Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 July 1937 — Page 13

FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1087 City Women Prepare for

Shoot Meet

State Trapshooters’ Event Opens Today at Carmel Club.

By MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Many Indiana women are donning shooting jackets and oiling up their guns this week-end. They haven't joined the “G-Men,” | as you might be led to believe, but | are lining up as contestants in the | Indiana Trap Shooters Association's | 43d champion tournament which is being held today, tomorrow and Sunday at the Carmel Gun Club, | Carmel. Preliminaries were held | yesterday. Local interest among trap shoot- | ing enthusiasts runs high since this | is the first time in many years that the state championship meet has been held near Indianapolis. Entrants Listed Among the local women who are engaging in many of the trap shooting events are Mesdames C. J. Stumph, Rex Dawson, Charles Shipp, R. W. Tubbs and Squire Engler. Mrs. W. Hathaway Simmons, a nationally known trap and skeet shot, who won the women's championship two years ago, will be missed in the contest this year as she is vacationing in Wyoming with her family. Among the Carmel women who are to shoct are Mesdames George Cass, O. J. Holaday, C. M. Donahue, and -Fred Strattan. A score of other ferfnine trap shooters from all parts of the State have registered for the event. Many association members’ wives who ‘do not participate in the sport have accompanied their husbands to Carmel to cheer from the side- | lines.

Bridge Play Arranged A bridge program has been arranged for those who may tire of | being mere spectators. The women | competed in their own game over | card tables this afternoon and will | play again tomorrow afternoon in| the Lincoln Room at the Lincoln | Hotel. Mrs. R. C. Jenkins, Indianapolis | and Mrs. C. M. Donahue, Carmel, | are the hostesses for these events. Prize awards are being offered and many a husband who has lost his chance for a trap shooting award may be consoled by the fact that his | wife will carry home a “trophy.”

Miss Jane Blake Party Hostess For Sue Bentey

Miss Jane Blake, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Blake, 615 Highland Irie, entertained at luncheon today for her house guest, Miss Sue Benfey, Sheboygan, Wis. | The table was decorated with summer flowers. Appointments were in the color scheme of yellow and green. The hostess was assisted by 1er mother. Guests included Misses Betly Beasley, Louise Brandt, Marie Stegemeier, Betty Whitaker, Nora Schiltges and Margaret Wells. Miss Blake is to accompany her guest home. Miss Blake is to make her debut July 29. She is also to visit school friends in Chicago before returning home. Both Miss Blake and Miss Benfey | were graduated in June from| Stephens College, Columbia, Mo.

Program Funds To Go to School

Proceeds of a performance by George Purves, magician, sponsored by the Pi Beta Phi Alumnae Clab at 10:30 a. m., Aug. 10, in Block's Auditorium, are to go to the sorority Settlement School, Gatlinburg, Tenn. Mrs. Robert S. Wild is general chairman, assisted by Mesdames Irvin Palmer, B. C. Lewis and R. D. Pritchard. Ten teams are to be engaged in selling tickets: Captains include Mesdames John I. Goldthwaite, Truman Hoover, Hollis Leedy, Harry Morton, Scott Waldon, Buford Cadle, C. Norman Green, George Herman Boots, Heber Williams and Lee Fox.

Mind Your Manners

Test vour knowledge of correct social usage on answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. May a spoon be used to test the temperature of a cup of coffee? 2. Are small pickles eaten with the fingers? 3. When does a guest who has finished eating place his napkin on the table? 4 If a guest is obliged to leave the table during a meal, whose permission does he ask? 5. Should a dinner guest thank both the host and hostess for their hospitality?

What would you do if— You are with a group of persons whose conversation seems dull to you— A. Dominate the conversational stage yourself? B. Show the persons how stupid their remarks really are by holding them up to the light of ridicule? C. Try to learn something from some person there?

Answers

1. Yes, but after that the spoon is left in the saucer and the ccffee is drunk. 2. Yes, 3. After the hostess has placed her’s there, 4, The hostess’. 5. Yes.

Best “What Would You Do” solution C. (Copyright, 1037, NEA Service, Inc.)

