Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1937 — Page 21

— AR”) {08 o%

FRIDAY, AUG. 217, 1987

\ {

Ex-Resident

Visits Here | During Trip 3

Mrs. Mary Van Winkle Ryan Takes Tour by | Land, Sea and Air.

By MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS |

In the midst of a summer of fas- | cinating conurasts in wavel Murs. | Mary van Winkle Ryan, Los An- | geles, Cal, has declarea "oid home | Weer’ nere in this cily where she | has spent most oi her lie. Alla remaining tor a few days as the] guest of Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Cox, | SUL N. Meridian st, she plans to be at the Marott Hotel tor a week. | Mrs. Ryan's visit here marks a | brief pause in an extensive wip | which she and her daughter, Miss | Katherine Langen, are making by | land, sea and air. Miss Langen, | who at present is visiting Martha | Washington Seminary schoolmates | in the East, expects to join her | mother here in 10 days. They then | plan to be the guests of Mrs. Ryan's | son, William Langen, in Chicago, | for a short stay before continuing | on a two-month motor trip to Can- | ada and on through the New ERg- | land states, | Following a boat trip on the 8S. S. | California from Los Angeles through | the Panama Canal to Havana, | Cuba, Mrs. Ryan and her daughter | flew to San Domingo last month, | There they were the guests of Mv. | and Mrs. James Scarf at their sugar plantation where the Scarfs have lived for 12 years. Mrs. Scarf is | well known as a former Indianapo- | lis resident and is the niece of Mrs. | S. GC. Parry, 3010 N. Meridian St. Reminisced of City Reminiscences of good times! spent in Indianapolis were frequent topics of conversation during their | stay there, Mrs. Ryan said. An- | other former Indianapolis resident was also a house guest at the Scarfs’ plantation home at the same | time. Mrs, Joseph McDowell, Lex. | ington, Ky., who was Miss Mae Bliss | before her marriage, made up the] other member of the Hoosier four- | some, “But there was no bridge playng,” Mrs. Ryan said, remembering the popularity of the game “back | home.” “It was much too hot for | that.” Afternoon teas among the Amer- | fcan colonists in San Domingo | were the principal social functions | which the guests attended with | their hostess Rode in Buggies

|

|

“It was in San Domingo that we | resorted to another mode of transportation,” Mrs. Ryan explained, as | she told of the quaint horse-drawn buggies which they used for travel in the tropics. Bicycling, too, is a favorite pastime among the younger set there, she said. A flight to Trinidad in a large Clipper ship was one of the air thrills which Mrs. Ryan and Miss Langen enjoyed after leaving San Domingo. There they boarded a West Indies cruiser for a more extended tropical trip and landed in New York only a few days ago.

Mildred Kritsch To Honor Sister

Luncheon Held for | | 1334 Reisner

Miss Mildred Kritsch is to entertain this evening with a Kitchen shower in honor of her sister, Miss Esther Kritsch, whose marriage to Vernon Neubauer will take place Sept. 5 at 3:30 p. m. in St. Pauls Evangelical Church. Guests are to be Breindl, Chris Sorenson, Shugert, Freeman Geer, Frank Kritsch, George Williams, Harry Glasson, Nelly Storm, Frank Haupt, Alfred Kritsch and Russell Tucker. Misses Leona Rugenstein, Elsie Wampner, Lucille Pasch, Edna Kritsch, Beulah Storm, Edith Luessow, Mildred Smith, Clara Suding, | Louise Suding, Emma Ries, Susanne Schmitz, Isabelle Robinson | and Edna White.

Mind Your M a nners

Mesdames Carl Richard

Test your knowledge of correct social usage by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. When a friend asks you to go some place in his car and on the wav srwops for gasoline, should you offer to pay for it? 2. Is it discourteous for a motorist to drive through a funeral procession? 3. Should & house guest monopolize the family radio? | 4. Should a house guest keep his bedroom neat? 5. Is & boy or girl of high school age expected to tip the servants in & house where he Is a guest?

