Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1939 — Page 18

IETY—

Series of

Prenuptial Parties

rranged for Katharine Fulton

; A series of prenuptial parties has been planned for Katharine Fulton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert N.

~ Fulton, who will be married

Oct. 13 to Peter Norman

Larsen, Louisville, son of Mr. and Mrs, Peter Larsen,

‘Staten Island, IN. Y.

_ First on the|list is the party “Spiegel will give

morroy in Shelbyville. mates of Katharine’s at Tudor Hall

Mary DePrez and Mrs. William The hostesses were schoolSaturday, Mrs. John M.

“Kitchen will entertain with a dinner party at Meridian Hills Country

- Club. : Helaine Pet Woodstock and | - =Friday, Oct. 6. 1 s Tuesday, Oct. 10; sand Mrs. Norma in their home.

Jean VanRiper Also Feted Another “of

and Ruth Zinn will have a luncheon Tuesday at

at the Rauch farm on the Noblesville Road. Mr. R. Kevers will entertain Oct. 7 at a buffet supper -

e current brides-to-be who is being feted exten-

sively is Jean VanRiper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guernsey Vane Riper, whose marriage to William Taylor Burnes, Woburn, Mass,

. will be Oct. 21. | Mrs. John ‘ for her on Tue Mrs. Edward Vi Mr. Burnes best man. - , of Montclair, N. J.

| Symphony Board Meeting Set

. Pearson and Mrs. Richard Dickson will entertain v, Oct. 17. Miss Jean Miller will give a party as will Riper, the bride-to-be’s sister-in-law. as selected Kenneth Chase, Wilmington, Mass., as | VanRiper’s attendant will be Jean Elizabeth Fox

' The executive board of the Indiana State Symphony Society

: women’s committee will hold + Wednesday at

its first meeting at 10:30 a. m. oodstock. Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres, president of the

: women's committee, will be hostess at a luncheon following -the

| meeting. Cha

en of standing committees will report at the meet-

‘ing and plans for women's committee activities during the concert

: series will be discussed.

: Members of the executive board are Mrs. Ayres, president; Mrs. i James W. Feslen, first vice president; Mrs. Jack A. Goodman, second | vice president; Mrs. Charles Latham, third vice president; Miss Lucy . Taggart, fourth |vice president; Mrs. William H. Ball, -Muncie, secre=

: tary, and Mrs.

iylvester Johnson, treasurer. Standing committee chairmen include Mrs.

Frederick G. Appel,

' ways and means; Mrs. H. H. Arnholter, state units; Mrs. Thaddeus R.

' Baker, women’s

‘clubs; Mrs. James F. Carroll, publicity; Mr. G. H.

{ A. Clowes, contests; Mrs. Frank Hoke, children’s concerts; Miss , Josephine Madden, office service; Mrs. P, R. Mallory, state council, “and Mrs. Herbert M. Woollen, luncheon-lectures,

Debonair Club to Meet Saturday

Debonair Club members, girls of Shortridge High School and ‘ Tudor Hall, will meet for luncheon at noon Saturday at the Columbia Club. Members are Barbara Kiger, Patty Casler, Patty Smith, Betty Jane Mosiman, Sara Beck, Ann Sayles, Marilyn Mulvihill, Beth - | Anderson, “0 Noel, Georgianna Dedaker, Nancy i{Wohlgemuth and

: Betty Lieber.

The Womeh’s Missionary Society of the Second Presbyterian 4 Church will meet at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Wal-

: ter C. Marmon i guest speaker. : lead

Brentdonwood. Dr. George W. Butler Jr, will be the Mrs. Charles Martin will sing. Mrs. W. L. Clarke will devotions and Mrs. Mark M. Covert, president, will preside.

