Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 133, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

Puppy Love Should Meet Kindliness Scolding and Ridicule Bring Suffering to Adolescents. BY HELEN WELSHIMER NEA gerrlre Writer CALF love and puppy love, they call It sometimes, this mysterious and fleeting adolescent attraction which a boy and a girl have for each other. Parents and teachers, who have grown older without growing wiser, sometimes smile at it. They

scold, too, grow contemptuous, or hold the embryonic affection up to ridicule. The situation is never eliminated by such tactics, according to Harold P. Page, director of the Young Men's Christian Association boys’ work, who writes of adolescent love in

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Miss Welshimer

the current issue of the Parent’s Magazine. The children who are experiencing this emotion are in the grip of a cyrlonic force, he says, and urges parents to be tender and gracious in their understanding. In time the emotional cataclysm will adjust itself. Do you remember the small tanned boy who used to bring you red apples as gallantly as any legendary knight came bearing golden fruit to a princess in a tower? You thought you would love him forever and forever. But one day you noticed guiltily that his voice did rasping things to you when he recited. It was as horrible as chalk squeaking on a wet blackboard. You wished that the little boy wouldn't be asked to define pronouns and nouns and bound countries. Asa silent idol he was so glorious! His voice was changing and somebody else, some day, would find it as sweet as David's when he chanted psalms to Saul. But you didn t know that. So you grew a little older and loved somebody else for a little while. Puppy love? Os course. But it took care of itself. Don’t Tease About Affections Children should never be teased about their fondness for each other. After all. during that interlude between childhood and adulthood, the world is a beautiful place to two who adore each other. Never, never again will it be so wonderful. The emotion may be as brief as April rain, but the memory will hold haunting loveliness long after abiding, stronger love comes to older, wiser hearts. Adolescence has its tragedy, too. Children have no background of experience against which to etch their present problems. They have not lived long enough to learn that happiness is comparative. There is no tomorrow on their calendars. When a little boy. who has ridden into a little girl’s heart like a knight with a scarlet plume, chooses somebody else as the recipient of a favor, the first little girl bows to a suffocating brightness of pain. Not ever, ever should she be teased because the little boy took somebody else to the party. Hearts may not break, but they bruise rather easily. Even adolescent hearts. Maybe especially adolescent hearts. To be teased about a queer boy or girl is a crucifying experience. The adolescent age is a conventional age. Yet there are many parents who derive pleasure from watching a child squirm as they amuse contemporaries by reciting a tale of the fictitious fondness of the child for a squint-eyed half-wit. Such teasing makes children selfconscious. They • ill avoid normal contacts. Sometimes it takes a great many years to put by the careless words of a loving, but thoughtless, parent. Help Make It Lovely Fathers and mothers can not eliminate puppy love by ignoring it, Mr. Page asserts. It is a necessary’ part of adolescense. After all. no one who ignores his scales ever plays Chopin. Hearts that had no introductory tenderness may find it more difficult to love with that everlasting understanding that beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things. An adolescent child is merely choosing a figure to wear the mantle of his fanciful weaving. Tire threads of the garment are more ethereal than earthy. If the situation is treated with consideration in time the mantle will be voluntarily removed. Adolescent love is not like measles, whooping cough and scarlet fever. It is not a disease to be avoided. First love is a preface to devotion. In later years, oh much, much later years, when the boy or girl is clinging to love long-tried, he will remember his early romancing with fondness, if his parents helped him make it something transitory and lovely. Youth is sweet and brief. Everyone lias a right to a*romance that exists mostly in the mind. {Copyright. 193*. NBA Service. Inc.) STATE GROUP TO HOLD LUNCHEON Annual luncheon meeting of the Indiana state branch. Association of Childhood Education, will be at 12 Thursday in the Riley room of the Claypool. Reservations, in charge of Miss Iva Pearcy. 271 Ritter avenue, are due Monday. Dr. Harold Anderson, director of the lowa child research station, will be the speaker. Choruses to Meet Federation of Mothers’ Choruses of the Indianapolis public schools will meet at 1:30 Monday in the Cropsey auditorium. Rehearsal will be held at 1:15 Tuesday at Manual Training high school.

