Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1938 — Page 13

TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1938 Young Swimmers From 4 Local Clubs Compete In Season’s First Meet

Enthusiasm High as Woodstock Natators Defeat Hillcrest and Meridian Hills Wins Over Highland in Opening Events of Series,

By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON One thing that does not get stifled around here in the summer is youthful enthusiasm for swimming. Cheering galleries spurred on eager contestants yesterday afternoon when the first of a series of swimming meets involving Highland Golf and Country Club, Meridian Hills Country Club, Hillerest Country Club and Woodstock

Club was held. Woodstock carried off the honors in the competition with Hillcrest in the Woodstock pool and Meridian Hills swimmers defeated Highland at the latter club. This season boys of one club meet boys of a competing club in a series of events classified according to the age of the contestants. The girls follow the same schedule. Children of 10 years of age or under are e.igible for Class 1; Class 2 is for 11 to 13-year-olds and Class 3 for those from 14 to 7. As Woodstock Club Tommy Atkins of Woodstock won the 25vard breast stroke and crawl events for boys in Class 1. The youthful entrants for the back stroke contest in this class were disqualified when, despite wild applause from the sidelines, they gave up after swimming half the length of the pool. Woodstock again scored in the boys’ Class 2 events when John Leasure won the 25-yard breast stroke and crawl and Ralph Scheidenhelm was first in the back stroke. Bob Binder of Hillcrest won the boys’ diving contest. In the girls’ events Mary Severs of Hillerest became the Class 1 star when she won the 25-vard breast stroke and crawl and tied with Jean Scheidenhelm of Woodstock for first place in the back stroke event Heberton Weiss of Woodstock won the 25-vard breast stroke in the Class 2 event for girls while Mary Jo Gray of Hillerest won the back stroke and Virginia Street of the same club won the crawl. In Class 3 for girls Barbara Wilde of Woodstock was first in the 50-vard breast stroke, Miss Weiss won the back stroke and Peggy Lockwood of Woodstock tied with Norma Oburn of Hillerest for first place in the crawl. Miss Wilde also won the girls’ diving event. Among the interested onlookers seated around the Woodstock pool, most of whom had sons or daughters in the swimming entest, were Mesdames Thomas A. Hendricks, John Beard Washburn, Roy H. Coles, Meredith Nicholson Jr., George E. Home, Jesse Fletcher, G. Vance Smith, Kurt F. Pantzer, Henry C. Atkins Jr, Robert Davey Eaglesfield, Harry S. Shepard and Mrs. Charles R. Weiss.

Meridian Hills Swimmers Win At

the 25

the Highland Golf and Country Club Billy Medlicott won -yard breast stroke and erawl in the boys’ Class 1 event and Myron Weaver of Meridian Hills was first in the 25-yard back stroke Meridian Hills scored a decisive victory in the Class 2 event for boys when Harry Sheridan won the 25-yard breast stroke and crawl events and Bill Kegley was best in the back stroke. Boh Stackhouse of Meridian Hills won the 50-yard breast stroke in the boys’ Class 3 competition while Alfred Huff of Highland captured first place in the 50-yard back stroke and craw! and the diving contest events In the Class 1 event for girls Lois Ragan of Highland won the 25-yard breast stroke, Julianne Forman of Meridian Hills won the 25-yard back stroke and Bobbie Hall of Highland won the 25-vard crawl Betty Carter of Highland won the 25-vard breast stroke in the Girls’ Class 2 event with Joan Wilson of Meridian Hills victorious in the 25-yard back stroke and Emily Flickinger of the same club first in the 25-vard crawl A clean sweep went to Meridian Hills in the Class 3 event for girls when Connie Miller won the 50-vard breast stroke and Jean Stackhouse performer in the 50-vard back stroke and crawl and girls’ diving contest

bovs

was star

” ” ” » s ”

