Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1936 — Page 10

orse © Preparing for Franklin Show

=N ext Sunday’s Event to

© Close Activity Until Aug. 1.

BY BEATRICE BURGAN he Society Editor Arlington horse show here

last week sounded the first call

© $0 the equestrians who follow the « series of summer shows.

Franklin's second annual show is|

= next, and the Franklin Polo and

Beatrice - Burgan

er

— as Saddle Club and ey >» American Legion

; Post 2056 are mak~ ing the last min-

ute preparations.

for the event, to be held next Sunf day. "a Horse exhibitors 7-' then will have a i reste until Aug. 1 : when Muncie will be host for its fifth annual show. Miss Martha Wheeler. and Fred Sharp, . Franklin,

a who rode hunters and jumpers in

+ the Arlington show, are working on

«the committee to present 15 classes

~~ at the Johnson County fairgrounds.

3 ~ Ball'Stable to Enter

Mrs. William H. Ball, chairman “ot the Muncie committees, had’ en-

=. bties at Arlington and is being aided

E Muncie

x

for the August event by G. A. Ball, fair president; F.. i ‘Clay- _. pool, ‘secretary mafiager; Seward B, ‘Price, secretary, and Roscoe Lord, - agsistant secretary.

LE TfPheé equestrian ‘competition’ is to

io * gs »

~ .

be a part of the fair program, and + will include among the usual events an exhibition of Arabian horses and a community horse ° interest _clas“sification. “The latter exhibition class is to include horses shown by communi-

#% ties with the owner or member of % + the immediape family ‘riding. Ar 1 ¥ . a

82 8 = Miss. Courtney Whitaker, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Joel Whitaker,

.. has joined the dozens of local vaca- “ tioners who are to spend the sum-

. mer abroad. She is to sail Wednesday on the Queen Mary.

; - Mrs.

4-8 '¥ James Genung and Mrs.

«John H. Darlington, who sailed on

«: and Mr. Compton. Mrs. Gompto ,. formerly was.Miss Phoebe Emerson.

-an earlier Queen Mary vogage, ar‘rived in New York today. . ” = ”

Mrs. Charles P. Emerson, Miss “Alice Emerson and Perry Emerson will: be ‘home soon after a visit in ‘Toronto, Ontario. There they at‘tended the wedding of Mrs. Emer: son’s niece, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Alan Canfield. ‘Accompanied: by Mrs. Reginald + Pellatt, the group motored to Boston to visit Mrs. Emerson's daughter, Mrs. Walter Ames Compton,

: % & = John Sloane Kittle Jr, has re-

* tirned from Cornell University for

~ py th

the summer, He ahd his mother, “Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, expect to go to Lake Maxinkuckee this week Stor the season.

* Club Federation: Board Members to Meet July 8

= ‘Board shembers of the Indiana Federation of Clubs are to meet July 8 and 9 at Turkey Run State . Park, - according to announcement ..of - Mrs, Frederick G. Balz, president. - Mrs, -C. J. Finch, Seventh District resident, . reports that Oct, 30 is ; joe date. for the annual district gonvention at the Claypool. Offi"gers. are to be elected. Mrs; ‘General Federation Endow-

~~ ment Fund committee adviser. Mrs.

- Robert A. Hicks,. Cambridge City, _ is chairman of this committee in _ Indiana with Mrs. Felix T® Mec- . Whirter and Mrs. Edwin N. Canine, »Tefte Haute, as members. Other Indiana advisers are Mrs. "Arthur Jaques, Poseyville; Mrs, Earl White, Worthington; Mrs, Morris

“ Ray, Bedford; Mrs, Cogley Cole,

Vevay; Mrs, John 8. Roberts, Terre

# Haute; Mrs. Armin Jones, Newcas-

tle; Mrs. Arvin Hudgel, Yorktown; Mrs. W. H, Likens, Covington; Mrs J. H. Howarth, Pine Village; Mrs. R. Earl Peters, Fort Wayne, and Mrs. L. R. Kellum, Culver.

LAWN FURNITURE

-

“MATERIALS VARIED

Wire, wood, willow, iron and now aluminum make up: the fascinating array of new lawn and garden fur- “ niture according to Helen Koues, = director of Good ousekeeping studio. : 3 : 3 . <r This furniture boasts of style, comfort, and color and can be found <n a ‘wide range of prices to suit fi mast any pocketbook. Besides have all these virtues, it does not. 1 * such “practical features as

x : ' waterproof. painted ‘finishes, water

repellent fabrics and ease of movTerrace ZX garden furniture

should be in-pleasant harmony with

the house, in both color and size. * For Instance, for a white colonial

+ house Select white, lively green or

for a gray stucco English house, ‘deeper rods greens and blues.