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ich

: These Five Were Married in

Holiday Clothes Must Serve for Varied Purposes

| By MARY FENTRESS ARIS, July 16.—Holiday clothes preesnt only one problem. They should be of noncrushable material | that will not wrinkle in constant packing and unpacking. Most of a holiday is spent in wearing beach or sports clothes during the day, but there is a need for some sort of practical suit for motoring, lunching out or walking about town. A practical suit in lightweight wool is best. It should be simple and tailored but not too “sporty” for lunching in a smart hotel. A frilly

blouse of organdy, a tailored blouse in pique or linen fits the bill for outings, while cotton or lightweight wool sweaters are more comfortable and suitable for cool days. Two bathing suits are hest for the beach, as there is nothing quite so disagreeable as climbing into a clammy suit that has not yet dried after yesterday's swim. A sun suil of pique or uncrushable linen consisting of shorts and a bandeau top is essential, as is a matching coat to be worn over the sun suit or over a bathing costume. The newest beach coats are long and fitted, have long sleeves and a small turn-over collar. Evening gowns are the most important part of the holiday wardrobe, and chiffon is the most practical material as it shakes out easily. Organdy is crisp and cool looking and is not too unpractical as wrinkles are easily eliminated with a few strokes of a warm iron. For a wrap, uncrushable black velvet in wit form of a full cape or coat is est.

Paris ‘Souvenirs’ Make Bid in Styles

Now the Paris exposition is also making its influence felt in the men’s shops. One of the largest New York stores starts the style ball rolling for men with some very interesting neckties, suspenders and handkerchiefs, all “souvenirs de Paris.” The suspenders are of tubular silk, imprinted with the Eiffel Tower, while on others spaced coin dots show the ancient sailing vessel that appears on the great seal of the City of Paris. Handkerchiefs have colored grounds with printed decorations showing the Eiffel Tower and the catch-phrase of a popular Parisian song, “Ca, c'est Paris!”

Girl Reserve Official Sails for England

Miss Jenna Birks, Girl Reserve secretary of the Y. W. C. A, sailed from Montreal today on the S. S. Duchess of New York for a tour of England and Scotland. The tour is made in connection with the annual midsummer party of higl school Girl Reserves Interclub up. Miss Birk is to leave the Sak of the local association on her ret after eight years of service here) She is to be associate ry of the Cincinnati

aN

Pleasant Run Blvd., hostess. LOD

in July. Masonic Temple Boosters. munity House.

EVENTS CORORITY Theta Sigma Delta Sorority. Mon. eve. Mrs. Harriett Mills, 5288

Ladies Auxiliary to the United Commercial Travelers will not meet

8 p. m. Sat, Open to the public.

GES

Dance. Cumberland Com-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES mmer Ceremonies

Two Women and Secretary

Stage 500 P

By HELEN

arties ach Year

WORDEN

Times Special Writer

NEW YORK, July 16.—“My earli15st recollection Is hanging over the stairs and watching parties go on,” said Mrs. Robert Littell when asked what prompted her to start an en-| tertainment bureau. “I always | wanted to give them myself.”

She and Mrs. Chester Burden are rornering the debutante party market. They have been averaging 500 varties a year since 1929, when they first went into business. Among ‘hose they managed in 1935 were {ebuts of J. P. Morgan’s two grandiaughters, Virginia Pennoyer and Tane Nichols; the coming-out party f Marne Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Lloyd Smith: Mrs. Robert Bacon's dance for her two rranddaughters, Phyllis Whitney snd Martha Baron; the party Mr. rnd Mrs. Cornelius Bliss gave for Kathleen Harriman and Marne Smith, and the two separate debuts Marshall Field and his first wife, Mrs. E. Marshall Field, gave for their daughter, Barbara. Last December, Mrs. Burden and Mrs. Littell supervised 100 dinners, fances and supper parties for cure rent debutantes. The two women and one small secretary work in a far corner of the fourth floor at Saks’ Fifth Ave. And when I say work, I mean work. All three were tlued to telephones when I dropped mn to check up on the debutante arty business. “I should say the number of narties just about doubled this De‘ember, wouldn't you, Eleanor?” Mrs. Littell asked Mrs. Burden.

Parties in Good Taste

“Easily,” answered her partner, as the shifted from the telephone to 1 waiting customer. When you look at these two women and consider their backrround, you know the parties they manage would be in good taste. Mrs. Burden, who is slim, smart and staccato, with blond hair and a juick way of speaking, wore a chic slack cloth dress and gay, flowertrimmed hat. She was a Cotton of Boston. Her husband is a son of Mrs. Joseph Warren Burden, of 28 E. 63d St. Aaccording to his mother, this sranch of the Burden family, like the I. Townsend and James A. Burdens, came from Troy. It was Mrs. James A. Burden, now Mrs, Richard Tobin, who turned her Long Island home over to the Ouke of Windsor when he visited the United States as Prince of

Tall, dark athletic, Mrs. Littell, {s the less sericus of the two. Like

| her sisters, Mrs. Sidney Howard and |

3.

