Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1939 — Page 20
PAGE 20
&
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Summer Homes
As Holiday Fe
And Vacations Are Arranged 8
Eleanor Winslow to Entertain at Maxinkuckee
Wednesday; W. H.
Next Month for Michigan.
Society's “design tor living” in
summer homes, vacation jaunts for the grownups and camp life for the
youngsters. This week-end will find
Miss Eleanor Winslow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walker W.
Windslow, will entertain Wednesday
Lake Maxinkuckee for her guest, Miss Sally Nichols, Brookline, Mass
About a dozen feminine members of
for luncheon. Mr. Winslow will join Mrs. Winslow and his daughter
for the Fourth. Mrs. William H. Coleman is to
the middle of July to spend the remainder of the summer. She is now in the West with Mrs. Grace C. Buschmann. They expect to visit the
Golden Gate Exposition, Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Binford
of July for Vancouver where they will sail for Alaska. They will be accompanied by their children, Virginia and Tom.
Plan Michigan Sojourn Mr. and Mrs. George S. Dailey
cottage at Graham Point, Crooked Lake, near Conway, Mich. They will be accompanied by their children, Frank, Margaret and Dorothy. “We
Call Hoosiers tes Are Planned
Colemans to Leave
summer includes carefree days at such activities at their height. at her parents’ summer home at
the younger set have been invited
go to Wequetonsing, Mich., about
are planning to leave the middle
are to leave tomorrow for their
FRIDAY, JUNE 30,1939
do not expect visitors over the week-end,” says Mrs. Dailey, but she counts on several Indianapolis residents later in the summer. They will
return the middle of August.
Dr. and Mrs. Edward Mitchell will spend some time this summer
at their cottage across the lake from the Daileyvs.
Mogg also will leave this week-ena fi
Leave for Vermont
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton or their cottage at Crooked Lake.
Mr. and Mrs. John Beard Washburn are making no special plans
for the week-end and the Fourth
sister, Miss Retty Lee, to arrive some time next week.
cently landed in San Francisco atter
will stop off at Lake Louise before coming on here.
daughter, Betty Lee Washburn, will
for Mrs. Washburn expects her Miss Lee rean extended visit in China. She The Washburn's
Jeave this afternoon by train with
a group of Indianapolis voung women for Camp Farwell, Wells River,
Vt. of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Boozer; Miss and Mrs. Arch Grossman; Miss Cyr
and Mrs. Thomas A. Hendricks: Miss Martha Ruple, daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. Ernest Ruple; Miss Ann
Mrs. Louis Huesmann; Miss Ann Atkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Elias Atkins, and Miss Betty Mayer, Mayer. Mrs. Roy McKinley Howard of P
The party includes the Misses Joan and Alice Boozer, daughters
Mary Grossman. daughter of Mr. nthia Hendricks, daughter of Mr.
Huesmann, daughter of Mr. and
|
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kiefer
ittsburgh, Pa., wha is visiting Mrs.
Paul Frame. will be entertained by her hostess this afternoon at luncheon at the Hillerest Country Club. Mrs. C. D. Bray entertained for the
The Lambs Club frolic promises to draw a large attendance Saturday night at the Athenaeum garden despite the fact the party is on |
the Fourth week-end which is gener lakes and other resorts.
A dinner group at
visitor yesterday at the Columbia Club. Miss Jane Hagerman, Detroit, who has been visiting her aunt, M
home.
rs. Willis E. Kuhn, has returned
ally marked by a great exodus to the club will incluce
Messrs. and Mesdames Horace B. McClure, Myron R. Green, Jacoh S. |
White, Charles M. Wells. Robert B. Adams, G. B. Jackson. Robert Wild, Joseph A. Miner, Harold Tharp. Severin Buschman, Arthur A. Brady of Anderson and Capt. and Mrs. Mark McClure of Ft. Leaven-
worth.
