Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1940 — Page 14

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SOCIETY—

Several Parties Are Planned For Eleanor Rogers Coldwell

Several parties have been planned for Miss Eleanor Rogers Coldwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Coldwell, whose marriage to Thomas M. Billings, son of Mrs. W. P. Billings, will be June 22. Mrs. Charles Lil and Mrs. Ralph Gray will entertain for her tomorrow night and on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. E. Starling Pearce and their daughters, Martha and Bettie, will have a picnic at their farm gear Browns-

burg, Ind. y

Miss Nancy Socwell will be hostess at 3 party for the bride-to-be Monday night and Miss Jane Snyder will efitertain with a tea at her country home Wednesday. The bridal dinner will be Friday, June 21, at the Meridian Hills Country Club. Miss Ruth Osborne entertained with a buffet supper last night. Other parties given recently for her included a kitchen shower given by Mrs. Ross C. Lyons and a tea given by Miss Doris Wheeler. Guests at Miss Osborne's party were Mrs. Ross C. Lyons and

Misses Agnes Coldwell,y Pearce, Barbara arid Margo Sherrin, Betty ' Tharp, Socwell, Snyder, Betty Hammerstadt, Alice Vonnegut, Mary + Sheerin Kuhn -and Betty Culloden.

! Sarah Frances Kackley to Wed June 29

June 29 has been set as the date for the wedding of Miss Sarah

“Frances Kackley and Raymond Edward Gregg, son of Mrs. Samuel

Grant Gregg. The informal ceremony will be at 3:30 p. m. in the Episcopal Church of the Advent. The bride-to-be is a niece of Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Atkins and the sister of Thomas Reid Kackley. ; Mrs. Hackley will be matron of honor and Ralph Nagle Jr, Philadelphia, will be best man. Charles Hole, Dayton, O.; George Clark, Columbus, O. Lawrence Knowlton and James Hurt ‘will be ushers. ’

The Wedding Picture—

. 1. Miss Betty Jane Voll, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Voll, 3724 E. Market St., will be married to Morris C. Snyder, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Snyder, Converse, Ind., Sunday. The ceremony will be performed at the Irvington Methodist Church. (Dexheimer-Carlon Photo.)

Carl S. Hulen and Fiancee to Be

Pi Phi Bridge Tournament to Be

Parties planned for Miss Kackley include a miscellaneous shower

"Lykins and Mrs. Ben

. I am the one he

"are hard to find.

which Miss Mary Edith Foster and Mrs. George Rose will give Saturday at the Propylaeum. Mr. and Mrs. Allen C. Miller will entertain with a supper party June 18 and Mr. and Mrs. Vance Smith will have a dinner June 22. Mrs. Robert Adams will have a tea June 25 and Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Johnson will entertain at a supper party June 28 for the families.

Elizabeth Kadel Is Guest

Miss Elizabeth Kadel, whose marriage to William F. Piel III will be June 19, was honor guesi at a luncheon bridge given yesterday by Mrs. Harry Hood Martin and her daughter, Barbara, at their home. ‘Guests were Mrs. Valentine Martin, Hollywood, Fla.; Mrs. George Kadel, the bride-to-be’s mother, and the Misses Elizabeth Kiger, Eleanor Cook, Marilyn Whitaker. Katherine and Barbara Hadley and Virginia Niven. Fi] : Mr. Piel’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred L. Piel, entertained recently with a dinner for the couple. Guests were members of the families. i Joy Geupel Will Give Dinner Tonight Miss Joy Geupel will entertain tonight at her home with a dinner for Miss Harriet Cracraft:- and William Jewel Stout of Bloomington, Ind. whose marriage will be at 4:30 p. m. Saturday in the First Baptist Church. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Cracraft. Guests in addition to Miss Cracraft and Mr. Stout will include Mr. and Mrs. Tom Beasley, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Weaver, Misses Roberta Haskell, Elizabeth Mahin, Marjorie Raiser, Lue McWhirter and Roberta Johnson, Delphi, William Lucas, Hiram Sexson, Richard DeMars, john Westfall, Sam Davis and John Alden, Rockville, Ind.

D. A. R. Chapter Celebrates Flag Day

Flag Day will be celebrated by the Cornelia Cole Fairbanks Chapter of the D. A. R. with a luncheon at noon tomorrow at the Woodstock Club. 5 Miss Deborah D. Moore, historian, will relate the history of the Tndiana- State flag. Annual reports will also be given and delegates

to the state conference will be chosen. Hostesses will bel the Mesdames Arthur V. Brown, Henry W, Buttolph, William H. Insley, Clarence Forsyth and Edgar H. Evans.

