Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1940 — Page 6

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| Day Nursery Junior Group to | Give Southern Ball Jan. 27.

ro The tadiznapolis Day Nursery J unior - Auxiliary will nsaor a Southern Ball at the Woodstock Club Jan. 27. e dance will follow the opening of “Gone | With the Wind” on Jan. 26. | Committee appointments were made thib morning at a meeting at the home of Miss Betty “Tharp. Mrs.

Paul B: Payne will be general chairman of arrangements. | Miss Margaret Clippinger heads the patrons and| patronesses committee, assisted by Miss Barbara Fowler, Mrs. John Kitchen and Mrs. Walter C. Hiser. The invitations committee eludes Miss Tharp, chairman; Mesdames Thomas B. Henderson, E. Hardy Adriance, Henry E. Gibson, Horace F. Hill and Miss Jean Rau. Mrs. Addisen Howe| is supervising the publicity, aided by Mrs. David Vawter Burn and Miss Mary Luten. Other committee appointments include decorations, Miss Jane Snyder, chairman; Miss Betty Hammerstadt and Miss Virginia Layman; entertainment and music, Mrs. James Northam, chairman, and Mrs. Kenneth F. Griffith; arrangements, Mrs. Donald B. Keller, chairman; Miss Ruth Noblitt. Mrs. Ralph B. Coble is in.charge of ticket sales. Her aids include Mesdames Mayburn F. Landgraf, Robert H. Rhodehamel, Marvin L. Lugar, Frederick W. Mitchell, Wendell’ M. Hicks, Dana L Lani and John A. Bruhn, Miss Ruth Zinn and Miss Elizabeth C

Two Clubs Will Have Speakers Tomorrow Mrs. Robert Frost Daggett will speak on “From Broadway . to Michigan” tomorrow night before members of The Portfolio at the Propylaesum. The supper committee includes Mr. and Mrs. Stephen ‘ C. Nolarid and Mr. and Mrs. Howard F. Foltz. Miss Katherine Layman will discuss “The New Deal of 1840” tomorrow afternoon at the Propylaeum before members of the Cornelia Cole Fairbanks Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. Hostesses will be Mesdames James W. Lilly, Mansur B. Oakes, Harry R. Wilson and Miss Mary Winter. :

Coleman Home Board to Meet Friday The monthly meeting of the board of Suemma Coleman Home will be held at noon Friday at the home. Mrs. J. Willlam Wright, president of the Board, will preside. The Children’s Museum Guild will meet at 2 p. m. Friday in the new activities room at the Museum. The room’was partially furnished with proceeds of the Guild’s annual Whirligig party held in November. |

Susie Murray Entertains Susie Murray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Murray, entertained yesterday with a skating party at the Meridian Hills Coupiry Club in celebration of her birthday. : Guests, classmates at Orchard School, were Nancy Sewell, Cynthia Hendricks, Nancy Clapp, Carl Eveleigh Jr., Donald Hippensteel, John Barrett and Richard Owen.

Gamma Beta Chi Meets Tonight; Sigma Phi Delta to Nominate; Kappa Delta Theta to Elect

Election and nomination of officers are the chief items on the agenda

of sororities meeting tonight. Mrs. Alice Bisesi will entertain members of the GAMMA BETA CHI

SORORITY tonight at her home, 1509 Barth Ave.

Miss Eunice Bradway and Miss Helen Arde, 4317 E. ‘Washington St., will be hostesses for a meeting of SIGMA PHI Deira SGRORITY

i Nomingiions for Ofice's Epiphany Tea Set Saturday

KAPPA DELTA THETA SORORITY will meet for election of officers tonight at the home of Mrs. Edgar Peters, 6504 Ferguson St.

ZETA CHAPTER OF PHI THETA DELTA SORORITY will meet at 8 o'clock tonight at the home of Miss

Women members of the Episcopal

churches in Indianapolis will hold their annual Epiphany Tea at 2:30 p. m. Saturday at the Cathedral House adjoining All Saints Cathe dral. The Women’s Auxiliary of Cathedral, MFS\Norman Beeson, president, will be in charge. A| highlight of the tea will be the cutting of the Epiphany cake with its 12 candles by Mrs. J. C. W. Linsley. Miss Elizabeth Pennington and Miss Opal Little will pour. Preceding the tea, a processional and religious service will be held in the Cathedral. The Rev. Mr. Linsley will officiate and speak. He will be assisted by the Rev. John M. Nelson and the Rev. Francis H. Tetu. Episcopal clergymen inaIndianapolis are to march in the processional.