What would you do ir— You have planned to go to a picture show with a friead and vou decide that you would like to have another friend go, too. - (a) Invite the second friend hoping the one with whom you had planned to ge won't mind? Ask the one with whom you had planned to go if you can bring the other person? Ask the second person another time when you have not made previous plans?

» 2 8

Answers

1. No, but you may pay for a meal eaten on the way. 3. Yes. 3. No, let the family tune in on the program they like, 4. Yes. 5. No.

Best “What Would You Do" solution—(c) or perhaps (b) if you are certain the person with whom vou planned to go wan't mind having someone else along.

(Copyright, 1937, NEA Service. Inc.)

| to-be,

given by Misses Trotha and Bertha |

| Eldridge.

| Church. (and Mrs, | Mich.

eon given last night in the Kop- | per Kettle. | pointments were | motif.

| Roberta Haskell, Emily Stine, Phyllis

| and Kathleen Behrman.

| Nancy

‘Chairman for

[ Rushville,

107%

a 5 po A

i INDIANAPOLIS. TIM

NMA AOL 3 NBA So: AR © AA nin

hu

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Coeds Enjoy Last Days of Summer

hs

Miss Florence Scott (left), Bruton enjoy the last of lazy |

Avrendonts For Wedd Ing Are Chosen

Jared Norsworthy, Cocoa, Fla, has been chosen to act as! | matron of honor for her sister, Miss Pauline Karnes, whose marriage to

Thomas A. Ressler Jr, is to take |

|

Murs.

| place at 4 p. m. Sept. 18 at the Tab- [ ernacle Presbyterian Church.

Miss Mary Lou Van Ness is to] be the only bridesmaid. Edward J Barrett is to be Mr. Ressler's best man, The ushers will include Jumes Marion Puett, Logansport; Harold M. Cumberworth, Eugene Foley Jr. and Robert H. White. Several prenuptial pavties have been plannea in honor of the bride- |

|

A miscellaneous shower is to be!

Wheeler Wednesday the Washington Hotel,

Miss Van Ness

night at

is to entertain | with a shower on the evening of ! Sept. 8 at her home, 3014 N. Cap- |

itol Ave, Another Party Set

Miss Ellen Robinson is to enter. | tain Sept. 11, at her home 3039 Lomond Ave. | Miss Karnes 1s the daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. Bertes W. Karnes, | Shelbyville Road. Mr. Ressler is | the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas | A. Ressler, Lafayette Road. |

Mrs. Mary P. D

Mrs. Henry A, Roberts and Mrs. | M. B. Hedges entertained with n| luncheon-bridge in the Roberts | home recently for Mrs. Mary P. | Dyson, Philadelphia, Pa., who has | been a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wisco. Mrs, Dyson is to return to Philadelbhia Monday. Guests at the | luncheon were Mesdames Allen Ti Fleming, Courtland Metsker, D. A. |

Robinson, Mary Hubbard and John Given,

yson |

Shower to Fete Norma Martin

|

| |

Miss Norma Martin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Martin, is to be honor guest at a bridal shower |

| tonight given in the home of Miss | Ruth Eldridge, 436 Alton Ave.

|

Cohostess with Miss Eldridge is to be Miss LaVerne Conway. They | | are to be assisted by their mothers, | Mrs. D. C. Conway and Mrs. E. R. Decorations and appoint- | ments are to be in the bridal col-

| ors, delphinium blue and pink.

Miss Martin is to be married to H. V. Kojola, East Chicago, Sept. 11 in the Grace Lutheran Evangelical Mr. Kojola is a son of Mr. Henry Kojola, Hibbin,

Pi Bet: ta 2 Phi Rush Luncheon Held

Miss Frances Watkins was chair- | man of the Pi Beta Phi rush lunch- | | 1 | |

Decorations and apin the colonial

Indianapolis active members at-| tending were Misses Zoe Thorson, |

Landis, Betty Higbee, Peggy Failing |

Out-of-town members attending were Miss Mary Louise Toby, Terre Haute; Miss Martha Mull and Mrs. Melvin Stine, Shelbyville, and Miss Waggoner, Rushville.