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Voters League Session to Be Held at Elkhart Points to be emphasized on the Indiana League of Women Voters’ program will be discussed at a regional conference Friday in Elkhart, where committee chairmen of Hammond, Gary. Michigan City, South Bend and Elkhart leagues will meet. Mrs. S. N. Campbell will preside. Mrs. Ralph Mowbray, Culver, chairman of the department of government and economic gelfare, has sent material to her chairmen on unemployment relief and will continue the program with further study of unemployment insurance. Mrs. C. T. Boynton, Elkhart, chairman of the department of government and child welfare, will emphasize the study of the child labor amendment, mothers’ aid and problems of county welfare organizations. Mrs. Harvey, Kokomo, chairman of the department of government and education, will discuss the survey which the department requested each league to make of its local school budgets and costs over a period of five years. At the first of the Wednesday morning discussion groups presented by the Indianapolis league to be held from 10 to 11:30 Wednesday at the Rauh Memorial library, the department of government and education will give an outline of the situation in Indianapolis schools today. Mrs. Ralph Vonnegut, chairman of the department, will preside. Executive board of the Indiana League will meet at 10 Tuesday at the Propylaeum. Miss Hughes and Louisville Man to Be Married Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Betty Hughes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Hughes, to Hardy L. Ralston, son of Mrs. W. L. Ralston. Louisville. The wedding date has not been set. The bride-elect is a graduate of De Pauw university, where she was a I member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Ralston, also a De Pauw graduate, is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. Several parties are planned to : honor Miss Hughes, prior to her marriage. Miss Betty Lupton will ! entertain Monday and on Wednesday a group of friends will give a party at the home of Miss Jane Howe. Miss Betty McFadden will entertain Thursday night and Miss Jean Porteous on Friday night.

i Card Parties

King Camp. R. N. A., will sponsor a card party at 8 tonight on the third floor of the Holliday building. Fraternal Order of Eagles auxiliary. will entertain with a card party at 8:30 tonight at 43 West Vermont street. King Camp, R. N. A., will hold a card party at 8 tonight in the Holliday building. Junior Order. Central America Mechanics No. 2. and D. of A. No. 57 will hold a card party at 8:30 tonight at 210 East Ohio street. The public is invited.