Mrs. Thomas Finletter, I suspect her of being something of a tease. This quality the girls probably inherit {rom their father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Damrosch, who would never be guilty of being banal. To give a party is as simple as hreathing for the Damrosches. “I've heen brought up on them,” Mrs. tsiittell repeated. She is married to a man who also likes parties himself and has a sense of humor. Mr. Littell and I first met when we were both writing for she Sunday World—he in the dramatic department, and I on the metropolitan section. Although I know his name as well as my own, [ am always confusing it with that of Bert Lytell, the actor. Like a bicyclist heading straight for a tree, [ called him Bert Lytell again the other day!

She Never Worries

“You and the Western Union,” he said. “I wish I were Bert Lytell. [ wouldn't mind having his income.” Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lytell have four children. Their youngest was Horn a month ago. “Mrs, Lytell is the most serene person I've ever met,” said Howland Auchincloss, the lawyer, recently. “I have never seen her worried or upset.” Which may explain why she takes the million troublesome details of a 100 parties so easily.

Give Care to Color Of Window Shades

Here's a tip or two that might be helpful when it comes time to equip your windows with new shades. Be sure that the rollers are of seasoned wood, and that the cloth is of good, closely woven quality, not filled with clay or starch that will wash out with the first rain, leaving crinkling and pin holes, ~ And watch the color; an eye specialist says the color of window shades can rest or irritate the eyes. Don’t use white in a bedroom, for instance, unless it's the opaque, nolite type. Blue and green are hoth restful to the eyes.

Returns to Home Mrs. Charles M. Kitchell has returned to her home, Cleveland Heights, O., after spending a few days as the guest of her brother, Dr. Robert I, Blakeman and Mrs. Blakeman, 3848 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. Kitchell, who is a trave eler and lecturer, was en route from a trip to Mexico. She is director of a lectufe series, “Wings of Adventure.”

time in San mite.

1. In a pretty midsummer wedding ceremony, Miss Dorothy M. Davis, daughter of Mrs. Merle Davis, became the bride of Robert S. Butterfield July 10 at the home of the bridegroom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert P. Butterfield. (Photo by Mooresfield Studio.) 2. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wright returned recently from a wedding trip to Canada and are to be at home after Sept. 1 at 37 S. Bradley St. Mrs. Wright was Miss La Verne Heath, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Heath, before her marriage June 26. (Photo by Dh Cho-Rehiex Studio, L. S. Ayres 0.) 3. Miss Louise Rudbeck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Rudbeck was married July 10 Delano Dresbach in the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. (Photo by Photocraft Studio.) 4. A June 25th wedding was that of Miss Elizabeth Coale, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George G. Coale, to John W. Parker. (Photo by Dexheimer-Carlon Studio.) 5. Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Mazelin are at home at 3550 N. Meridian St. Mrs. Mazelin was Miss Rosemary Cullen, daughter of Mrs. J. A. Porter, before her marriage July 6. (Photo by Dex-heimer-Carlon Studio.)

Bridal Supper A rranged for Couple Tonight

Appointments of summer garden flowers surrounding a miniature bride and bridegroom are to

form the table decorations for a |

bridal buffet supper to be given tonight by Thomas H. Kaylor. His daughter, Miss Elizabeth Jane Kaylor, and her fiance, John Harold Wright, are to pve the honor guests, Their marriage is to take

place at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the |

1rvington Presbyterian Church, The supper is to be held at the Kaylor home following the wedding rehearsal. Other guests will include Miss Mary Lou Watts, Milwaukee; Misses Mary Alice Kaylor, Barbara Harrison, Elizabeth Howard, La Verne Wagener, Grace Fairchild, Dorothy Aldag, irs. James D. Kaylor, and Clarence Elber:, Clarence Schwartkopf, Donald Wright, Charles Bartleti, Jean Ochiltree, Frank BE, Wright and Leland Wright.