Dance Is Named

Miss Mary Elizabeth Pell is chairman of the dinner-dance to be given by young women students and alumnae of Stephens College tomorrow night at the Athenaeum.

and Miss Yvonne Desummer days before

| ley, | publicity; | and

| student Stephens, telephone,

| Clennon, | Riggs and Clifford Voges.

| Myers,

Tea Planned

For Wives Of Editors

Card Party to Be Main Women’s Event at French Lick.

The formal gardens of the French Lick Hotel are to be the scene of | a tea today for editors’ wives ate tending the Indiana Democratic | Editorial Association's outing at | French Lick, | The keynote social event [women is to be the card party | morrow afternoon in the lobby {the hotel, according to Mrs. | Finney, 3703 N. Meridian St, and | Mrs. Jack Dolan, Hartford City, co{chairmen of the women's arrange- | ment committee, A dance in the hotel lobby tonight {is to follow the tea. A banquet tomorrow night is to conclude the | sessions, | The Hoosier Sentinel trophy is to! |be awarded the winner of the golf | | tournament scheduled today, to be! | Jouowed by the air show this afternoon sponsored by Thomas Taggart. |

Aces to Perform Lieut. Joseph Mackey and his |

for VO= | of

LN

Dexheimer-Carlon Photos Mr. and Mrs. Willlam P. Rigdon, Danville, announce the engagement of their daughter, Virginia Lee, to Glen Safford Peters, New York. The wedding is to take place Sept. 5 at the First Methodist Church in Danville,

Frank Mrs.

Chantilla Earl White Jr, was Miss Druscilla Madeline Garske, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. BE. G. Garske, before her marriage Aug. 21 in her parents’ home. Mr. and Mrs. White are at home at 3126 College Ave,

EVENTS

SORORITIES

Alpha Theta Chi. 5:30 p. m. Sat. Brookside Park, Reunion. Theta Sigma Delta. 8 p. m. Mon, Mrs. Glenn Hendrickson, 1215 E. Michigan St., hostess,

os A

APE ARE LBA LAAN Hy A Se

| statement, | stand taken by Rep. Ibuis Ludlow

|

{Flying Aces are to be featured in | the show. Bleachers are to be erected in the Japanese Garden for the | timax Phat | Outdoor athletic show also to be | preparing to return to school at Indiana University | held today. | where they are members of Kappa Alpha Theta. | Wrestlers are to be Dan 0'Con- | Te | nor, Boston, and Dorv Roche, De-| |catur, Il. A battle royal with seven | (French Lick boys participating Is | to conclude the event, | At the editorial round table meet- / [ing at 10 a. m. tomorrow, Joseph [Craven is to speak on newspaper | photography, and Ray Smith is to | discuss newspaper publicity. Wray E. Fleming is to speak on newspaper legislation and Willlam Cosgrove, Chief Examiner, State Board of Ac- | counts, is to talk on legal advertising.

CARD PARTY

White Rose Drill Team. I. A. of B. R. T. 2 p. m. today. Whitehill,

Banner-

PROGRAM

Frances Willard unit, W. C. T. U. 2 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Gertrude Sherman, 1313 Roache St. hostess, Installation of officers.

|Parent- Teacher Committee Named by Mrs. W. W. Hadley

Mrs. W. W. Hadley, Indianapolis Council of Parent-Teacher Associations’ president, has announced appointments of the advisory committee and department heads for the year. The advisory committee is composed of School Superintendent De- | Witt Morgan, Miss Belle Ramsey, School 76 principal; Miss Verena Dt EJen BRR! 50 principal, and Mrs. Edward J. - Thompson and Mrs. E. itchell OO —_— eae

Department chairmen are: Mrs.| rua . | Hadley, extension; Mrs. Matthews Showa Tonight ' T o Do Honor to |

| Winter, health; Mrs. Frank Lentz, historian; Mrs. George A. Plats Alice W oolling

City Student Wins Fellowship For Year's

Some girls go to college to learn social poise, care of four awkward years in a girl's life, Others go because they want to be mentally interesting to their associates. actually want to learn something, so that they can be themselves . and useful along with it. Miss Jeanette LeSaulnier comes in the latter class.