Betty Jane Wilde, 3956 Boulevard Place.

GAMMA CHAPTER OF OMEGA NU TAU SORORITY will meet tonight at the home of Mrs. Paul M. > Cook, 1320 N, Delaware St.

LAMBDA CHAPTER OF OMEGA NU TAU SORORITY will meet at 8 n. m. today at the Hotel Lincoln. Members of BETA TAU SIGMA SORORITY will hold a Dutch Treat party at 6 p. m. today at the Canary Cottage. They will elect officers.

EPSILON CHAPTER OF _ EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA SORORITY will meet tomorrow in the Rauh Building. PHI GAMMA RHO will meet at 8:15 p. m. tomorrow with Mrs. H. Ellis McCammon, 2710 N. Harding St.

LAMBDA MU CHAPTER, SIGMA BETA, will plan for a cocktail party Sunday . honoring rushees when members meet this evening at the Severin Hotel.

BETA CHAPTER OF OMEGA KAPPA will have its business meeting at 8 p. m. tonight with Miss Kathleen McFarling.

Plans for a slumber party will be

JANE JORDAN |

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am 4a girl almost 20 years old, nice looking, and I have a very good job. I work hard every day and enjoy my work. My problem is that I can’t find a boy friend whom my parents like. I have been dating boys since I was 16 and not once have I gone with anyone they liked. I went steady for two years and my parents fought, with me all the time over this boy until we broke up. I was terribly hurt and thought I'd never get over it, but I did. I have dated other boys, and all my parents say is, “Is that all the better you can do?” | - They are good boys, not handsome, for I don’t believe that hand- - someness means everything. I like to go places, but I don’t believe in a boy’s spending all his money on a girl. I am dating several boys right now and none of them has a car. It makes no difference to me whether they have a car or not, for a car isn't the making of a boy.

made by RHO GAMMA CHI at its meeting tonight with Mrs. Frank Clay, 1226 Cruft St, Sa

ALPHA CHAPTER, PHI DELTA PI, will hold pledge services for four at 8 p. m. tonight. The services and a business meeting will be at the home of Miss Betty Fouts, 1710 Ruckel St. Those to be pledged are the Mesdames Ralph Hoevener, William Spencer, Carl Shaw and Miss Helen Matson.

ee . The boys are backward and don’t talk'very much when they ~~ | come to my house. One boy hasn't a job, but is looking for one.. I E like him better than the rest, but my parents call him isneaking, I am supposed to date the boys my parents like whether I like them or ) Si t. My mother and I argue all the time over this matter until | ymetimes I hate everything and everybody. At present my mother * | and I aren’t speaking and it hurts me so much that I don’t care ri what happens. When I am not dating anyone, she says I can’t hold any boy, and when I do date, she speaks so low of the boy that it turns me against him. I am a good girl and do what is right. What is the matter with me? FORGOTTEN AND LONESOME, # # » 2 2 2 | Answer—The chances are that your parents are too ambitious for you and set a goal higher than you can attain. You are satisfied

ers, but they wans something “super” for you. | It often happens that parents who started from scratch themIves and struggled slong on nothing much, want their daughter to escape the hards and mediocrity which made up their experice. They dream of h brilliant marriage for their daughter, of ease d financial security;/in other words they want her to fulfill all their trated ambitions for. them. Sometimes this is large an ofder for a girl. She just isn’t up it, and the heavy requirements of her parents put her under an bearable strain, After all she is made of the same clay ‘that oned her parents, and actually isn’t able surpass them. All e wants is to be an average girl: with average friends and would happy with an average existence if her parents would let her alone. You will have to ask yourself if the boys you go with are your eriors as your parents believe. If you are too low in self-esteem, ‘perhaps you can raise the level of your companions by trying. Hower, your parents are on the wrong track when they criticize you ntinually. They should encourage you to look higher without such nstant disparagement of your choice of friends. Instead of quarling with their ambitious attitude, try to talk with them reasonably

succeed when her ‘parents are against her. JANE JORDAN. Pu § your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will sp | 2 ’ dally,

your anestions in- rips

th an average boy who doesn’t offer too much challenge to your

Pierian Clubs Program Calls For 2 Papers

Mrs. Martin to Speak on ‘Sam Houston’ for : N. Side Group. arty

Talks on “What Is Democracy?” - “Sam Houston” and "The Develop= ment of Railroad Trains” will be features of clubwomen’s meetings tomorrow. Mrs. Truman Hoover, 5261 Guil= ford Ave. will be hostess for the * | . |meeting of the PIERIAN STUDY «+ . CLUB tomorrow. Mrs. Herbert. Thurston will talk on “Lives of Great Men All Remind Us,” and Mrs. Wilson Oarey will discuss “Ben= jamin Franklin.”

