Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 111, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1934 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Workers in Campaign of State Symphony Society Schedule Three Meetings Luncheon and Tea to Precede Main Business Session Set for Monday; Captains to Gather Sunday at Woollen Home. BV ELIZABETH C ARR IN preparation for the opening Oct. 1 of the Indiana State Symphony aocie'y membership drive, teams and their captains are “getting on he mark.’’ Last minute plans will be discussed over the luncheon table tomorrow toon at Ayres. Mrs. Wendali P. Coler. one of the team captains, has aranged to meet her committee members. Covers will be laid for the twelve nembers of the group, and for Mrs. Herbert M. Woollen, chairman of the drive. Sunday afternoon at 4 will find the team oeptains assembling at the Woollen's Golden Hill home to become acquainted and to discuss in. formally the project. Mrs. Coler will be there, with Mrs. Paul V. McNutt, Mrs. Carl Lieber. Jr., Mrs Noble Dean. Mrs. George M. Bailey, Miss Mary Adelaide Rhodes and Mrs. Henley Holliday. Others planning to drop in during the tea are Mrs. Louis Thomas. Miss Gladys Alwes, Miss Grace Hutchings, Mrs. H. H. Amholter, Miss Dorothy Merrill, Dr. Paul Ledig. Miss Lorle Krull, Miss Elizabeth Ohr, Mrs. Frank Edenharter, Mrs. Jack Goodman. William Stafford Jr., John Schumacher and Mrs. A. Dickinson Smith
The entire staff of workers with their captains will be present Monday night at the American Central Life Insurance building for the mam business meeting. man Yesterday saw a group of young women leave to enter St. Mary-of - the-Woods at Terre Haute. Miss Marie Hpgarty, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Hegarty, and Miss Louise Hardesty are taking up freshman studies. Louise's sister, Miss Gertrude Hardesty, will leave Thursday with the young women returning for upper class work. Mrs. John CofTield has returned to her home in Los Angeles, Cal., after accompanying her daughter, Mary Lucille, to Indianapolis. Miss CofTield was one of the group entering the Terre Haute college for the first time. While in Indianapolis Miss CofTield was the guest of her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. William L O'Connor. Work at Sarah Lawrence college will be resumed by Miss Estelle Burpee. daughter of Mrs. Hortense Rauh Burpee. Miss Burpee plans to leave tomorrow for Bronxville. N. Y., to resume classes. Edward Sweeney has enrolled for classes at the University of Michigan and his brother Jack has returned to the University of Notre Dame at South Bend.
Several friends of Mrs. Jaquelin S. Holliday and her sister, Mrs. H. L. Anderson. Jacksonville. Fla., who is visiting here, will be dinner guests tonight at the Holliday home. Covers will be laid for ten. A luncheon will be given in Mrs. Anderson’s honor Friday by Mrs. Henry W. Bennett ad Mrs. W. B. Wheelock. and Wednesday, Sept. 26, Mrs. A. L. Mason of the Marott will be hostess at luncheon at the Propylaeum Club with Mrs. Anderson as special guest. mam In a party attending the Little Lamhs Club frolic Saturday night at the Columbia Club will be Mr. and Earl Barnes and their guests. Mr. and Mrs. Barnes will entertain with a dinner preceding the entertainment. m m m Mr*. Guy Wainwnght, who ha* been visiting Sweden and the British Isles, is expected home next week. She will sail this week-end from London.