In the Realm of Clubs

MONDAY Vincent Reading Circle will meet at the home of Mrs. F. G. Johns, 5526 University avenue. Mrs. MacMillan Carson will review "First to Go Back,” by Irina Skariatina. Twelve-thirty luncheon will be served members of the Camelian Club at the home of Mrs. Otis Carmichael, 1133 East Thirty-fifth street. Assisting will be Mesdames Robert Elliott, Robert Endsley and Wilson Parker. Bridge will follow. A paper on “Victorian Government,” by Mrs. L. W. Bruck, will be read by Mrs. C. A. Harris, at a meeting of the Irvington Woman’s Club, with Miss Lola B. Conner, 5318 Julian avenue, hostess. C. Stanley Garrison, editor of the United Mine Workers of America Journal, will address members of the Monday Afternoon Reading Club when they assemble at Mrs. Leland K. Fishback’s home, 5703 Broadway terrace. Mrs. Charles R. Yoke. 4144 North Pennsylvania street, will entertain members of the Monday Conversation Club. Mrs. W. P. Anderson 111 and Mrs. S. S. Craig will present the program. “Beauty Spots in Indiana” will be given in response to roll call at the meeting of the Sesame Club when it meets with Mrs. S. G. Campbell, 29 North Hawthorne lane. Candlelight tea will be held. Research Club members will meet with a charter member, Mrs. H. B. Burnet, 4417 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. L. L. Griffith will talk on "Mexican Art" and Harold Kottlowski will present violin solos, accompanied by Margaret Powell. Mrs. Minor S. Goulding, 5420 North Delaware street, will be hostess for a 12:30 luncheon meeting of the Parliamentary Club. Representative Louis Ludlow will talk on "Governmental Affairs.” Mothers’ Guild of the Advent Episcopal church will hold its regular meeting in the parish house at 1 with a covered-dish luncheon to be followed by a business meeting. Mrs. W. B. Peterson will preside. TUESDAY Mrs. Leroy J. Keach. 4311 Broadway. will be luncheon hostess for a meeting of the Procter Club. Fortnightly Literary Club members will hear a discussion on “An Imperial Palace in the Far North,” by Mrs. Vernon Hahn. The senate will be discussed by Mrs. Adolf Wagner and the house of representatives by Mrs. Carl H. Irrgang at a meeting of the Multum-m-Parvo Literary Club. Mrs. Frank W. Weimer. 3540 North Meridian street, will be hostess. Mrs. Emil H. Soufflot will lead the discussion. Mesdames C. M. Finney, C. E. Day and T. E. Halls Jr. will present a program at a meeting of the Hoosier Tourist Club with Mrs. J. O. Cott ingham. Tuesday Quest Club members will meet for 1 o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. O. O. Johnson. 3915 Central avenue. Mrs. Howard Beecher and Mrs. J. K. Lpng will assist the hostess. Mrs. J. R. Farrell will talk on "Textiles.” Mesdames C. Frank Albright, Russell P. Hatt and Hazel L. Richter will be hostesses for a meeting of the Wy-Mo-Dau Club. Mesdames D. E. Allen, Alonzo Cherry and Walden Vanosdal will take part on the program. Mothers Club of the Woodstock Kindergarten of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society will meet at 2 with Miss Lucille Brown talking on "Parents and Public Health. ’ Tea will follow with Mesdames William Eckstein, Ervin Singer and Ralph Howery, hostesses. Class in contemporary literature under Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten, sponsored by the Irvington Union of Clubs, will open at 10 at the Irvington Presbyterian church. Mrs. Garten will review "The Chinese Testament'' and Full Flavor.” Mrs. C. F. Donnell is chairman. Mothers of pledges Zeta Tau Alpha sorority will be honor guests at a luncheon at 12:30 at the Butler university chapter house with Mrs. Charles Apostal, program chairman, and Mrs. Howard Spurj geon, who will preside. Fall