Mrs. Roy Martin will talk on “Sam Houston” at a meeting of the NORTH SIDE STUDY CLUB tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Forest . S. Cartwright, 1649 N. Temple Ave,

The CAROLINE SCOTT HARRISON CHAPTER OF THE DAUGH-=-TERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION will meet at 2 p. m. tomor= row for a business session. The pro=' gram at 2:30 p. m. will be under '. auspices of the Committee for Na=tional Defense Through Patriotic Education. Mrs. Felix T. McWhirter is chairman and Mrs. ‘John W, Moore, vice chairman. : Mrs. O. L. Watkins, chairman of hostesses, and Mrs. Odin F. Wad=-> leigh, vice chajrman, will be assisted by Mesdames James Martin Gloin, Martine H. Griffing, Frank Clinton

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Groninger, William H. Hart, William

Butler Offers

New Courses

Courses in Appreciation of Antique Arts and Crafts and Household Embellishments will be offered by the Butler University Home Economics Department in the coming semester, according to Prof. George F. Leonard director of eve-

ning classes. Mrs. Grace B. Golden; executive secretary of the Children’s Museum and member of the evening division faculty, will teach the courses. The class in Appreciation of Antique Arts and Crafts will meet Monday afternoons at 4 p. m. and {the other class will be on Tuesday afternoons at the same time. Registration will be held Jan. 29 and classes will start then. The appreciation course is a continuation of the lecture series offered during the first semester under the title of “Early American Arts and Crafts.” The other course presents a study of early American arts and crafts ‘covering antique textiles, samplers, coverlets, prints, clocks, lighting devices, and metalcraft. The spring course, Appreciation of Antique: Arts and Crafts, offers opportunities to visit points of interest in Indianapolis and will include the collections in two private homes, the antique department of the Charles Mayer Co., the silver gallery of the H. Lieber Co., the Mrs. Marshall Field and Garden collection at the John Herron Art Institute, the Children’s Museau, the Conner Prairie Farmstead near Noblesville and a tour of the Fairmount Glass Werks. Only the first and final meetings of the class will be held in the Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall on the Fairview ‘campus. Beginning Feb. 6, Mrs. Golden will start a series of 10 lectures covering the following decorative accessories for the home: Clocks, Feb. 6; painted ware, Feb. 13; samples and needlepoint,’ Feb. 20; coverlets and quilts, Feb. 27; fabrics, March" 5; metalcraft, March 12; lighting devices, March 19; wall treatments, March 26; prints, April 2; and provincial = antiques and. interiors, April 9.

Elizabethans Meet

The Rev. E. Burdette Backus spoke this afternoon before the Elizabethans of All Souls Unitarian Church. Mrs. Guy Morrison, 6185

N. Meridian St., was hostess for

luncheon and the afternoon program. :

Directoys to Elect

The board of directors of the Indianapolis Flower Mission will hold its annual election and monthly business meeting Thursday morning at 10 o'clock in the -directors room of the Fletcher Trust Co.

C. 0.D. Club to Meet

The C. O. D. Club will meet tomorrow afternoon with Miss Vivian L. Johnson, 3266 N. New Jersey St.

Newest Hair-Dos Are Romantic in Manner of 1860

make hem understand your problem better. It is hard for a girl °

A modernized version of the popular Civil War From a center part, the hair curves up and back to form graceful sculptured

period coiffures,

curs a¢ both sides of ihe Head Tost FI a cluster of bBo st ik

Queen Esther O.

E.S. to Hive

Brothers’ Night at Hall Friday;

Auxiliary to

Install Officers

An installation of officers, brother’s night and card party are planned for this week by women’s lodge organizations.

The brother’s night is to be held by the QUEEN ESTHER CHAPTER OF THE ORDER OF EASTERN STAR at the hall on Friday evening. The Murat Chatters and the Queen Esther Choir will sing, ‘Mrs. Nellie

Hutcheson is worthy matron and Harry A. Boland, worthy patron,

The LADIES AUXILIARY TO THE INDIANAPOLIS FIREMEN'’S ASSOCIATION will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Hotel Lincoln. A card party will follow at 8:30 p.m.