CAMP FIRE GIRLS TO SEEK MEMBERS Roller skating party at 3:30 Friday, Sept. 28. at Riverside park will open the city-wide membership drive of the Camp Fire Girls. Mrs. Marie Holstein Newell and members of the Hachelota group and Miss Ruth Ormsby and the Wico-Wicango group will be hostesses. The second j skating party is scheduled for 3:30 Friday, Oct. 26. The first meeting of the Shutan will be held at 10 Saturday, Oct. 6, in the Camp Fire office. All presidents and scribes are eligible for membership. Swimming classes will' begin at 11:30 Saturday for Camp Fire Girls and will be held weekly under the direction of Mrs. Ruth Pahud Higgins at the Young Women’s Christian Association headquarters. At a recent meeting of the board of directors Chris Wagner, president. was elected to represent the members at the national council meeting to be held Sept. 28 and 29 in New York. Miss Mamie D. Larsh is alternate. Announcement was made of the acceptance of Karl C Wolfe as a board member. Class Meeting Set Mrs. B. H. Bofisert. 2106 North Talbot avenue, will be hostess for the twenty-eighth anniversarymeeting of Mrs. W. C. Smith s Sunday school class of the Central Christian church at 2 Thursday afternoon. Mrs. J. A. Patenaude is program chairman and the hostess will be assisted by Mesdames Walter Fitch. M. A. Haber. Fred W. Schniepp and Harley Vann. Bridge Section to Meet Mrs. L. M Fehrenbach and Mrs Robert Wands will be hostesses for the auction bridge section of the Hoosier Athletic Club which will meet at 2 Friday at the clubhouse.
fr-RESH, TART-SWEET RUBY RED CRANBERRIES ARE ON THE MARKET. Ask for Quality Graded and Trade Marked / THESE EARLY BERRIES / ARE DELICIOUS /
Shover School Conferences to Open Thursday Teachers and hostesses of the Claire Ann Shover Nursery school will be at the headquarters, 3265 North New Jersey street, starting Thursday for the conferences with parents. Classes will open Monday, Oct. 1, with Miss Amy C. Brady, teacher-director. The school is owned and managed by the Indianapolis branch, American Association of University Women of which Mrs. N. Taylor Todd is president. Mrs. Paul J. Stokes is school chairman; Mrs. M. E: Krahl, secretary, and Mrs. S. W. Benham. treasurer. Miss Brady will arrive tomorrow from Detroit to take up her duties. During her ten years of teaching, she has headed three nursery schools and has continued her studies at the University of Chicago and Cornell university. Mrs. Vivian Glass, junior teacher, has been associated with the Purdue nursery school for the past three years and just returned from the Mabel Katherine Pearce Rhythm Camp. Mrs. lan K. Joyce is chairman of participation, Mrs. William F. Rogers will direct the adult child study and observation group and Mrs. Maurice H. Angell has charge of promotion. The nursery school committee will meet at 1:15 tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Stokes. Miss Brady will attend. Club to Give Dance Young People's Democratic Club. Seventeenth ward, will entertain with a barn dance tomorrow night in ward headquarters. 2320 Shelby street. Business meeting will precede the dance to begin at 9. Mrs. Hazel Green is chairman. School Opening Set Tudor Hall school will open for classes at 8:30 tomorrow morning with a general assembly.
Card Parties
Card party will be given in St. Philip Neri auditorium on Eastern avenue, at 2:30 and 8:30 tomorrow with Mrs. P. E. Derry, chairman. Busy Bee Club of the Grand Circle. U. A. O. D.. will entertain with a luncheon and card party Thursday in the hall, 29 South Delaware street.
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Enclosed And 15 cents for which send me pattern No. 343 Size Name Street City State
SATIN or lightweight woolen gives this model that expensive look that distinguishes well dressed women The easy to follow patterns are available in sizes 34 to 42. Size 38 requires 4’ s yards of 38-inch fabric and l l * yards of contrast. • • • To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street. Indiaaapoiis. together with 15 cents in coin. • • • The Pall Pattern Book, with a complete selection of Julia Boyd designs, now is ready. It's 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, If you want to order it with the pattern above, send just an additional 10 cents with the coupon.
Youthful Suit for Fall
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Above, a youthful version of the fall suit, deliberately designed to be young, gay and different. It is brown woolen with red leather accents. The tip-tilted and be-feathered felt hat is the perfect complement to this jaunty suit.