Tournament Booked at Highland

f the Highland Golf and Country Club will tomorrow with a flag tournament. Mrs. L. L. Olsen will be in charge of medal play. At the same time the Women’s Western low net, event will be played,

the winner receiving a gold pin. i Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Leath will be hosts for a mixed two-ball

foursome at the Indianapolis Country Club Sunday.

Parties Attend Arlington Show The Arlington Horse Show, which opened last night and con-

Women golfers) celebrate Flag Day

» Ea

“tinues’ through Saturday night at the R. H. Brown Stables, is the

occasion for a number of parties. “oo Mr. and Mrs. Lucius V. Hamilton entertained at dinner last

night preceding the show's opening. Their guests were Messrs. and Mesdames Alex Metzger, Clayton Mogg and Robert Bunch, Miss Marjorie Bunch and Mrs. Dorothy Alford. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Fuller in their box-during the show will be Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kinney, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fox and Mrs. John| Cull. Dr. and Mrs. C. F. Stout's guests last night were Mr. and Mrs. Posey B. Denning, Mr. and Mrs. John Dills and Mrs. Anna Deane. Mr. and Mrs. A. Hastings Fiske’s bay mare, Kalarama Rita, won the Frederic M. Ayres’ $250 stake for fine harness stallion, mare or gelding last night at the show which was attended by. more than 1000 persons. Ce Winners of first place in other classes were: Middle weight hunter, Hector, owned by Mr. and Mrs. William H. Wemmer; three-gaited novice horse, Good Judgment, Miss Margaret Emmert, Chicago; Buck Creek Farm $150 stake, Happy Duchess, Betty Lynn Stables of Indianapolis; child rider, 10 years and under, Delores Them, Bloomington: stallions and geldings, five-gaited, Radiant KingsJ & B Stables, Lexihgton, Ky.; three-gaited saddle pony, Dashing Duchess, Miss Jane Howell, Louisville, Ky.: three-gaited over 15 hands and under 15.2, Helen Carroll, Stony Ridge Farms; hackney or Welch pony, pair, any height, Mrs. A.C. Thompson, Chicago. L

| JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN—After being married more than five months my Haters tells me he is not satisfied with married life and doesn’t want to settle down and go housekeeping. | We have lived with his folks all along. At first he wanted to settle down but the boys with whom he works talk of the big times they have and of their girls, and he is not satisfied because he feels he can’t do Hsewise, | If he does go out with one of them, they want

him to go with a girl. = I've tried to get him to go with young married couples but he doesn’t seem to enjoy himself. We are both 18. He says we were married too young. I know that, but we still love each other and I want to make the best of it. He says he is going to leave and doesn’t care what I do, although anted and loves. I am afraid if we go on this way will core to hate me because he hardly speaks to me any more. I am doing housework now but that won't last long and jobs bove all, I can’t go back to my folks. If I leave him I'll never be satisfied. How can I keep him or what Should do?

” 8 2 # ” ” Answer—I do not know how a reluctant young husband can be made to assume his responsibilities and like it. There is no magic key to the situation. He is right in his opinion that you married too young, but he should have thought of that five months ago and so should you. Now he has placed you in a very difficult position. You aren’t welcome in his house and you don’t feel free to return to your own, defeated. Apparently he feels no responsibility for your predicament whatever. Another mistake you made was in consenting todive with your husband’s parents, Very likely he is fighting against his mother’s authority and when he brought a wife home he found that he had two bosses instead of one. Young men. because they expect marrihge to be fun and when they find that it ties them down to a routine instead of providing a round of pleasure, they rebel. There is not much you can do but set him free. Perhaps if you do not stress your claim on him he will stop pulling against the tether so hard. That is, do not give him anything to buck against and he may not feel impelled to revolt. At this time it will profit you nothing to heap reproaches on his head. : The only sensible thing you can do is to look diligently for a job and prépare to e care of yourself. Your refusal to lean on a man who considers you a burden is bound to win respect. It may be letting him off too easily, but after all what can you gain by holding except further humiliation and unhappiness? If you are right in your conviction that he still loves you in spite of his dislike of marriage, this fact will come to light’ when he realizes that you are preparing to leave him to his own conception of pleasure. : JANE JORDAN.

Put your problems in a fleiter to Jane Jordan who will unswer your questions in this column’ daily.

