munson, Josephine Metzger. Katherine Kaerscher, Olive Faulkner, Flora Lyons, Marjorie Ford, Mayme Blades, Lula Grace, Norwood, Eleanor Adams, Louise McCarty, Pearl Holloway, Edith Dashiell. Nell Jones and Sally Butl'er.

Personals

Mrs. Charles D. La Follette with her children has returned to her home at Corning, N. Y., after spending the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerry M. Sanborn. Mrs. Alice Zollinger Turner will return today from a three weeks’ visit in Milwaukee and Chicago. Mrs. Fred L. Thomas and her daughter, Mrs. T. R. Kackley, with .her two children, left today for Naples, Fla., to spend the remainder of the winter.

Sororities

Beta chapter, Theta Nu Chi sorority, will meet at 8 tonight at the Claypool. Alpha chapter, Tau Delta Sigma sorority, will entertain with a bowery party tonight at the home of Mrs. Gilbert Gee, 916 North Graham avenue. The following guests will attend: Mrs. Richard Layton, Mrs. Russell Duke, Mrs. Donald Gordon. Mrs. B. C. Waitman, Miss Adeline Glidden and Miss Olivia Fortney. Pledges of Alpha chapter, Pi Sigma Tau sorority, will be initiated at 8 tonight at the Barbara Frietchie tearoom. They are: Misses Jayne Shea, Phyllis Prosch and Marjorie Kross. A dinner will follow the services. Lambda chapter. Omega Phi Tau sorority, will meet tonight at the home of Miss Louise Smith. 962 Moreland street.

Card Parties

Women's Club of Christamore House will entertain with a card party Wednesday in the auditorium. Boosters Social Club, Security Benefiit Association, will hold a card party at 8 tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. E. F. Taylor, 612 Woodlawn avenue. Club Hears Mrs. Ball Mrs. W. H. Ball, Muncie, was soloist for the monthly meeting of the Prelude Club of Tuclor Hall yesterday in the residence. Mrs. Beulah Oesterle was accompanist. Miss Lucinda Ball played several piano selections. Two Will Entertain Mrs. D. O. Wilmeth, assisted by Mrs. Thomas Johnson will be hostess to the cheer committee and officers of the Ladies auxiliary of Sahara. Grotto Wednesday at Mrs. Wilmeth’s home, 4337 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Luther Manley will be a special guest. French Club to Meet Miss Genevieve Scoville will entertain members of the Alliance Francaise at her home. 2050 North Delaware street. Thursday night. Audley Dunham will present a program of magic. your physical inheritance is good, you should not be blamed for your family's deficiencies. Perhaps your very ambition is a reaction against their inertia. Why don't you risk taking these things out with him? If a heart-to-heart talk results in a warm understanding between you, what is there left to fear?

Have a Hobby Dag i ierreo type St a rted Photography in America

BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON Times Hobby Editor VIEWING the marvelous photography and poignant artistry of such motion pictures as -Little Women” or the recent charming fantasy m technicolor, ••Lullabv Land," by Walt Disney, we have difficulty in realizing that less than a century ago no photograph ever had been made. The year that saw the young Victoria crowned Queen oi England not only ushered in the mauve decade but witnessed the fulfillment cf a dream of Louis Jacques Daguene —the making of the first photograph. In many homes today can be found cherished tiny black boxes of ornamental leather or papiermache, often inlaid with pearle, which contain the daguerreotype of a beloved member of the family who lived during the Victorian era. These quaint first photographs are collected today because of their historic significance, sentimental appeal, beautiful cases or because of their charming and sometimes amusing subjects, since they were made in the period of hoop skirts and poke bonnets, high stocks and queer fitting long coats and the rich, deep pile of magnificent whiskers. 1 Photography had progressed by experimental stages until Thcmas Wedgewood, of pottery fame, was able to catch the image of a stationary and inanimate object in his camera obscura in 1802. The impression faded, however, when exposed to the light. In 1839, the Frenchman, Daguerre, in conjunction with experiments by Joseph Nicephore Niepce, perfected a process for sensitizing a silver plate with iodine and developing with vapors of mercury the image produced on exposure. The finished product was called a daguerreotype. Samuel F. B. Morse, inventor of the telegraph, who was in France trying to interest foreign capital in his own discovery, asked Daguerre for his formula with which to experiment upon his return to America. The next year Morse made the first photograph in the United States, the picture of the Church of the Messiah on Broadway, and the same year, 1840, Professor John Draper of New York university made the first photograph of a human face. Because of the time required for exposure, daguerreotypes were considered impractical for portraiture; nevertheless, in the same year, Walcott and Johnson opened a gallery in New York, the first in the world. tt tt tt SOON the time of exposure was shortened and the many galleries which opened were crowded during, the sunlit hours. According to an early photographer, Monday was the best day for business because during Sunday night courtship, lovers promised to exchange pictures. Often in the finished portraits the eyes looked queer because the sitters thought they couldn’t blink but otherwise the daguerreotypes were exact repelicas of the subjects as if looking in a mirror. In that day there was no “retouching" double chins and wrinkles, although the photographer had sticking wax to fasten back winged ears and wads of cotton called “plumpers’ ’to fill out hollow cheeks. Daguerreotypes could not be ordered a dozen at a time from one sitting as with our modern photographs. The lovely, quaint, old pictures found in attractive cases and outlined with small gilt frames, are each the original plate on which the image was made. There is but one of a kind. - When a young and gallant captain marched away to the Civil war at the head of his volunteer company he carried over his heart a daguerrotype. It was the likeness of his young wife, my maternal grandmother. Inclosed with it was a lock of their first son’s hair. It was encased in a flat black box, lined with padded and stamped velvet and made ro-