Hare Out-of-Town Guests
|
|
Round of Showers and Parties
brides
1. Mrs. John R. Bumgardner was Miss Norma Keller before her marriage June 24, Mr. and Mrs. Bumgardner are on a wedding trip to New Orleans and will be at home in Indianapolis after Aug. 1. (Ramos-Porter Photo.) 2. Miss Jeanette Nauta, daughter of Mr. an Mrs. Charles J. Nauta, was married to Raymond H. Fields in a recent ceremony read at the Woodside Methodist Church. (Plowman-Platt Photo,) 3. A ceremony read on June 4 united Miss Juanita Fall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Fall, and Milton E. Gambill. (Plow-man-Platt Photo.) 4. Mrs. George FE. House was Miss Lucille Morrison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Morrison, before her marriage June 24, (Ramos-Porter Photo.)
Arranged for July's Brides; Mary Hughes Lists Attendants,
Included on the prenuptial calendar for several of next month's is a series oi showers -and parties. Parents of one young woman will entertain at a bridal dinner tonight for her preceding lier marriage tomorrow. Miss Helen 2Zitzlaff will entertain with a shower tonight at her home, 3244 Broadway, for Missi personal shower for her on July 14. Juliet Baker, daughter of Mr. and| The bride-to-be was entertained by Mrs. Thaddeus Baker, whose mar- nye Howard Staley at a recent riage to James Charles McLauch-|itehen shower. lan, Occumster Caithness, : » ‘9
-s J - ‘ X land, will be July 16 Mrs. Bdward Throm will entertain
nome, 53 Whittier Place. Mrs. Frank Teague. 6062 St. Joe St., will give a
Scot-
Mr. McLauchlan was an exchange!
Women Voters
Push Program
For Expansion
‘Positive Action to Save Democracy’ Hailed At Lake Session.
Condemning the “negative. approach” to “the saving of democ= racy,” Mrs. Mark Ferree, Indianapolis, told the board of directors cf the Indiana League of Women Voters at Lake Wawasee that the league was on the road to “positive action.” Chairman of the league's “ex= pansion” program, Mrs. Ferree des clared that “democracy must stand or fall ultimately not by its capacity to resist alien ideas but by its capacity to devise policies and measures to solve our own social and economic problems.” “Its capacity to attain these ohjectives,” she said, “must come through effective and honest publi¢ administration. These objects can= not be accomplished unless there is a supporting public opinion and a sufficient number of citizens equipped to participate in governs ment. Tells of League's Goal
Mrs. Clarence F. Merrill, League |president, declared that “We must {breed a new type of citizen: One (Who tries consciously to overcome {her prejudices and to cultivate the |all-over pbint of view; one who (wants facts before forming opin» ions and who takes the trouble to acquire them; one who has a living (sense of personal responsibility for {what government does.” x | Mrs. Merrill stated that the
(League had created valuable citizens {during its work of the last 19 years but much too slowly. “The League
10 Different Troubles Harass Young Couples on Way to Altar, Letters by 450 Lovelorn Sho
By Science Service
When boy meets girl. no less than 10 kinds of doubts and worries
may beset the “happy pair.” Stumbling blocks to a wedding
believes that there is a way to speed up the process—hence the ‘expane sion’ program.” Mrs. J. J. Detzler, South Bend {League representative, was named | to fill the board vacancy left by the ‘resignation of Mrs. Clyde Jordan. w Miss Laura Howe was appointed to represent the Logansport League on [the board and Mrs. P. Morris Standley, the Gary Group. Represent Many Units Attending tne meeting were Mes= range all the way from “she was dames Merrell, Leonard Smith, Les=
born on the wrong side of the tracks” to his having an income too small ter Smith, S. N. Campbell, Ferree
for even lovebirds to thrive on.
land Miss Mary Sinclair, Indianap-
Reading 450 letters by the lovelorn, Dr. Antonio Ciocco of the Johns 0lis; Mrs. E. H. Sutherland, Blooms
Hopkins University has analyzed | their troubles. His aim is to find out what the problems of getting married really are, in our day and age.
(ington; Mrs. Rex Van Tilbury, Mrs. Joseph Graffis and Miss Laura Howe. Logansport; Mrs. Otto Fifield and Miss Marguerite Maack, Crown | Point; Mrs. Herbert Keller, Culver; (Mrs. R. L. Beck, Michigan City;
Mrs. Weimar Is Lake Shore
Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Ruckelshaus will have as their guests Mr. and Parents Complicate Situation
tonight, with a bridal shower for | Mrs. Joseph Broderick of Muncie and William Lonsdale of Si. Louis.
