Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 39, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 June 1934 — Page 4
PAGE 4
Howie Trek' Arranged to New Mexico Twenty-two Boys and Seven Men Will Make Trip. BV RMIRIO: BERDAN t'WM rt Miltt tJKFORE Hillis L Howie seta out on July 5 for a series of exciting adventure* on a prairie trek in the Zorn mountain* at Thoreau N M . he mill motor east to pirk up several hoys who will take the Children's Museum trip. Mr Homie led the first group of boys on a trek
eight years ago; then mast of young explorers were In dianapoiis boys. In 1929 Mr. H o wlo met Chahs on the s s President Roosc v e 1 1 headed for th Bov Scout jamboree in England Mr. Chalis organ-
Miss Bur-
ized a delegation from his home town. Short Hills. N J, and joined Mr. Howie's western trips. He is senior counselor now. Robert Berry, Livingston Moore and Mr. Chahs will join Mr. Howie at Short Hills. John Ragsdale, junior counselor, lives at Summit. N. J Jack Breed, fiwampsrott, Mw„ has traveled with Mr. Howie hefor*. hut Richard Adler. New York, and Howard Hull, Bernardaville. N. J.. will he newcomers in the trek croup. Mr. Howie will leave Friday in a station wagon, and Philip Sweet and Oene Iglehart will leave Thursday in anew truck to carry equipment. Twenty-Nine to Travel Mr Howie will return on July 5. the eve of departure on the trek. Twenty-two boys and seven men will form the personnel. Gordon Thompson, who has assisted Mr. Howie on the Ireks since 1928 will accompany the Turquoise Trail trek, rnmposed of girls, who will have their headquarters in the heart of the Navajo country. Mrs. Howie and Mrs. Donald Jameson will lead the girls, who will stay at the guest lod2e of Burton Staples near Cottonwood Gulch. Near Notables' Homes The lodge is a stone's throw from the summer home of Harold Ickes, secretary of interior, and his family. Nearby is the home of Leopold Stokowski, who visits the district to study Indian music. The Trail group will take trips in and out of the ramp all summer and will return in September in time for the opening of school. Patty and Margaret Jameson. Jeannette Tarkington. Susan Gafeh. Prisriila Johnson and Margaret rogue, Cincinnati. wil> he in the ramp. Margaret Pogues brother Tom will be in the trek with Mr. Howie. Ranks of the month-old Bachelors Club have been broken. Yesterday Mr and Mrs. James S. Waison announced the engagement of their daughter. Miss Jane Watsc i, to Thomas Mahaffey Jr., one of the ten founders who entertained with a danre Memorial day eve. Mr. Mahaffey will retain his membership until his marriage. When he will be honor guest at a stac party to be ctven by the club. Miss Watson attended Pine Manor after she was graduated from Tudor Hall. Since she finished school she has been active in the Junior League and the Dramatic Club Mr. Mahaffey is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame. Friends of George Somnes, Hollywood. Cal., former director of the Ctvie theater, are happy to hear of his plans for the summer. He will sail Fridav from Pedro. Cal., aboard S S Rialto for a four months’ tour of Europe. He will establish hi* headquarters at Genoa. Italy, and will visit studios and theaters in several countries. Mr. Somnes will return to California to resume his duties as motion picture director.
W 0 ENTERTAIN FOR MRS. DOUGHERTY
Fight guests attended a break-fast-bridge party given at Whispering Winds Sunday by Misses Mary Devrnv and June A. Brossart. The party honored Mrs. George Dougherty formerly Miss Evelyn Munday. Appointments were in pink and ireen. and favors were wedding bells tied with tulle in pastel Shades. Guests included Mrs. Munday. Mrs. Chester Cranfill and Misses Florence Benson. Cincinnati; Margaret Esterline, Gilberta Held and Rita Healv.
EiiMKrcV* / M tV,!I. TH oS
*i ■ in') EXPERT OPEN SHAMPOO AND r OPERATURS EVENINGS UNGER WAVE
Sun Chair Copied from Wheelbarrow
|r^'-V^‘# ii; v ?f1 # >^o2
In Hollywood. F.velvn Venable, Paramount player, reclines smilingly in the new wheelbarrow sun chair in white wood, upholstered in Venetian red. The chair is ideal for sun bathing. Solid wood wheels with rubber tires enable one to move it about, following the sun. The cushions are sunfast.