flowj era will be used. Miss Virginia Lett and members of the active chap-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ter will sing, and short talks will be given by Mesdames F. A. Fisk, R. H. Kroger and Ines M. Andrews. Current Knowledge Club will meet with Mrs. Grace Linn Sandy, 2894 Sutherland avenue. Mrs. Frank Clark will present a Riley program and Miss Ruby Hardin will read a paper. Luncheon is scheduled for 12:30. Miss Virginia Edwards will sing. Mrs. Don A. Anderson and Mrs. H. M. Banks will present a program at a meeting of the Heyl Study Club at the Rauh library. Mrs. D. B. Johnston will talk on “A Strong Personality of India” at a meeting of the Irvington Home Study Club with Mrs. R. R. Scott hostess. New officers of the auxiliary to Mcllwain-Kothe post, American Legion, will be installed by Mrs. G. I. Seybert at luncheon meeting to be held at Maple Arms. Mrs. Harold Robinson will take the oath as president; Mrs. George Evard, vice-pres-ident; Mrs. Richard Brann, treasurer; Mrs. Everett Lett, secretary; Mrs. C. T. Brady, historian; Mrs. Lucinda Spaan, chaplain, and Mrs. Earl Stafford, sergeant-at-arms. WEDNESDAY “Mental Hygiene and the Class Room Teacher” is Mrs. F. C. Lemley’s discuss on topic for the meeting of the Irvington Mother Study Club with Mrs. Irwin Ward, hostess. Mrs. C. L. Price will talk on “What Does Literature Mean to Me?” Mrs. Claudia Erther will tell the story of the opera “Aida” at a meeting of the New Century Club with Mrs. I. E. Rush and Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, hostesses. Mrs. Carl H. Bals will present "Opera Through the Centuries.” Irvington Auxiliary, Public Health Nursing Association, will meet with Mrs. B. J. Terrell, 509 North Ritter avenue. Covered dish luncheon will be served members of the Alpha Delta Theta Mothers’ Alliance at the home of Mrs. Myrtle Wilcox, 2449 North Illinois street. Business meeting will follow. Mrs. Miles S. Barton. 2031 North Delaware street, will be hostess for a night meeting of the Indianapolis alumnae of St. Mary’s College, Notre Dame. Miss Virginia Jobes will assist. THURSDAY Review Circle will meet with Mesdames A. E. Baker, Bransford Clarke and J. S. Wright, hosteses. "From the Deep Woods to Civilization” is the program theme of the Aftermath Club for its meeting with Mrs. H. M. Cochrane, 5880 North New Jersey street, i Mrs. Pink Hall will be hostess. Miss Elizabeth Cooper and Mrs. C. B. Rhoads will present the program. "Highlights of the Renaissance,” by Mrs. R. I. Renfrew, and "Dramatic Entertainments of the Renaissance,” by Mrs. H. H. Akers, will be included in the program for the Beta Delphian Club at 9:45 at American National bank. FRIDAY Mrs. D. O. Taylor, 3834 Kenwood avenue, will be hostess for a 2 o'clock meeting of the Central Union chapter, W. C. T. U. Devotions and musical program will follow the business meeting. Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson will address the group and read an original story featuring Americanization day. Mrs. Charles L. Hartman will entertain the Women's Missionary Society and the Calendar Circle of the First Evangelical church at a tea at her home, Pleasant Run parkway. Miss Doris Clark will present "Japanese Women Speak.” and Mrs. J. Albert Schumacher and Mrs. Raymond Gardner will pour. All women of the church are invited. SATURDAY Magazine Club members will be guests of Mrs. Albert G. Small with Mesdames C. E. Appel. A. E. Baker W. H. Blodgett and H. K. Fatout, hostesses. Miss Anna Brochhausen will talk on "Modern Movement in Poetry” Club Meeting Set Mrs. E. C. Mcllvain will be in charge of the surprise for the meeting of the Home Economics Club, with Mrs. J. C. Barnhill Jr., 3652 North Delaware street.