ANGE SHOWER

Miss: Molly Canfield, |

n, | publican Presidential candidate.

Finch has been appointed! -

' Eastopolis Club. 7:30 tonight.

ney, new members. Alpha Chapter Sigma Phi. ‘worth, 4121 Beta Chapter, Ee Phi. Corinthian Auxiliary, O. E. 8S.

business meeting.

Club. Reception, dance, cards.

SORORITIES N. Parker-av, hostess. Misses Lucille Taggart and ‘Loretta Koer6:15 tonight.

Washington-st, hostess: 8 tonight. Lincoln. *

LODGES" Temple, 2515 W. Washington-st.

PROGRAMS Indianapolis . Beauty Culturists Local.

Booher, Dorothy Stewart and Helen Hicks, committee.

Miss Ruth Anne Wellman, 838

9 Miss Hilda Hollings=

. Evergreen Masonic 11

456. Wed. Bridge, bunco and euchre.

Tonight. Hoosier Athletic Mrs, Esther Allen, Misses Lucille

Voie League to Present Civil Service Plank to Democrats

Miss Florence Kirlin, Washington, National League of Women Voters’ congressional secreuary, and rs.. LaRue Brown, Boston, National League director, are to orm the Ledgué’s official delegation at the Democratic convention in PhilAdelphia tomorrow. Miss Kirlin formerly was the Indiana League's. executive. Seprelary with headquarters here.. The League whose plea for Republican convention support. of its specific civil service = plank drew support from Alf M. Landon, Re-

Mrs. Brown is to 1epresant ths

‘League for the third time before a | Democratic commitfee. Mrs. Harris T. Baldwin, | president,

convention platform

Washington, first

vice also is to "attend. ¢

The League's plank asks for a.

party promise of abolition of the spoils system, merit system and commitment to specific types of remedial legislation. Chief recommendations include placing first, second and third.class postmasters and deputy collectors of internal revenue under civil service, and repeal of laws discrimingtory of the employment of married women in government service. Similar appeals made to the Re-

publicans are to be brought to the

attention of the Democratic plat« form writers. Petition cards signed by over 260,000 voters in 47 states

| and the District of Columbia, ask-

ing parties to pledge abolition of

substitution of the:

the spoils system and establishment of the merit system, are to be placed in evidence.

Miss Mary Sluss,

D.H. Rothrock Jr. Set Nuptial Date

The marriage of Miss Mary Estelle |

Sluss and David A. Rothrock Jr.

Bloomington, is to take place at 4 ‘| Saturday, July 18, at the Taber-

nacle Presbyterian Church. Announcement of the wedding date was made Saturday night at a bridge party given by Mr. and Mrs. ‘Ellis "Edward Sluss, parents of the bride-to-be. Among ° out-of- town ‘guests were Mrs. D. A. Rothrock, Mrs. Robert E. Bates, Misses Jeane Barrett and Mary Siebenthal, all of Blooming-

“doors summer ‘months.

: Sports that take players out of are ' popular during - the

1. Miss Olaire Patten, daugh-

ter of Mr..and Mrs. Hughes Pat-

> ten; a8 she paddles around a swim-

Taylor-Oakes Wedding Rites

to Be Held 1 in Garden Today

ton; Mrs. J. H. Lesh, Huntington; |

Miss Mary Dorothy Johnson, Vincennes; Mrs. William Moorman, Westfield, and Mrs. Jerry Murnhan, New Augusta. Other guests were Mesdames Thomas Arnold, Vance C. Hall, Max Lewis, Gordon M. Raeburn, Donald R. Mote, Max Fritz, Frank M. Wright and Norman Babcock and Misses Josette Yelch, Mary Love

Hewlett, Dorothy Thompson, Grace |;

‘Wierick, Evelyn Bentley, Claribel Davidson, Mary Agnes Nurre, Jean Miller, Jane Diddel, Peggy Lee Bridges, Inez Jeffries, Gene Porteus, Alice Miller and Zeralda Frick.