Manners and Morals BV JANE JORDAN
Whlil xntt like mure licht on the rauwew o| vnur nun hohavwr? Write June Jordan for an analrsi*! Vnur rnm - mnti nn the opinions in thi* column invited. Dear Jane Jordan—l have been married thirteen years and have a little girl 11 years old My husband got a job out of town and I
stayed home with m.y little girl. He wrote nice letters and came home once in five months. Then he wanted us to come with him. I tried to sell my furniture last winter, but times prevented it. I last on it in May when I did sell it. I did not
a
Jane Jordan
let him know I was coming and found him with a woman he had been going with steady He was angry and said he would give me every penny hr could, but was going to run around and drink just as long as there was life-in his body. He has killed my trust in Inin The shock was so severe it lias caused me to have a nervous breakdown. The doctor said I can t live another month the w'ay I am now. When I am worse he will stay right with me. but when I am up he will slip off and go. Don’t you think after two months if he cares anything for me he should promise to be true or divorce me? He is kind to both of us and does very little drinking to what he did. AN UNHAPPY WIFE. Answer—ls your husband is determined to run around and drink, there is nothing you or I can do to stop it. 'The only thing I can do to help you is lo point out some farts about a nervous breakdown which I am sure you do not know. The term nervous breakdown is really a misnomer, for the condition has nothing,to do with your nerves, a nervous breakdown is a sort of psychological knockout brought about by a crisis wiiich the personality feels unable to face. Dr. Brian Wolfe tells us that the real cause of a nervous breakdown must be sought in the future of the patient s experience, not the past. It is not a conscious evasion of responsibility in a critical situation, but an unconscious phenomenon which enables the idividual to call a moratorium in the
Head o f Two 11 arid Groups to Be Heard in Transatlantic Broadcast
Miss Lena Madesin Phillips, president of the National Council of Women and the International Federation of Business and Professional Women, will talk over a trans-Atlantic broadcast from 3 to 3:15 Thursday. July 5. from the amphitheater of the Sorbonne in Paris. Miss Phillips now is in Paris heading the delegation from the United States at the meeting of the international council, which representatives of approximately fifty countries are attending. The address will be a feature of a mass meeting in defense of womens right to work. The title of Miss Phillips speech will be The Underlying Principles of Womans Right to Work.” Other speakers taking part in the program will be Mile. Marguerite Thibert of the in’ernational labor office: Frau Marie Hoheisel. president of the National Council of Women of Austria, and FYoken Kcrstin Hesse’ en. president of the National
face of a difficulty too severe folium to handle. The nervous breakdown is a faoe-saving device which we employ when we do not. know how to maintain our self-respect in a critical -situation. It is as if the individual said. “Nothing can be expected of me at this time—for lam sick.” According to Dr. Wolfe. “The nervous breakdown is not a weakness, but is a valuable unconscious offensive-defen-sive device, designed to save ‘face’ before the personality disaster occurs.” You can see now well the device has worked in your case. Your husband doesn't drink anything like he did before you learnpd to control him through illness; when you are worse, he stays with you; when you are better he goes. The thing you nerd to know is that you consume more energy in maintaining your breakdown than you would in the actual solution of your problem. A nervous breakdown is a full-time job, and the pain and drudgery of keeping it up is second to none. Even if you accomplish your objective, which is the control of your husband, the end is hardly worth the cost. It .will be lar better for you to face the fact that your husband is a weak reed to lean on, and that some day you may have to earn your own living. I do not mean that you are not sick, for you are, but only that your cure lies in choosing a better way of solving your problem,' even if it means carrying on the task of living without the protection of your husband. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—Does a boy like a girl who will neck him the first, time he is with her, or does he like the type who doesn't neck? What do you think of a boy like this: When he is with a girl he acts like he likes her a lot; if she meets him on the street he treats her very nice and when in a crowd acts likes he likes her and talks about their first date, but never asks for more. I can t understand a boy like this. Will you help me? IN DOUBT. Answer—ln general boys like best the girl they have to work hardest to get. They seldom take the easy necker as seriously as the one who offers a challenge. The boy who is cordial, but does not ask lor dates, is not hard to understand. He is simply a fellow' who is instinctively pleasant to women, but whose interest has not been sufficient aroused to make him want to spend tlis evening.