Club Group of District to Convene President’s Day Will Be, Marked By Reception and Musicale. A reception for old and new officers of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs will precede a musicale, arranged by Mrs. Will C. Hitz for the president’s day program at 2:30 Friday at the Woman's Department Club. The program will include a memorial to Mrs. J. F. Edwards, to be presented by Mrs. Demarchus Brown and Mrs. R. O. McAlexander. Mrs. McAlexander and Mrs. Felix T. McWhirter will preside at the tea table, and Mrs. C. J. Finch, president, will head the receiving line. Mrs. E. A. Pedlow and Mrs. H. W. Painter are in charge of arrangements and decorations. Mrs. Finch has announced committees for the Indiana Federation convention, Oct. 23 to 25. They are: Reception. Mrs. McAlexander. chairman; Mrs. william Hartinger. vice-chairman, and Mesdames Grace Julian Clark. Demarchus Brown, E. C. Rumpler, Felix T. McWhirter. M. F. Ault, Ralph Kenmngton, John T. Wheeler, C. T. Austin. David Ross, H. K. Fatout, George Cornelius, Frederick G. Balz. T. W. Demmerly. Edna Sharp. Ralph Cradick. Arthur Robinson, Robert T. Ramsay. A. H. Off. T. A Bowser, Bert S. Gadd, Delbert Wilmeth, Dorothy Phillips, Burt Kimmell. C. L. Stubbs. M. D. Didway, A. F. Walsman. Ushers and pages, Mrs. Jerauld McDermott, chairman; Miss Ethel Mary Ostrom, vice-chair-man; Mesdames Royer K. Brown, Lee Fox, L. M. Green. Drew Ross, Bennett Whitney and Miss Dorothy Phillips. Door, Mrs. James E. Gaul, chairman; Mrs. Loren B. Warner, vice-chairman; Mesdames R. P. Beightol. W. J. Behmer, Earl Cox, E. P. Jones, M. E. Burkhardt, Robert B. Douglass, Clyde Montgomery, Herman Roesch, Otis P. Renchen, Charles Fenner, William Russell, Frank Kinzie, W. F. Holmes, Frank Symmes, Eli J. Shields. Hospitality, Mrs. W. D. Keenan, chairman; Mrs. George E. Steinmetz, co-chairmen; Mesdames W. H. Polk, H. E. von Grimmenstein, E. H. Mitchell, Claud Watson, Richard Pinder. J. D. Smith, William B. Ward, M. J. Chenoweth, Claudia K. Erther, Rufus O'Harrow, J. F. Boesinger, T. William Engle. H. P. Willwerth. Social committee, Mrs. E. A Kelly, chairman; Mrs. Chic Jackson, vice-chairman; Mesdames Everett Lett, Dana L. Jones, Hollie A. Shideler, Marvin L. Lugar, Paul A. Hancock. Earl C. Bucher. W. C. Kasselbaum, Frederick C. Albershardt, Luther J. Shirley, Paul L. Rochford; transportation, Mrs. Carl Foltz, chairman, ana Mrs. George Van Dyke. vice-chairman; processional, Mrs. Clayton Ridge, chairman, and Mrs. John F. Kelly, vice-chairman; exhibits. Mrs. Tllden F. Greer, chairman, and Mrs, Phoebe Link, vice-chairman; dinners, Mrs. Isaac E. Brokaw, chairman, and Mrs. Edmund Clarke, vice-chairman; luncheons. Mrs. Otis Carmichael, chairman. and Mrs. Edna Sharp, vice-chair-man; breakfasts, Mrs. E. L. Pedlow, chairman, and Mrs. E. L. Burnet, vice-chair-man, and flowers and decorations, Mrs. A. H. Opperman. chairman; Mrs. H. W. Haworth, vice-chairman, and Mrs Robert Ramsay. Mrs. William E. Gabe. Mrs. Buschmann Heads Woman’s Contract Club Leading the Woman’s Contract Club of Indianapolis, which will meet on alternating Thursdays at the Indianapolis Athletic Club, will be officers, headed by Mrs. Charles L. Buschmann. Other officers are: Mrs. O. G. Pfaff, vice-president; Mrs. Ralph K. Smith, treasurer; Mrs. R. Ralston Jones, Jr., assistant treasurer; Mrs. Hal T. Benham, 1 recording secretary, and Mrs. Nathan P. Graham, corresponding secretary. Directors, besides Mrs. Buschmann, Mrs. Pfaff, Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Benham, are: Mesdames Lawrence Hess, Clarence M. Warren, Elmer J. Ittenbach, Harlan Hadley and William R. Cooper. Mrs. William H. Coleman has been elected an honorary life member of the club. RESEARCH GUILD’S BENEFIT FETE SET Mary Hanson Carey White Cross Research Guild will give a benefit card party in the ballroom of the Marott at 2 Wednesday. Proceeds will be used for guild’s research work at the Methodist hospital. Mrs. J. Raymond Lynn, president, has announced that tickets may be obtained from any member of the guild. Members are Mrs. Edgar H. Evans, vice-president; Mrs. Alfred Conklin, secretary: Mrs. Edna F. Vajen, treasurer; Miss Emma Claypool, social secretary; Mesdames Walter Hutton, Jean S. Milner, James B. Nelson, A. H. Steinbrecker, William L. Taylor, W. W. Wentz, Allen A. Wilkinson, Edward Zink, Carolyn Atherton, Arthur V. Brown, John G. Benson, Mary Hanson Carey, Wilmer W. Critchlow, Berkley W. Duck. Edwin H. Forry and Vernon Griffith. EDUCATION GROUP MEETING IS SET Tea and business meeting is scheduled by the Association of Childhood Education for Monday afternoon at the D. A. R. chapter house, 824 North Pennsylvania street. Newly elected officers, to be in charge, include the president, Miss Berenice Lamb; vice-president, Miss Ann Fern; recording-secretary. Miss Virginia Adair; corresponding secretary, Miss Martha Logston, and treasurer, Miss Ruby Stapp. Miss Lamb has named the following committees for the year: Program, Mrs. Florence Baker and Misses Evelyn Hall, Mary Misch, Dorthy Yagerline, Dasye Alves and Ruth Patterson: social, Miss Loan Coan, Mrs. Helen Surprise, Miss Olive Briesch and Miss Hazel Hart; ‘ ways and means. Miss Eleanor i Add ms, Miss Mary Barton and Mrs. Helen Bain; publicity, Miss Helen •Grace Selvage. Miss Mildred Levey and Miss Gertrude Ebner. MISS BUTZ WED AT CATHEDRAL Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Butz announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Catherine Alice Butz, /and Myron T. Watson, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Watson, which took place Wednesday at All Saints cathedral the Rev. Robert C. Alexander officiating. The bride was attended by her sister. Miss Dortha Butz, and Gerald Watson was his brother’s best man. Mr. and Mrs. Watson will De at home at 646 East Fifty-sixth street, after Nov. 1. Both Mr. and Mrs. Watson are graduates of Butler university. Mrs. R. R. Cook and Mrs. O. E. Kessler have returned from Louisville, where they were delegates to the national of the Vet-