Sage Chapel, Cornell, Is Scene of Baker-Genung Vow Exchange

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Baker Jr. are taking a wedding trip through New England before returning on Aug. 15 to make their home here. Mrs. Baker, before her marriage Saturday at Sage Chapel, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. ¥,, was Miss Dorothy Cooper Genung, daughter of Dr, and Mrs. Terrell T. Genung, Ithaca. Mr. Baker's parents reside

Here.

The bride's uncle, thé Rev. E. S. Genung, ‘Stanley, Wis, officiated. Prof. William OC. Ballard Jr. played the bridal ‘music. While the wedding party left the chapel univere sity chimes were played.

Others in Party

Miss Theodora Sharrocks, New York, maid of ‘honor, wore a pale green mousseline de soie gown and carried yellow roses. John David Baker, the bridegroom’s brother, was bést man. David Purzelt, New Haven, Conn.; Carl Dunham, New Milford, Conn. and Harley Riley, Ithaca, were ushers. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a white mousseline de sole gown over white satin, a} tulle veil falling from a lace cap.

ELEANOR SCUDDER JACK RIGG’S BRIDE

Mr. and. Mrs. Jack A. , on

| their return from ‘a motor rip, are to be 86 home at 460°E. Washing- §

OR MISS EARLE “Sort mies

{She carried a bouquet -of gardenias and lilies of the valley, Mrs. Genung’s gown was of periwinkle blue crepe and her corsage of white roses. Mrs. Baker's gown was of beige embroidered net over brown taffeta, worn with a Token rose corsage. Reception Is .Held -The reception following the cereony was held at Willard Straight a Out-of-town’ guests included the bridegroom’s grandparents, Mr. and

0. Sidney Stout, Indianapolis; Mrs. Viola Hart, Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Purzelt and Mary Anne, New Haven, Conn.; Misses Florence Togan,- Marion Woodbury, Luella Pease, Great Barrington, Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Paish, Albany, N. Y.; Misses Miriam and Harriet Hubbard, Fitchfleld, Mass. The bride is a Cornell graduate and did graduate work at Yale University. Mr. Baker was graduated from Ohio State University and ths Yale law school. He is a member of Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity.

Bridesto-Be

is | 921 Grande-av. ie fireplace was : palms and baskets of Fosse aad or:

Miss Barbara Oakes, who is “to become. the bride of Wendall Charles - Taylor -at 4:30 today at her home, 4419 Washington-blvd, is to walk from the sun porch .on a carpet of ‘white, through the garden, to a birch bark kneeling ‘bench. She is to advance to the altar on the arm of her father, Mansur B. Oakes. In the setting massed with shrubbery and summer flowers, a: rustic arch covered with Dorothy Perkins roses is to be the scene of the ceremony. Surrounding it is a narrow planting of forget-me-nots, pansies and. variegated phlox. ’ - Dr. George Arthur Frantz of the First Presbyterian Church is to officiate. The. bride, who is being married on her parents’ twenty-sixth wedding anniversary, is to wear a white

PROGRAM IS FIXED BY WAR MOTHERS Marion - County Chapter, Ameri-

can War Mothers, is to give a lunch tomorrow at the Cohimbia

Club in honor of Mrs, E. May Hahn,

national fourth vice president, and Mrs. W. 8. Norris, Frankfort, state president. Mrs. Gertrude Lowell, Capitol

City Chapter. president, ‘also is to}: Mrs. J. R. Fenstermaket,: Dayton, | be

a guest, Mrs, Clara May Pohlman is to preside. Following the luncheon Dr. Maud Jones, Americanization chairman, is to give a patriotic program in commemoration’ of ‘flag day. Mrs. Clyde Burks: and Miss Marjorie Bpesicer are to sing and readings are to be given by Miss June Gardner.

MARY LOU ROBBINS FETED AT SHOWER

marriage to Charles Scott Padgett

is to take place June 28, was honor | guest at a personal shower given | Miss Elfreda Grande, i

Saturday by : _banked with

| Driniums fo form a bridal altar for

: ne: nclided ‘Meadin © | ces Honderich, Tom Dwyer, Carl |

Pudge and Mes Kathrin

tulle veil’ with cap of Duchess lace.

