Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1939 — Page 4

PAGE 8

It’s Fun to Be Patriotic With Dances and Parties

Topping Holiday Calendar

Many Will Celebrate With Long Trips;

Local

Group Europe-Bound on Mauretania; Tonight’s the Night at Woodstock.

Entertainment goes slightly hodge-podge over the Fourth of July week-end, what with dances, sports events and summer homes luring many residents out of town. Many are starting on long trips and several persons have left for all summer, but for the ones left behind are the dances tonight at local country clubs and the holiday celebra-

tions tomorrow.

Clayton Mogg is host at a fishing party over the holiday week-

end on his boat on Crooked Lake, Mich.

With him are Frank J.

Hoke, A. Hastings Fiske, Perry Lesh and Frank Smith, Chicago. While the men are busy enticing the fish, their wives will be over at Burt Lake at the Hoke cottage swimming and playing badminton.

The Moggs' cottage on Crooked for the summer.

Lake was opened this week-end

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Thompson and their children, Mary Jane, Virginia and Ralph Jr. have returned home from a two-week stay at Hyannisport, Cape Cod. They also visited in New York and

Washington.

Five From Here on Maur

etania

Among Indianapolis residents aboard the S. S. Mauretania bound for Europe on her maiden voyage are Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Thomas, Mrs. Carl F. Eveleigh and her daughter, Sue Ann Eveleigh, and Miss Jane Allison. They saiied from New York Friday.

Mrs. Addison E. Coddington, daughter, Martha, left yesterday trip to California.

115 W. Hampton Drive, and her from Chicago for a three-weeks’

They will visit relatives in Pasadena and San Diego

and will attend the San Francisco Exposition. They plan to return by way of the Canadian Rockies, stopping at Lake Louise and Banff. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Sweeney Jr., will he guests over the Fourth of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Lanville Brown at the cottage of Mrs. Brown's

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Elder Adams. Caddick also are guests at Wawasee.

Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah They are guests of Mr. and

Mrs. Stanley McComber, Kendallville, at the Adams’ home. Miss Betty Cline of Scarsdale, N. Y_, returned home over the week-end after visiting her aunt, Mrs. Robert E. Sweeney Sr. Miss Fayette Ann Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Miller, Indianapolis. left Friday to join her parents at their summer home on

Cape May, N. J.

Mrs. J. P. Lunsford, her daughter, Nancy Lee, and Gene Willson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Willson, arrived here yesterday from New

York to spend a week at the Willson home, 33 Maple Court.

Miss

Lunsford and Mr. Willson will be married in September. Mrs. Nicholas H. Noyes, her daughter, Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres Jr., Mr. Ayres and Thomas Solley, Mrs. Noyes’ nephew from Washington, Conn. have left for varied stays at the Les Cheneaux Club, Michigan. Mrs. Noyes’ son, Evans, Homer Lathrop Jr, and two of Mr. Noyes’ classmates at the Harvard University School of Business Administration are already at the club. They have been taking a cruise on the

Noyes yacht.

Mr. Ayres will return some time this week and Mrs. Ayres will

spend two weeks with her mother. olas H. Noyes Jr, will join their the summer. the summer at the club.

it’s Party Time

Mr. Noyes and another son, Nichfamily at Les Cheneaux later in

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene C. Miller have taken a house for

The Fourth seems to be growing in social significance as well as being a patriotic holiday and is always the occasion for dances and

parties. Country Club will be Mr. and Mrs. their guests Messrs. and Mesdames and Ralph Boozer.

Attending the dinner dance tonight at the Indianapolis

Claude C. Jones, who will take as Thornton Sterrett, Frank Dowling

Miss Laura Miller will entertain at a dinner party before the dance in honor of Mr. and Mrs. David Laurance Chambers who re-

turned recently from a honeymoon cruise to Bermuda.

Miss Miller's

guests will be Messrs. and Mesdames Joseph E. Cain, Charles Edwin Test, John Gordon Kinghan, Dr. and Mrs. John Hendricks and William

Remy. Miss Miller will entertain Mrs.

Donald Cutler, Pasadena, Cal, for

several days the latter part of the week at her home, 1221 N. Delaware

St. will be en route to her home after

Mrs. Cutler is the former Miss Diana Dietz, Indianapolis.

She a visit in Buffalo, N. Y.