Governor to Speak

Among speakers at the banquet tomorrow night are to be Governor | Townsend, Rep. Eugene Crowe, Bedford, representing the Indiana lower {house delegation in Washington, and | | Senators Minton and VanNuys. | Mr. Finney is in charge of ar- [ rangements for the outing and Mr, {Dolan is president of the associa- |

| tion,

ago she has burned the midnight

oil with one main objective in pl Hunts WwW ill Hold

| juvenile protection; Mrs, ig | | Manthei, legislation; Mrs, | Roberson, literature; Mrs. Tinney, membership, and Mrs. Thomas M. Rybolt, music, Mrs. Harlan Craig, parent ed-

ucation; Mrs. Claude M. Wise, par- " ; liamentarian; Mrs. William R. Shir- | Mrs: Dudley Hutcheson and Miss |

program; Mrs. Irwin Morris, Betty Lutz, 1512 N. Meridian St, Mrs. Willard Sims, radio are to entertain with a miscella- | Mrs. Willlam E.| neous shower and bridge tonight in | fr Sige a Thy | the Lutz apartment for Miss Alice | "aid, and Mrs. Frank N. Marie Woolling. . « Miss Woolling is to be married A yi of Qijcions ecting hy Sept. 20 in the Broadway Methodist to be hela at 9:15 a Sep 2 in ; ihe Jel Wasninglon. The fist CUE to Ralph Coble The | council eeu of the season is to] iy eh ne their mother, Mrs. Emma Lute,

Ww. RE

Building to Be Year’s T opic Ot Study Club

recreation;

| den flowers of assorted colors. Guesis are to be Mesdames Freda | Siefert and Helen Brown, dreth Siefert, Mr, and Mrs, Barnell and Joseph Sitzman Lyman Wolfla, Miss Siefert was guest last night at a party Misses Josephine Gray and Light and Mrs. Noel Bailey. Classmates of Miss Siefert | diana University and alumnae | Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority were present. were in the sorority quoise blue and silver. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Jacob Varntz, Lebanon; Miss Elea-

E. J and

given by Helen

at In-

colors of tur-

Weidner, Lapel.

Kr ick- Montgomery

Mrs, Julia Montgomery announces the marriage of her daughter, Mar- |

the Trinity Methodist

in

ficiating. The coupie is at home at |

the award of a year's fellowship plan, Bellefontaine St., are to entertain | the compilation of an Anglo-S¢ | Misses Jean Rau, Elaine Obetholtz- | today. roaming the Acropolis ruins in 8 1 | tertain this evening with a bridge | song, Jane Hennessey, Helen Dan- | 7000 Land," Mrs. Margaret Hall; Alumnae to Give umnae to ive Lasher on Oct. 21: Mrs. Hildegarde | Scriptions Decorations and appointments are { portunity she may have for a trip Theodore Caldwell, William Mec- | Sorority, are to entertain with a | March 3; Mrs. Maud Welch on some bit of antiquity which will gold and blue. Mrs. Lasher is president of the | Tedrowe, Mary Lucille Trager, Mar- | of the event. Miss Gertrude Me- 2323 W. Morris St.