A Woman’s Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
WHEN I return from a moving picture, I try to analyze its good and bad points, mainly because I’m a fan with a conscience and consciences are like nagging women. Many times facts which escape you while you watch them will rise up afterward and hit you a blow between the eyes. I had just
such a reaction to “Housewife,” a thoroughly ord i- - film and, upon first thought, harmless. 11 shows the proverbial good wife acting as an inspiration for the customary backboneless cinema husband; the clever siren who is paid $25,000 a year
Mrs. Ferguson
for doing nothing apparently but vamping the office help, and ends with the same old kiss-and-make-up. It was not until I got home that I realized what admiration the audience had felt for the wife who saved hubby's business by suggesting the most obvious rascality,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
rascality that was hailed by the men on the screen and the occupants of the theater as a marvelous bit of cleverness. “If,” she says, “the public will pay $5 a jar for your face cream” —and by inference we already had been led to think it was worth much less—“why not put the same cream into a different jar, change the label and charge $10?” “Admirable! Inspirational!” cried all the business men in unison, and so the smart little woman got herself a $50,000 a year income, a fine town house with a pompous butler —why anybody would want one I can’t see—and reformed a philandering husband. All this, mind you, for an idea which in plain terms amounted to fraud and theft. Now this is the kind of thing w-hich, suggested often enough to young or old creates damnable ethical standards. Sex will take care of itself, I think. It always has. Moreover, we can hope by and by to see all the big thugs shut up in Alcatraz, but can we expect anything but a bigger crop for the future when we set up trickery and theft and label it big business? To exhibit, for admiration and consequently for emulation, the cheater and his methods, to make legitimate for the corporation merchants what is not legitimate for the huckster, is a very good way of educating in crime several more generations of highbinders and crooks. EARL BOLES TAKES BRIDE AT CHURCH The marriage of Miss Mildred Crawhorn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Crawhorn, Glasgo, Ky., and Eari Boles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Boles, took place Saturday night at the Victory Memorial Presbyterian church, the Rev. William H. Lee Spratt, officiating. Miss Mary Allen and Gilbert Gray attended the couple. The at-home address is for 2117 North Talbot street. Dinner Scheduled Mrs. Ruby Willoughby, assisted by Miss Virginia Furgason. will entertain members of the Indianapolis White Shrine Patrol at dinner tomorrow night at her home, Woodlawn drive.
Daily Recipe CHOCOLATE COCOANUT DROPS 1 square unsweetened .. chocolate 2-3 cup sweetened condensed milk 1-4 pound (1 1-2 cups) shredded cocoanut Melt chocolate in dquble boiler. Add sweetened condensed milk and shredded cocoanut. Mix well. Drop by spoonfuls on a buttered pan. Bake fifteen minutes in a moderate oven, 350 degrees. Makes two dozen.
At Real BARGAIN P?TIS PRICES Genuine Spiral pKL £■ or Croqnignole A 4W Include. Hair Cat. ShamPoo *"<l Finger Watt. 8 fltic for $1.31. Bring a friend. v W Value* I Oil lt'aTe Egyptian Oil 89c >B-0® | * for SI.SI 8 for $3.01 Splendid fer Gray. Dyed. Bleached Hair ROYAL BEAUTY SHOP API Roeserelt Bldg. 81-STSA ri’.inoi* and Washington Sta No Appointment Necessary
Two Will Be Honored at Bridal Fetes Miss Lucine Warfel and Mrs. Stephens Will Be Entertained. Bridal showers and bridge parties tonight will honor Miss Lucine Warfel, bride-elect, and Mrs. K. H. Stephens, a recent bride. Misses Betty Ramey and Joan Boswell will entertain with a personal shower for Miss Warfel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Warfel, whose marriage to Dr. George Frederick Collins will take place Sept. 29. Miss Warfel’s colors, ashes of roses and wisteria, will appoint the serving table. Mrs. George L. Ramey and Mrs. E. C. Boswell will assist with hospitalities. Sixteen guests will attend. Mrs. Stephens will be honored at a party at the home of Miss Lucy Jane Baker. Before her recent marriage. Mrs. Stephens was Miss Maxine Rigsbee. Guests with the honored guest will be Mrs. E. P. Gallagher and Misses Marian Power, Marian Olive, Alberta Alexander, Kathleen Rigsbee, Ruth Landers, Madge McPherson, Luana Lee, Agnes Ball, Dorothy Screes and Jeanne Winchell. a a a Last night Mrs. Rush McKinney entertained 150 women of the Thirty-first Street Baptist church at a reception and shower in honor of Miss Vernice Michael, whose marriage to the Rev. Morris H. Coers will take place Friday night. The party was held in the church parlors which were decorated with cut flowers in rainbow shades. The hostess was assisted by Misses Muriel Byers, Ruth Henderson, Dorothy Reddick, Evelyn Meek and Mary Alice O’Donnell.