The AUXILIARY TO MAJ. HAROLD C. MEGREW CAMP 1, UNITED SPANISH WAR VETERANS, will install new officers Friday night at 512 N. Illinois St. Mrs. Virginia Martin is president. Other new officers are Alice Goodnight, Ora Love, Catherine Weaver, Vera Coffey, Agnes Wiley, Evelyn Shannessey, Cecelia Brooks, Florence Grey, Beatrice Heath, Nora Heinrichs, Pearl Krause, Edith Kernen, Goldie Andrews and Luella D. Porter.

Mrs. Katherine Hansford, membership chairm [sn of the WOMEN OF THE MOOSE, will be in charge of the chapter night program tomorrow night at Moose Hall.

The P. N. G. CLUB OF CHAPEL REBEKAH LODGE will hold its reguldir meeting this evening at the home of Mrs. Annie Williamson. Mrs. Mildred Corya will be. assistant. Members are asked to bring gift handkerchiefs.

MYRTLE REBEKAH LODGE will install new officers Friday night at the I. O. O. F. Hall, Addison and W. Washington Sts. Officers are Mrs. Ethel Rutledge, noble grand; Mrs. Ruby Tucker, vice grand; Mrs. Lessie Woods, financial secretary; Mrs. Cora McFeely, recording secretary, and Mrs. Anita. McConnell, treasurer. Mrs. Woods will ‘be installing officer. The degree staff of the lodge will sponsor a card pany at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at the all,

Waa Has ‘Free Week’

“Free Week” for “home women” now is in progress at the Y. W. C. A. and will continue through Jan. 6.

Activities include swimming and gym class. Five swimming classes are being given each morning between 9 and 11 o’clock. Classes are limited to 20. Weight normalizing, relaxation, ballroom and folk dancing, rhythmics and badminton are included in the afternoon program. Mrs. William Bridges, chairman of the Y. W. C. A. Health Education Committee, is sponsoring the project. Miss Lillian Preston, Miss Vonda Browne and Mrs. Robert Brandeis. are instructors for “Free Week” activities.

Travel-Study Club Will Meet Friday

‘Mrs. Maurice Lindley, 6149 Park Ave., will be hostess for a meeting of the Normandy Chapter of the International Travel - Study Club Friday. ing hostess will be Mrs. Boyd Brown. Mrs. John W. Thornburg will | speak on “Argentina.”

A W.T. Meets Today

The A. W. T. Club will hold a noon luncheon today at the home of Mrs. Edith Huckleberry, 929 N. King Ave. A business meeting will be held after the luncheon.

By ALICIA HART

1. Mrs. Deo Dawson was Miss Julia, Lewis before her recent

marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Dawson are at home at 42 Kenmore Road. (Voorhis Photo.) 2. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald C. Carmony are at home in Shelbyville. Mrs. Carmony was Miss Helen Greigh Unger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Unger of Morristown. (Kindred Photo.)

3. Miss Lucille Coyne was mar= ried to Don Reachert in a -ceremony read Nov. 4. (Holland Photo.) | 4. A ceremony read on Thanksgiving Day united Miss Augusta Bova, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bova, and C. F. Brinker. (Kindred Photo.) : 5. Mrs. Charles L., Alford Jr. was Miss E. Lorraine Wise before her marriage Christmas Day. Mr. and Mrs. Alford are at home at 1806 Southeastern Ave. 6. Mrs. Paul Speth wass Miss Delores Dietz before her marriage Thanksgiving Day. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Dietz. (Holland Photo.)

EVENTS

SORORITIES

Alpha Tau Chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta. 8 p. m. today. Hoosier Athletic Club. Beta Chapter, Alpha Beta Gamma. 8 p. m. today. Miss Dorothy Engle, 1622 Centennial, hostess. Alpha Chapter, Omega Kappa. 8 p. m. today. Hotel Lincoln. Miss Alice Byers, hostess. Alpha Chapter, Omega Fhi Tau. 8:30 p. m. Wed. Spink Arms Hotel. Regular meeting. Gamma Chapter, Delta Thetf Phi. Friday. Indiana Power & Light Co. auditorium. Pledges giving

card party. © CLUBS

Indianapolis Piano Teachers Association. 10 a. m. Friday. D. A. R. Chapter House. Alta Vista. 1 p. m. Thurs. ¥. W. C. A. Mrs. Fred Manning, hostess. Lilac Chapter, Sub-Deb. Tonight. Bernice Stroud, hostess. St. Mary’s Social Club. 2:30 p. m. Thurs. Rectory, 317 N. New Jersey. Card party. LODGE Sewing Circle, Myrtle Temple Pythjan Sisters. Noon Thurs. Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, 2718 E. New York, hostess.