Council of Women of Sweden. These speeches, however, will not be broadcast io the United States, but only the address given by Miss Phillips. Shower io Be Given Mrs. H. B. Mendenhall, 1425 Coli orado avenue, has invited friends of ! Mrs. Bryon Curry, formerly Miss S Beatrice Goodpasture, to a misceU laneous shower for her tonight. The guests will be Mesdames Bert Goodpasture, Guy Booher. Robert Mohr, Walter Streit. Fred Latham, Ewing Lynch, Cecil Ludlow. Her- ; bert Silver and Lawrence Booher. Recent Bride Feted Miss Pauline Von Ohlen entertained at her home, 3702 East New York street, recently, with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Mrs. Charles K. Brown, formerly Miss I Rachel Ann Elliott. Bridge Scheduled Miss Burge. 5867 Central avenue, will be hostess tomorrow afternoon at a bridge party, one of a series to be sponsored by the Alpha Sigma Alpha Alumnae Association. Picnic Arranged Members of Amicus chapter. I Verus Cordis, will attend a picnic I and bridge party Thursday at Brookside park with Mrs. Claude Watson, chairman. I Club's Luncheon Set Mrs. Lewis Edwards. 1631 Part; avenue, will be hostess for a lunch-eon-meeting of the Park avenue Neighborly Club at 1 tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. John Bertermann 111 and daughter Julie Anne have returned from a trip to Vineyard Haven, Mass. Alpha and Kappa chapters. Pi Omicron sorority, will meet tomorhow msrht at the Washington to make plans for the sorority tn-state convention.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Maty Ellen Ryan Wedded Today in Church Service A breakfast at the Marolt followed the wedding of Miss Mary Ellen Ryan, daughter of Mrs. Martha Ryan, and Anthony R. McCann this morning at St. Philip Ner church. The Rev. Raymond R. Noll said the nuptial mass and performed the w’edding ceremony. The bride entered to the altar with her brother, Michael H. Ryan, while Miss Mary Helen Brooks, organist, played the bridal chorus from “Lohengrin” by Wagner. Bridal music was provided bv Miss Mary Feeney, soloist, and Thomas Poggiani. violinist. The entrance to the sanctuary was marked with baskets of pinkrambler roses and fern, and the altar was arranged with baskets of white lilies and peonies and lighted with w-hite cathedral tapers. The bride's gown of ivory satin, eut princess style with cowl neckline and long tight sleeves, was w'orn with a tulle veil designed w'ith coronet caught with orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bridal roses and lilies-of-the-valley. The only attendant was Mrs. Virgil L. Prather. Denver. Colo., the bride’s sister, who appeared in a green lacc dress, green taffeta picture hat and carried pink roses. Herbert Kossman was best man. John and Edward McCann, brothers of the bridegroom, seated the guests. The couple left on a motor trip and will travel through Canada and the east. They will be at after Aug. 1 at 3536 North Meridian street. Indiana Alpha chapter, Lambda Alpha Lambda sorority will meet tonight at the home of Mrs. Virginia Johnson, 745 North Rural street. Mrs. Robert Mint,a, 945 DeQuincy street, will be hostess for a meeting of Alpha chapter, Sigma Phi sorority, tonight.
Contract Bridge
Today’s Contract Problem South i3 playing the contract at six spades. West opens the jack of hearts. How would you play the hand to make the maximum? AA 5 3 VAQ S o 2 ♦K 8 6 AKJ * 1 1 N 1 IS (Blind) w s (Bind) Dealer A K Q J 10 4 V 3 ♦A 4 3 AAS 4 2 Solution in next issue. JO
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY \V. E. MKENNEY Secretary American Rridse League IT is difficult to show both high cards and distribution in one bid. But here is a simple rule that you can follow. If your partner opens in first or second position, you can figure he has either a six-card suit or two five-card suits and two and onehalf tricks. If he has only one five-card suit, he must have an extra half primary trick, while if he does not have even one five-card suit, he should have three and one-half primary tricks. You will notice that you add onshalf primary trick for each distributional card you lose.