An extended midsummer contract bridge club meeting is to take place today ahd tomorrow at Lake Wawasee where several club members have summer homes. Mrs. Ralph M. Reahard, Mrs. Jewett V. Reed and Mrs. Frederick W. Jungclaus joined the members already at the lake for luncheon at Mrs. Robert Alexander's cottage today. Mrs. C. E. Whitehill will entertain the group at dinner this evening: they will breakfast at Mrs. Roy Elder Adams’ cottage tomorrow and have luncheon with Mrs. J. K. Lilly Mr. and Mrs. Guy H. Shadinger will give a small party at the Propylaeum this evening for their guest, Mrs. Carl Hinshaw of Lake Wales, Fla Miss Judith Preston will give a picnic luncheon and swimming party today at the home of her sister, Mrs. Hobson Wilson, in Sunset Lane for Mis Anne Simpson of Little Falls, N. Y.. who is visiting Miss Sue Anne Eveleigh and for Miss Edythe Hobson of Newport News, Va, who is the guest of her cousin, Miss Patricia Eaglesfield.

White Cross Guild Presidents

To Be Guests

of all White Cross the North home of be

Presidents party tomorrow The Clarence U. Knipp and Mis Manning. Mrs. C. A. McPheeters is to present a vocal program The Broadway unit is to work on hospital supplies all day tomorrow at the White Cross headquarters in Methodist Hospital's Nurses home. The Grace Church unit was work all dav today. Temple | Sisterhood and Municipal Gardens units will meet Thursday and are to make plans for the October bencard party Riverside and nits will meet Friday.

given by at hostess

Mrs assisted by

the

wil

the

to

efit

Unity ‘India Calls’ Is

Institute Theme

Rev

on

The Harry Campbell was to

speak conditions in

India at

present

the afternoon session of the So- | cieties of the Indianapolis District the The illus-

an all-dav institute today for

Women's Foreign Missionary

were held at

House

I'he sessions Brookside Community Rev. Mr. Campbell trate his talk with display of native costumes, The program theme the sessions was “India Calls.” Mrs. C. H Sedam was to pre-| side Mrs. C. E. Asbury was outline plans for the year and Mrs W. C. Hartinger was to be in charge of the worship hour. Mrs, J. E. Andrews was to review the study text, “Moving Millions,” the Edgewood Standard Bear- | ers were to present a stewardship | demonstration.

was to

of

{to

and ana

Baptist Women Hold Lake Wabee Meeting

A group of women members of | the Indiana Baptist Church were to attend a houseparty opening today at Lake Wabee, near Milford, Ind. | The party will continue through Thursday, | Mrs, T. J. Mann, president of the Baptist Women’s Missionary Society of Indiana, will teach a course in| Parliamentary Law at business ses- | sions, Mrs. L. C. Trent is to present home and foreign missionary study!’ books A conference on new books will | be conducted by Miss Ollie Ownes. and Mrs. W. H. Anthony is to direct discussion of White Cross work. Dr Mabel Lee, a native of China and representative of the First Baptist Church, New York, is ameng the speakers. Mrs. W. L. Lincoln. field representative of the National Min- | isters and Missionaries Relief Board, also will talk,

Methodist John G

Clara &

| Alice Heissler, 400 E. 58th St

| Mrs. Orthwein Heissier,

; establish

Voorhis Photo.

Mrs. Lawrence L. Bird was Miss Norma Franke before her marriage June 26 in the Emmaus Lutheran Church.

City Residents Likely to Enter

Several Indianapolis residents are expected to enter mounts and at-

nual Richmond Horse Show, July 24, at Riley School Field Classes include an open class for five-gaited horses, horsemanship for children, three-gaited horses, open horsemanship, junior five-gaited and hunter and jumper Others are a three-gaited open fine

manship, year-old

Junior League To Move Post Following Sale

The Indianapolis Junior Trading Post, 1507 N.

moval sale Thursday, Friday Saturday from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. The Post is to open at a new location, 3418 N. Illinois St, Mrs. Booth T. Jameson, Post chairman, and members of het committee wili be in charge. League members to be on during the sale

duty

termann, Louis Huesmann, Collins, John Hollett Jr., Blaine Miller Jr., William Lochhead, Arthur Shea, Henrv C. Atkins Jr., Egbert Driscoll and Woods Caperton Jr.