Mr. and Mrs. Roger G. Wolcott will entertain with a small dinner party tonight for Miss Virginia Solley, Washington, Conn. before the dance at Woodstock Club. Miss Solley was the houseguest this

week-end at the Wolcott home,

Meridian Hills Popular Tonight

Among the 200 reservations made for the dinner dance tonight at Meridian Hills are those of Messrs. and Mesdames Eugene P. Fish-

burn, H. A. Kemper McComb, E. J. Ellsworth, A. A. Zinn, Paul Moffett,

C. H. Hagedon, A. C. Sinclair, R. W.

Showalter, Paul P. Summers, Wal-

ter Brant, the club president; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Waldo, Dr. and Mrs. R. R. Hippensteel and Dr. and Mrs. Donald H. Draper.

Among Frolicking Lambs

“Lambs” who frolicked in the fold at the Athenaeum

Among “Saturday night were Mr. and Mrs.

Uz McMurtrie, Mr. and Mrs. Carl

Wallerich and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Willson who attended together

in a “Dutch treat” party. Todd's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Todd took Mrs.

B. Paul and Mr. and Mrs. R. M.

Malpas of Los Angeles. Dining with the Todd party were Messrs. and Mesdames Otto W. Eisenlohr, R. V. Law, George Green, Chicago, and

Mrs. William T. Eisenlohr.

L. G. Rockey and)

Esther Koch Wed

Mr. and Mrs. IL. Guy Rockey will | be at home in Indianapolis after a short wedding trip following their recent marriage at the home of the Rev. and Mrs. Herbert Wilson. Mrs. Rockey was Miss Esther Koch, daughter of Mrs. Regina Koch, 3126 N. Drive, Brookside Parkway, and Mr. Rockey is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Rockey. A few friends attended the ceremony. Miss Regina Koch, the bride's sister, was her only attendant. James Kinnaird, a cousin of the bridegroom, served as best man.

Open House Tomorrow

EVENTS

SORORITIES Sigma Lambda Chi. 7:30 p. m. today. Miss Emilie Harding, 1215 E. Michigan, hostess. Zeta Chapter, Phi Theta Delta. Wed eve. Miss Dorothy Rose, 4112 N. Capitol Ave. CLUBS J. I. F. F. of Shortridge High School. Today. Picnic. Miss Lorene Reynolds in charge. A. W. T, Pocahontas Embroidery. Thurs. Covered dish luncheon. Miss Clara Goodnick, 945 Congress Ave. hostess. LODGE Silver Star Review 15, W. B. A. 8 p. m. today. Castle Hall, Mrs. Bertha Shuck will preside.

Leaves on Trip West Miss Nina Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Garvin M. Brown, has

Miss Peggy Trusler, daughter of|left for a two months’ trip West.

Dr. end Mrs. Herold M. Trusler, will| She will stop at the Homestead hold open house for her friends to-|Ranch in Wyoming before going on morrow afternoon from 3-5 o'clock (to Saratoga, Cal, to attend the at her parents’ new home, 6150 N.(wedding of Miss Kathleen Benet,

Pennsylvania St. No have been issued. .

Yona

Aug. 12, a former classmate at Sarah Lawrence College.

JANE JORDAN-—-

EAR JANE JORDAN—We are to be six of us, but one girl

a group of five girls. There used got married. We all belonged to

the same church and sang in the same choir. This one girl, as soon

as she met the fellow she married, dropped all of us.

gave her a kitchen shower and I didn’t get. This is our trouble: more as she does not come to see

Her mother don’t know of a thing which she

We never see or hear from our friend any

us or ask us to come and see her.

She puts her husband’s parents first, and his friends first, even before her own parents and her own friends. She has not even acknowledged her kitchen shower that we remembered her with. We say if one gets married they should not forget their own

parents and friends.

® = #

She doesn’t even come to church any more.

THE FORGOTTEN FIVE. * & =

Answer—It often happens that when a girl gets married she

makes a complete break with her old life. You think now that you would never desert the friends

some day.

It may happen to you

of your youth, or weaken your ties to home, but that depends on

the man you mairy.

Not many husbands are particularly congenial with their wives’

girl friends.

And the girl friends find that their relationship with

the on= who pulled out of the group to marry is not the same. The old easy comradeship is gone. She isn't available for the same good

times as before.