ERT wi : ..| Miss Gene Elizabeth Hall at her » las W ) arMr. and Mrs. Norman Kevers and Mr. and Mrs. William H. Wemmer [ant § eo Oe ney Seo. home, 318 N. Hamilton Ave. Miss | will be together. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley W Shipnes and their house- | lang to live. |Hali, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | guests, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Buck, Grand Rapids, Mich, will be among | Guests at the party will he the Harry A. Hall, will be married to those attending. | bride-to-be’'s mother and the Misses Lewis Blacklidge, son of Mr. and Mr. ana Mrs. Thomas Ruckeishaus will entertain a party in | Charlotte Bruce, Mildred Foster, Mrs. C. W. Blacklidge, on July 8. honor of Mr. and Mrs. David Laurance Chambers Jr. wha recently : [
Ruth Lewman, Margaret Montgom-| Guests at the shower will include returned from a cruise to Bermuda. Mrs. Chambers was Miss Estelle | ery, Grace Shoup, Kathryn Thomn- Mesdames Floyd Clark, Byrl HamRah Burpee, daughter of Mrs. Hortense Rauh Burpee, before her | son. Lowse Wills, Barbara Baliin- ilton. Richard Grabhorn, Carl Trout, recent marriage.
‘ger, Ula Wright. Katherine Allen, Tommy Cox,” Catherine Bradley, ; ' ‘These two “immediate disturbing A Dutch treat party is to include Messrs. and Mesdames J. I | Virginia Fout, Dorothy Peterson, Franklin Flee, Michael Dowdell,| In a simple Quaker wedding cere-| ions ac py. Ciocco bv Cummings. Robert N. Bowen. Thomas Mahaffey Jr. Messrs. Walter R. | Mesdames E. Carl Watson, John F. Fussell Duvall and the Misses Dor- mony at the Friends Church in them, beset the majority of the Edward C. Heidenreich, secretary; conference will be held Sept. 19 and Schott and David L. Stone Jr. and Mr. and Mrs, Robert Stang, Co- Beach and Mary Dye Beach. tha Heiden. Mary and Betty Black- Mooresville, Miss Lucia Edwards lovelorn letter writers, both men and Mrs. Frank Scherrer, treasurer. 99 at Culver and the biannual conJumbus, Ind., house guests of the Cummings. oo ; : h se|
| lidge. Martha Hedses and dean! : : Mrs. A. F. Craigle heads the golf yenti i win 05, or, Sa So down in me ton mi Pet lind Seen,” hanes mses Bs 18 Mary K. Hedrick to Exchange 7 : : Vows With Robert Newby in Formal Church Rite at 8:30
| Mesdames Lloyd W. Josselyn, C. Q. Erisman and Charles Shambaugh, Lafayette; Mrs. Detzler and Mrs. { B. A. Anderson, South Bend; Mrs. Mrs. Os-
[teacher at Shortridge High School When the course of true love doesn’t run smooth, from the girl's angle, it’s most apt to be papa and mamma who complicate the situation, he finds. The lovelorn youth, lon the other hand, is most apt to be emotionally upset over whether {he can hold the lady's affections | long enough to get her to the altar.