400 [Expected at Riviera Party

More than 400 children are expected to attend the junior party at 8:15 p. m. today at the Riviera Club. Mrs. Wayne Swope is arrangements chairman assisted by Mrs. Varjo Anderson and Mrs. J. F. Heidenreich. Gaylen Goodwin and his orches{ra are to play for the midsummer dances Saturday and Sunday nights sponsored by the Reveliers and the Boosters Club respectively. Dancing is to begin at 9:15 p. m. Guests are to promenade around the swimming pool during intermission. Charles Strattman is Revelfers president and Clyde Montgom=ery is Boosters Club chairman,

Visitors Are Given Riviera Club Party

Mrs. Robert Schmunck and daughters, Shirley and Sally, are here from Cleveland as the guests of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Little. They were entertained with a luncheon and swim party today at the Riviera Club by Mrs. Herman Lauter, 3046 Washington Blvd. Among other guests were Mrs. Henry C€. Churchman Jr. and daughter, Barbara, and Laddie and Johnnie Lee Lauter.

Returns From Coast Mrs. Edmund H. Bingham, 2715 N. Meridian St., has returned from a six weeks’ trip to California with her three sisters. They are: Mrs. Kathleen Snowstringer, Detroit; Mrs. W. J. Rush, Cincinnati and Mrs. Josephine Vetter, Pittsburgh. The party visited Mrs, Bingham'’s daughter, Mrs. Russell PF. Pierson fn Burbank, and also spent some Francisco

to

Horse Fans

Attracted By 3 Shows

Local Persons Plan to Attend Lexington | Exhibit.

Although local bridal paths are fairly deserted on sultry days, the interest of horse fans remains unaffected by the weather. Local exhibitors and spectators plan to be present at three shows just in the offing. A number of local horse folk are planning to attend the Lexington (Ky) Junior League Horse Snow, July 21-24, at the famous trotting track in that city. Included in the galleries are to be Mesdames Clayton O. Mogg, Margaret Feore, M. C. Piel, A. L. Piel, Alex Metzger and daughter, Dorothy, Miss Janet Rosenthal and Mr, and Mrs. Morris Roesner. A wide round of entertainment has been planned for the visitors at the show by the Lexington Junior League.

In competition for the $10,000 in cash awards and the trophies are to be six entries from the Fairmount Stables. Tillman Bubenzer is to show them.

Other Entries Listed

Among the large farms which are shipping entries to the show are the Dixiana Farm wtih its tanbark stars, the Spindletop Farm and the entries of the Robert Moreland farm, all of near Lexington. Mrs, Cleo George, Glad Acres Farm, Dallas, Tex., who won many prizes at the receut show at the R. H. Brown Stables, is to be among those showing from distant stables. A program of 30 classes is to attract exhibitors and spectators to the Muncie Horse Show on July 31 and Aug. 1. The bill arranged by Mrs. William H. ‘Ball and Seward B. Price, Muncie, includes classes for threb-gaited and five-gaited saddle horses, hunters and jumpers, saddle ponies, horsemanship and Arabians. Local entries include those of Dr. P. O. Bonham and his sons, Max and Chester, Algonquin Riding Club. Others are horses of Mrs. J. S. Williams, Miss Lucy Kaufman and Fred Sharp. The Cole County Fair, Charleston, 111, is to follow the Muncie show on Monday, Aug. 2. Indianapolis riding devotees are expected at the ringside. The R. M. Brown Stables’ hopes are divided between the Muncie show and the Charleston exhibit.

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. Austin H. Brown, { 4401 N. Illinois St., have returned from a month’s Mediterranean cruise on the S. S. Vulcania. They were accompanied by their daughter, Miss Virginia Brown, and Miss Elizabeth Watson. David Baker, Massachussetts Institute of Technology student in Boston, is to arrive July 25 to spend the remainder of the summer with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Baker, 3962 N. New Jersey St. He is to enter his senior year at M. 1. T. in the fall. Mrs. Ernest C. Barrett, 3173 N. Delaware St.; her sister, Miss Cora Fletcher, and Miss Florence Barrett are to spend the remainder of the summer at the Barrett cottage on Burt Lake. Miss Dorothy Dugan, Walter Shiels Jr. and William Shiels have left for Washington, where Miss Dugan is to visit her brother, Roger

i

Plights Troth

Photo by Photocraft Studios. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Miller, 5349 Washington Blvd, announce the engagement of their daughter, Joan, to James Potter, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Potter, 3109 N. Meridian St. The wedding is to take place at the home of the bride-to-be on Aug. 29.