Catherine Moore Is

Miss Catherine Moore, daughter Kuttner are to be at home in New

|

of Otto N. Moore, was married June [York in several weeks.

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7 to Henry Kuttner of New ¥ork. The - ceremony was read at the

: A ; - Married in New York |New vork city Hall. Mr. and Mrs,

Winners of various sections of

Allan C. Raup, Robert D. Pritchard, Robert Mannfeld, W. H. Turner, Robert M. Armer, Garth R. Marine, A. L. Arnold, Howland Bond, Burchard Carr, Robert E. Walker, Howland N. Crawford, E. S. Hildreth, Buford Cadle, Joseph J. Cripe, W. H. Edwards Jr. Don E. Warrick, Raymond Davis, Vance Garner, W. C. Richter, J. William Berry, J. D. Dunning, Sheldon Miner and the Misses Ethel Cur-

|ryer, Sally Bosman and Marguerite

Ulmer.

Indianapolis Alumnae of ALPHA OMICRON PI SORORITY will hold a called meeting at the home of Mrs. Paul Weir, 346 Graham St, tonight at 8 o'clock. The meeting was requested by Mrs.. William H. Burlingame, Shaker Heights, O, alumnae superintendent of the Ohio Valley. ' : Mrs. Burlingame will be a house guest of Mrs. C. C. Trueblood, 836 Berkley Road while in the city. She has been attending the Ohio Valley District Alumnae meeting. Assisting the hostess at tonight's

meeting will be "Miss Geraldine

Kindig and Mrs. Adrian Wilhoite of Kirklin. ,

SIGMA DELTA TAU SORORITY will hold its annual convention and dinner-dance in the Hotel Severin Saturday. The Alpha = Chapter of Indianapolis will be hostess chapter. The Delta Chapter, Anderson, and the Gamma Chapter, Muncie, will attend. A business meeting and election of officers for next ape year will be Miss Fibiger held at 5:30 r. m. Miss Genevieve Lowe, Indianapolis; Miss Betty. Bechtel, Muncie, and Mrs. Charles Newman, Anderson, will speak. Miss Margaret® Mueller, president of the Alpha Chapter, will welcome out-of-town members. Miss Edyth Fibiger, Miss Josephine Brown, Mesdames Edwin Martin, Marion Goode and Thomas Quinn head committees and Mrs. Milton Rardin is general chairman.

BETA CHAPTER OF THETA NU ‘SORORITY will have a dinner at the gHoosier Athletic Club Roof Garden at 3 o’clock tomorrow night. A dance from 9:30 p. m. to 12:30 Pp m. will tollow. Table decorations at the dinner will be red, white and blue as a Flag Day motif.

DELTA CHAPTER OF. ALPHA BETA GAMMA SORORITY will meet at the home of Mrs. Lucile Huebner, 1422 N. Gale St.,. tomorrow night at 8:30 o'clock.

Miss Esther Herbig will enfertain members of ALPIIA PI OMEGA SORORITY tonight at het home at 2166 Webb St.

RHO ZETA TAU SORORITY held its annual party at Wilson's Chicken Dinner Home last night. Miss Mary Nees was ‘in charge.

SIGMA PHI SORORITY will hold its annual convention tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday at the Columbia. Club. National officers will be elected at the dinner business meeting at 6:30 o'clock at the Canary Cottage. A dinner-dance will be held at 7:30 o'clock Saturday night at the Columbia Club. Members and their guests will at- : tend the dinner and non-mem-ber- guests will be invited to the- § dance. The table will be decorated with American Beauty reses and cerise and silver, the sorority colors. Miss Frieda. Brimberry will act . as toast mis- Mrs, Vehling tress. Those who are on the convention committee are Mesdames Robert Wallman, Kenneth Crockett, Harold Vehling, Lloyd Howard, Miss Josephine Beck and Miss Judy Phoelin. An informal open house will be held Sunday at the Columbia Club.

Lodge Sponsors Rally Mrs. Betty Wickliff will be in charge of the card party to be held tonight at 6:30 o'clock in. the. Food Craft Shop. The. party is sponsored by the ways and means com-

bekah Lodge 10, 1..0. O. F.

mittee of the Olive Branch: Re=

Lp ihe 4

Saturday at Ayres’ Tearoom; A. O. Pis Have Called Meeting

A bridge tournament, two conventions and a called meeting are scheduled for sororities the next few days.