Tauer-Edwards Wedding to Be At Mooresville
Women’s Chie mmr— {C. A. Corns, Rensselaer;
Mrs, William P. Weimar will serve car Strom and Mrs. J. M. Sellers, as president of the Women of the Hobart; Mrs. David N. Burruss Jr. | Lake Shore Country Club during the and Mrs. Roy Gibbons, Hammond? coming season, following a recent Mrs. W. A. Firstenberger, Elkhart; election. Mrs. Paul V. Ford, Kokomo, and Other officers include Mrs. Rob- Mrs. Don Datisman, Gary. ert Durham, vice president; Mrs.| The organization's fall program
EVENTS
SORORITY Alpha Chapter, Rho Delta. Tonight. |
i . a i113 ein | | Mr. and Mrs. William A. Durkin li opie an smmedivt is. | Frank Schutter, Edward Wanek, | vs [will entertain with & bridal dinner Miss Edwards is a daughter of Mr.! Calin patents an mm a od *"| John Gormley and George Katzen- : : : | turbing condition méans that par bo Mrs Fred Weber is chaip<i X51 1 1 ans | tonight at Highland Golf and Coun- and Mrs. Walter Edwards and the ents focus attention on whichever | X18¢7- gn oe € WIT c Be : : {try Club for their daughter, Anna | bridegroom's parents are Mr. and of the 10 basic doubts and worries pro 00 am, Ee B Outing Next Month | Margaret, and John A. Slattery, son Mrs. Paul O. Tauer Sr, Lebanon. {shadow the prospects for a happy | goog, Jerome Wacker and William | Mrs. Robert Dickinson will head : > wh Will be The Rev. Albert Copeland will of- wedding day. Fathers and MOthers, | vw 112 ce Watkins as her aids {a committee of Psi Chi Phi Sorority of Mrs, Clara Slattery. who . tne| Hoosier Athletic Club. Dance. Miss ficiate. Miss Kathryn Bowlby will it seems, are practical-minded ki-| Typo Lovicee Warren will serve Members in planning the organizamarried tomorrow morning in ihe porgthy Winter, chairman. 'sing preceding the ceremony. as chairman of the entertainment tion's annual picnic to be held next
; | bitzers. They believe in warning the | St. Joan of Are Catholic Church. | CLUBS | The bride will be gowned in white children when they see possible un-| committee, assisted by Mesdames J. month, She will be assisted by Miss
Miss Mary Katherine Hedrick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. for the ceremony. The dinner table Clique. Thurs. eve. Miss Betty Stall, | gra ed hodice. short puffed Hedrick. 3678 N. Delaware St, will become the bride of Robert M. Newby, will be laid with a white organdy| : op “1 puis son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Newby, in a formal ceremony at 8:30 cloth over green satin, The floral Indianapolis Theosophical Society. 8 dress. smocked
o'clock tonight in the Tabernacle Pre The Rev. J. vases of white lilies, delphinium and roses, Family pews will be tied with white satin ribbons and palms and creenery will be used throughout the church. Preceding the ceoremony, F. A. Augustus will sing “Ah. | Sweet Mystery of Life” and “I Love You Truly.” Miss Donna Alles, organist, will play a program of bridal music. Bride's Gown White Net
The bride will enter on the arm of her father in a gown of full white net worn over white satin. The dress is made with a sweetheart! neckline, puffed sleeves, with the! iace of the bodice set iif medallions around the bottom of the skirt. The gown has a long train and the brid: will wear a hip-length veil which falls from a headpiece of starched flowers of illusion encrusted with beads to match the clips of her gown. A “blusher” falls over ths face and she will carry orchids, gardenizs and lilies of the valley. : The bride's sister, Mrs. Don G. Rall, Ft. Wayne will be matron of honor. She will wear a gown styled like the bride's in hyacinth blue and will carry Briarcliff roses and pale blue dephinium. A coronet of matching flowers will be worn in her hair. Miss Elizabeth Fitzpatrick, maid ef honor, will wear Holivwood lilac and will carry Johanna Hiil roses and dark blue delphinium with matching flowers in her hair,
Bridesmaids in Pink
The bridesmaids. Mrs. William Frame. Miss Charlotte McKay and Miss Marian Kissell, will wear gowns like the other attendants in coral pink and will carry Johanna Hill roses and light blue delphini-' um with matching flower coronets. Joan Alice Ball, the bride's niece, and Shirley Jackson will be flower girls. Their gowns will be styled! like the matron of honors in hyacinth blue and pink. They will wear matching net bows in their hair and will ecarrv colonial bouquets of sweetheart roses and delphinium. Don G. Ball, Ft. Wayne, will be best man and ushers will include Paul Peralta. Lloyd Jackson. Harold Engleman and Otto Kern Jr. Mrs. Hedric: has chosen a gown of powder blue lace made with a sweetheart neckline, short puffed sleeves and a long basque bodice with net inserts. Her corsage will be of or-| chids. Mrs. Newby's gown will be of pink lace with which she will; wear a corsage of gardenias and roses. Reception te Follow
After the ceremony, a reception will be held at the Hedrick home. The couple~will receive guests in the living room and garden. White lilies, roses and delphinium will be used throughout the house as dec-| orations and the tiered wedding; cake will be banked with Johanna
garden flowers. The couple will leave after the reception on a trip to California and! will be at home after July 15 at 3678'
{hat is her novel idea. For informal
sbyvterian Church.