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Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem North has the contract tor four spades. East and West did not enter the bidding. East opens the deuce of clubs, the trey Is played from dummy. and West plays the six How should declarer proceed with the hand? < A K J 10 8 4 2 ¥Q 6 4 ♦ 8 *A K J 5 * '5 (Blind) W 5 E (Blind) ♦ Deale. J * * *Q ¥ K 3 4 A KQ 6 3 *87543 Solution In next Issue. 4

Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League I SUPPOSE you know that schoolboy problem, one-half of twelve is seven. The youngster proves it to you by making a twelve in Roman figures, then drawing a line horizontally through the middle and you do have seven. Here’s a hand in which, if you will count your losers, you will find that you have four, a losing heart and three losing diamonds. I don’t want you to believe that we are going to turn those four losers into five, but we can reduce them to three. In this case you do it by deliberately losing an extra trick. Now doesn’t that seem mathematically impossible? You have four losers, you lose another trick, deliberately, one that you can ruff, and end with only three losers! West’s opening lead was the king of hearts, which the declarer won in the dummy with the ace. He could see that he had four tricks to lose, if the ace and queen of diamonds were in the West hand. e a a AFTER carefully looking the hand over, Charles Porter, Cincinnati, another member of that Ohio team that won the national knockout team-of-four championship of the American Bridge League, and who now ranks thirtysecond on the Masters’ list, decided his only chance was to work on the club suit. He led a small spade, won with the king, and cashed the ace of spades. Then he played the seven of clubs, West played the queen and Porter won the trick in dummy with the ace. He now led the jack of clubs. Remember, this was a trick that he need not lose, but he deliberately gave this up, discarding his losing jack of hearts. He lost nothing there, but in making this play, he established the ten and nine of clubs in dummy.

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West won the trick with the king of clubs and laid down the queen of hearts. Porter ruffed with a small spade and played another spade, which he won in the dummy with the queen. He then discarded two losing diamonds on the two good clubs. By deliberately losing an extra trick, he ended up with only three losers in the hand, thereby making his contract. {Copyright. 1934, NEA Service. Inc.)

St. Margaret’s Guild Tea Set at VanLandingham Home

Mrs. H. T. VanLandingham’s home at 3456 Central avenue, will be the scene of the St. Margaret’s hospital guild tea to be held from 3 to 5 Tuesday. With Mrs. Jackson K. Landers, president, in the receiving line, will be Mrs. Preston C. Rubush, retiring president; Mrs. 1 Grace L. Bennett, director of occupational therapy at the city hospital; Mrs!

Sororities

Anniversary dinner and initiation services will be held by Indiana Alpha chapter, Lambda Alpha Lamda sorority tomorrow. Services at 4 will be followed by a 6 o'clock dinner at Whispering Winds. Miss Dorothy Spalding is chairman. Initiates include Mrs. James Beam and Misses Rase Kempt, Phyllis Dickman, Rosemary Seybried. Louise Melvin and Catherine Bracken. Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Sigma Sigma Kappa sorority will meet at 7:30 Monday night with Miss Jewel Bartlow, 1434 North Delaware street. Mrs. E. FI. Stuart will preside. lota Chi sorority will install officers at 7:30 tonight at the Martin Japanese tearoom, 27 Jenny Lane. A dinner will honor the officers, who are Miss Delores Maloney, president; Miss Florence Newcomb, recording secretary; Miss Emma Reese, corresponding secretary, and Miss Ruth Slick, treasurer. Indianapolis Tri Kappa cluo will meet at 6:30 Monday at the Blueberry Muffin tearoom, Sixteenth and Meridian streets. Pi Psi sorority will give a card party Nov. 5 for the benefit of the Bridgeport Nutrition camp building fund. Miss Thelma O’Reilly of Delta Rho chapter will be chairman. Mrs. Horace Howell. 5401 Winthrop avenue, will be hostess for a rush party of Theta Mu Rho sorority to be held tomorrow afternoon. ELECTION WILL BE PART OF MEETING Three admissions committee members and three board members will be elected at the annual meeting of the Meridian Hills Country Club and Realty Company at 8 Monday night. Howard S. Morse, president, will be in charge. Dinner will be at 6:30. Committee chairmen will give annual reports.