Arrangements in the dining room will be under the direction of

* Mrs. Daniel I.

lossbrenner. Mrs. Orland A. Church and Mrs. Frank

- J. Hoke will be arrangements committee assistants with Mrs. Jean : Milner and Mrs. Vance Smith. Assisting Mrs. Glossbrenner will be i the Misses Mary Glossbrenner, Katie Glossbrenner, Susanne Milner,

: Ann Marmon,

Jancy Hoke, Mesdames Mary Bradley, Evans. Coch-

‘rane and Le Roy Gordner. Mrs, J. H. Rehm! is in charge of trans-

: portation.

i l

| White Cross Guild to Choose Queen at Annual May Meeting; Pr gram for Season Arranged

A White Cross Queen, representing the ideal White Cross woman, : will be crowned at the annual luncheon of the Methodist Hospital White : Cross Guild next spring, it was decided at a meeting of. the executive i board yesterday. The luncheon ‘will be May 12 at the Claypool Hotel.

i Membership) rallies in all member { units, a campaign to acquaint the i public with [hospitalization facts i and health principles, a public lec- : ture course and special work proj- { ects for all guilds are to be included ‘in the program for the coming year. "The Mary Hanson Carey Research Unit «will sponsor the lecture course and will present speakers on health : Choice of Projects Given

* Special projects of member guilds may be chosen from any activity sponsored by the White Cross Guild for the patients and nurses of the Methodist Hospital, which include Tiny Tim beds; new books for the hospital | library, nurse scholarships and student loans, the Hall of Fame and special equipment for the hospital. The Hall of Fame i$ a social service [project on the maternity

oor. ~ The Children’s Cheer unit is raising funds to purchase an oxygen unit for the| baby incubator which it presented | several years ago for the childrens floor. Proceeds from

a cad party which the unit will sponsor Oct. 10 will go into this fund.

Book Reviews Arranged

Other units which will sponsor benefit parties this fall include the

Mother Unit, a book review on Oct. 11 in Ayres’ auditorium, and Municipal Gardens and Tabernacle Presbyterian units, book reviews on Nov. 7 and 9. y Mrs. J. I. Holcomb has presented a Tiny Tim bed providing hospitalization for a child from a” needy family for five days on the Thomas Taggart Memorial Children’s Floor. Mrs. Carl A. Ploch, second first vice president of the Guild, is chairman of the Tiny Tim fund.

Musicale Board to Meet

Mrs. James H. Lowry, president of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale, has called a business meeting of the organization's executive hoard for 10:30 a. m. tomorrow at Ayres’ auditorium.

JANE JORDAN—

EAR JANE JORDAN—In your answer to M. L. B.'s question I 4.7 think you are entirely wrong. You have the mistaken idea that every ot gets married just for a meal ticket. Just what do you

mean? Th

makes a wife or any woman feel rather cheap. In fact

4 would scare any man away from the weman he intended to get. >. When a man and woman get married it is, of course, for love, a home and family. I do not believe they ever get to the point where

they hate think the or other he will be sorry. No wo being married for any time.

wr x wrote| you before and your answer was about the worst I ever read. You certainly do not know how to answer or give advice. If I better advice than you do, I'd quit. This idea of saying

couldn't gi

on other. They may tire of each other, but never hate. I an should stick to the woman he married or some time an is able to shift for herself after

women get married just for a meal ticket is awful. In time men will not care to get married if they read all you print; so cut that.trash out and think before you advise, if you can. : I am stire plenty of other women think as I do; so I hope M. L. B, will see ouf point and ignore that meal ticket idea. ' You sure are iy

ou know it. »

wrong and

~- ||. »

FRIENDS OF THE TIMES. s 8 =

Answer—I did not say that every woman married for a meal ticket. - Such generalizations are always wrong. What I said was that some women get their devotions mixed up with their security. It is e women marry a check book, or a meal ticket, rather

in, but not all, of course.

“¥. Your letter is full of mis-statements. Your first is that all men and women marry for love, a home and family. Plenty of our readers could ‘testify that they married for other reasons if tHey would take the trouble to write. Also it isn’t true that a married couple never

learn to hate each other. Man tell you that they are living with “whom they despise. . It is woman h mistake, lightly or

now reading this statement could

or have escaped from, partners

Iso untrue that a man should, in every case, stick to.the married. There is nothing to be gained in perpetuating a I do not mean that any person should take marriage try to escape the responsibility he assumed, but only that

when people simply cannot get along peacably together, they are

better off Of all

probably is

apart.

your mis-statements, the one which misses the mark most, the one where you say that no woinan is able to shift for

herself after being married for any time. The facts are against you.