PI BETA PHI SORORITY winter

bridge games will play in the annual dessert-bridge tournament to be held Saturday in L. S. Ayres & Co. tea room. They are Mesdames Horace E. Storer, E. E.

Whitehill, Harry Trimble,

Lodge Conclave

Is Tomorrow -

Judge Wilfred Bradshaw will welcome delegates to the 17th annual session of the Grand Guardian Council of the Order of Job's Daughters= at the Claypool Hotel tomorrow and Saturday. Visitors and delegates for the 24 Indiana Bethels will assemble at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the Chateau

Room at the Claypool. Committee reports will follow the noon luncheon. ' Drill teams from Bethel 8. Ft, Wayne, and Bethel 1, Indianapolis, will give exhibitions at 7 o'clock tomorrow night. Officers from the eight Indianapolis Bethels will demonstrate ritualistic work at 8 o'clock. Election of officers and completion. of business are scheduled for Saturday. The banquet at 6 o'clock will be followed. by installation of the grand officers. Mr. and Mrs. Herschell Ginn are co-chairmen of the dance Saturday which will begin at 9:30 p. m. in the Riley Room.’ They will be assisted by Gustave Lange, Mrs. Alma Clark, Mrs. Ruth Hancock, Cecil Bennington and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cosand of Kokomo. On Sunday, delegates will attend services at St. Paul's Episcopal Church.

Bridge Winners

Announced

Mrs. Dorothy Ellis has announced winners of the recent bridge forum in Block’s Auditorium. They are: Section 1—North and south. Mrs. W. H. Bridgins and Mrs. J. A. Conkey, first; Mrs. William Gerrard and Mrs. A. J. Hendricks, second; east and west, Mrs. M. L. Ent and Mrs. V. A, Newcomer, first; Mrs. Arthur Pratt and Mrs. Ralph Duncan, second. - Section 2—North and south, Mrs. Lida Rikhoff and Mrs. R. C. Goodwine, first; Mrs. Lloyd Veazey and Mrs. Fink Dorman, second; east and west, Mrs. A. J. Strole and Miss Daisy Brooks, first; Mrs. R. F. Pasho and -Mrs. H. S. French, second. Section 3—North and south, Mrs. Carl Shafer and Mrs. Harry Higbee, first: Mrs. C. A. Fredeking and Mrs. Irene McCormick, second; east and wast, Mrs. William Krieg and Mrs. William H. Peele, first; Mrs. R. N. Jenckes and Miss Charlotte Bruce, second. :

Rose Festival To Continue

The fourth annual rose festival of the Hillsdale Nurseries has keen extended through the remainder of this week with musical programs planned for each evening. The gardens at the nurseries, six miles northeast of the city and tr.ear Castleton, Ind. are illuminated at night. At 8 p. m. tonight Mrs. Frank Boles, contralto, member of the Choral Ensemble of the Matinee Musicale, will present a program of spring songs. accompanied by Mrs. M. B. McDonaid. Tomorrow

‘|evening at the same time a trio

from the Choral Ensemble will give a group of songs. Members of the trio are Mrs. Preston Highley, contralto; Mrs. Paul Whipple, second soprano, and Mrs. Arthur Madison, soprano. Mrs. Whipple and Mrs. Madison also will sing solo numbers. Mrs. Russell Sanders will be ‘accompanist. On Saturday at 7:30 p. m. pupils of the Helene Eder School of Dancing will present an exhibition, and Mrs. Julia Niebergall, will play a program of piano selections,

Home Management Lesson Presented

The June meeting of the Lawrence Homemakers’ Club was to be & noon luncheon today at the home of Mrs. George H. Malone, 46th St. and the Post Road. : A home management project lesson in the afternoon was to.be followed: by. a business session and.a social hour, HAL um ay

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. 2. Mrs. Mary M. Tucker has announced the engagement of her daughter, Hollis. Eva, to Roscoe Stelle, son. of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Stelle of Connersville. The wedding will be June 22 at St. Mark's Lutheran Church. (Holland Photo.) 3. Miss Margaret Tucker has chosen June 20 as the date for her marriage to Thomas Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. John O. Williams. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carter Tucker. The service will be at the Englewood Christian Church. (Moorefield Photo.) 4. Mrs. A. E. Harris was Miss Byrnece Hankins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hankins, before her recent marriage. Photo.) May 4. Mrs. Humphrey is the daughter of Lewis Stansbury. (RamosPorter Photo.)

6. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Ireland have announced the engagement

~

Paul Watts of Ben Davis. The wedding will be in the fall. (Len-Art

Photo.) : 7. A June 26 wedding will be that of Miss Margaret Hackett, daughter. of Mr. arid Mrs. Chester Hackett, to Bert A. Timmons, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Timmons. (Holland Photo.) : 8. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Spiegel have announced the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Jeanne, to Robert C. Robinson, son of Dr. and Mrs. F. C. Robinson. (Dexheimer-Carlon Photo.) u! i 9. Mrs. Lawrence C. Moore was Miss Rosemary Klein, daughter of John G. Klein before her marriage May 30. ; 10. Miss Anna Jean O'Brian was married to Robert Hughes in a recent ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jennings O'Brian. + Te : 11. Miss Eloise Kunz and Ralph Hiatt of Richmond, Ind. will be married Sunday. Miss Kunz is a graduate of Indiana University and has been teaching in the Beech Grove High School. y 12. Mrs. Ray Stewart was Miss Marjorie Amt, daughter of Mr. and

Mrs. Harold Amt, before her marriage May 25. (Photoreflex Photo.)

Irvington Social Club Will Have Garden Party at Enyart Home; Mrs. A. H. Backus to Speak

(Ramos-Poroter -

5. Miss Geraldine Stansbury was married to Robert D. Humphrey

of their daughter, Bernice, to Herschel L. Watts, son of Mr. and Mrs.}t{T. Shaneberger,

Honor Guests at

with news of parties and showers notes.

Guests will include the bride-to-be’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Mrs. | Besse E. Herrmann and Mrs, George Kyger. 2 #2 Sunday has been set as the date for the wedding of Miss Anne Clifford, daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. William Clifford of Lapel, Ind. to Earl L. Cooper, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry P. Cooper, 3462 Fall Creek Blvd. The ceremony will be at 2:30 p. m. in the home of the bride's parents. } . ” ” ” Miss Mary Catherine Markey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Markey, 3133 Ruckle St., has set June 27 as the date for her marriage to C. William Mason Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. C. William Mason, 3030 N. Pennsylvania St. The wedding will be at 9 a. m. in St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church. Among parties planned for her is a silver shower which Miss Betty Jeanne Balz will have Sunday. Mrs. Clyde T. Bowers and Miss Margaret Koesters will entertain Tues-

Dinner Bridge;

Shower Given fer Nancy Hurt

The setting of wedding dates and a marriage announcement appear

for brides-to-be in today’s nuptial

Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Pike will entertain" tonight at their home, 1915 Talbot Ave. with a dinner bridge for Miss Florence Lynn Shaneberger and Carl Spurrier Hulen whose marriage will be June 22,

George Diener, Blvd.

clap coin a Mr.- and Mrs. A. A. Fivecoats, Grandview Drive, announce. the marriage of their daughter, Waneta, to Dan M. Cooper of Cleveland. The wedding was April 28 in the home of the uncle and aunt of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Romeiser, 2437 Riverside Drive. : Mr, and Mrs. Cooper will be at home after August 1 in Cleveland. He is the son of Mr, and Mrs, John Cooper of Harrison, Ark. {

5346 Washington

A a | Honor guest at a linen shower given tonight by Miss Dorothy E, Steinmeier at her home, 4900 E.

Mrs. P. L. Masters 32 E. 46th St. Miss Masters will be married) June 30 to Gordon Bryant, Schenectady, N. Y., son of Mrs. George Hanson of Lafayette,’Ind. Appointments will bé in pink and white, the bridal colors. Mrs. Albert L. Steinmeier will assist her daughter. Guests with the bride-to-be and

Outings and garden parties are included in tomorrow’s club calendar. The annual IRVINGTON SOCIAL STUDY CLUB outing will be a garden party at the home of Mrs. O. M. Enyart, 75 N. Hawthorne Lane, tomorrow afternoon. Each member may bring a guest.

Mrs. Clifford Wagner will read

discussed by the Mesdames G. C. Grimes, G. C. Roberts and Claude Dill.

Mrs. Harvey B. Hartsock and Mrs. Bert L. Cruzan will assist the hostess.

THE CHEER BROADCASTERS CLUB will meet at 12:30 o'clock for luncheon at Maple House, 5831 E. Washington St.,, tomorrow afternoon. : New officers will be installed at the meeting. Mrs. Everett Hays" will replace Mrs. Edward H. Niles as president. Mesdames W. F. Holmes, C. F. Dillenbeck and Jerome Prochaska will be in charge of the program. “.:

The. Friday AFTERNOON LITERARY CLUB will meet tomorrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. E. F. Sunderman, 2746 N. Gale St. Miss Alvira Clark and Mrs. A. B. Miller wili speak.