{12 vears ago. Proceeds go toward the League's financing of the Occupational Therapy Shop at the Riley Hospital

| Personals

sons of Carroll. home

Alex Carroll, James F, are motoring

Allen and Mr. and Mrs Golden Hill,

S. Normandie { from Europe. The former was | graduated in June from Hamilton | College and the latter will be a

vesterday on the S.

| senior next year at Williams Col- |

v Si > Fv r | lege. at Garden Party Miss Ellen Irene Kroger formerly

v

| troit

Fuild units will attend a garden Church unit from 3 to 5 p. m, Benson, 3663 N. Delaware St.

Mrs. H. E. Hayes, president, Mrs.

Former Local Judge to Wed | New York Girl

limes Special

NEW YORK, July 12.— Miss Helen |

is to |

become the bride of Byron K. | Elliott, Boston, Friday, at the

Chapel of the Fifth Avenue Presby- ! terian Church, The families and a few friends are to attend. The bride-to-be is the daughter of St. Louis and Edward R. Heissler, and is a member of the St. Junior League. She attended school at Chicago where she made her debut, Mr, apolis, counsel of the John Hancock Life Insurance Co. He is the son of Mrs. | William Elliott. At Indianapolis he | was a member of the University | Club, the Dramatic Club and the Woodstock Club. He was a judge in the Superior Court of that city before moving to Boston, He was graduated from Shortridge High School, Indianapelis; Indiana University and the Harvard | Law School.

Elliott, formerly of Indian- | Is vice president and general |

Mrs. Bowen Is New

[| Kroger's | Kroger and Mrs. Kroger.

Chicago, | Louis |

| belle and Myrtle Mayer have

| Waters,

of Indianapolis has returned to Dewith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Kroger, after an extended Georgian Bay cruise, They visited Minneapolis and Chicago and were the guests here of Miss brother, R. McDonald

Mrs. D. S. Meditch and her daughter, Janet, have left for Colo-

rado. Before returning they are to | | visit

friends in Denver and St. Louis. On their return they will stay at their country home, Summerest, near Brownsburg.

Horses in Show,

jumping, fine harness horses, ladies’ |

stake, Wayne County men’s horse- | harness | class, park class, plantation walking | class, and a five-gaited open stake. | | §

Sept. 1. | Trading |

Jameson, Joseph Hanna, John Ber- | James |

The Trading Post was established |

from New York where they arrived |

¥en

:

Miss Evelyn Bichel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Eichel, became the bride of Floyd Herald June 26.

5

| |

tend as spectators the second an- |

|

League | Illinois St, | will hold a final clearance and re- | and |

Mrs, Everett Schofield (right) Indianapolis. was director of provinces at biennial convention of Kappa Kappa Gamma So-

elected national rority recently at The Homestead, Other officers are (left to Handy, Crisfield. Md.,

include Mesdames |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Four Become Brides in

right) standards director:

V hk

JS

PAGE 18

Recent Rites; Betrothal Is Announced

Ayres Fhoto. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Stewart have announced the engagement of their daughter, Catherine Louise, to W. Russell Bain.

the 33d

Hot Springs. Va. Miss Marian Mrs. E.

Granville Crabtree, membership and Panhellenic; Miss Clara A. Pierce, Columbus, O,, re-elected executive secretary; Richard Shyrock, Durham, N, C., re-elected grand president, and Mrs. James F. McNaboe, New York, re-elected grand vice president.

5)

Miss Betty Jean Miller's marriage to Charles Titus was disclosed recently. She is a niece of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Milam,

Local Woman Named Sorority Officer

Brookline, Mass, director of

Mrs.

Set Founders’ Day,

Sororities

Plans for a Founders’ Day cele- | | bration, lawn festival and conven- | tion are being made by local so-

rority members this week.

The lawn fete will be held July |

28 at the home of Miss Mae Thig-

pen. Arrangements will be made

Sorority at the

Antlers.

tonight

» ” ”n Five members of Alpha Tau Chapter of Alpha Zeta Beta Sorority will attend the organization's | national convention Thursday, Fri- | day and Saturday at Washington. | They are Miss Pauline Workman

and the Mesdames Irene Pletts, Lil-

lian McAllister, Helen Wenner and |

Catherine Reed. | . | The national council of Alpha Omicron Sorority was to plan a Founders’ Day observance for Aug 9 at a meeting today. Mrs. John R. Sentney, 3514 Birchwood Ave.

o ”

Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Block are stay- |

ing at the Hotel St. Regis, York, and Miss Emma Force is a recent arrival at the Hotel Com-

! modore.