In almost, any business employing a large number of people you will find women heroically supporting a family after the death or desertion of a husband and father. I personally have seen women who ~ never earned a nickle, start in middle age and make good without previous experience. - It is not easy, of course, but it is done con- . finually by courageous women who ‘have no other alternative, + I am afraid that your opinions are based on what you want to lieve rather than on. the unpleasant reality .which confronts you. in let! me say thaf not all women marry for economic reasons. I 2g to believe that most of them marry because they are y rh ¢ 3 At JANE 4) i

NN

winter social season Oct. 7 with

Alpha Chi Club Planning Lunch

Mothers of Alpha Chi Omega pledges at Butler University will be honor guests at a Mothers’ Club luncheon at 1 p. m. Monday at the chapter house. Newly-elected officers will be hostesses. Officers include Mrs. Carl V. Howe, president; Mrs. R. F. Benham, vice president; Mrs. G. P. Schulz, secretary; Mrs, C. W. Gilkison, treasurer; Mrs. A. R. Chapman, corresponding secretary. Mrs. D. C. Talbott will have charge of the program. Miss Mildred Blackridge, former national secretary of the sorority, will talk ‘and Mrs, George Underwood will speak on activities of the Mothers’ Council of Butler. Miss Lois Morton will sing. :

Tea Is Given by Voters League

Members of the board and membership committee of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters entertained at a tea yesterday in honor of new members of the league. Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin was hostess for the event. Mrs. Clarence Merrell, president of the Indiana League, presided at the tea table. Mrs. John K, Goodwin is president of the Indianapolis group. Mrs. Smiley Chambers is chair. man of the membership committee, assisted by Mesdames Edwin Ferree, C. C. Hamilton, Maurice T. Harrell, D. C. Hess, Walter Montgomery, C. A. Campbell, R. M. Loomis, Thomas G. Sinclair, Grosvenor Shirk, Carol Kramer, Kenneth Keegan, A. W. Noling, John Kautz, Alan Albright; Miss Barbara Fowler and Miss Eldena Lauter.

Auditions for Choral

To Start Tomorrow

Auditions for the Choral Ensemble of .the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale will be tomorrow and Saturday at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory. Mrs. Paul Whipple, membership chairman, will be in charge. Rehearsals will begin Tuesday at 9:45 a. m.-in the Indiana World War

_{ Memorial. .

New officers are Mrs. Preston Highley, chairman;' Mrs. Paul Whipple, vice chairman; Mrs. Walter Wolf, recording secretary; Mrs. J. R. Howell, treasurer; Mrs. Herbert Grouns, corresponding secretary, and Mesdames J. BE. Wilson, C. C. York and J. E. Shaw, directors.

The Columbia Club is to inaugurate its fall and

Serving on the patrons and patroness committee are

ley, Arthur Paetz, Charles Great-

Trio Planning Colum

bia

a dinner dance. will play for the

Club

- TI “

Plan Showers § To Fete Fall

| | Brides-to-Be]

i

: Miss Fosler to Be Honored

‘Tonight, Miss Haworth. | Saturday. 0S

: Severtl showers have been planned for the remainder of the week.

. ldaughter of Dr. and Mrs. David W.

| Posler, 5718 N. Delaware St., will be _ |married Oct. 14 to Robert D. Gruen, ‘Ison of Mr. and Mrs. George. J.

+ | Gruen, Cincinnati. Y

| Woods,

Harry Harlan, Harold Cumberworth, Olen Seaman, George Oburn, Earl Mericle, Miss Betty Price and Miss Mary Elizabeth Craig. Mrs, Elmo P. Fisher and Mrs. J. G. Cox will be assistant hostesses.

2 = 8 Mrs. Robert Day and Miss Ber-

*Iniece Mulholland will -entertain: tomorrow evening with a miscellane--|ous shower in honor of Miss Pauline

Ameter, whose marriage to Jack Jones, Tipton, will be Oct. 14. Guests will be Mrs. Paul Ameter, the bride-to-be’s mother; Mrs. Mabel | Jones, mother of the -bridegroom-to-be; Mesdames’ Herman = Maze, Ward McAvoy, William Bailiff, Glen Kantz, Thomas Hughes, Francis Roberta ' Smith, Harold Sauer, Paul Bresock, Walter Oliver, Verniet Beechler, Vincent Roberts,

[Richard McElroy, Kenneth Sauer,

Earl Fairbanks and the Misses Ethel

. | Jackson, Betty Pierson, Peg Stevens,

Times Photo.