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.OCT. 13,1934

Dean Smith tc Address Club Group Leader of Educators of Nation Will Discuss Current Trends. Paul C. Stetson. Indianapolis school superintendent, will introduce Dr. Henry Lester Smith, National Educational Association president, at the opening discussion luncheon of the community welfare department of the Woman's Department Club at 12:30 Wednesday. Dr. Smith, also dean of education at Indiana university, will talk on ■’Current Trends in Education" Special guests at the meeting will be Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge. Carl Wilde, Alan W. Boyd, John F. White and Earl Buehanan. the five candidates for the school board selected by the citizens’ school committee, and indorsed by the club. Mrs. Charles H. Smith, incoming chairman, will preside. Serving with Mrs. Smith, new officers of the department include Mrs. Robert L. Moorhead, vice-chairman; Mrs, Frank E. Weimer, secretary: Mrs. Martha E. Wilson, treasurer, -and Mrs. Othniel Hitch and Mrs. A. C. Rasmussen, executive committee members. Assisting with the luncheon will be the following chairmen and vicechairmen and members of committees: Courtesy. Mrs. Charles F. Remy and Mrs. Harold K. Bachelder; door, Mrs. E. J. Shields and Mrs. Frederick H. Bowen; hospitality, Mrs. William E. Kennedy and Mrs. Frank D. Downs; luncheon, Mrs. Robert Shingler and Mrs. Charles B. Crist; telephone, Mrs. Robert M. Bryce and Mrs. E. Blake Hull; publicity, Mrs. Philip A. Keller. Reservations may be made with the telephone committee. Social service and civic co-opera-tive committees of the department will continue activities under the following leadership: American Red Cross, Mrs. Thomas Spencer and Mrs. Oliver P. McLeland. city hospital. Mrs. Merritt E. Woolf and Mrs. John F. Engelke; co-operative league for hard of hearing, Miss Janet Shaw; legislative, Mrs. William A. Eshbach and Mrs. Lawrence F. Orr; municipal affairs, Miss R. Katharine Beeson and Mrs. Earl R. Cox; Public Health Nursing Association, Mrs. A. C. Rasmussen and Mrs. Everett E. Lett; smoke abatement, Mrs. George A. Van Dyke and Mrs. John W. Moore, and welfare, Mrs. Charles Hartman. Mrs. William Dobson and Mrs. Will C. Hitz. Mrs. John Connor and Mrs. William C. Smith will continue as chairman and vicechairman of the Monday Guild, section of the department club for sightless women. Tea Given for Club Mrs. M. C. Norris, president of the Current Events Club, entertained members at a tea today. Mrs. James C. Morrison played piano numbers, and Mrs. Frank Symmes gave readings. Dahlias and other fall flowers decorated the house.

Charles W. Myers and Mrs. VanLandingham. Articles made in the hospital’s occupational therapy department will be on display. Mrs. R. A. Miller and Mrs. William Mullen will preside at the tea table. Others assisting will be Mesdames Gayle B. Wolfe, Myron McKee, A. F. Head, Herbert Bacon, Vince Canning, Forrest Hindsley, John Rau Jr., Mark Enright, Dorma Akin, Jack Adams, Frank Ball Jr., William Doeppers, Charles Kotteman, Francis Sinex, William Low Rice, G. I. Seybert and Maxine Hauser. MUSEUM WILL AID IRVINGTON PROJECT, Several cases from the Children’s museum will be moved to Carr's hall, East Washington street and Ritter avenue, on Oct 20 and 21, as a project of the children's entertainment committee of the Irvington Union of Clubs. Mrs. Laymen Schell, chairman, has announced the following committee: Mesdames H. H. Hasbrook, Harold Arnholter, Charles Bechtold, James Hall, Frances Insley. Clifford Wagoner, ,J. Gilbert McNutt, A. M. Schmaadeke, S. R. Randall and Roy Van Spreckleson. Conducted tours have been arranged from 1 to 9:30 on Saturday, and from 10 to 9:30 on Sunday. Hostesses w-ill be present from tha following schools: Our Lady of Lourdes, Numbers 57, 58, 77, 82 and 85, and from the Irvington Free Kindergarten. Miss Drake Honored Miss Flora Drake, for five year3 educational director of Alpha. Kappa and Zeta chapters of Pi Omicron chapter, was honor guest with Mrs. Bjorn Winger, new director, at a buffet dinner given last night at tha home of Mrs. M. Earl Robbins. Thirty-five guests attended the dinner and bridge party. Mrs. Robbins was assisted by Mesdames Herbert Massey and Thomas Seimier.

• TOMORROW! WLW AT 1:30 LUX RADIO THEATRE MIRIAM HOPKINS AND JOHN BOLES IN “SEVENTH HEAVEN” Full-hour prmentatlon of Auatin Strong'* famous comedy. Let thla romantic story thrill you as It thrilled thousand* when produced by John Golden on Broadway! Eery Sunday anew Let Radio Theatre presentation of famous plays with famous star*. NBC Goaat-to-Coar* Mm Network.