-t0 be an archaeologist. An outstanding one. She has taken the steps grad- * . ually and now they have led to| Dinner In Honor to the University of Munich, in f Germany, She was the one grad- O Helen Siefert uate student chosen by Bryn Mawr ne College for this year's honor in : an international exchange student | Mr. and Mrs, Hiram Hunt, Miss LeSaulnier is the daughter at 6:30 p. m, tomorrow with a din[of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. LeSaulnier, | ner party for Miss Helen Siefert. 11347 N. Pennsylvania St. After al Miss Sno fs to be married | summer devoted to work on her | Sept. 1 in Philip Neri Catholic | master’s degree at Bryn Mawr and | Church to Robe E. Brown. Deco “Home building, nation building | dictionary, on which she and Dr. be held Sept | i and world building” is the outline | Otto Metzger, Bryn Mawr, are cold Sept. 29 Guests are to be Mesdames K, K. of study chosen this year by the | laborating, she set sail this month re rth fourth district, Indiana Study Club, | on the 8. 8. Rotterdam for HolMar tha Heller | Billings, Knoxville, Tenn, aid | Recording to the yearbook issued |)and. : It's Romance to Her er, Betty Woolling, Phyllis Smith,| Among the books to be ewe While other college students are T 0 Be Honor ed a jorie Hennis, Elysee Crosier, land their reviewers are “Pigeon | hooting. it Up Wt Football watnes | Jane Pfeiffer, Roseann Doebber, |H00,” to be reviewed by Miss Kath- iy OOpAE 1. Wp Wy 100m Y Sues | Barbara Jean Holt. Louise Rhode- |erine Vosbrink; “Fish in the Sea,” | Miss LeSaulnier is likely to b> Miss Frances Wysong is to en- hamel, Barbara Zechiel, Betty Wy- | Mrs. Dorothy Holmes; “Rich Land, | { Greece ‘Dangerous Sea.” Mrs. Kathryne | Athens. and kitchen shower at her home, er. Musjorie Case, Betty “Frasier. | Laupus, and “American Doctor's | It all sounds very earnest and Hell h Bt. for pis auiiiia me nn 2 | Odyssey,” Mrs. iy Sok 0 | difficult as a major pursuit but to eller, whose marriage to Rober [ Hostesses are to be Mrs. Dorothy |, . | Riggs is to take place Sept. 3 in | Auffenberg on Sept. 16; Mrs. Maud | this art student the study of in the Heller home. and relics of ancient | Montgomery on Nov. 4; Mrs. Mayme | People spells romance and glamour | to be in delphinium blue and white. Rush Lunche O11 | Elsner on Nov. 18; Mrs. Emma Mas- | of the last word. : | The hostess is to be assisted by | ters on Dec. 2; Mrs. Ethel Conner Most of her year's work will her mother, Mrs. B. G. Wysong. i lon Jan, 6; Mrs. Agnes Thompson | center about the University library Guests are to include Mesdames Alumnae and active members of | on Feb. 3; Mrs. Bertha Bollinger | and classrooms. But every opMerwyn Heller, Frank Riggs Sr. |DePauw chapter, Delta Delta Delta | | on Feb. 17; Mrs. Ruth Gillespie on | to ancient tombs or tumbled ruins Frank Riggs Jr, Jack | rush luncheon and theater party | March 17; Mrs. Helen Warbritton | nearby ‘will be to her advantage, | tomorrow in the Harrison Room, on April 7: Mrs. Bessie Ogan on|she believes. One trip to Athens Misses Winifred Adams, Panoria | Columbia Club. | April 21; Mrs. Charlotte Beldon on |is included in her school schedule Apostle, Rosemary Ford, Jeannette | Covers are to be laid for 30 guests. | May 5, and Mrs. Marietta Buhner | and there she hopes to unearth Garrett, Virginia Landgraf, Ruth | Tables are to be decorated in the | on May 19. y Betty Prosch, Dorothy | sorority colors, silver, prove that the Greeks had more Prosch, Thelma Tacoma, Mary Jean | Miss Lois McKaskey is chairman | Study Club. The program commit- | than a word for it . even in | tee is headed by Mrs. Thelma Sar- | olden times. garet Trager, Emily Yucknat and | Cullough, Franklin, is to be an | geant, assisted by Mrs. Mary Ensele Marjorie Ziegler. | out- of- town guest. and Mus. Auffenberg. | . . T F 1 d ‘Mail Order Telescope Failed, Local Girls Ar e Recent Bi ides So Star-Gazing Hobby Bega