(left to right) the Mesdames J. H. Kemper, Elmer Goldsmith and E.

G. Dehner. John Philip Sousa III dancing.

County Democratic Women's

Club Names Committees and Hostesses for Party Oct. 6

Committees have been announced for the Marion County Women’s

Democratic Club card party Friday of the Claypool Hotel.

chairmen,

evening, Oct. 6, in the Riley Room

Mrs. Ira Haymaker is general chairman, with Mesdames John Bingham, Clarénce Wheatley and John McNellis, co-

Honorary hostesses will include Mesdames M. Clifford Townsend,

Samuel Trippet, John W. Kern Sr., Sherman Minton, Frederick VanNuys, William Larrabee and Louis Ludlow, ; Reception committee members include Mesdames Frank E. McKinney, John Hollett, Emery Scholl, Earl R. Cox, James E. Deery, Albert Losche, William A. Clauer, Fred Hoke, Michael Ryan, H. Nathan Swaim, E. Kirk McKinney, Frank Dowd, Guy Ross, Carl Wood, B. M. Ralston, Joseph Markey, Henry Goett, David Lewis, Dewey Myers, Herschel Tebay, William Dudine, George Werbe, Herbert Spencer, Charles Ettinger, Herbert Wilson, Wilfred Bradshaw, Roscoe McKinney, Glenn Ralston, Smiley Chambers, John Linder, James P. Wason,

Jr., Edward C. Wakelam, James P. Scott, Walter Lewis, George Popp Jr., Joseph E. Woods, Mary Feeney, Margaret Layton, Kathryn Coleman, Marcia Murphy, Kathryne Clements, Harriett McNamara and the Misses Mary Sullivan, Julia Landers, Emma May, Sara Lauter, Vera Day and Ione Sylvester.

Finance Group Named

Finance committee members are Mesdames John Donnelly, E. Wayne Seay, Mary Shackelford and Miss Lela Dipper. Members of the ticket committee include Mrs. Marie Westfall, chairman; Mrs. Timothy Sexton, co-chairman, and Mesdames Sysan Munn, Mary Case, Mark Gray, Victor Salb, Albert Fromhold, Iva Smith, Clara Hilkene, Bessie Myers, Bonnie Heidelberger, Mabel Rose and the Misses Edith McKay, Olive Fitz, Goldie Dold, Elva Powers, Mary Brown, Mary Louise Walpole, Ann Brown, Perlie Friand, Lucille Boher, Mary Garner, Norma Dalton, Mary Ricketts and Bess Bigane. The general committee includes Mesdames Grant Karns, J. B. Calloway, John Corwin, Leonard Mar-

house, Joseph E. Kernel, George Nelson, Robert Shipman, Fred Pullman, Leighton Powers, Wilfred Seyfried, William Kiley, John Weinbrecht, James McCaslin, Homer L. Cook, Thomas Rollison, Charles J. Fisher, Robert Bell, Paul Gastineau,

- |Mary Murphy, - |bach, Mary Hurley, Tella Haines,

Feldman, Lillian Donahue, Naomi Whitesell, Katherine Koster and the |said. ; ke & : The institute sessions are to be held at 10 a.m. each ‘Thursday

| Gertrude Smith, Bertha Cook, Eva-

448 |Deutcher and Margaret Hurt. Ramos-Porter Photo. | © chessing Table Prize nnin

Margaret Appers-

Bessie Gassaway, Opal Taylor, Margaret Shuller, Loretta McDonald, Marie Hadley, Faye Terrill, Rose Taylor, Blanche Ratz, Margaret Flaherty, Anastacia Schuetz, Louise Hurt West, Catherine Sandberg, Edith Reilly, Lillian Cowden, Linnie Cannaday, Susan Greene, Helen Miller, Lenora Robertson, Frances Graves, Mary Stout Dugan, Clara

Misses Frances Sherrer, Marie O'Connor, Ruby Hendelman, Pauline Kappemeier, Rose Ritter, Frances Spaulding, Elizabeth. Steele, Hazel

Josephine Fenberg, Louise Fishbach, line McCullum, Mary Barrett, Pearl

Ward, Louise ‘Sachs, Maris Ruska, Mary Glaska, Anna Dubin, Rose

W. C. Smith, Meredith Nicholson |-

Freeman, Bety Nolan, Marie Haas,!