The JOHN STRANGE HOME-

a paper and current events will be

in the kitchen at a recent meeting at the home of Mrs. A. F. Augustine. Mrs. Ben Armstrong led the discussion. The club is a newly organized group of mothers of 4-H club girl members who attend the John Strange School. Mrs. W, C. Starkey is president; Mrs. Charles W. Ryde, vice president, snd Mrs. E.

E. McKinstray, secretary-treasurer. Mrs. Ben Armstrong and Mrs. Augustine are project leaders.

day and Miss Betty Reed and Miss Mary Jane Kruse will have a party for her next Thursday.

marriage to George Straub Diener will ‘be June 30, will be honor guest at shower given tomorrow by Miss Norma Overbay and Miss Doris Jones at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.

in the bridal colors of lavendar and peach. Guests with Miss Hurt will |be Misses Patty Hill, Jane Freihofer, Jeanne Shirk, Mary: Marott: and Peggy Hussey.

Dr. and Mrs. Paul Thomas Hurt, 4151 N. Pennsylvania St., and Mr. Diener is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

her mother will include Mesdames Kenneth Green, Robert Bosson, Russell L. Roberts, J. L. Masters and Arzell Reynolds of Fishers, Ind., and the Misses Rosemary Sargent, Naomi McKenzie, Nina Everett, Judy Bosson, Edith Catherine Roberts, Alice Steinmeier, Judith McTurnan, Thelma Hughey, Eva, Thompson, Helen Jean Willcutts, Mary Nesbit and Mary, Suzanne, Dorothy and Mildred Masters.

» ” ” Miss Nancy Susan Hurt, whose

a luncheon and bathroom

Decorations for the party will be | ? =n =» The marriage is announced of Harry Wright Evard and Miss Helen Eaton Jacoby. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond R. Noll, D. D., officiated at the ceremony at 9 a. m .yesterday in the rectory of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Miss Jacoby is the daughter of the late Elias Jacoby of Indianapolis.

Virginia Burkhdlder,

The bride-to-be is the daughter of

Mrs. A. H. Backus will be lostess at the garden party to be held by the NORTH END GARDEN CLUB at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at her home at 5530 Broadway. Mrs. Backus ‘will present a paper “Poetry and Legends of

Have a Flower Garden

MAKERS’ CLUB discussed safety

Roses.” ;

f la STREET FLOOR i) CLEARANCE!

HANDBAGS

(20) SUMMER HANDBAGS in attractive fabrics, ore i with contrasting leathers. Were (15) RED PATENT LEATHER. BAGS. Were $3...1.50 (18) WHITE LEATHER BAGS. Were $5...3.89 (30) PIGTEX AND CAPESKIN BAGS. Pastel colors. - Were $3...%$2 (50) GENUINE LEATHER BAGS. Black and brown, - Were $2...69¢c BILLFOLDS AND KEYCASES. Samples in good condition. Were $1 to 12.50...l/, PRICE

al

COSTUME JEWELRY COMPACTS. Attractive styles. Were 89c...25¢

SUMMER JEWELRY. Necklaces, bracelets and pins. Were $1...25¢ a

SHEER BLOUSES. Broken sizes. Were $3...89%¢ SHEER. AND PIQUE BLOUSES. Broken sizes. Were $2...5% Sdynee NECKWEAR. Regularly $1 and $2 ...50¢ COSTUME FLOWERS. Were 39¢ and 50c..10e VEILING. Regularly 35c and 50c...Yd., I5¢ JRUSHED Yoo JACKETS. Pastels. Regularly 3.50...%$2 | . POLKA DOT JACKETS AND BOLEROS. Regularly $3 and $2...1, Off hin

SUMMER COTTON SWEATERS. Slipover and | Cardigan styles. All colors and sizes. Regularly $1 and 1.19...69¢

Street Floor

Fill Those Window Boxes This Week

ALLIED FLORISTS

3

~ This Summer

A Small Investment Now Will Give You—

CUT FLOWERS ALL SUMMER

Asters, Petunias, Zinnias and

nothing

“An exhilarating morning sight and uite as refresh flower boxes outside my windows!”

ASSN. OF INDPLS;