Five of you are left, but one by one approximately the same thing will happen. Doubtless each of you will meet a man to whom you can say, “whither thou goest, I will go. Thy people shall be my

people.” ties and new friends.

better.

Then you

Each of you will be swept into a new life with new family

will understand your girl friend

It is rude of her not to acknowledge her wedding presents, but §f you were all present at the shower, perhaps she thinks her thanks at the time were sufficient. I doubt if she has forgotten her parents.

It is just that she doesn’t belong

to them any more and they miss

her presence so much that they fancy she neglects them. It is too bad that you have to say goodby to one of your group, put I don’t know what you can do about it except wait for the time when you will do the same thing. Then you won't miss your girl

friend any more than she misses you.

JANE JORDAN.

Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions

a this column daily.

¢

ake Places in

Coterie of Bri

Betty Williams, Robert L.. Smith To Wed in East

The announcement of the engagement of Miss Betty Anne Williams, Larchmont, N. Y., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Norton Williams, formerly of Indianapolis, will be of

interest to her Indianapolis friends. Miss Williams and Robert Lawrence Smith, New Rochelle, N. Y., will be married Aug. 19 in the Larchmont Presbyterian Church.

Miss Williams is a graduate of DePauw University and is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma and of the Larchmont Junior Women's Club. Mr. Smith is a graduate of Pennsylvania State College and is a member of Alpha Delta Sigma Fraternity. Announcement was made at a week-end party given by her parents for another daughter, Miss Barbara Jeanne, who has returned home after completing her freshman year at Duke University, and for their son, Stuart Cambell, who returned June 24 on the S. S. Mauretania after a year of graduate study in Rome,

Mr. and Mrs. Welke Take Michigan Trip

Times Special BLOOMINGTON, July 3—Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Welke are on a wedding trip in Michigan following their marriage yesterday afternoon in the First Methodist Church of Bloomington. They will be at home in Indianapolis after Sept. 1. Mrs. Welke was Miss Elizabeth Jane Burnett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Burnett Sr., Bloomington, and the bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Welke, Peru. The Rev. C. Howard Taylor officiated. The bride was given in marriage by her father. Attendants were Mrs. Vernon Huffman, Bloomington, matron of honor, and Sidney Steensma, Detroit, best man. Ushers were Arthur Welke, Chicago, and Guy Burnett Jr. Welke are graduates of Indiana University.

Viola Hall Bethrothed

Mr. and Mrs. Ellis B. Hall announce the engagement of their daugher, Viola Ruth, to Dr. Perry A. Ratcliff, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Ratcliff. The wedding will be Aug. 20.

Philippines, and Mrs. Mi her friend, Miss Anne

EY

@

the U. S. Naval Academy.

Carlon Photo.)

Charles D. Neumeyer.

=

1. Mr. and Mrs. Max Bardach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Adele, to Donald William Shoemaker, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Raymond Shoemaker, Elmira, N. Y. Miss Bardach attended Purdue University and Western College and Mr. Shoemaker attended (Dexheimer-Carlon Photo.) 2. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick William Olson announce the engagement of their daughter, Anna, to Earl Raley, son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Raley, Sullivan. The wedding will be in September. 3. Mrs. C. Lyle Mannweiler was Miss Mildred Jasper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman F. Jasper, before her marriage June 24. Mr. and Mrs. Mannweiler will be at home in Seymour, Conn.

(Kindred Photo.)

(Dexheimer-

4. The marriage of Miss Ruth Gross and Paul Obergfell will be July 15 at the Blaine Avenue Methdoist Church. Miss Gross is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gross. 5. Miss Helen Neumeyer became the bride of Glenn Erisman in a ceremony read June 24. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

(Ayres Photo.)

6. Mrs. Ben A. Davis was Miss Bernice Emrich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Emrich Jr, before her marriage June 2.

(Bell Photo.)

Passing of Month of Brides Brings Decline in Showers For City’s Brides-to-Be

Wedding events have taken a customary midsummer decline now

that the “month of brides” is past. Prenuptial social events, including showers and parties, have tapered accordingly. A few showers have been planned for this week and several more have been announced for this month. Several engagements have added somewhat to the ranks of the brides-to-be and one young woman has set a date for her wedding.

Both Mr. and Mrs. !