Samuel Ralston, Henry F. Schricker, Paul V. McNutt, Frank McHale,

Saul Hoffman, Ben Bacon, Margaret Harrington, Emma Jackson, Margaret O'Connor, Ray H. Herner, Thomas Bridges, Mary Frenzel, Minnie McGrew, John Kelly, Paul Watson and the Misses Lena Cohen and Helen Mannix. :

Additional prizes will be arranged for by Miss Hanna Noone, chairman, and Mrs, P. C. Kelly, cochairman, assisted by Mesdames George Yeazel, Thomas Quinn, Maurice Reilly, Val McLeay, Josepin Tynan, Ada Crider and Carolyn Behymer.

Mrs. Norma Amt and Mrs. Katherine Koss are co-chairmen of the candy committee, assisted by Mes= dames Juanita Quinn, Marie McEIlwin, Betty Anderson, Marie Pyle, Pauline Elliott, Mary Lee, Gar Davis and the Misses Harriett Deer, Eunice Day, Elizabeth Quinn, Martha Kelly, Frances Hickey, Lucille Smith and Mary Brown,

Mrs. Martin Walpole is chairman of refreshments, with Mrs. Grover Parr as co-chairman, assisted by Mrs. Morris Maney and the Misses Dorothy Gauss, Helen Barrett, Bertha Frey, Lenore Lorentz, Helen Reidy, Marie Loechle and Ruth Haefling. Mrs. Frances Marsh is in charge of publicity.

Opens Course |,

The housewife can exert the greatest disciplinary force possible on “unfair business” by informing herself on the elementary principles of fair practice, A. W, Metzger, pres< ident of the Indianapolis Better

homemakers today: He spoke at the opening session of a Consumer’s Institute at Block’s Auditorium. The adult education institute is being sponsored by the bureau, Butler University, the Ad-

organizations.

mentary pringiples of fair’ practice and how to recognize trickery in its various forms, you will consciously or unconsciously avoid that individual, or that business, that, will not play fair. ... You will-be king his practices unprofitable, he must do one of two things, clean up or quit.” “The advertiser who unfairly takes advantage of the housewife also takes advantage of and injures legitimate merchandising and advertising, Innumerable = examples

that the interests of the consumer and the legitimate retailer coincide and are inevitably intertwine, oh

morning alternately in Block's

Genevieve Lahey, Kathleen Barrett, | will

hoosing Table

g is |

For Consumers|

Business Bureau, told -Indianapolis|

vertising Club and by women’s civic|

“By informing yourself on the ele- |

could be given to illustrate the point |

he

Bertha Pursel, @Mildred * Sexson, Betty Dobyns, Dorothy Ratcliffe, Ruth Young, Anna Lloyd Waneatah Taylor, Goldie Johnson, Louise Kethcam, Marcele Martin and Elizabeth Martin.

® 2 =

Miss Louise Haworth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Haworth, 5610 University Ave., will be honor guest

day afternoon at the home of Mrs. Robert W. Platte. Miss Haworth and George H. Warner, Dallas, Tex., son of Mr. and Mrs, Henry H. Warner, Indianapolis, will be married Oct. 10 at the home of the bride-to-be’s parents. Guests with Miss Haworth and her mother will include Mrs. Warner, Mrs. Charles T. Platte, assistant hostess; Mesdames Alfred E. War-

ner, Jack D. Oldham, James D. Ford,

Weir Kyle, Alma Foltzenlogel and the Misses Virginia Warner, Marybeth Oldham and Lois Oldham.