AKQ J 4 2 V lv J 5 ♦ io A J 10 9 3 A? 53 A S VAQ 8 8 N c VI 3 W c E ♦KQ -T 7 ♦A9 6 4 p V *AQ S 6 A K 42 A A 10 9 V 10 9 7 2 #BS 3 2 A < 5 Duplicate—AH vul. Opening lead — A K. South West North East Pass IV 1 A A Pass 2 # 2 A 5 ♦ Pass Pass Pass Pa
If you hold a four-card minor and a four-card maior suit, bid the four-card minor first. If you bid a major and then a minor, your partner knows that you
City Will Be Represented at Institute Miss Frances Holliday to Attend Wellesley Summer Event. Miss Frances Holliday will have an opportunity to exchange her views on economic and social problems with other students of economics at the Wellesley Summer Institute for Social Progress, July 7 to 21. Miss Holliday is secretary of the board of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters. The institute will be a cross section of a typical community. Outdoor recreation and social events will be included in the program. Many leaders ir. the national recovery program will be among the lecturers. Max Lerner, professor of politics at Sarah Lawrence college. Bronxville, N. Y., will head the group. Alfred D. Sheffield, professor of group leadership at Wellesley college, will be dean of round tables, and Miss Dorothy P. Hill. Buffalo. N. Y., director if the institute, will conduct special meetings. Dr. Helen Everitt Meiklcjohn. chairman of the Wisconsin Summer School for Industrial Workers and board member of the Bryn Mawr summer school for women in industry. will be on the faculty. She formerly was a professor of economics at Vassar college. Other leaders are Gardiner C Means, associate at the Columbia university law school and economic adviser on finance to the secretary of agriculture, Henry A. Wallace, and Caroline Ware, professor of economic history at Vassar. Stone-Davis hall, anew dormitory at. Lake Waban, will be the home of the institute members this summer. Lieutenant and Mrs. Douglas Johnson, Coronado Boacff. Cal., are visiting Mrs. Joseph Cain. Mrs. Johnson formerly was Miss Anne Timberlake. Mr. Cain is in Chicago participating in a bridge tournament. Mr. and Mrs. James D. Pierce and son. James Douglas Pierce Jr., are visiting in New York after attending the graduation of Henry Jameson Pierce from Dartmouth college.
JUNE BRIDE
'’’Sapp X, ' i* * m \
—Photo v Voorhis Mrs. Eugene Campbell Before her marriage June 10 Mrs Eugene Campbell' was Miss Marion Hurst, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen E. Hurst, 5154 North Illinois street.
have at least five cards in the j major suit. Don’t go on bidding a ; suit just because it has five cards j when it doesn't fit your partner's • hand the first time. n n tt IN today’s hand West docs not; have to re-bid hearts on the sec- j ond round to tell his partner he has a five-card suit —the bid of two diamonds tells that. East's jump to five diamonds is a little optimistic —perhaps four diamonds would be safer—but he knows that, if he bids four diamonds, his partner will probably bid four hearts, and he will have to go to five diamonds any way. The hand must be played carefully. North and South cash the j first two spade tricks and then I North leads the ten of diamonds,! which the declarer wins with the i ace. Declarer must not make the mis- j take of ruffing a heart. North’s play of the ten of diamonds practically marks South with four diamonds, The only hope to make your contract is to establish the clubs. If you ruff a heart in dummy, you will have to ruff clubs in your own hand ; and your contract will be defeated j immediately. The proper procedure is to cash ; the king of clubs, lead a small diamond, win in dummy with the jack. Lead a small club, trump with the six of diamonds and then lead the nine of diamonds, winning in dum-! my with th# queen. Cash the king of diamonds, which picks up the last trump, and now you have four good clubs and the ace of hearts. (Copyright. 1934. NEA Service, Inc.) SORORITY MEMBERS WILL ATTEND PARTY Swimming party and supper will bi given tonight at the Indianapolis Country Club by Misses Norma G. Mack and Ruth Jones for members of the Eeta Sigma Phi sorority. Guests will include Mrs. William . H Thompson and Mrs. Maury Hegarty. Misses Dorothy Oakes, Helen Marley, Esther Carnine, Vinera Chandler, Betty Coffing. Norma Jay, Madeline Kruchten, Catherine Martin. Marie Nielson, Isabelle Russell, Dorothy and Birginie Stone, Elfreida Speckman, Alita Lee and Jerry Gardner. Miss Helen Marie Flaherty, daughter of Mrs. Man- L. Flaherty, has left for several month’s visit with her aunt, Mrs. H. C. Feld, Denver. Kappa Delta Theta sorority will hold initiation services tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Ernest Charron for Misses Emiiy Cowger and Helen Smitia.