Mrs. Martin L. Ruth will entertain Thursday night at a miscellaneous shower for Miss Edna Gladys Shaw, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver H. Shaw, W. 50th St, whose marriage to William L. Gullett will be July 22, Assistant hostess will be Mrs. Frank Z. Sims and the party will be given at the Ruth home, 1331 S. East St. Guests will include Mesdames H. W. Armstrong, Dorothy Lyon, Martha Turpin and the Misses Christina Maurer, Edith Freetly, Virginia Fillinger, Gertrude Mahoney, Opal | Selby, Beth Kern, Helen Hopping, | Esther Davis, Loujean Gullett, Vera Gullett, Amy Myer, Annalee Webb and Josephine Graf.

” 2 2 Miss Thelma Tacoma, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Tacoma, 1046 S. Randolph St, was honor guest recently at a tea towel shower at the home of Miss Julia Miller, 718 E. Morris St. Guests included members of the Zeta Tau Alpha So|rority chapter at Butler University. Mrs. Robert Svendsen, Minneapolis, and Mrs. Lester Noerr, Madison Wis., sisters of the bride-to-be, will arrive July 15 for the wedding and to entertain at a prenuptial shower for Miss Tacoma. Miss Tacoma and Kenneth Trees, son of Mrs. Edna Trees, 130 S. Butler Ave., will be married in August. 8 = Mrs. J. W. Lewis, who will be matron of honor at the wedding

July 24 of Miss Eleanor Klutey and the Rev. Harry T. Wells, Pocono Lake, Pa, will entertain for the bride-to-be at a personal shower Wednesday, July 12, at her home, 245 W. Maple Road. . Miss Klutey is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Klutey, 1099 Congress Ave. Mr. Lewis will act as best man at the wedding. ” ” o Miss Florence Jane Scott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E. Scott, 2002 N. Almbama St, has chosen Sept. 2 as the date for her wedding to James Robert Herdrich, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Herdrich, 3162 N. Capitol Ave. ® ® 2 Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J. McCoy announced the engagement of their daughter Beulah to Immanuel H. Hinds, son of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Hinds, at a buffet supper this weekend at the McCoy home in Bloomfield. The wedding will be Sept. 3. Miss McCoy has been Green County public nurse the past three years. She is a graduate of Indiana University and the Indiana University training school for nurses. She is also a first reserve nurse in the American Red Cross. 2 » EJ Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gross have announced the engagement of their daughter Ruth to Paul Obergfell. The wedding will be July 15 at the Blaine Avenue Methodist Church.

Louise Mc Nuit Chats With Old Friend

McNutt, United States High Commissioner to the

Times Photo.

Miss Louise McNutt (right), daughter of Paul V. Mrs. Bowman Elder, during the McNutts’ visit with the Elders. The McNutts returned here last night tt, is shown chatting with from Martinsville, where they visited the Commis , daughter of Mr. and Sioner’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John McNutt,

: |beginning Thursday

6

v aga

Women of Moose To Fete Officers At Dinner Party

New officers of the Women of the Moose will be honored at a dinner party Thursday at Moose Hall, 135 N. Delaware St. Mrs. Kathryn Hansford will have charge of entertainment, assisted by Mrs. Pearl Hull, retiring homemaking chairman, and members of the entertainment and homemaking committees.

Officers and committee chairmen, installed at a recent meeting, are: Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, senior regent; Mrs. Dorville Wise, junior regent; Mrs. Edna Mershon, chaplain; Mrs. Esther Hansford, graduate regent; Mrs. Beulah Anderson, recorder; Mrs. Anna Cornell, treasurer; Mrs. Betty Klemm, argus; Mrs. Pearl Beck, sentinel; Mrs. Bertha Wilner, guide; Mrs. A. B. Matillo, assistant guide; and Mrs. Phoebe Hart, pianist. Committee heads for the new year include Mrs. Mayme Whiting, alumnae: Mrs. Hart, audit; Mrs. Hazel Postma, child care and training; Mrs. Nelle Runyan, emblem; Mrs. John Ferguson, homemaking; Mrs. Nelle Powell, library; Mrs. Kathryn Hansford, membership; Mrs. Wilner, Moose Haven; Mrs. Lydia Watkins, Mooseheart; Mrs. Hull, publicity; Mrs. Jean Butze, ritualistic; Mrs. Hazel Novak, social service; Mrs. Clara Neerman, ways and means, and Mrs. Helen Jepson, merry sunshine. New escorts are Mrs. Whiting and Mrs. Mae Ginz, chaplain; Mrs. Neerman and Mrs. Clara Thompson, junior regent; Mrs. Runyan and Mrs. Kathryn Hansford, senior regent, and Mrs. Helen Wolsifer and Mrs. Maude Shoultz, graduate regent.