Mrs. Garrett W. Olds was a guest

| at the Beekman Tower Hotel, New | York, where she attended the Delta

Delta convention

Delta the Mass, Mrs. Isaac Born and her mother,

houseparty following at Swampscott,

| Mvs. Mathilda Weil, Rockport, will for Atlantic City | where they are to visit Mrs. Born's | | daughter, Mrs. Herbert W. Salus.

leave tomorrow

George J. Maver and Misses returned from a 10-day motor trip to Columbus and Cleveland, O., and

| Buffalo, N. Y.

New | | to be appointed for the organiza- | Oct, 1] | Kokomo; | Lafayette; Miss Loraine Beng, Mar-

was to be hostess. Commitjees were

tion's national convention to 3 at the Hotel Lincoln.

New members will be guests at a dinner tonight of Phi Gamma Chi Sorority. The event will be at the

! Parkview Inn Mrs. Ennis Stinnette and Miss Josephine Adrian are in charge.

| Mrs. Doyle Harbaugh will entertain members of Chi Delta Chi

| Sorority tonight at her home, 3103 | Guilford Ave. Miss Kathryn Gillick will assist,

[Lawn Festival

at a meeting of Lambda Chi Delta | Hotel |

| beck, Gary;

31st, hostess.

covered dishes,

hostess

EVENTS SORORITIES Amicas chapter, Verus Cordis. 1 p. m. Thurs. Mrs. O. R. Dickinson, 1420 Grant, hostess. Luncheon bridge Rho Gamma Chi. 8 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Herbert Ottensmeyer, 1243 W. LODGES

Temple Rebekah 591. 8 p. m. today. Hall. Lucy Ann Elliott to be installed Noble Grand. Helen Miller to be installed Vice Grand. Corinthian auxiliary, O. E. S. 456. 9:30 a. m. Wed. Evergreen Masonic Temple. Picnic at Riverside Park. Members requested to bring CLUBS K. P. 7:30 p. m. today. Miss Mary Elizabeth Barrett, 5869 Guilford,

Elite Friendship. 11 a. m. Wed. Brookside Park. Picnic.

| speak on “Progressive Education.” preside. More than 300 guests are New students include Miss Mary Ernestine Pierce and Miss Janice Pope, French Lick; Miss Joan LinsMisses Jane Dugan, Sue Hull, Mary Louise Nott, Janet Meredith and Jean York, Indianapolis; Miss Betty J. Beardsley, Frankfort; Miss Margaret Ann Bohnert, Jasper; Misses Jean Chaffin, Jane Dohner and Virginia Lung, Miss Mary F., Hunter,

engo. Also Miss Shirley Jane Ploner and Miss Kathryn Schmidt, City; Miss Marilyn Bir, New Albany: Miss Barbara J. Oppenheim, North Manchester; Miss Janet Casterline, Plymouth; Miss Melissa Hebbard and Miss Betty McPFail, Richmond; Misses Edna Jean Elliott, Jean Ada Hilbert, Patricia Parker, and Janet Lavery, South Bend. Attending will be Miss Elizabeth Ann Jackson, Spencer; Miss Helen

Coultas, Tell City; Misses Anne Har-

Individualist Changes Her Mind About Matrimony

By PAUL ROSS |

NEW YORK, July 12.—Society. |

| the art werld and newspaper editors |

alike perked up their ears recently |

| when the announcement came down |

from Gloucester, Mass, that 34-|

engaged to wed Captain Willis H. |

| ecutive, : This engagement not only marks | :

D. A. R. Club Officer!

Mrs. Morse P. Bowen is newly appointed treasurer of the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. will fill the unexpired 1938-40 term of Mrs. George P. Peavey. Mr. and Mrs. Peavey and their son Robert will leave in August to permanent Dallas, Tex.

cotton fabrics avoid materials which | early as 1922, she became inter- | If, when rubbed | ested in the arts,

are heavily sized. between the fingers, a powdery film

{ appears on the surface of the ma-

terial, you may be sure that it con-

‘ tains a “filler.”