STATE r.-T. A. TO CHOOSE OFFICERS Mrs. George G. Burbank, Richmond, is chairman of the nominating committee for the election of officers of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers to be held at the annual convention Oct. 16, 17 and 18 at the Severin. Mrs. Logan G. Hughes heads the ticket as presidential candidate, with Mrs. Dale Cline, North Manchester, first vice-president; Mrs. J. L. Murray, second vice-president; Mrs. N. N. McCrory, Whiting, third vicepresident; Mrs. L. A. Winslow, Bloomington, fourth vice-president; Mrs. J. H. Wheeler, Danville, fifth vice-president; Mrs. H. E. Shrader, New Albany, sixth vice-president; Mrs. William Richardson, Jefferson, ville, seventh vice-president; Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge, secretary, and Mrs. Thomas M. Ross, Evansville, treasurer. On Mrs. Burbank’s committee are Dr. Edna Hatfield Edmondson, Bloomington; Mrs. Hughes, Mrs. M. L. Redmon, Peru, and Mrs. Homer J. Miller, South Bend.
Personals
Miss Ann Tyndall, daughter of General and Mrs. Robert H. Tyndall, is in New York for the winter. Dr. and Mrs. E. V. Alexander and daughter Doris are home from Rensselaer, where they spent the summer. Mrs. Lee Burns is expected to return today from Northport, Mich. Mrs. John Bertermann has returned from a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hickox, Chicago. Misses Hilda and Reta Buddenbaum, Mrs. Stella Landgraf, Mrs. Paul Dunn, Mayburn Landgraf anti H. Edward Raffensperger have gone to Phillips lake, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Pierson and daughter, Miss Mary Alice Pierson, have left for a visit at Burt lake, Mich. Mrs. Howard N.vhart and Mrs. Urcell Cooper arrived last night after a trip to Washington, and cities in Virginia and Ohio. Harold J. Cohen, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Cohen, has left to enter his senior year at Harvard Law school in Cambridge, Mass. He is a member of the editorial board of the Harvard Law Review. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Metzger and daughter Nan are home from Walloon lake, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Springgate are at home, 5630 Washington boulevard, after a summer at James lake. Mr. and Mrs. Bert C. McCammon and sons Bert and Richard have left for New York where Mr. and Mrs. McCammon will take up work at Columbia university. Mrs. E. M. Johnson, Sunland, Cal., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Johnson and family, 3668 Central avenue. Miss Evelyn Lilly will leave soon to enter Foxcroft school, Middleburg. Va.
VALUES \ Never before offered to the women of Jf Indianapolis. Until further notice we /X five you the opportunity to purchase this wave at the lowest price in history. Wy f THE STREAMLINE A/l 7 RE-O-LISTIC |jUC PERMANENT A THOROtCH 2 ,or 11 15 SHAMPOO and Ah a a • Hot Oil Treatment ah artistic Anger *W JB I • Finger Ware ■■ §1 ware, rin.e and /#1 f I • Shampoo • Rinse |% Us end curia, all V I • Neck Trim llalV Other Ware* at $1 40-$3.35-$5.00. Thursday. Friday, Saturday, ~,9c ECO VOMICAE—EXCECSIVE —EFFICIENT S4c Permanents at 953 N. Penn., 633 Mass. Are.. 210 Kresge Bldg, and 1103 Shelby only. 933 N. Penn. —■■■-pwjw IFI HO3 Shelby 3015 C-ntral Vs iJT.I M I 2109 F. lfHh 3*06 College It AWiil L™ Ls 2309 E- Mich. 4*17 C ollpe# _ 55? 1 E. Wash. 4-.17 college l 0 Bldg.. Wash.-Penn, Sts.