The mail order house catalog said poetically that their superb tele- | scope woud unravel! the heavens’ secrets. Charles Herman, now an officer in the Indianapolis Amateur Astronomers’ Association, was chagrined when he invested. ke found that the heavens’ secrets remained intact, for the superb instrument pierced no more mysteries than ordinary spectacles. With a camera lens he set about HRleing a Yglescope and thus discovered a hobby—with a capital H, &— he says. One of his six-inch | products is now being used at the | jo cag by the movement of the association's miniature observatory | earth as it travels east at the rate set {ip this summer at 73d St. near | of about 5000 miles an hour. Crooked Creek. Sections of the moon, all that Another instrument, 60 times | can be reflected on the small perimore powerful, which he is now phery of the legs, appear to be covbuilding, cannot be used in Indi- | ered with great craters.

ana. “The air here does not permit its Plan House on Wheels

use,” he explained. “The tele-| Plans are being made by the asscope will have to be taken to a | sociation to build a house on wheels ! mountain,” He added that observa- | and equip it with telescopes, built | tories are placed on mountains, not | perhaps by Mr. Herman. to be nearer the stars, but because | S. Waters heads the society. the air is clearer. But that, Mr. Herman “Indiana air,” he said, “is made | would be a man-sized job. up of minute dust particles, and such a powerful instrument not | only enlarges the planets, but also the dust.” Comet ‘Washout’

ih

/ 7 7) YY

7

4,

7

)

tience,” he said. “It will ficult to make a telescope in a basement workshop.”

2 A

PR

_ PAGE 21

One Is Wed and Other-Engaged | Merit Stand

Wins Praise For Ludlow

League of Women Voters Raps Action of Other Congressmen,

A committee of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters issued a today commending the

| on measures for the extension of the | merit system before the 75th Cone

| gross.

The statement further expressed its regret and dismay at the action of other Congressmen toward fure thering the patronage system in governmental agencies, “We heartily approve the action of our Twelfth District Congressman, Mr. Ludlow,” the statement reads, “In his consistent support of the merit system on every occasion upon which his vote was recorded during the 75th Congress. Mr. Ludlow was unique among Indiana Congressmen in supporting his party platform. “We deeply regret William R, Lare rabee’s failure to support the merit system by twice voting against

measures which would have extended it.

‘Dismayed’ at VanNuys “We are dismayed at Senator Fredrick VanNuys’' negative vote on extending the merit system to ape

| pointees under the Wage and Hours

| and

Bill with salaries more than $4000, Senator Minton's failure to

| make use of his opportunity to supe [ port his party platform by being abe

sent on the roll call on this mease

{ ure.”

Study in Munich

Some go just to take | tem,

Some few go because they | has not only interesting to | service reform,

graduated from Shortridge High School as an honor student a lew years |

6023 |

|

|

axon | 'ations tomorrow are to be in gar- |

Miss Hil- |

of honor |

of |

Decorations and appointments |

| nor Gantz, Odon, and Miss Eleanor |

garet Elizabeth, to Reason A. Krick. | The wedding took place July 17 | vacationing at Atlantic Church | (with the Rev. J. R. Flanigan of- | William,

| ality, members say, the movement |

Samuel | - thinks, |

“It takes a lot of skill and pa- | be dif-|

In reviewing the action of Cone gress generally on measures proe posed to further the merit system, the committee added “The 75th Congress has adjourned with a record of almost consistent contempt of the public's demand for the abolition of the patronage svse We cannot disguise our dise may at this fact that this Congress failed to promote civil but also at the flag« (rant way it has defended the posi

Ever since she | tion and attacked all measures that

would take patronage away from the |S tessmen, “The Senate failed to do its part when it turned down the Ramspack [ bill, passed by the House, which | would have removed one of the most | conspicuous blots on the personnel | policy of the national Government, | namely, the political appointment of | postmasters.”