and orange blossoms, belonging. to Mrs. Addison Parry. . Her gown of

white satin is fashioned along Prin-

cess lines with Dolman sleeves, ‘She is to carry an arm bouquet of whi roses and lilies of the valley. Her only attendant, Miss .ne Moore, has chosen:to wear peach chiffon over peach satin, contrasted with blue accessories. Her flowers are to be blue delphiniums. Countess Vandal roses, token, ‘Dorothy -Perkins ‘roses and lilies, tied with delft blue ribbon streamers. ; Delford Drummond, Elkhart, a classmate of Mr, Taylor's at Notre Dame: University, is to be best man. The. Dauner. trio is to furnish

music throughout the ceremony-and. during. the garden reception which

is to follow.. The: garage is to ba

transformed by floral decorations |

into a summer house. and refreshments are to be served from there. Bamboo - trellises covered with rambler roses are to cover the outer walls. On. either side of the serving table old stone vases .are to stand, filled with Dorothy Perkins roses, delphiniums and Shasta daisles,’ The wedding cake is to. be served on cake stands, covered with masses of flowers and maiden hair fern. The punch table is to be are ranged with garlands of smilax and grapes. v . ‘The couple is fo leave -immediately. on a motor trip in the north. The bride is going away in a linen lace ensemble of May wine color, worn with peach and whité accessories. - Affer July 1 they are to be at home at 2725 N. Meridian-st. ‘Miss Oakes i§ a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma -Sorority and Mr, Taylor belongs to Phi Delta Theta

Fraternity.

Out-of-town guests here for the

‘wedding are Mrs. Oakes’ cousins and

Miss Blanche Barney

‘and Miss. Bertha Barney, Detroit;

Mr.- and Mrs. A. L. Taylor, ‘Cedar Rapids, and Mr. Te Me Mrs. Delford Drummond, - Elkhart.

Wed Recently

‘are on vacation.’

ming pool, in a home-made kayak, ‘is anticipating a vacation at Ak-O-Mak, a girls’ camp in the Mus-

'koka Lakes region, Ontario, Can-

ada. She is to be among the I. A. C. swimmers to appear in water exhibitions and games at High-

‘land Golf and Counfry Club at

the I. A. C.’s “sunshine and water

: carnival” Thursday.

2. Misses Mary Ellen Gartland, ‘Louise Argus and‘ Mary Catherine Sexton (left to right) are St. Mary-of-the-Lake fresh= ‘men who enjoy golfing while they Miss Gartland (left) tells her two classmates how she handles her clubs. : 38. Miss Mary Louise and ‘Miss Frances Fuller (left to right) - enjoy the whirling swing at High- - land Country Club. Miss Fuller is a St. Mary’s graduate and Miss

Losey is an academy student.

Misses Jane Keach, Frances “Rollis, Mary Louise Keach and

- Marguerite Bernatz are other St. “Mary's Students. on vacation.

“| Frances. . yesteokt: | Henry, Schmidt; flower, Robert, Heuslein. and, Mrs. N. i MoLoathe] Emigholz; mem--

Leaders Named for Delta Zeta - Work Next Year

Mrs. Guy Harrison Harrison Gale, Indianapolis Alumnae of Delta Zeta Sorority president, has announced Sorumiioes for next year's activi--ties “They are: Ways and means, Mesdames George Buskirk, Robert Platte, Dorothy Duesenberg Cassady, Robert Armstrong and Miss .| Blanche .. Sizelove; program, . Miss bridge, Mrs,

lin and Miss Riith Emi

| bership, Mesdames J. W. . Tucker,

Thomas Grinslade and Herbert

Hartman; placement bureau, Mrs. Joe Kettery; calling, Mrs, Henry Talbott; ‘magazine subscriptions, Mrs. “Platte. The club entertained with a bridge and: tea recently at. Mrs. Noble Hiatt’s home in honor of members who were graduated from Butler University this month. She was assisted by Mrs. Robert Allen and Miss Pearl Bartley. Mrs. Gale talked on arrangements for the national convention to be held in Asheville, N. C., June 29 to July 3.

YORK, June

graphic career.