Ambrose Dunkel will officiate ai the single-ring service Sweetheart hefore an altar decorated with twn white seven-branch candelabra and boutonnieres will mark the covers.|
N. Delaware St. The bride will travel in a jacket dress of blue noncrushable linen with linen lace trim. a natural colored turban and accessories and corsage of orchids. | Among out-of-town guests who will attend the wedding are Mrs. Mattie Newby, Milwaukee: Mr. and Mrs, F. O. Smith, Detroit: Mr. and |
| Mrs. Harry Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. |
Bernie Lees and their daughters, Mary Ann and Eleanor. all of Marion; William Southard Jr.. and Mr. ion Mrs. Victor Nickolson. Michigan ity.
Goes to Geneva | As U.S. Delegate
Mrs. Ruth K. Heavenridge, 43 N.| Vine St., director of the Butler Uni- | versity special education department, will represent the United States at the International C:ouncii for Exceptional Children at a! world congress July 23-28 in Geneva, Switzerland. Mrs. Heavenridge will sail tomorrow afternoon on the S. S. Rex for the fourth annual World Conference of Workers for Crippled Chiidren, July 16-22, in London. The conference is given under the au-. spices of the International Jociety
for Crippled Children and the Cen-|
tral Council for the Care of Crippies. “The Present Status of the Education of Exceptional Children in| the U. S.” is the title of a pape: | to be read by Mrs. Heavenridgs at! the Congress. Representatives from! South America, Africa, Canada and! all parts of Europe will attend. ! Mrs. Heavenridge has been director of special education in the Indianapolis Public Schools for the past seven years and direcwor of! special education at Butler for five | years. { A laboratory class, meeting daily | on the Butler campus, is under Mrs. | Heavenridge's direction. The class | for exceptional children is the only | one of its kind in the nation where! free instruction for exceptional children is given for a four-week period.
Smart Women Avoid Windblown Effects
Today's smartest women avoid; any suggestion of windblown effects, | choosing sleek, neat but softly! feminine coiffures to top up-to-the- | niinute costumes. An invisible hair net, especially designed and shaped to keep the coiffure within bounds, but not to flatten or in any way mold its charming contours, is suggested by an important milliner.
| | { i i i | { i | 1 ! {
bons to match the trimming on the
evening parties, a glorified net
Decorating |: (the net with flowers, beads or ribHill roses, delphiniums and white!
The dinner will follow rehearsal] fashioned with an Alix’ sleeves | The skirt of the at the waistline, p. m. Sunday. Studio, 411 N. Penn- | falls into folds to the full-length | svlvania. Miss Alice Hollings- | train. Her fingertip-length veil] worth to talk on “The History of hangs in three tiers and is topped! Guests will include Mrs. Slattery! Words.” | with gardenias and lilies of the valMiss Louise Argus, J. Albert Smith, Nature Study. Sunday. Visit to lev. She will carry a prayer book] William A. Durkin Jr., Miss Bege-i Thomas A. Hendricks home and with white orchids and a shower of | nice Brennan, maid of honor; Miss| Indianapolis sanitation plant. ‘cymbedium. Mary Catherine Slattery and Miss Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunny- Sister Will Wear White Mary Fitzgerald, bridesmaids; John| side. Sat, July 8. Ayres audi-/| C. Flannagan, Chicago, best man;| torium. Business meeting. | Mrs. Edward N. Bradford, the