Moving Is Fun, Your Children, ‘Too, May Say

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON

The Smiths had to move again, because Mr. Smith had been sick and then reduced to easier work. They could not keep up the house on Harbor St., which they had am=bitiously rented when he had gotten his last raise. It was hard to get out of their lease, but the landlord, confronted with a nonpaying tenant, had finally given his consent, if the Smiths would take another of his houses near the flood district. So that was what happened, and now here is Mrs. Smith listlessly packing, feeling that life is too hard to bear. It is the children who worry her. Poor Donnie, just getting acquainted where she was. Only last week Jennie Jackson had asked her to a party, and the Jacksons were such lovely people. Other Disadvantages And then, too, little Kurt was about to go to the big kindergarten nearby. He played so nicely with

and the neighborhood they were going to was simply a swarm of every kind of child under the sun. Were the children to have no wetter chance than she had had, or Elmer? “What a dreadful place to grow up in,” she said to herself. “Six of us in that hole and Grandma coughing her heart out. If things keep on, some day that will be me. But I don’t care. It’s the children I worry about.” Mrs. Smith began to lift an old box to the top of a trunk, and then some unexplained urge made her open it. Inside there was a mixture of everything—a broken buckle, some assorted nails, & piece of striped sash, a few shells, a little blue pitcher with the spout gone. Back Down Memory Lane

Mrs. Smith sat down and smiled. The blue pitcher was hers when she was about Donnie’s age. How she had loved it. She put it down, and took the bit of sash in her hands. Of all things. The very dress she had worn when she had applied to Mr. Ogden for a job as cash girl in his store. Her pride in that day flooded back as freshly as though it had been an hour before. She had loved the old things after all. Maybe the children wouldn't mind so much. Donnie came in, all bright and

“Oh, mother,” she cried,

the children on quiet Harbor St.|

Local Church Groups Plan Conferences

Young Married People of Christian Endeavor to Hold Outing.

Plans for an annual convention and a midwestern conference meeting this fall are being made by organizations affiliated with local churches. Several outings, a card party, lawn fete and all-day institute meeting have been planned for this week and next.

Members of the Senior Christian Endeavor, the Young Married People’s Class and the Young People’s Choir of the Centenary Christian Church will hold their annual outing tomorrow at McCormick's Creek State Park. The groups will leave by bus tomorrow morning. John Irvine is leader of the Young Married People’s Class.

Newly elected officers of the Senior Christian Endeavor are Lloyd Darnell, president; Mary Ellen Darnell, vice president; Roberta Neely, secretary, and John Bridwell, treasurer. The new officers, and William Buhr and Clarence Price are attending the Bethany Young People’s Christian Conference this week at Bethany.

Several Indianapolis women will attend the National Convention of Church Women Thursday through Sunday at Conference Point, Lake Geneva, Wis., as delegates from the Indianapolis Council of Federated Church Women. Mrs. Asa Hoy, council vice president; Mrs. Lionel Artis, race relations chairman; Mrs. C. A. Childers, promotional chairman, and Mrs. J. H. Smiley, time and place chairman, will be official council delegates. Others who will attend are Mrs. Ralph Hudelson, vice president of the national council, and Mrs. C. W. Roller. Mrs. Hoy will lead a discussion on “Personal Faith and EXxperience.” The theme of the convention, opening at 7:30 a. m. Thursday, will be “That in All Things He May Have Pre-emin-ence.” Miss Daisy June Trout, retiring president, will preside.

Committees have been announced for the fall meeting of the Midwest Synod which will be held at the Immanuel Evangelical and Reformed Church Sept. 11-13. Mrs. B. F. Entwistle is a member of the program committee, while Mesdames Harry Wagener, Ray Brandes and Edwin Aufderheide will serve on the entertainment committee. The Ladies’ Aid Society, with Mrs. Anna Emhardt president, will have charge of meals and serving. The Happy Builders Class of the church will meet at 7:30 p. m Thursday at the home of Miss Elsie Ragan, 122 S. East St. Miss LaVern Towns will be assistant hostess. The church's annual J. I. M. lawn fete will be held Wednesday, July 26, at the church.