Personals

Miss Jeanne Oglesby, daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Oglesby, has re | turned home after spending two | months at Camp Kairphree on Lake Charlevoix, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. White are vae cationing at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va, and are to be among the guests attending the 65th annual | Lee Monument Ball to be held there | this evening, The ball is a fea« ture of the Robert E. Lee Week at the spa and commemorates the | 130th anniversary of the birth of | the Confederate general. Miss Betty Nicholson [turned from a two-months’ | Los Angeles, Cal, Charles and John Gray, New | York, are visiting their parents, | Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gray. Mrs. William A. Porter left yese terday for Hollywood, Cal. to join her husband for future residence, Mrs. Minnie Pettet entertained re= cently with a farewell party for | Mrs. Porter.

has ree trip to

{

Wedding Announced | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown re-

| cently left for a six-weeks' motor | trip through Canada, California and Mexizo. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Hardisty are City. Elizabeth Meslam and son, are to sail early in Sep tember for a year's tour of France, | Syria and North Africa. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Medlicott have been the recent guests of Mr, and Mrs. Gordon M. Jones, Evanse ton, Ill. Mrs. Anna Conner, 2902 Central | Ave. has returned from a visit with ( her niece, Mrs. David Swaine Jr. | Chicago, formerly of Indianapolis, Miss Ida Lobraico is staving at the Barbizon Plaza Hotel while vise i'ing in New York Mr. and Mrs. Arch V. Grossman have gone to Vermont to visit their daughter, Miss Mary Grossman, who is attending Camp Farwell,

Mrs, Culver Godfrey To Entertain Visitors

Mrs. Culver C. Godfrey, 911 BE, 46th St, is to entertain with an informal party tomorrow afternoon, The honor guests are to he Miss Marjorie Hendren, New York, and Mrs. L. V. Pringle, Ocean Springs, | Miss, who is here visiting her | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles OC. Kistner, 2424 Broadway.

Mrs,

Say It With

FLOWERS

ALLIED FLORISTS ASS'N. OF INDIANAPOLIS

The sight of Finsler's Comet to the layman, he termed a “washout.” More than 200 local people who took | a trek two nights last week ‘uv the observatory to see the phenomena beheld an undefined blur in the sky, slightly brighter in the center, Popular anticipations of a sight of a fiery star with a long tail were thus precluded. Saturn, through the Herman telescope and also the eight-inch instrument belonging to the club, is a brilliant body about the size of a dime, with a well-defined ring around it. The ring, according to members of the association, is probably composed of shattered bits of one great | moon that exploded when it moved | too close to Saturn. | The planet appears to travel across the lens at about the rate of |

Indianapolis. LI. 2361.

Miss Betty Lictenberg is in charge | of reservations.

| Out-of-town guests who are to attend

are to be and Martha and Gwen Terre Haute.

Misses Janet Williamson, | Resenak, |

Mauzy

t

PIR An DR A Plowman-Platt Photos. Another Aug. 15 wedding was that of Miss DeLoris Mellis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Frank

Mellis, to Edward Sedam.

Mrs. Hyman Baren was Miss Blanche Freedman daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Freedman, Detroit, before her marriage Aug. 15.

a Second hand on a watch. In re- |

Prose LAUNDRY

SPINK-WAWASEE

Hotel and Country

Playground of the Middle West

Here, at the finest lake resort hotel in Indiana, you will find the smart play spots you have been looking for. ‘The accommondations, food and wines are even better than you expect. swimming, tennis, speed-boating or fishing and a most enjoyable night life will help to make a vacation you will remember,

For reservations or Information phone or write the Spink. Wawasee Hotel at Lake Wawasee, or the Spink-Arms

Club...

Golf,

otel,