Angora Boleros Return

Boleros again—this time of fine, | of

soft angora in all the sweet pastel shades and white,

front closing. Theyre worn by

smast folk over evening gowns on | choice, then go ahead. . . .

cool evenings at the theater and for dining out of doors.

She | | because I never wanted to . .

q | her to do the scenery for a play.

| Then the Royal Miniature Society

, | made her the youngest member ever

i year-old Natalie Hays Hammond is|

New York steamship ex-| :

a new phase in the active life of | :

one of America’s most women. It represents an aboutface, Hammond said: “I never married

. I've

interesting | :

Only a few years ago Miss |

| |

| never met a man with enough am- | :

residence at |

|

{

bition, imagination and humor to

make me change my mind.” | &

As the daughter of the late John Hays Hammond, millionaire mining expert, Nalalie Hays Hammond

| could have lived the soft life of a | When buying cotton garments or | thorough-going society girl. But as |

!

appearing that winter as the featured dancer at a brilliant Parisian charity ball. With a mind of her own, Miss Hammond leaped into print in 1924

when she prepared a sighed article |

for newspapers giving her opinions men and marriage. Among

other things, she indicated that

short-sleeved, | Birls should seek “a he-man—a | for painting. with a fitted ribbed band around | mental cave-man” for a husband. | sented at Buckingham Palace and | the bottom and tiny buttons on the | She advised the marriageable girl | the Vatican but it was not enou

to "size up the man, make her If she misses the first time, she can try again.”

Natalie Hays Hammond

| Society had hardly recovered | from that when Natalie Hammond | abandoned a purely social career She had been pre-

apparently, After only a few years of art study she met her first success when Alla Nazimova commissioned

| to join and the French Govern- | ment bought one of her miniatures. In 1930 she had her first one-man | show of 75 pictures in the Roerich | Museum. The show aroused much | interest in the art world. Miss | Hammond was then painting 14 hours a day in her swank studio | but she wasn't satisfied. She wanted to do caricatures and to de- | sign things. held an exhibit of a new kind of architecture. Her interests shifted to the theater in 1933 when she helped found the Stage Alliance to do ancient miracle plays. She designed the costumes and sets for these. Then she returned to painting and in 1934 exhibited a series of “symbolic characterizations” of stage personalities, Katharine Cornell was represented as a tall Corinthian column, draped in a length of bright orange fabric. Noel Coward, to Miss Hammond's way of thinking, was a purple Regency carriage piled high with band-boxes. She seems to have found her medium during the last few years in surrealist paintings. Her work, exhibited in the East, has aroused | wide critical comment.

will go on painting and doing unusual things, marriage or no mar-

riage.

| Washington:

| Huston,

Michigan |

Two years later she |

That being the case, and Natalie | gh, | Hammond being the kind of woman | | she is, it is a safe bet that she

New Students Are to Attend Stephens College Banquet Here

Several newly enrolled students are to attend the Stephens College informal banquet tonight at the Columbia Club, James M. Wood, college president, is to be the guest of honor and |

Miss Norma Keller, Indiana Alumnae Association president, is to |

expected to attend.

riott, Marianna Merkle and Marie Prox, Terre Haute and Miss Rosemary Freund, Valparaiso. Others are Miss Barbara Miss Glenna Dean Williamsport: Miss Betty Anderson; Miss Kathryn Ellen Mefferd, Auburn; Miss Patricia Rollins, Anderson; Miss Ruth Shaffer, Auburn; Miss Jayne Standish and Miss Marguerite Truman, Bedford; Miss Anna May Reid, Brooklyn: Miss Jeanne Miller, and Miss Katherine Mitchell, Crawfordsville; Miss Georgette Alexander and Miss Betty J. Waring, Evansville; Miss Alice F'unk and Miss Jane Meyer, Ft. Wayne, and Miss Jean Coapstick and Miss Joan Spray, Frankfort,

Rang,

Hunter,

tee, and Miss charge of publicity.