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HEADS SORORITY
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Miss Pauline Workman
Alpha Tau chapter. Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, recently installed Miss Pauline Workman as president.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Ask Jane Jordan to help yon with your problems. She will answer your letters in this column daily. Dear Jane Jordan I am a girl of 21 and my boy friend is 22. We think a lot of each other. Before I met him he went with some girl steady. Then he split up with her and started going
with me. We had been going together just five months when this other girl told him that he had to marry her. He said he would rather go to jail first. I told him it would be better to marry her than go to jail. All she asked for was a name for the
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Jane Jordan
baby. So we agreed that he would marry her just so the baby could have a name. He has never seen her or the baby since. She came down and talked to his mother but not to him. She said she would like to live with him and raise the baby like a baby should be raised. I told him I would take the baby and raise it myself if the mother didn’t want it. We have been going together now for a year and a half and think lots of each other. Please tell me what to do. if I quit him maybe he will go back to her. Or should I keep on going with him? A TROUBLED GIRL
Answer—lt is up to the young man to make a satisfactory settlement with his wife and child. Obviously he did the right thing by marrying the mother in order to save the child the stigma of illegitimacy. But this does not end his obligation. The child is entitled to support and the mother to aid during the child’s infancy. The fact that he does not love the mother does not alter the fact that the two of them have a joint responsibility in the child. Ignoring the problem will not cause it to vanish into the air. If he would face it in a responsible manner,- and set aside a fair part of his earnings as his contribution toward an expense which he brought on himself. I I have no doubt that the mother would readily consent to divorce for which she has just grounds since he has not lived with her at all. Hus attitude toward the problem is decidedly evasive. He wishes to put the full burden of guilt on the mother and accuse her of standing between him and a happier adjustment with another partner. Asa matter of fact her plight is more serious than his since it is she who must care for the child. Apparently you absolve him of all responsibility after he made the grand gesture of giving the baby his name. Although it was a right and proper gesture, it required the minimum of effort on his part and cast only two dollars. Except for his emotional rebellion, it was the easiest thing he could do and does not release him from the harder task of sharing in the care of the baby, financially if in no other way. When he shows that he is a person able to face the consequences of his own acts he will be worthy of your consideration as a lover and a potential husband. As it is he is poor material. man Dear Jane Jordan I am a patient in a sanatorium and have been for sixteen months. I am 20 and have been going with a girl slightly older who is also a patient. We would like to marry when we leave here, but the nature of the disease which we have makes it inadvisable to have children. The doctors offer me an operation which Would permit normal married life without danger of children. Can such a marriage last or would she look elsownere for a father for her
Suits of Knit Silk From Strauss Store Will Be Seen at Football Games Brown Most Popular Color; Red, Green and Blue Also Used; Clodhopper Weave Latest Sports Wear Offering’. BY HELEN LINDSAY THE football season which arrived with the first of the fall weather has encouraged the use of knitted suits for spectators' sports wear. This year knitted suits will have a "sportier'* look. The newest of these are in the knits known as clodhopper, and are shown in Marinette suits displayed by L. Strauss & Cos. They show checks and overplaids in their weave, and are in two and three-piece styles. New football colors are featured, in Indian summer shades. Prominent in these colors are reds, one the shade advocated by Vionnet, and the other a rust shade, known sometimes as
Chili. Greens also are popular for football wear, the outstanding one being a bright shade, and the other a yellow green in a sage cast. Blues are shown with a purple cast, and light grayed-beige also will be seen in football crowds this season.| Brown continues, however, as the leading color. One of the newest of the knitted suits made by the Marinette manufacturers, and shown at the Strauss store, is in the clodhopper knit. It has a slip-over sweater, and features a reefer collar with four buttons at the high neckline. The blouse can be worn either inside or outside of the skirt, which is made with four buttons at the front. The model shown by Strauss, and which is exclusive with the store, is in brown and rust. The most important thing for the wearer of knitted garments to learn is the care of such clothing. To keep knits in good condition, the wearer