» ” ”

Miss Mildred Benton will entertain Sunday afternoon at her home, 1201 N. Kealing Ave. with a bridal shower for Miss Florence Egleston and Mrs. Gordon R. Davidson. Miss Egleston will be married Oct. 21 to John Sheehan and Mrs. Davidson is a recent bride. Guests include members of Alpha Nu Chapter of Alpha Zeta Beta Sorority including Mesdames Russell Adams, Charles Martin, Willis Overton, Harold Quinlan, Louis Buennagel, Norman Schultz, Ronald Copestick, Harold Martyn, Charles Kilgore, Erwin Kleiner, Louis Haines and the Misses Florence Engleage, Jerry Gibson, Ruth Beard and Jane Schnell, 2 2 | » Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Dibble, Terre Haute, have announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Lillian Kathryne, to James A. Martin, Indianapolis. The wedding will be at 4:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon, Oct. 8, at the home of the bride-to-be’s parents. Miss Dibble attended Indiana State Teachers’ College in Terre Haute and is a member of Gamma Gamma Sorority. Mr. Martin was graduated from Rose Polytechnic Institute in Terre Haute and is a member of Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity. = ® 8 =

"Mrs. Floyd G. Harlan and Mrs. Charles E. Orme were hostesses recently at the Harlan home at a miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Helen Mudd, whose marriage to Albert J. Dietz will be Saturday in the rectory of the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral.

Mrs, Robert Russell will be hostess | [tonight at her home, 5017 Broadway, “|for. a bathroom shower honoring| ‘|Miss Virginia Fosler.. Miss Fosler,

“|: Guests with Mrs. Fosler and the| pride-to-be will include Mesdames

at a shower and bridge party Satur-|

Alumnae Head

- Ayres Photo. Mrs. Robert P. Joyce (above) is president of the Indianapolis . Ohio State University Alumnae Association. The organization will open its season with a bridge luncheon Wednesday at the home of Mrs. H. T. Ford, 30 E. 37th St. ‘New members will be guests of honor. Mrs. A. R. Albright and Mrs. Fred Smith will ‘be assistant. hostesses. Mrs. N. H. Poole, vice president and social chairman, is in charge of arrangements.

Phi Mu Fetes A.D. T. Group

A shower, guest dinner and several- routine business. sessions are planned by members of Indianapolis sorority groups for meetings tonight, tomorrow and the first of next week. Alumnae members of Alpha Delta Theta will be honored by members of the INDIANAPOLIS PHI MU ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION at a dinner-meeting Monday evening at Catherine’s Tearoom. Several of the hostess group will entertain informally at their homes for the guests before the dinner. Miss Dorothy Hoff will provide the music. Mesdames Stanley Hayes, George P. Dennerline and George OC. Burkert Jr. are in charge of arrangements. Members of the program committee are Mesdames Ross Coffin, C. L. Van Horn, W. B. Wilcox and William Ramsey and Miss Margaret Stewart. ‘

Mrs. Frank Campbell. will be honored by members of BETA CHAPTER OF PHI GAMMA TAU at a shower Tuesday evening. Mrs. Russell Davis and Mrs. Erich Tuschinsky will be hostesses.

Members of LAMBDA CHAPTER OF OMEGA NU TAU will be guests of Mrs. Loraine Walters tomorrow evening. - Miss Marie Hartley will be assistant hostess. !

Members of BONAE AMICAE CHAPTER OF THE VERUS CORDIS SORORITY will meet this evening at the home of Mrs. Pete Harakas, 2927 E. 19th St.

Members of PHI GAMMA RHO will meet this evening at the home ‘of Mrs. Rollin S. Tenney, 651 E. 56th St.

Muriel Browne Will Give Play

“The Ghost Between,” a one-act play written and directed by Miss Muriel Browne, will be presented tomorrow: night at a report meeting to be held by Civic Theater mempership drive workers. Cast fmempers will include Mr. and Mrs. Ronald S. Skyrme, Mrs. Gladys Moffett, Miss Frances Westcott and Ray Robinson. - Miss Sara Lauter’s division led sales, according to results announced at yesterday's report meeting in Ayres’ Tearoom. Frank Hoke, theater board president, presided at the meeting yesterday and introduced Walter Jackson who talked. Elmer Wheeler, president of the Tested Selling Institute of New York, was a special guest. Edward Steinmetz Jr., director, introduced William Brenn, new technician, who will supervise construction of the sets for the first play, “When Ladies Meet” (Rachel

|F. Leonard, director of

Wiener Roasts * | Are Scheduled

| By Two Clubs

Lawrence Township G. O. P. Women to Hold Party ~ Tomorrow Night.