Merit System Brief Prepared

Mrs. Lester Smith, chairman of

Elm Grove Photo, Mr. and Mrs. William L. Niedenthal are at home here. Mrs. Niedenthal was Miss Doloris Laker before her marriage June 28.

80 Prepared for Camp Dellwood Second Period

Scouts’ Camp Dellwood tomorrow

for the second two-week period.

Frederic M. Ayres recently pre-

sented the camp with a canoe and Miss Dorothy Hande, front director, instructs the campers in skill and safety measures of handling it. The campers who have just completed their two weeks were senior and intermediate scouts. The Sherwood Forest unit took a two-day gypsy trip with their leader, Miss Marylin Knowlton. They traveled 10 miles south of the camp.

Miss Mary Hosier is chairman of the place and invitations commitJeane Meek is in

| Jackson, William R. Higgins, Harry B. Custer, George V. Coffin, C. Sev-

| erin Buschmann; Montgomery Lewis |

| and Earl Moomaw,

Put Women on Supreme Court, Federation Asks

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., July 12 (U. P.).—Members of the National Federation of Business and Profes- | sional Women's Clubs asked Presi- | dent Roosevelt today to appoint a ; woman to the U. S. Supreme Court

[to fill the seat left vacant by the | death of Associate Justice Benja- |

| min Cordozo.

The Federation's board of direct- |

ors passed a resolution calling upon their president, Miss Earlene White, to ask the President to give “serious | consideration” to the appointment | of a “qualified woman" to the Court. At its annual meeting in connec- | tion with the Federation's annual | convention, the board also supported the question of married women in business. The board explained that there is a “widespread attack” on working wives and promised to use “every means at our disposal’ to combat such attacks. In her annual report Mrs. Maude E. Empey, San Jose, Cal., reporting for the education committee, urged the women to vote for members of their own sex on boards of education “so that the community may have the advantage of a woman's point of view.” Miss Louise Franklin Bache, executive secretary, reported that the Federation is the largest corporation in the nation which is owned and directed solely by women. She said it has 68,000 members. Further board action, a luncheon, | a question box session, and a picnic super were scheduled for the dele- | gates today.

| St. Patrick’s Party The ladies of St. Patrick's Church will entertain at 1:45 p. m. tomorrow with a benefit bridge party at | the Foodcraft Shop. The event will | be one of a series of four parties. | Proceeds will go toward the church | festival to be held Aug. 9-12. Mrs. Edward Voltz, entertainment chairman, is in charge of arrangements.

|

Eighty girls are to go to the Girl |

water- |

Council members who visited Dell- | wood during the first period were! | Mrs. Horace McClure, commissioner; | Mesdames Maxwell Droke, E. Star- | | ling Pearce, Charles F. Voyles, R. O. |

Prenuptial Party Given Virginia Holt

Other Showers Arranged; Mildred Lewis Names Her Attendants.

| | |

Prenuptial parties for several brides-to-be and the attendants for the wedding of one local young woman were announced today.

Mrs. Charles D. Howell and her daughter, Mrs. G. William Raffensperger, are to entertain at 8 p. m. Thursday with a linen shower and bridge in honor of Miss Virginia Holt. Miss Holt's engagement to J. Russell Townsend Jr. was announced recently by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Holt, Guests are to be Mrs. Holt, Miss Barbara Jean Holt, a sister of the bride-to-be; Mesdames Fred Howenstine, Owen Calvert, C. W. Graves, James Allen, Seward Baker, Don Hopping, Robert Collins of Tipton, and Miss Marjorie Carr.

