Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1940 — Page 8

PAGE 8

SOCIETY—

Visits Planned by Local Residents and Visitors Here Spice the Social News

Mrs. Otto W. Eisenlohr will spend next week with Mrs. Carl Tuttle and her sons, Richard and Tom, at their cottage at Lake Wawasee . . . Mrs. Charles P. Emerson will return today from Toronto, Canada, where she has been visiting Col. and Mrs. Reginald Pellatt. She stopped on her way home to visit her daughter, Mrs. Walter A. Compton, and children, Cynthia and Joan, at Elkhart, Ind. Mrs. Emerson’s son, Dr. Charles P. Emerson, Boston, Mass., will arrive at the end of August

to spend a week here. Mrs. William Ray Adams and her daughter Jane will leave tomorrow for a visit to the Sylvester Johnson's ranch in Pitchfork, Wvo. Sylvester Johnson Jr. and Edwin M. Craft Jr. will accompany them. . . . Miss Patricia Doud, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond A. Doud, will go to Chicago this week-end to visit Miss Sally Miller.

Mrs. Arthur Doud, Philadelphia, Pa., her son Richard and her daugh-

ter, Mrs. Theodore Driscoll, Louisville, Ky., are expected to arrive here Sunday for a visit with Mrs. Josephine B. Doud.

Patricia Eaglesfield Visits Mary Scot Morse

Miss Patricia Eaglesfield, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davy Eaglesfield, has been visiting the Theodore Oley Ayers at Mackinac Island, Mich. and has gone to visit Miss Mary Scot Morse at Leland, Mich.,, for a few days. The Eaglesfield's daughter, Townsend, returned yesterday from a trip to Wrichisville Beach, N. C., Richmond, Va. and Virginia Beach.

Betty Best to Entertain

Miss Nancy Schmick of Baltimore, Md., will arrive Sa.urday to visit Miss Betty Best, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claus Best. The two young women were classmates at Bradford Junior College. Miss Best will give a luncheon bridge on Monday for her guest and Miss Jane Renard and Mrs. James M. Ogden will give luncheons for the Baltimore visitor during the next week. Miss Best and Miss ok will spend one day at Lake Maxinkuckee.

Mrs. R. C. Jacobs and Daughter Visit Here

Mrs. R. C. Jacobs of Boston, Mass., and her daughter, Dorothy, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Browning and their daughter, Ann. The Jacobs left Ft. Benjamin Harrison about a year ago for Boston where Maj. Jacobs has been in charge of the R. O. T. C. at Boston University. He recently was transferred to the general staff in Washington. Mrs. Jacobs and her daughter will return to Boston before joining Maj. Jacobs later. Miss Dorothy Jacobs will return to Wellesley College in the fall. Mrs. Browning entertained Wednesday afternoon with a tea in Mrs. Jacobs’ honor. Miss Ann Browning will enroll as a freshman at Butler University this fall. She is the fourth generation of her family to attend the school. Her grandfather, Samuel Frazee, was one of the founders of Northwestern Christian University, which later became Puller. Her grandmother, Dr. Maria Frazee Browning, attended But'~~ ~~ did Ann's father.

Younger Set Plans for Opening of School

Others of the younger set who have chosen Butler ai. Iius Patricia Failing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Failing; Miss Sally Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Evans; Miss Joan Cross, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Cross; Miss Martha®Tufts, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Tufts; Miss Mitzi Early, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Early; Miss Martha Anne Kirby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford B. Kirby; Miss Ann Shaw, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Shaw, and Miss Marilyn Clark, daughter of Mrs. W. D. Clark. Others who are planning to attend Butler include the Wells twins, Alberta and Jean, Rosamond Herriot and Jean Sims. Three of this year’s Shortridge graduates will enroll this fall at DePauw University. They are Miss Barbara Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Merriam; Miss Virginia Louise (Ginger) Mason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Mason, and Miss 3: v Jane Bright, caughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bright. Several Will Attend Swarthmore Freshman students will enroll at Swarthmore Colle, 2 >. 190 and old students will be back for their work on Sept. 23. Rew. .uag will be Miss Anne Davis, daughter of Paul G. Davis; Miss Charlotte Hofmann, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. William Hofmann, and Miss Sarah Lindley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stacey B. Lindley. Miss Sue Mellett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Mellett, and Miss Jane Cox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Harvey Cox, and a Tudor Hall graduate of last June, will enter Swarthmore. Miss Emily Glossbrenner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel I. Glossbrenner, also will be at Swarthmore. Miss Miriam Fatout, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray T. Fatout, will enroll at Western College this fall. Miss Betty Steinkamp and Miss Betty Kerbox also are planning to enter Western. . .. Miss Betty Louise Hosmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Hosmer, will return to Radcliffe College. :

Miss Mary Helen Madden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J.