Wiener. roasts and talks on gare dening and fiction writing are

|planed for meetings of women’s

clubs today, tomorrow and Monday, One group will entertain for fame ilies of its members, ; ~ Plans for a wiener roast will be discussed .by members of the TRI LAMBETH CHAPTER OF THE SUB-DEB FEDERATION at 17 o'clock tonight at the home of Miss. Pauline Cox, 1031 N. Tacoma Ave.

Miss Virginia ‘Armstrong, 5920 | Ewing Ave., will be hostess to members of the I. G. W. A. CLUB of Shortridge High School at their first ‘meeting of the season this afternoon. : :

Republican families will be guests of the LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP CLUB. OF REPUBLICAN WOMEN at a wiener roast at 6:30 p. m. to= morrow in Woolen’s Gardens. Ene tertainment will be provided.

Mrs. B. C. Johnson. will discuss “Fall Gardening” before members of the NORTH SIDE MOTHERS’ CLUB following the President’s Day luncheon today at Joslin’s.

Mrs. Josephine Duke Motley will sing at the meeting of the INDIANA POETRY SOCIETY Saturday at 2:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Carl Taylor, 3115 Washington Blvd. Mrs, Clara Seeman will be assistant hostess. Original poems will be read.

Mrs. William Tudor, 5528 Guilford Ave., will be hostess to members of the METAL CRAFT CLUB at 1 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at her home. Mrs. Charles Doyle will be assistant. hostess,

Members of the SOCIAL CLUB will be entertained tomorrow at 1:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Mary DeFord, 6008 Carrollton Ave.

Butler Groups Plan Programs

A musical program, several talks and a spread are planned for opening meetings of a Butler University Mothers’ group and a campus honorary organization tomorrow morning: and Monday. Another campus group recently elected offi cers at its first meeting. : Members of the BUTLER UNI~ VERSITY MOTHERS’ COUNCIL will open their season with a musical program and meeting at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning in the Recreation Room .of the Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall. Mrs. Frank Hunter and Mrs. Russell Sanders will provide the music. : C. R. Maxam, director of placement at Butler, and Prof. George student welfare, will speak, Mrs. O. R. Burghard is program chairman. . The first spread of the school year for members of PHI CHI NU, freshman women’s honorary, will - be Monday evening at the Delta Delta Delta chapter house. Miss Helen Reugamer is president. 4 An effort is being made to affiliate the organization with Alpha Lambda Delta, national freshman women’s group. Dr. Janet Macdonald is the faculty sponsor for the Butler sorority. Former members will be guests at the spread. Miss Barbara Keiser, Indianapo« lis, will head the Butler University SPANISH CLUB following her election . recently. Other officers are Miss Mary Wiley, Prescott, Ariz., vice president; Robert Howell, Oak Park, Il, secretary, and Augustine Seu= lean, Anderson; treasurer. Among club activities will be talks by speakers from ‘the Indianapolis Spanish Club, a Spanish Christmas party and a Fiesta in the spring.

Dotty Spivey Hostess Miss Dotty June Spivey, 1031 Le= land St., will entertain members of the Much-Ado Chapter of the Sub

Crothers), opening Oct.. 13.

New Home of Fletcher Avenue Saving & Loan Assn, 150 EAST MARKET STREET

in TWO Ways With a ‘‘Fletcher Avenue’’ "DIRECT REDUCTION

HOME LOAN

Deb Federation tonight at 7:30.

1. At "Fletcher Avenue'' the’ borrower is

given ‘the advantage of a

possible lower

interest depending’ upon the type and location of the security offered. ~

2. The borrower pays interest for a shorter

loan period. pay out in"10 to || years.

"Fletcher Avenue'' loans

In addition, the “Fletcher Avenue" Direct Reduction loan plan means that each monthly = payment made by the borrower reduces the = a

ance of the principal owed rower pays interest ONLY on balance. BUY your LOAN! -

Are Equipped to Give You pe VICE rs

and the bor- - this. remaining

HOME with s "Fletcher Avenue" St

+

he * ? » A