‘Tonight’s Dinner

"to Close Season

Monument Chapter 549, Order of the Eastern Star, is to close its session’s activities tonight with a dinner at 6, at Which the chapter is ‘fo. bé presented with a labyrinth floor cloth as a gift from Monument Lodge 657, ; Candidates to be initiated are Mrs. Otte Cox, Judge and Mrs. Wilfred Bradshaw, Mrs. Leah Schild

mejer, and Mrs, Esther Frankowitz. Mrs. Frederickau Witoff is to be received by. affiliation. Officers who are to participate in the conferring of degrees are Mrs. Ella Levin, worthy matron; Otto ‘Cox, worthy patron; Mrs. Ella Berger, associate matron; Maurice Tavel, associate patron; Mrs. Goldie Freeman, secretary; Mrs. Esther Fogel, treasurer pro tem for Mrs. Rachael Domont. - Others are to be Mesdames Florence ‘Hérrmann, Rose. Deutscher, Sarah ‘Rose; Bertha Melman, Florence Boyer, Dora Tavel, Mary Va“linetz, Zena Davis; Nellie Barnett, and Miss Patsy Worthall. Mrs. Mamie ‘Passmore, organist;

Lefkovits is to be soloist. Mrs. Hermann is in charge of dinner‘arrangements.

—| BOOSTERS ARRANGE “PROGRAM FOR JULY

1 Riviera Boosters Club members have received announcement of the .Social program for July. A dance-is to be given July 3, and breakfast swims have been planned for July 5 and July 19. A picnic is to be held on the club grounds July 15.

arrangements for a breakfast swim and dance July 4 Miss Dorothy Schilling and Miss Olava Feist are co-chairmen, and are to be assisted ‘by Theodore Weakley, Harvey Rogers Jr. and Wilbur Nagley. ?

Y. w. GC. A. CLASS ~ TO GO ON TRIP

.Membezs of. the. class conducted at the ¥, W. C. A. for home women

at 8 tomorrow for a trip to Brown County by. chartered bus. The group is to make a side trip to Bear Wallow, to the home of Marcus Dickey, biographer of James Whitcomb Riley. There is to be a picnic at noon in the Brown County State Park, where a talk is to be given by one of the Brown County artists. Class instructors are to accompany the group, and former class members have been: invited to join. it. Carl C:-Graf-is-to meet the party. at

Nashville to conduct it through the art gallery.

E. E. N eal to Address Indiana

Women’ S G. 0.

E E. Neal, Noblesville, Republican nominee . for state auditor, who is fo be the principal speaker at the

regular monthly meeting of the In- |:

diana Women’s Republican Club at

12 Thursday in the Columbia Clilb,

has announced as his topic, “The Crusade Is On.” ' Mrs. Henry R. Campbell is to preside. Mrs. Grace Urbans Reynolds, national committeewoman, is to be honor guest, and Mrs. Harry E. Bars nard, legislative chairman, is to discuss ‘the merit system ‘plank, spon-

ONE MAIN COLOR SCHEME ADVISED

The most economical as well as satisfactory way to plan a summer wardrobe is to decide on one main color -schéme, then to - accessories to Jeng. coler and interest. . For instance, a navy ‘blue baby

swagger coat of woolen or shark-|:

printed silk dress with a in it, one navy

P. Club Meeting

sored by ¢ the League ‘of Women Voters. Mrs. Charles Breeéce, IndianaApolis, is to sing. Indianapolis hostesses are to he Mesdames August : Soutter, chairman; Ethel Dennis, Sarah Earnst, Homer Elliott, Mart White, J. B. Smith, George Wilson, Arthur R. Robinson, Joseph E. Hartman, W. B. Peak, Bertram ' Malone, - William Henry Harrison, Tom McNulty, Pyrle E. Hughes, Oren W. Dickey, Hazel Workman, Harry Stitle and Miss Jessie Levy. © Out-state hostesses are to be Mesdames Raymond Greely, Muncie; Ethel Smith, Crawfordsville; Clara Roudebaugh, Greenfield; Ivan Morgan, ‘Austin; E. BE. Neal, Noblesville; Raymond Springer, Connersville; Ida McClellan, East Chicago; Mable V. Bible, New Richmond; William Swain, Pendleton;.. Joseph H. Slane, Lafayette: David R. Bceott, Linton; Miron Hamilton, Austin.

Gary; Norman J. Lasher, Seymour; Alfred E. Evans Bloomirigton; Tea vis Williams, a loom Clara B Ulen, Scottsburg; Clifford D. "Comb. South Bend; Abigail Paulline, Shoals! John A. Sabo, Gary, and Misses Merle Burdge, Portland, and Leorah G. Walls, Danille. /Others- are to be Mesdames ollie Overton, Plainfield: io C. O. Jones Winchester; © Katherine Sg

| Andessons: 4nd Pay Holman, Roch. ! i 5 musa ye 1 genes AnD

| ST. ppc rr 1370 STAGE PARTY |

for O.E.S. Group

has arranged music and Miss Esther |

The Royal Reveliers are making.

each Tuesday ‘morning are to leave

Also Mesdames Joseph B. Kyle, |.