BRIDE
Mrs. Beckman Wilson
Tire marriage of Miss Helen Smith, daughter of Mrs. and Mrs. Burt Smith, and Beekman Wilson. son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Wilson, took place Sunday at the Smith home, 560 North Jefferson avenue. The Rev. Robert Kudbler officiated. Miss Jean McNair was maid of honor and Misses Frances Wilson and Louise Smith, bridesmaids. Fred Hert was best man.
Helen Preston Will Be Bride in Church Rite Miss Helen Preston, daughter of j Mr. and Mrs. Edward Preston, 261 ■ North Rural street, will become the i bride of John E. Dorsey, son of Mr. and Mrs. James P. Dorsey, at 8 tomorrow morning at St. Phillip Ncri church. The Rev. Raymond R. Noll will say the nuptial mass. Blue delphinium and pink gladioli will decorate the altar. Mrs. John | Shaughnessy, cousin of the bride, will wear a blue lace gown and; matching cartwheel hat. She will j carry a bouquet of pink roses and delphinium. Hugh Dorsey, brother of the bridegroom, will be best man. The bride’s gown will be of pink net and taffeta, and a pink tulle veil will be arranged with rosebuds. She will carry a shower bouquet of pink roses and swansonia. The bridal couple will be honor guests at a breakfast at Whispering Winds, where a tiered wedding cake will center the table. They will leave on a wedding trip to Chicago and Detroit, and will return to Indianapolis to live at 251 North Rural street. Out-of-town guests will be Mrs. j Earl T. Denham, Winamac; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dorsey, Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. William T. Moore. Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Demeron, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. John Carey. Rochester. N Y., and Mrs. Carrie Moore, Pasadena, Cal. SPENCES FETED ON DATE OF WEDDING Mr. and Mrs. James Spence were entertained at a surprise party Fri- | day night by Mr. and Mrs. W. T. j White and Mr. and Mrs. W. J.: Moore in honor of their twentieth wedding anniversary* Pink and green appointments were used. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Ingram, Panama Canal zone; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Young and daughter, Manda Jean; Mrs. Pearl Cox and Mrs. Daniel Keefe. Los Angeles, Cal.; Mrs. Walter Smith, Washington; Mrs. William Copenhaver, Harrisburg, 111., Mrs. William Drogue, Cincinnati; Mrs. C. O. Patton and Miss Ruth Barger, Milroy; Mrs. L. M. Van Aus- j da 11, New Augusta, and Mr. and, Mrs. John McNaught. Bridgeport. Indianapolis guests included Messrs, and Mesdames William Malloy, M. H. Dillon, Marion Dunn, Glen Eitel, Charles Gasper, Jacob Walter, Edward Devin, Harry Schumacher, F’. T. Klinger and George Malles; Misses Mae and Minnie Spence. * FRIEDA SELIG WED IN RITE AT HOTEL Miss Frieda Selig's wedding to Joseph I. Hantman, son of Mrs. Sarah Goldman, took place Sunday at the Lincoln, with Rabbi Sam Levin officiating. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Selig, 841 South Capitol avenue. Dr. N. O. Hantman, cousin of the bridegroom, was best man. Miss' Victoria Montani, harpist, played bridal music. Mr, and Mrs. Hantman will live at the Ambassador. CITY WOMEN WILL ATTEND MEETINGS Registration for the convention of province 4. Kappa Kappa Kappa sorority, will be held at 9:30 tomorrow morning at the Anderson Country Club. Attending from Indianapolis will be Mesdames Fred Rahm, Ray H. Briggs, Earl Moomaw. W. J. Teter, Ross Ewert, John Reister. J. Dwight Peterson. George Deck, Harry Ludlum and Fred Holland. Miss Clarisa Ahl, Centerville, a province officer, will have charge of the business meetings. Recent Brides Feted, Mesdames Russell Quinn, Henry Schmidt and Henry Talbott, all recent brides, attended a garden tea Sunday, given in their honor by j Misses Maxine Scherrer, Margaret | Fry and Josephine Ready. Miss 1 Anita Brownlee and Miss Scherrer j poured and Mrs. George M. Scherrer ; assisted the hostesses. Appointments! were in rosh and green.