The Foreign Missionary Societies of the Methodist Churches of the Indianapolis District will hold an all-day institute for the program building committees at the Brookside Community House on Friday, July 14. -Mrs. J. E. Andrews will review “Women and the Way.” Other speakers will be Miss Myrtle Wilson of the Belgian Congo; Miss Ada Nelson, Mrs. Hattie Asbury and Mrs. M. O. Robbins. A box luncheon will be served at noon.

Members of the Federation of Circles at the Wallace Street Presbyterian Church will hold their annual outing and picnic Thursday, July 13, in Ellenberger Park. The monthly meetings of the federation will not be held during this month or next.

Officers of the Altar Society of the St. Philip Neri Catholic Church will entertain with a card party at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday. Mrs. George Randall is chairman.

The St. Joan of Are Woman’s Club of the St. Joan Arc Catholic Church, is planning a lawn fete for Saturday, July 15.

S. of U. V. Auxiliary Plans Supper July 11

Members of Auxiliary 10, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, will meet for supper at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday, July 11, at Ft. Friendly. The meeting has been postponed from tomorrow. A business meeting will be held following the supper and Mrs. Margery Engle, president, will preside.

smart appearance

even the fussiest men.

ERR a 1

shining. “it's great fun to move.”

\

ONDA, JULY 8,1089¢

ZTA Delegate

Miss Nelda Johnson of this city will represent the Indiana University chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority at the international convention, July 8 to 13, at Mackinac Island. Miss Johnson is the chapter secretary.

Yarboroughs on Wedding Trip in Southern Region

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Yarborough are on a wedding trip through the Smoky Mountains following their marriage Saturday in the chapel at the Methodist Hospital. The Rev. William Burroughs, pastor of the St. Paul's Episcopal Church, of= ficiated at the ceremony. Originally planned for St. Paul's Church, the wedding was held in the hospital chapel so Mrs. George A. Haynes, 5356 Ohmer Ave. the bride's mother, could attend the ceremony. She was present in a wheel chair. Mr. Yarborough is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yarborough, 20 N. Pershing Ave.

The bride’s sister, Mrs. James Genders, and Joseph E. Wood attended the couple. The bride wore a simple white silk suit with an orchid corsage and white accessories. Her sister was dressed in dusty pink with a corsage of roses and larkspur.

Edits Butler U. Sororities Book

Miss Betty Ellen Sanders, 18 W. 36th St, will edit the Butler University Pan-Hellenic “Rush Rules and Information,” a booklet published annually by the organization for sororities and women new to the campus. The booklet will appear on the campus about the middle of July. Assisting the editor are the Misses Dorothy Durham, Virginia Blackley and Ann Aufderheide. Included in the booklet will be information on the Pan-Hellenic creed, rush rules, letters from PanHellenic officers, rules on etiquette, the eight sororities on the campus and the financial status of each. Rush season for the sororities will begin late in August.

2000 Expected at B. P. W. Convention

Times Special KANSAS CITY, Mo, July 3— American Business and Professional Women’s Clubs will meet here next week for a biennial national convention. About 2000 are expected. The convention theme, suggested by Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, suffrage and peace leader, is “a centennial of progress for women.” She will broadcast a convention message from her home in New Rochelle, N. Y., the night of July 10. Convention speakers will be Federal Judge Florence Allen, Cleveland; Dr. Viva Booth, acting director of the Bureau of Business Research at Ohio State University, and Margaret Culkin Banning, Duluth. Mrs. Norma Harrison Thrower and Mrs. Marie Simmelink Kraft, both of Cleveland, will present a pageant on “Mr. Godey Presents.”

Loyal Legion to Meet

Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, president of the Indiana Society of Dames of the Loyal Legion, will preside at a meeting of the organization at 9 a. m. tomorrow on the north steps of the Circle monument. The Declaration of Independence will be read at a public service.

MAKE YOURSELF CONFORTABLE

IN COOL WASH SUITS

and leave it to us to keep their Our methods of loundering are those recommended by the manufacturers. Qur skilled operators are artists in reconditioning them to please

in warm weather because it causes garments to hold their shape longer. We pay close attention to the shape of lapels, ULE NCTC LIR and trousers. :