Came to This City for Training; a Returned With Job--and Fiance

Fammy.S. Bwesiity, He Head of Own Firm, Estimates She Has Recorded 70,000,000 Words at 1155 Public Gatherings.

- BY LAURA LOU BROOKMAN : NEA Service Staff Correspondent 22.—Fanny 8. Sweeney, New York, who is to take notes at the Democratic National convention tomorrow in Phila delphia, had special coaching in Indianapolis when she: began her-steno-

. When she takes down the words which open the sessions, it’ will mark the 1156th convention she has attended as an official reporter. At 15, she already was & stenographer. When she decided to learn a stenotypic method of taking dictation, she was 50 successful that the company manufacturing the device |

offered to enter her in a national shorthand reporters’ contest. First, though, they wanted her to go to Indianapolis for special coaching.

Came Home With ‘Fiancee

Fanny wanted to_go. . Her mother consented only. when 17-year-old Fanny, who, had, never. been away from home alone, promised not to go out with any Jou men When she was in Indianapolis Fanny promised. She ‘made the trip and came back with- first prize in. the .contest, a gold medal, a » job and a fiance.

: She married him, too. He 18d. Lee

: Sweeney. He was the first person

she had met in Indianapolis, assist ‘ant to the president of the ‘steno type firm, who. had been sent to meet her at. the train. They now have -a 17-year-old :daughter. She's been going to “conventions for 22 years, has .averaged one a week. . Mrs. Sweeney estimates that in that time she’s recorded about 70,000,000 words of platform oratory, She's met practically every . front page figure in the United States— from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Aimee Semple McPherson, Jack Dempsey and Nicholas Murray Butler. Knows how they ‘talk’ and little personal mannerisms ‘that escape the aver age observer. : It's’ Mrs. ‘Sweeney's ‘business to take down everything— EVERYTHING--a speaker says and she doesn’t miss a thing

Went to Night School

She’s been in this business since, at 17, she: decided to: go to night school and learn to write short hand by machine. Today she is president of the Master Reporting Company, organized by herself, with offices in New York, Chicago, Cleveland and Washington. . Members of her staff frequently have been sent to. Vienna, Paris, London and Havana to report: cone ventions: . : Mrs. Sweeney herself, with three assistants, will: be on: duty at the : Democratic convention. Slightly under average : height soft-spoken, smiling, Mrs.- Sweeney's manner belies: the fact that she has shattered world stenographic rece ords, can take down a speech faster than the fastest speaker can talk, is'accustomed to working under fev~ erish strain. ;

It’s Speedy. Work There's ‘a good deal more to cone

vention reporting, Mrs. Sweetiey will: “| tell you, than® pushing (down levers

A tater FepOtteE” WMS bay * “A ‘mas réporter, He ‘says, ‘must be” aplé: er #t least 250 words" a ‘minute. Qften those words are, technical. “If” it if. a medical convention, the. reporter must be able to take down, without stutter ing, such words as ‘laryngological’, To be late on an assignment is a cardinal crime. If, through some absolutely unavoidable _circumstance, a ‘reporter is late, she can noj interrupt proceedings to ask to have speakers identified. Instead, she will note on her copy, ‘The Mani” ‘With Brown Necktie,’ or ‘Gentleman With a Wart on his Nose’ Then, at the end of the session, she will learn the names.” One of "Mrs." Sweériey’s tests for prospective employes is a list of 15 words to be spélled. She worked out

{the list herself, finds it valuable.

Here are the words: Potato, ‘cemetery, symmetry. viewe ing, agreeable, controversy, parallel, ‘principles, emblematic, interrogative, luminous, foretell, caress, cane on, ‘assiduity. a

H. MAX HEALEY BACK FROM CUBA H., Max Healey, son-of Colonel and Mrs, George H. Healey, 2715 N. Meridian-st, has arrived home from Havana, Cuba, where he has been: instructor of English and at Ruston Academy: for the last year, Mrs, Healey has joined her husband here for the summer. Mr, Healey is to attend Butler Univer sity summer school and is to return to Havana .in_' September where he and Mrs. Healey are to teach in Ruston Academy,

ETS GILT (TT