1 urday. -

THERE'S A NEW SOFTNESS about the smartest coiffures of the season. Whether they are variations of the popular Civil War period hair-. dos or not, they are faintly Fomantic—in the southern-belle-of-1860 manner, For evening, one bobs are finished in plump ringlets, dangling on: the neckline or caught together in a chignon- cluster on the back of the head. The majority are swept backward away from the face, of course, hut some hang straight down and turn out to be ultra-flattering to the very thin or very long face. When curls are allowed to hang straight down all the way around, hair on top of the head is smooth and unwaved. The girl under 20. might wear velvet bows high on the two curls nearest. her face, The soft look prevails so far as the daytime mode is concerned. Few and far between are women who wear their hair severely brushed upward this year. There's nothing mannish about very. short, shingled effects. They are shaped rather than clipped. i ‘With femininity the keynote of current hairstyles, it becomes even more important to have shiny, sofe locks—glistening with health and the results of perfect grooming. ' 8 8 8 : ® 2 8 - USE YOUR HAIRBRUSH every single night. If your hair is too dry or too oily or if the scalp is covered with flakes of dry cuticle, get a special lotion designed to cure a specific defect and apply. it, exactly | according to directions. Don’t try to make a wave do a few more days. See your hairdresser on a certain day each week. If you live in the country where the air is clean, perhaps once every ten days will suffice. : Hot oil treatments will help to give excessively dry hair glossy sheen. The hot olive oil should be massaged into the scalp, 1 t on for at least an hour before the shampoo. In a beauty shop, the oil often is steamed in, At home, a steaming towel may be wrapped around the head and removed when cool. Brushing, however, experts agree, is the great cure-all; 1 will correct minor scalp ailments and hair problems reasonably quickly. it will keep healthy hele ab 13] L

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This romantic colffure for daytime has a center . part and a wing like effect at the sides with the a fui on

L. Horne, Harold G. Lanham, Carl PF. Maetschke, George Philip Meier, Lawrence F. Orr, Edgar Y. Pattison, Charles H. Smith, James H. Taylor, Frederick Terry, Joel Whitaker, Miss Anna Lois Reeves and Miss Jane M.. Scudder.

Mrs. Harry Plummer will talk on “Development of Railroad Trains” at .a. meeting of the THURSDAY LYCEUM CLUB tomorrow at the

Club to Hear Book Review

Mrs. Olive Tinder will review “Sea Island Lady” (Francis Griswold) Monday afternoon before members of the Monday Club, at Ayres’ audi- ms. M. E. wolf, 4520 Quis torium. . . Included on the program will be Henry Dowling, Indianapolis at selections by the Rev. Franklin L.|torney, will speak on “What Is Crutchlow, including “David and|pemocracy?” before members of the * Goliath” (Malotte), “Where ‘Ere INDIANAPOLIS BUSINESS AND You Walk” (Handel) and “O Dry| pROFESSIONAL WOMEN'S CLUB

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Those Tears’ (Tiresa Del Riego).|tomorro : Mrs. Crutchlow = will be ac- rrow night, eompanIst. ? Members of the LADIES FED-

ERAL CLUB will meet for luncheon tomorrow at the home of Mrs. M, P. Higgins, 936 17. Oxford St. On the committee are Mesdames Charles H. Tuttle, John C. Hervey and Lowell D. Wadsworth.

Mrs. Floyd, E. Williamson and Mrs. Marion A. Peeples will be on the program of the BETA DEL- “ PHIAN CLUB meeting tomorrow in the directors’ room of the Indians National Bank,

Mrs. C. C. Stump, 6446 Park Ave, will be hostess for the meeting of the 1908 CLUB tomorrow. ‘Mrs. C, A. Mueller will speak on “The Worth of a Soul.”

The THURSDAY AFTERNOON CLUB will meet for luncheon toe ‘morrow at the home of Mrs. J. L. Lock, 427 N. Linwood Ave.

The ALPHA OMICRON PI MOTHERS’ CLUB will hold a covered dish luncheon at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the Chapter House, F529 Rookwood Ave. \

Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review “Imperial Twilight” before members of the BOOK REVIEW CLUB at: Ayres’ auditorium. toe . morrow.