First In Indianapolis FRENCH PERMANENT NEW FORK AND PARIS CRAZE 1-ya. gm. Hegular 00 iEb Complete With OCR OWN Shampoo SECRET and FORMICA Push-Up NEW SUPPLIES WHY THIS WAVE IS SUPERIOR I—lt is a TONIC WAVE that reconditions jour hair, leaving it healthy. 2—lt produces a deep, strong wave on every texture of hair. 3—lt produces perfect ringlet ends. 4—NO OIL TREATMENTS necessary before or after this wave. s—lt stays until the hair grows out. BEAUTE-ARTES 601 ROOSEVELT BLDG. Illinois and Washington Streets LI. 0670. No Appt. Necessary. oßnaMi When Yon ThinliMMa of Dgy Cleaning THINK OF Excelsior Laundry 840 N. NEW JERSEY RI. 3591 B.' EVANS’ 1 R ALL PURPOSE^ i Krause Bros f Going Out of Business M $2.95 Blouses, $1.76 ■ $4.50 Blouses, $2.96 C “Courthouse Is Opposite Vs”

mantically ornate in floreated embossed papier-mache, very hard and metallic. The wife chose that type of case so that it might turn a possible bullet. Unfortunately, few daugerreotypes carry any marking to show where they were made or by whom. Miss Martlia Dorsey of the Washington high school staff has a fine collection of family daguerreotypes which she knows were made in southern Indiana, but with the exception of a Mr. Dorr, a photographer at Princeton, she has no other maker or gallery. tt a a THE first daguerreotype gallery in Indianapolis was opened in 1842 on the south side of Washington street between Meridian and Illinois, by Thomas W. Whitridge, who later became a noted artist. John Nicholson, a pioneer Indianapolis portrait photographer, and W. H. Bass, dean of Indianapolis photographers, although engaged exclusively in the commercial side, came to Indianapolis after the daguerreotype era, but remembers much about the process. In 1851, the year Mr. Bass was born, his uncle, living at Haw Fateh, near Columbus, learned to make daguerreotypes and practiced by making family pictures, which they still own. Shortly before the Civil war ambrotypes were introduced, and tintypes came a bit later. These often are called daguerreotypes today, probably because they were placed in the same type container, but they were distinguished easily from real daguerreotypes. The tintypes have painted cheeks and gilded buttons, and in ambrotypes the face, hands and other light parts are shown in silver. Daguerreotypes were made approximately but thirty years. During the Civil war the little cartede visite, true forerunner of the present-day photograph, was produced. In their lovely cases, daguerreotypes are precious antiques of truly remarkable excellence. They were the trail breakers of photography, the first step in the development of a great, art which has attained the present-day perfection in camera portraiture. GROTTO OFFICERS TO BE INSTALLED Officers of the Ladies’ Auxiliary to Sahara Grotto will be installed at 8 Wednesday night. Mesdames Stanley Bryson, Leslie Bowden and Fred Earhart will be in charge of the program. Incoming officers include Mrs. Martha Reinhardt, president; Mrs. Walter Beauchamp, first vicepresident; Mrs. Joseph Nelson, recording secretary; Mrs. Bryson, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Roy Stebbing, treasurer. Trustees will be Mrs. Earhart, Mrs. William Hamilton, Mrs. Ruby Pettigrew, and guards, Mrs. Jack Small and Mrs. Myrtle Keough. IRVINGTON UNION TO HOLD PARTY Mrs. Fred D. Stilz, chairman of the ways and means committee of the Irvington Union of Clubs, will sponsor a bonnet and boot style show and card party at 2 Monday, Jan. 29, in the Irvington Masonic temple. Proceeds will be added to the milk fund. Mrs. James C. Todd, chairman of the Irvington Cheer Center, announces that during January and February the center will be open from 10 to 4 on Wednesday and Saturday, instead of daily. The committee announces need of men’s working clothing.