Albert Ravarino, St. Louis, and Jos- | LODGES | bride's sister, will be matron of), eph Argus, ushers. Lyndhurst Chapter, O, honor. Her gown will be in white] » p. m. Sat, July 8. chiffon also with a shirred bodice,| Miss Joanne DeMilt was hostess| Lyndhurst Drive, square neckline, short puffed sleeves) for a shower last night at her home| Per. Mrs. Stella and a wide girdle of the same main honor of Mrs. Albert Bernhardt _ VAtlons. \terial tying in a bow in the back. Holiz. who was Miss Floridia Mon- Daughters of America. Tonight. She will carry White carnations and | ical before her recent marriage. ! Bien Sanur? party. Mrs. wm wear a white taffeta bow in her ; ; ie 4 | ary Simpson. chairman. | hair. Sine Tl hie Rill be ak Joy Lodge 5, W. W. M. & B. 7p. m.| The bridesmaids, Miss Virginia AONE guests Were the Misses Al-| Sat. Woodmen's Hall, 322 E. New Bugbee. Mrs. J. E. Gillespie, Mrs. hve | York. Card party at 8:30. Initia- James E. Lowry and Miss Martha
ta Rogers, Esther Cotton, Bar-| © : : a hn iy Ruth Alice Hoffman,| tion and installation. (Haltom, will be gowned like the 3 Ee | matron of honor and will carry
Mary Johnston, Virginia Budden- = es | ! 4 . | toile ; ne baum and Miss Dorothy Foster, Mo- [Recention Ar 1 anged Jiar Does, JB bara Walker ' For Golden Wedding
vile, Ala. His Ain accordion pleated gown of blue net Miss Mary Hughes. daughter of} My and Mrs. Charles Mann i pink VAIVEE h0% soa Mrs. John Hughes, 227 S. AudubOoh celebrate their 50th wedding anni- Brother Best Man Road, has chosen the attendants for versary with an informal reception Robert IL. Tauer will be his! her wedding July 30 to Cleatls L.!Sunday from 3 t6 6 p. m. at thelr|yoner's best man. Ushers will ive Wilkerson, Los Angeles son of Nr.'home, 3649 N. Illinois St. hice Arn Batiey. Edward N ana Mrs. William Wilkerson, Los! There are no invitations. As- po df d. Joh Sims. Dr J E. Angeles. The wedding will be July sisting will be the Manns’ daugh- GOD «ST SHS, JP dB 30 in the McKee Chapel of the Tab- |ters, Mrs. U. J. Pike, Mrs. Calvin| Lespie and James B LOFTY. ernacle Presbyterian Church. |Traylor and Miss Mary Louise! Mrs. Edwards will wear king blue Mrs. Albert Grannemann will be Mann. {lace and orchids while Mrs. Tauer's matron ef honor, Miss Mary Hull! On Monday Mr. and Mrs. Mann, dress will be peach chiffon with an will be bridesmaid and Mr. Gran-|their son, Edgar, and Miss Mann will | Orchid corsage. nemann will serve as best man. |leave on an extended trip to the| Following the ceremony, a recepA series of parties has been West Coast. While in California. | tion will be held at the Edwards’ planned for the bride-to-be. Miss|chey will visit Aiden Mann of Glen- home in Mooresville and the couple Hull will entertain at a linen shower |dale, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. | will leave on a trip to New York. for Miss Hughes July 12 at her
{ chiffon
hostess. fand a V neck. centerpiece will be of smilax and] roses. Corsages and |
FE. S. 6:30 Temple, S. Chicken supBallard, reser-
” »
Mann, | They will be at home in Lebanon.
| friends that he and she will have a!
happiness ahead. Parents’ Influence Potent
Fear of being cut off from the
home folks is the plain reason why the modern lovelorn are generally | reluctant to defy parental opinion, judging by the letters. | Father isn't apt to point with | dramatic forefinger to the exit and |
|order an ungrateful child never to {darken the apartment door again. [That's melodrama.