Mrs. E. B. Compton, president, will extend New Year's greetings. Mrs. C. L. Kittle and Mrs. O. L. Franz have-arranged the program. The board of directors will meet at 12:45 p. m..

Vedders Go to Son’s Wedding

Two showers and an announcement of attendants are included in bridal events today. Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Vedder, 3720 N. Meridian St. have left for Wichita, Kas., where they will attend the wedi of their son, Fred T. Vedder of St. John, Kas., and Miss Barbara Ann Bergstresser SatMiss Bergstresser is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Bergstresser of Wichita, Miss Florence Bergstresser, of New York, sister of the bride, will be bridesmaid, and Jack Copeland will be best man. 5 ” ” 2 Miss Elsie Katheryn McDonald, 1618 N. Delaware St., who will become the bride of Russell Langley tomorrow night, has chosen her cousin, Miss Peggy Williams of Marshall, Ill, as her bridesmaid. Members of the Marine Corps

Tea Arranged or Bou eons. Joon Save At Kirshbaum

age, service officer of the League, : ‘ will be best man and ushers will include Wayne Simpson, commander; Russell Bower, Rush Williams, Charles Crumbo and Ingold Schermerhorn.

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The Indianapolis Section, National Council of Jewish Women, will spon= sor a Thrift Shop Bundle Tea Fri- “ day afternoon at 2 o'clock at Kirshbaum Center. ” Members have been asked to bring a bundle of clothing for the shop. Mrs. Louis Trinz will report on the shop’s activities. The Pretenders Club will present ’ “Just Another Saturday.” The cast includes Mesdames Raymond Kiser, Louis Segar, Allen Kahn, Julian Bamberger, Lewis Lurie, Leonard Solomon, Milton Abrahamson and Miss Anita Cohen. A short business meeting will pre cede the program. Mrs. Sultan G. : Cohen will preside. Tea will be f served in the lounge. Mrs. Herman Strashun and Mrs. Leo Traugott will *

pour,

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Miss Adele Dunn, 327 ‘E. Fall Creek Parkway, entertained jrecently with a shower for Miss Barbara Strack, daughter of Mrs. Verna A. Strack, 122 W. 39th St., whose marriage to Morris B. Hancock, son of Harry Hancock, 3720 N. Pennsylvania St., will’ take place Jan. 18. » # ”

Mrs. .E. J, Sargent will entertain with a miscellaneous shower, /tonight at her home, 417 N. Oakland Ave., for Miss Janet Gasper. Miss Gasper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gasper, 210 Hendricks Place, will be married to Victor McGuise, son of Mr. and Mrs. William D. McGuire, 1126 N. Kealing Ave. Jan. 6. : | Guests will be Mesdames Albert Hoop, James Wulle, William Smith, John Hostetter, Misses Nadine Stice, Florence Pfeiffer, Margaret Gasper and Mary Margaret O'Hara.

Tri Psi Head Party Leader

Mrs. F. N. Daniel, souial chairman of Tri Psi, mothers’ club affiliated with Delta, Delta Delta Sorority, « -| will have charge of the program for ‘| the club’s luncheon Friday at the chapter house, ‘809 W. Hampton X Drive. Hy Mrs. J. K. Langfitt heads the ° general committee, assisted by Mes{dames A. E. Franke, Harry.C. Ane derson, Paul R. Duckwall, C. L. °° Hopkins and C. C. Guffey. 1

Luncheon Honors Baltimore Guest -

Mrs. Frank Panden will entertain ® | with a luncheon bridge today at her ki home, 2173 N. Meridian St., in honor of Mrs, Violet Tanden Down of Baltimore, who is visiting her sister. Mrs. Claude Eugene Hadden, 1801 * N. Penasylvania St. ' 4 Mrs. Hadden entertained. New 4 Year's’ Eve at her home with a watch and card party in honor of her sister. Guests were Messrs. Mesdames Fred Lutz, Newell B, Brown, Rene Neukom, G. J. Brame wood, Henry Metz, J. C. Dixon, |George Malless, Dr. and Mrs, Thomas Dugan, Miss Juliet Hallam, John Rice and Robert Riley. 4 Miss ‘Hallam will entertain with '|a luncheon bridge for Mrs. Down | tomorrow. Mrs. Down will return to Baltimore Sunday.

Luncheon Set ,The Alpha Omicron Pi Mothers Club will meet at 1 Pp. m. tomorrow for luncheoh at the Bue Unis versity Chapter House.

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soft ‘curls, Notice that curled back e nape of the neck-—not