Judge Nisley’s by quality Not by price L Xttce I i m !Init )| .Jlutoiij 1 1 Final Clearance En ds Practically entire stock included in sizes 2} to 10—widths AAAA to D. J " I ''Jj / Spect3.cu.icir Value! xn iL axoxX yyu require, j J CHIFFON or SERVICE at U!7C 44 NO , PENNSYLVANIA ST* t Mail qrders filled promptly when accompanied by purchase price and 15 cents for mailing t

Modern Paper-Making Contrasted With Early Style in Ayr's’ Display Reproduction of Press Used in Seventeenth Century and Tiny Model of Present Machine Are Features. BY HELEN LINDSAY INDIANAPOLIS admirers of the work of Joseph Hergesheimer will be interested in an unusual display on the sixth floor of the L. S. Ayres store this week. The exhibit, which has come to Ayres from the Century of Progress Exposition, and is shown under the auspices of the American Writing Paper Company and Lawrence college, Appleton. Wis., will recall a book length romance of early American days, built around the making of hand-made paper, "The Foolscap Rose.” The story ran in serial during the fall months in the Saturday Evening Post. It was written in

much the same style as “The Limestone Tree." Shown in the exhibit are reproductions of the pulp vat, the drying rack and the press used in the seventeenth century, and described in the Her* eslieimer story. The machines are of wood, and have been sent out by Lawrence college. Students of the college are trained in the making of fine papers, and then sent for practical work to various paper mills about the country. A huge wooden vat is shown, in which the stock from which the paper was made was soaked in water. It was then hung on the wooden rack to dry, and later pressed in a large wooden press into sheets of paper. In comparison to these primitive methods of paper-making, the American Writing Paper Company has 1 furnished for the display the smallest paper-mak-ing machine in the world. It was originally built by an Englishman, and was on exhibit at the fair in Leipsic. Germany. An official of the American Writing Paper Com-

pany bought the machine, brought it to the United States, and had it remodeled. As nearly as possible, it is a reproduction of the Fourdrineer machines, on which the finest writing papers are made. tt tt tt tt tt tt Tiny Machine Only Six Feet in Length THE tiny machine, which is only six feet in length, is mounted on a table, and will be in operation this week. Representatives of the paper mill will be in attendance to explain its operation. Sheets of paper made on this small machine are four inches in width. The largest machine in the world in comparison, makes sheets of paper 304 inches wide. The entire machine shown at Ayres could be placed on one of the many rollers of the average writing paper machine. It is valued at about $30,000. The machine operates just as larger paper machines do. The stock from w’hich the paper is made is placed in a compartment called a “beater,” which grinds and prepares the stock. Then it passes to a circular copper chest below’, where it is mixed with water, and is then pumped to a machine chest. From this it feeds through a screen, and forms on a fine meshed wire. Suction boxes under this remove the water from the material, and it is then pressed through rollers covered by woolen felt, which press it into sheets of paper. These are passed over heated driers, to complete the process. tt tt tt tt tt a Piques Fashionable for Spring Again PIQUES are to be as fashionable for spring as they w’erc during last year. They are shown in various new’ weaves, a basket weave design suggested as smart wear in w'hite. Block's is showing a tailored dark cloth dress, with unusual pleated collar and cuff sets of white pique. A hat which is suggested for wear with this frock is copied from one seen in the production of “Roberta,” taken from the Alice Duer Miller novel, “Gowns by Roberta.” The play is being shown now at the New Amsterdam theater in New York. The hat is a blue straw knit, with a bill-like effect to the front cf the brim, and is trimmed with white ribbon. One side is cut to show the details of the nev; up-swept coiffure. Other fabrics suggested in fashion dispatches for smart spring wear are seersuckers show’ing colored cords in open ground, with a wide-w’ale effect, and ratine yarns in a voile ground.

Dr. Cory to Discuss Homes at Department Club Tea

Dr. A. E. Cory, world traveler, will discuss “Hemes of the World” at the meeting of the American home department of the Woman’s Department Club at 2:30 Wednesday at the clubhouse. Musical program will be presented by Mrs. Lewis E. York, and Mrs. Bert S. Gadd, chairman of the department, will preside at the business meeting. Paul Duncan will review “From Flushing to Calvary," “Meeting of the Bounty” and “Mary Lincoln, Wife and Widow.” These books are included in the course offered for credits by Epsilon Sigma Omicron sorority of the Indiana Federation of Clubs in co-operation with Indiana university. ftlrs. McClellan Coppock is chairman of the tea which will follow the program. She will be assisted by Mesdames J. L. Smith, William

JAN. 15, 1934

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>lrs. Lindsay

Dobson, Edward A. Zimmer, O. R. Summer, Clarence J. Finch, L. A. Cortner. Charles H. Beckett, Howard W. Painter, Frank S. O'Neil, William H. Link, E. L. Burnett and Charles J. Oval. GIRLS' FRIENDLY TO OBSERVE BIRTHDAY Twenty-third birthday of the Christ church branch of the Girls’ Friendly Society will be celebrated tomorrow night in the parish house. Miss Elizabeth Poole, chairman of the entertainment committee, will be assisted by Misses Helen Kidwell, Jean Moore and Alba Rogers. Auxiliary to Meet Irvington auxiliary to the Public Health Nursing Association will meet Wednesday with Mrs. I. L. Miller, 340 Downey avenue.