Ship Covers for Furniture Add Color to Room

Cretonne and linen furniture covers have become so attractive that they are used in many homes throughout the year. In summer they are indispensable. Not only do they protect the upholstered furniture and save many hours of brush= ing, dusting and beating, but they brighten up rooms that might other wise look empty and bare. Of course, the furniture covers must be kept immaculate if they are to provide a cool and soothing atmosphere. Luckily that isn't the problem it used to be. Now that many of the loveliest fabrics are made with colors that are resistant to. water and sun, the furniture covers are included in the long list of household furnishings most housewives consign to the wash. Even if the fabric is guaranteed colorfast, however, it is best ‘to test a sample before washing the covers; or if possible, before they are made up. Simply squeeze a sample in clear, tepid water and let it dry. If the colors do not run in water, the pieces can be safely washed with mild soap. Mild Soap Used Like all colored pieces, furniture covers should be washed in an abun- | dant lather of mild suds which have been cooled to a luke-warm temperature. Only tepid water should be used throughout washing and rinsing. Never soak the covers in advance or leave them in the water longer than is necessary. If the suds are renewed by adding more soap as soon as they hecome flat and soiled, there will be no need for prolonged washing te remove the accumulated soil. After the final rinse, roll each piece in clean, absorbent towels or cloths for a moment, then hang in a shady place to ary. If the covers must be dried indoors, an electric fan placed at a safe distance, will hasten the drying. Iron while damp. Only when the covers are immac= ulately clean can you really appreciate their charm.

~ Garden Club Meets The North End Garden Club met at 2 p. m. today with Mrs. Foster V. Smith. Mrs. J. R. Spalding talked on “Summer Bloom in the

| Dugan.

Rock Garden.”

By Science Service

The test is one that the U, S.

tive cleaner for the teeth. These specifications, now adcpted for use, were reported here yesterday. Safety for the tissues of the mouth and the teeth was the first consideration, Next came the question of efficiency in removing foreign materials from the teeth. Last in importance was the matter of flavor or perfume, A toothpaste must not be excessively either alkaline or acid, it was decided. It must not be caustic. It must not contain arsenic or other poisons. Tt must have a preservative that will insure that it keeps in good condition until used. Twenty-five popular brands of toothpaste were tested against the specifications as adopted for use in Government purchasing. More than half failed to meet the requirements, Drs. Souder and Schoonover said. Hardening, separation of ingredients, and fermentation or spoiling were the most common faults. Some showed signs of chemical attack upon the tube container, and that was considered undesirable.

10 Failed On Scratching Ten toothpastes among those tested failed on the test for scratching. This test, as developed at the National Bureau of Standards, can be used by anyone who wants to be sure his dentifrice is not scratching the enamel of his teeth. A piece of glass and a piece of alloy metal the size and hardness of a five-cent piece are all that are needed for the experiment, First test the glass for hardness by rubbing the edge of the metal piece over it to be sure that the metal alone does not scratch the glass. Human enamel and glass both vary in hardness. The grade of soda-lime glass used in a noncorrosive microscope slide was found to be harder than any of the enamel tested at the Bureau. Place some of the toothpaste to be tested on the glass and rub again with the coin. If scratches result, then you may expect scratches on your teeth. This test is sentitive enough to detect one part of emery in one hundred thousand parts of paste, A mechanical device which can be

and Yose- |

Test Toothpaste tor Grittiness With Nickel and Piece of Glass

ATLANTIC CITY, July 16.—With a nickel and a piece of glass you

can make a simple test that will tell you whether your favorite toothpaste will scratch the enamel of your teeth.

Government requires for all tooth-

paste purchased and it was described at the meeting of the Amor. ican Dental Assocwation here by Drs. Schoonover, chemist, of the National Bureau of Standards. Uncle Sam buys quantities of toothpaste. 14,000 dozen tubes was contemplated, specifications for a safe and effec-*—

Wilner Souder, physicist, and Irl C.

When an order for some | a committee was appointed to write |

placed in a child's mouth to stop thumb-sucking was also reported to | the dental association by Dr. Earl | Swinehart of Baltimore, Children do not object to use of the device, Dr. Swinehart said, but | on the contrary look upon it as a good friend that relieves them of the responsibility of combating the

habit and of freeing them from the continuous scolding and disciplining to which they had been subjected by their parents. Thumb=-sucking should not be] lightly regarded as something that will be quickly outgrown, Dr. Swinehart emphasized. The habit not only causes crooked teeth, but is likely to result in mouth-breathing and many. attendant nervous habits “Surprisingly, the symptom most commonly noted was unsound sleep,” Dr. Swinehart said. “These children seldom slept throughout the night without partially waking several times. The awakening seemed to be in response to the unconscious urge of the habit, as indulgence of it was followed by re-

PAGE 18 House Party

Entertains Young Folk

Peggy Clippinger «and Brother Invite School Chums.