But the most undramatic parents can make it quite clear to Juliet that they won't support young Romeo when he loses his next job. | Or, Juliet is made to realize that she needn't come home to mother when she finds out—what the fam-| ily sees plainly—that Romeo is so| vastly different in his tastes and great deal of adjusting to do, if they make a happy home. | Those 10 Troubles
The 10 kinds of basic disturbing conditions that cause the lovelorn to hesitate over marriage have heen | put on a list by Dr. Ciocco. Here they are, in trouble-causing order: | Social status, sexual conduct, in-| adequate income of the man, religion and nationality, age, marital status, temperamental traits, social
L. Kavanaugh, Theodore Tanzee Jr. Juanita Carrier and Mrs. Lester Alvin Mayer and William H. Dudley. Freeman. Mrs. Fred W. Nordsiek is newly, Mrs. Louis Nieten will have charge
elected publicity chairman. {of the annual rush to be held early meme m————p— lin September. Other committee members are Miss Rita Stephenson land Miss Alis Marquett, Newly elected officers of the group were entertained recently at a din=‘ner and theater party. Officers in=clude Mrs. Mildred Busenbark, president; Miss Carrier, vice presi=3 (dent; Mrs. Dickinson, secretary; A iwi, Nieten, treasurer; Miss Betty Alpha Sorority, will be guests of the|Latimore, publicity chairman; Miss central council of the organization |Sicphenson, pledge cabiain Mrs, at a dinner party this crening at Freeman, historian, and Miss MarCahary Cottage 2 ne gueite, chaplain and sergeant-at-Following the dinner, Mrs. wil. { 2s.
b ill ain inf ly | cm Fe rT.» I oe rar 1 Phi Theta Delta Unit St. This will conclude the ¢ 21'S | ’ 3 is will conclude the council *To Enter tain Mothers
activities for the year. Newlyelected officers of the chapters will] Members of Alpha Chapter, Phi
form a new council in September, |Theta Delta Sorority, will entertain ? their mothers Wednesday evening at
Cr Whi : Aid an informal dinner at the home of ream nppmng Aid Miss Anna Lou Roult in Jamsstown. A few drops of lemon juice—no| Pledge members who will assist more than three or four—squeezed |the hostess include the Misses Eleainto whipping cream will cause it|nor Earnheart, Marjorie Henninger to thicken quickly. and Margaret Pierce.
Sorority Council Will Give Dinner
vices, kinship and somatic (mean- fs
ing bodily) peculiarities.
It is practically unheard of for a i
man to complain about his prospective bride gambling and drinking too much. And the inadequate
income problem is also ‘one-sided. |[
Otherwise, the items worry men and women in just about the same
order, so far as frequency is con- @
cerned.
Men and women feel somewhat = differently, when they become in- f§
volved in triangles, judging by lovelorn letters.
Two Among Recent June Brides
Ramos-FPorter Photo.
- sherrick hoto. Miss Kathleen Mattingly, daugh Mrs. Roscoe Batts was Miss Helen Behmer,
snood is just the thing for complete coiffyre control Li
ter of Charles Mattingly, Larchmont, N. Y., was married to Kevin | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Behmer, before
on June 17,
be more concerned over the probiems of affection involved. A man is usually troubled by principles. But that does not mean theological misgivings. Kinship Problem Slight
Kinship, which generally means g8
marrying a first cousin, is a problem for comparatively few. But it is taken seriously by those who have doubts, generally on moral or religious grounds. Age takes on curious angles for the lovelorn.. Feminine letter writers who fear that he's “too old.” show how varied are the present day ideas of suitable age gaps between a young wife and an older husband. But when the girl is older than the boy! That's different. Juliet need be only a year or two years
older than her Romeo to raise a i
lurking doubt in her mind, or in his, as to the suitability of this marriage.
Somatic peculiarities are rarest |§
of the lovelorn’s worries. That means, exactly, peculiarities body frame—such as a person being too tall or too short. Dr. Ciocco sums up modern marriage this way: “It is accepted that love, or deep mutual affection, is a prerequisite to marriage.” But,
‘| he adds that although love may be
the dominant factor in human selection of mates, other conditions—
A woman is apt tof
of E
PARAGON'S JODHPUR BOOT
Fit a Rider's Budget
3.96
H there's a horse in your vacation, you know where to get your jodhpurs! The Paragon Shoe Shop has them in neat brown calfskin with pliable soles. Such leather would lead you to expect a higher price than 3.96,
(Blocks
OPEN SATURDAY UNTIL 5:30 P. M.
~~
Paragon Shoe Shop
Fourth Floor
the problems poured out by the