» n »

Miss Mildred Lewis today an= | nounced that her sister, Elizabeth, | will be maid of honor at her July 31 wedding to Charles I. Pringle. | Otto Rieger is to be best man. The | ceremony will be read at the home { of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. | H. S. Lewis, 3912 Katrine Ave. Mrs. Lawrence Pringle is planning to entertain with a shower | for the bride-to-be on July 27.

o

The marriage of Miss Christine Swanson to Kenneth A. Maass is set for high noon Saturday at the First Presbyterian Church. The bride-to-be is the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. E. O. Swanson, Duxbury, Mass., and has lived for several years at the Spink Arms Hotel. Following the ceremony a reception will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Good, The couple is to live in Chicago. Miss Swanson was graduated at the Massachusetts Teachers’ College, Boston, and is a member of | Beta Gamma Sorority. Mr. Maass attended Marquette University,

Miss Frances Davis and Miss Dor= othy Walter will entertain Aug. 3 for Miss Alsie Corn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Corn. Miss Corn’s marriage to Joseph Wilbur Nesbit will be an event of August.

”n ” ” Lambda Gamma Sorority mem- | bers tonight are to fete Miss Lois | Imogene Campbell, whose marriage to Thomas E. Lyons has been set for Aug. 6 at the Broadway Meth=odist Church. Miss Flossie Noland will be hostess.

Other affairs for Miss Campbe!l { include a garden party July 17 at the home of Mrs. Earl T. Lyons. Miss Evelyn Calloway and Miss | Eleanor Lyons will honor her July 22.

” zn

” ”n

Miss Nila Maze and Miss Evangeline Morgan entertained recently at | the latter's home with a shower for | Mrs. Charles Titus, a recent bride. | Guests included Mesdames Fred | Long, G. B. Franklin, Willis Milam, | Gordon Brown, Lyle Rawlings, J. P. | Zike, E. F. Hamaker, Benton C. | Hicks, Merle Titus, Ray Morgan | and the Misses Charlotte Hogle, | Lois Miller, Ocal Franklin, Lois | Rawlings and Gwen Hatch of Ft. Wayne.

' Mrs. Pugh Is Hostess For W.C. T. U. Meet

The Washington Union Women’s | Christian Temperance Union will { hold a picnic Friday at the home of Mrs. Claude Pugh, 157 N. Vine St. Mrs. Walter Hogan is to be in | charge of the Bible Study Class, and Miss Cora McFeeley will present a patriotic program. There is to be a covered dish luncheon at noon. { Members and their friends are in- | vited. | Church Event Set | St. Mary's Church will sponsor a | lawn fete tomorrow and Thursday nights at 7 p. m. on the church grounds. Thursday afternoon the church Social Club will entertain with a card party at the school hall, The public is invited.

” on

L. S. AYRES & CO.

A

|

the Indiana League of Women Vot- |

ers department of government, has

prepared a new outline for study of the merit system.

terial for study by new members, Discussion of the complexity and magnitude of Government service, the need for career service, and the contrast of the spoils system to good systems of public personnel management in all units of government are included in the outline. The history of the United States and Civil Service are also discussed. The outline also includes a summary of the league’s efforts to promote the merit system with an intensive campaign which was started in 1934. Mrs. Smith has been appointed chairman of a committee to study the functioning of the registration of voters law in Indiana. The committee will report at the September board meeting.

Advises Short Jackets

For frivolous evenings when only a very light wrap is needed, wear a short cape of tucked taffeta with a

The brief will be used by newly | organized leagues and will be in- | cluded in a state league kit of ma- | }

2

ai a)

> |p yo, # 7

Uy -_— 7 y

7 , 7

NON NS

n.onk’s cowl hood, or a bolero: or |

short jacket of ostrich in white or black or clipped marabou in white or blue fox color —flattering as fur, but light and cool.

feathers—curled |

% JULY SPECIAL . . . BUY THE TICKETS NOW . .. USE THEM ANY TIME

beauty baths 6 for $10

(Individual treatment, $3)

*Whether you want to reduce, or just look and feel your best, Ayres' Beauty Baths are just what you need. Telephone RI. 9441,

Supervised exercises overs seen by our physical di rector to meet your body needs (these may be optionally taken).

The salt scrub and body shampoo—an invigorating rubdown which will make your body glow with cir culation.

Then the steam room where clouds of steam cleanse every bit of ime purity from your pores.

After a warm shower you're ready for a scien= tific body massage, which will make you fel like a million. And we're not bragging, either.

AYRES’ BEAUTY BATHS

—AIR-COOLED EIGHTH FLOOR,