This week-end promises to be a lively one at the Foster Clippinger home, 3231 Washington Blvd. If the weather is scorching, the younger members of the family and their guests probably will be too busy to notice. Miss Peggy Clippinger, vacation ing from “Wellesley College, ‘Where she is a student, and her brother, Foster Jr., at home from Dartmouth College, are entertaining several of their respective school chums at a house party. Miss Winifred King, Cincinnati; Miss Anne Bollinger, Seymour, and Miss Edith Johnson, New York, all Wellesley students, and Don Bol« linger, Seymour, and Robert Fabray, Evanston, who attend Wharton School of Business, are among the house guests. Picnic Planned Tonight A picnic at Arlington Place, thes Charles W. Jewett farm, is on the docket for this evening's entertaine ment, Other local members of the younger set who will join the party will be Miss Anne Elliott and John Zankl, Swimming and sports activities at Woodstock Club will engage their attention tomorrow, with dinner and dancing at the club as a final windup of the day's program. Preceding the house party, Miss Bollinger entertained the young women yesterday with a luncheon at her home in Seymour. Sunday the crowd is to leave for a house party to be given by Miss King at her summer home in Hare bor Point, Mich.

Mrs. William Garrigues and son William III are visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rose Danner, 1030 W, 42d St.

n u Ld

Mrs. Romney L. Willson, who is traveling in Germany, writes that she has just completed a boat trip down the Rhine River. ; She plans to travel through the German countrysides this summer, and will remain in Munich next winter. Mrs. Willson's niece, Miss Martha Sillery, is occupying her

| apartment, 1310 N. Alabama St., in

in her absence.

Camp Fire Girls To Be Hostesses To Altrusa Club

Camp Fire Girls at Camp Delight are to prepare dinner tonight for members of the Altrusa Club. Miss Helen Nichols, Camp Fire executive secretary and an Alliusa Club member, is chairman of the

entertainment to be presented by campers following the dinner. Reports on the club's international convention held last month in Mexico Cily are to be made at the club meeting by Mrs. Guy A, Boyle, Miss Marie Schulz and Miss Edith Dickover, delegates. Mrs. Hammerbeck is chairman for the quarter. She is assisted by Misses Nichols, El'a Groninger, Margaret Hiles. Eunice Johnson, Jessie Jolly, Ruth Millie gan, Mary Perrott, Emily Jo Pizler and Mesdames Pearl Clarke, Myra | Clippinger and Georgianna Webe ber.

program

| Church Group Hears Address

Mrs. William Forsythe, 15 8. Emerson Ave. was hostess to the Woman's Auxiliary, St. Paul's Epise copal Church, at 1 p. m. Monday. “My Life in South America” was the subject of a talk by Mrs, Fred W. Dickens. The Blue Box of fering was taken, and the pro gram was concluded with a talk by Miss Flora Henzie, Assistant hostesses were Mrs, Merritt E. Woolf and Mrs. Terry H, Clifford.

sumption of sleep. Another condi« tion often noted among the aggravated cases was perverted or deficient appetite. In some of these, the habits were so appealing that they were preferred to meals, or meals were interrupted by them. “The persistent types are often termed high-strung or even problem children,” he said. “The chile dren have been continually harassed by scolding, shaming, drilling, and punishment. The effects of these measures have been to increase the nervous symptoms and to encourages deceit, resentment, and inferiority complex. The mechanical appliance recoms mended by Dr. Swinehart consists of a bar across the palate to which has been soldered spurs about an eighth of an inch in length.

dizzy spells, it is more than suffering from eyestrain.

go unchecked! Have your

DONT NEGLECT A HEADACHE

It you consistently have headaches, are nervdus, have Don't allow this condition to

that proper measures for relief can be taken.

Dr. J E KERNEL

TRACTION TERMINAL BLDG. FLOOR, COR, MARKET AND ILLINQIS STS.

probable that you may be

ayes examined at once, so

LI. 7600