? WARNING! j Be Sure the Name on Bottle and Cap w are the Same WB INDIANAPOLIS DISTRIBUTORS ‘TbxteuSiLzecL MILK
9x12 Vel-Loom Rugs Heavy quality rugs in beautiful (■hades of r u s t = _ _ Reds and tans suit- i|. ft J able for living and I If , dining room*. Specia. ■ W United Rug & Linoleum Cos. 139 W. Wash. 0r ’ poM, T ' h ';ur a
More Floors Cooled at Ay res Store by Extension of Conditioning System Third and Fourth, Tea Room and Auditorium Now Enjoyable as First and Basement, Long- Commended.. BV HELEN LINDSAY I IKE an oasis in tlie desert, the L. 8. Ayres store oflers to perspiring shoppers a breath oi cool, refreshing air. from a iww cooling system which has been installed on the third and fourth floors, and in the,tearoom and auditorium. F'or five rears. Ayres first floor and basement nave been recognized as among the coolest places in Indianapolis. The cooling system new has been extended to other parts of the store. The system made necessary digging a ninety-loot well, capable of producing 800 gallons of water a minute. The water is used in a giant unit of machinery, which circulates water-cooled air through the build-
ing. Two huge tans blow 99.000 cubic feet ot air each minute to the conditioned area. Three and a half tons of water are circulated each minute. More than 4.000 feet of pipe were installed throughout the store, to carry the chilled water to the various floors. Outlets, situated in the building in inconspicuous places, send the conditioned air through the store. If this machinery were used for the production ot ice, instead oi ehilled water over which the air is passed, it could manufacture 450 tons of ice every twenty-four hours. Ayres is the only store in the city with a cooling system ot this kind. The machinery is equipped to circulate air. without first cooling it, later in the season, when the temperature is not uncomfortably hot. Fitting rooms on the third and fourth floors no longer need be equipped with electric fans.
Customer comfort, efficiency of salespeople, and decrease in damage lo merchandise were considered in the installation. The system was extended to the tearoom Friday, and has met with approval of shoppers who gather there for lunch. a a a a it a Contest Announcement Set for Fall ANNOUNCEMENT ol the winner in the Ladies Home Journal civic achievement contest, which closed recently, will be made early in the fall. Judges now' are examining manuscripts describing civic activities ranging from projects to establish one-room libraries in rural communities to the sponsorship of welfare campaigns involving hundreds of thousands ol dollars. Representatives of practically every large woman's organization m the country submitted manuscripts in the contest. The largest number ol entries was submitted by the National Congress of Parents and Teachers. Next in number of entries was the General Federation of Women's Clubs, with American Legion Auxiliaries third, and the National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs fourth. a a a o a u Winner Will Receive SI,OOO AN award of SI,OOO will go to the organization which submitted the manuscript describing the most, significant project. Judges will be Mrs. Grace Morrison Poole, president of tlir General Federation of Women's Clubs; Mrs. Geline MacDonald Bowman, president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs; Mrs. Minnie Bradlord. president of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers; E. A. Hayes, national commander of the American Legion, and John A. Lang president of the National Student Federation. Among the unusual projects described in the manuscripts received in the contest were cocoon collecting to save the trees of the community; community plowing machines; toy distribution to underprivileged children. and a campaign for a municipal astronomical observatory.