should remember that they should not be hung, but always folded. Stretching of the shoulders to unnatural points occurs when the garment is hung. If the dress is a heavy knit fabric, it will hang and the skirt become too long. In folding the knitted costume to place in a drawer, one of the most satisfactory customs to follow is to fold with paper, as in packing, to avoid any creasing. Skirts which begin to bag a little in back should be laid on a flat surface, front down, paper placed over the back, and the sides and lower part of the skirt folded over it. Another suggestion for the separate skirt of suit or dress is to turn the skirt when it begins to show a slight sag at the back of the hips, and wear it with the back at the front. While this is one device used! by some wearers of knitted clothing, it should not be followed to anj{ great extent. nan n a a Reblocking Restores Original Shape THE wisest course is to give a dress a rest, and have it rcblockcd. In having knitted garments cleaned, the cleaner should be advised of the original size of the dress, and it should be re-blocked accordingly. The yarn has a resiliency which will return it to its original shape. Some manufacturers make two skirts to one knitted suit, to prevent the too frequent wear of one. This not only changes the costume, but adds to the wearing advantages. With skirts as narrow as they are, they often bag at the knees. When a suit is being tried on, before purchase, a good test is to sit in it, easing it by pulling it up a fraction, to determine if it is too tight at the knees. n* * * Varied Wardrobe Worn by Ida Lupino IDA LUPINO is one of the busiest girls in Hollywood these days. Sha is having ten or fifteen changes of wardrobe in “Ready for Love/* one of which is a smoky blue crepe frock, with heavy linen collar anq cuffs which button on w'ith jeweled buttons of star sapphire. an tt nun Slip Covers Made of Corduroy THE corduroy fad is spreading from hats, frocks, shoes, bags and various types of wraps to furniture, and is now used in some of the smartest homes in the country as slip covers. a a tt ana Wide Range of Colors Given Rice RICE in all colors of the rainbow is the latest food fad to hit dinner tables. Although snowy white rice continues to be favored by food experts, women seeking to match or harmonize food with table linen, chinaware or floral decorations, have hit on the idea of coloring rico. Attempts to color the uncooked rice have not been successful, but the up-to-the-minute hostess has discovered she can boil her rice in colored water to achieve the desired effect. After boiling, the rice is fluffed or steamed to produce separate grains.
children? There are others who are waiting for your answer on this problem, so please consider it well. 800 800 Answer—l do not know the answer to your problem. I have no idea how the girl would react if she recovered her health to tne point where it would be safe for here to have children of her own. If you both have the same disease. why is it any safer for her to have children than you? And why anything so elaborate as an operation with contraceptives available? It you love each other and voluntarily refrain from passing on a bad physical inheritance to children, I do not see why this fact in itself should disrupt your marriage. If the urge for parenthood is strong, you can adopt children. WARD BELMONT CLUB LUNCHEON All former students of Ward Belmont College at Nashville, Tenn., are invited to attend the 1 o’clock luncheon meeting of the Indianapolis Ward Belmont Club which will be held at the home of Mrs. Fred Dopek, 5301 Guilford avenue, Saturday. Circle to Meet Olive Branch Social Circle will meet with Mrs. Mary Gaskins, 4921 West Fifteenth street, tomorrow, for a covered dish luncheon and business meeting. Assisting hostesses will be Mrs. Mayme Berry and Mrs. Ada Staley. Charles Latham Jr. has left to enter Exeter Academy, Andover, Mass.
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.SEPT. 18, 191
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Mrs. Lindsay
Presidency of Club Assumed by Mrs. Wagner Mrs. Emil H. Soufflot, retiring president of the Multum-in-Parvo Literary club, todiay presented the gavel to Mrs. Adolf Wagner, incoming president, at the luncheon and program in the Italian room of the Lincom. Premier and supreme rases centered the luncheon table which was lighted with white tapers in silver candelabra. Copies of the United States Constitution, bound in the club colors, red and white, were given as favors. Inaugurating the club year’s program on "The Federal Government of the United States,” Mrs. Earl Clampitt. vice-president, talked on “City of Washington,” and Mrs. Frank E. Weimer. state convention delegate, discussed “Formation of the Constitution.” The discussion was led by Mrs. Ernest W. Fullenwider. Mothers Will Meet Mrs. C. H. Heid. 430 North Euclid street, will be hostess for a luncheon and business meeting of the Mothers’ Alliance of the Alpha Delta Theta sorority tomorrow. Mrs. Arthur Robinson will be speaker.
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