Indianapolis Colony Active in Social Life at Maxinkuckee
BY BETTY CONDEIt Times Special Writer LAKE MAXINKUCXEE, June 26. —Now' that Ihe Maxinkuckee colony is fairly well populated for Ihe season the active social life of the lake is beginning. Always Maxinkuckep has been known for its many interesting gatherings for young and old alike, affording a busyseason for all those desiring to Lake part. Last week-end a house party was, scheduled for Marion county grand jurors at Hickory Crest on the east shore of the lake. The guests were Herbert E. Wilson, Marion county prosecutor; Oscar C. Hagemicr and Miss B. A. Gohman. grand jury deputy prosecutors, and grand jury members, Roy Kennedy, J. William Knowles, T. W. Klippel. L. B. Mtindy, A. H. Van Horn and their guests, Mrs. Herbert E. Wilson, Mrs. Oscar C. Hagemicr. Miss Merzie George and E. A. Warnicke. Mrs. Walter Behmer had as her house guests last week at her summer cottage on the west shore Mesdames J. T. Moynahan, A. A Tillet and Thomas A. Moynahan. The guests returned to Indianapolis for the week-end. Mrs. Joshia Bcldcn was hostess Thursday night at her summer home on the east shore for the
Plenty of pep all afternoon!
Always forging ahead, this chap. His competitors think he gets the breaks. He’s just a bit more alive, that’s all. How does he do it? One of his secrets is a wiselunch, especially these warm days. Crisp, tasty Shredded Wheat, with cool milk and fruit. This natural whole wheat food contains carbohydrates for energy'.
pit COMPANY Uneeda Bakers'
STC^P^i^ s * planning n • . a start Going on a Jl'/fj) GREAT LAKES CRUISE Frequent sailings on palatial ocean-type skips. s' / \ V Low fares include spacious staterooms and in- / 1 comparable cuisine. Elaborate shipboard enter- \/ | tainment. Railroad tickets honored. This summer _ take advantage of the lowest fares in history for . uCfMO I the finest vacation cruises in America.-- f \ Full day for sightseeing in Buffalo and\ 1 Q f O Ut) \ Niagara Falls included on all cruises. \ Return f \ GREAT LAKES \ \ TRANSIT CORPORATION 1 S.S. Odorera S.S. Tiontste S.S. Juniata 1 |nC 1 Sailing frequently between Duluth, Hough- I nltV OULU*'* 1 ton, Sault Ste. Mafia, Mectinee liland, \ ft . |)R i w Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo. \ U an J Return A # } 1 Also weakly lailingi hom Chicago and \ ~l Cr , , Milwaukee. \ '.CNTTN. Forjull wjormnfinn, npph- any I rnr'Aor 1 ~ Railroad Agent: V— Reheeen All Parts
.JUNE 26,1 1934
(HCm gift rgjr&ll
.Mrs. Lindsay
[weekly picnic of the Indianapolis colony of the East Shore lane. Mrs. Beldcn’s guests were Mr. and Mrs. ! Donaldson Trone. Mesdames W. E. Shea, P. M. Daum, J. W. Scott, P. S. Trone, C. P. Condor and Rev Shaneberger,' Misses Norma and Betty Condor, and Peter Trone. Mi. a,nd Mrs. Donaldson Trone were in Chicago last week attending the Underwriters Insurance convention at the Edgewater Beach. The Trones returned for the weekend to be at their cottage on Maxinkuckee. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Albright spent .the week-end at their cottage on the east shore of the lake. Mr. and Mrs, Francis Dunn have opened thear summer cottage on the east shore. Mrs. John L. Crawford and daughters, Misses Elizabeth and Mary Crawford, Terre Haute, have opened their summer cottage. Cricket Hawn. Patty Crawford, Mrs. Crawford's niece, is visiting the Crawfords for a few weeks. Miss Helen. Behmer has returned to Indianapoiis after spending the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Behmer at Culler. Miss Behmer attended the Pi Bela Phi danoe and initiation while at Indianapolis.
vitamins to resist disease, and bran to keep you regjular. It’s easily digested. See howjit keeps you going. Notice how clepr your mind is—how well you Teel. No wonder! Shredded Wheat is whole wheat, double cooked—nothing added, nothing taken awtay. It tastes good. It’s easily digested. Don't forget: Start Shredded Wheat for lunch today.