Madden, will return to St. Mary's College, Notre Dame, in the fall.

Country Club Pools Are

Miss Charlotte Shafer, Glencoe, Ill, found the Woodstock Club pool was a good place to cool off during the warm summer days. She was to return home today with her brother, John. They have been visiting their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Shafer. Bill Shafer, son of the William Shafers, has returned from Beverly Hills, Cal., where he has been visiting his cousin, Frederick Payne, for three weeks.

Support of State Merit System By Candidates for Legislature Is Reported by Voters League

The Indiana League of Women Voters today announced that early

replies of prospective state legislators to questionnaires indicated “over-§

whelming support of the merit system in state government.” The results of the first returns were disclosed at the league's bimonthly executive committee meeting yesterday at the home of Mrs.

Clarence F. Merrell, president. Mrs. the

Virginia M. Mannon, > : league's administrative secretary, | Ww 11 G announced today that when more] a 1S to et No Curtsey v

returns are received she plans to make “a Gallup type of analysis” of the opinions expressed on all the NASSAU, Bahamas, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—The Duchess of Windsor is to remain plain “Your Grace” offi-

questions. cially, and will not be styled “Your

pressions of opinion on subjects of

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

The questionnaire, said Mrs. Merrell, continued the league's policy of Royal Highness” like the Duke during her stay here as wife of the

communicating with the candidates of both major parties, seeking exnew governor and commander in chief, it was learned today.

public interest in which the Women Voters are especially concerned. The state president said that responses from both Democratic and Republican candidates showed a very large number in favor of abolishing political spoils methods of selecting candidates.

Candidates Views Asked

that the Duke is to be addressed as His Royal Highness, with a curtsey

be “Your Grace,” like the wife of any ordinary British Duke, without

Popular Spots With the Younger Set

Margaret Miller, Dodie Miller and Agnes Alig (left to right) put their stamp of approval on swims

in the Woodstock pool, too.

Miss Barbara Hess (left) entertained Miss Joan Robinson (center) and Miss Norman Coulan recently at a swimming meet at the Highland

Golf and Country Club.

‘Maizie Tyner to

Be Honor Guest

I, bas been ome wresiietl At Personal Shower Monday; trom women. But the Duchess wil! Robinsons to Give Bridal Dinner

. . Miss Virginia Earlvwine, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Earlywine. is at I.ake Wawasee this week at a houseparty of W. O. W.

Club members. . . . Miss Susan June

Alvis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Frank W. Alvis, will enroll at Monticello College, Godfrey, Ill, this

fall. Comings and Goings

Mrs. Ward Hackleman and her niece, Miss Evadne Hibben, will

visit Miss Hilda Hibben at Lake Wawasee this week-end.

Mrs. R. L. Lochry and their sons, R

. « Dr. and ichard and William, will return

the first of September from a month's vacation at Calvert's Camp,

Rainey River, Cedar Islands, Ontario

. Canada.

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I went cared a great deal for him. months and then we drifted apart, would make dates and then stand usually took it on dates. He always excellent driver I didn't mind. Ever

to go with him as he only went with me for the car. We enjoyed ourselves together and he told me he always

have one.

with a fellow last summer and

We went together for a couple of

or rather he drifted away. He me up. I have a car and we would drive it but as he is an yone told me that I was a fool He didn’t

would love me no matter what happened. Still he quit coming over so I interested myself in other fellows.

Our birthdays are two days apart a

matter if we split up we would still celebrate our birthdays together.

Both of us will be 20 at the end of

he came over and asked me for a date on our birthdays

I had a date for that night, which

the boy: so he said he would be seeing me and that was all goes by once in a while but never stops.

Candidates also were questioned on their opinions on the City Manager form of government, on their views about the school attendancechild labor law and on the administration of poor relief. Candidates also were asked to make suggestions “to expedite legislative procedure,” to express themselves on trade barriers between states, and the protection “of those unfortunate children who become | the objects of public concern through illegitimacy, appearance in, juvenile court or the occasion for! adoption.” Trends on these questions, however, were not disclosed by Mrs. Merrell.

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The Indiana League of Women Voters will have its first fall program conference Sept. 11 in Lake County at a location to be announced later, Department, legislative, study group and publicity chairmen will attend. The second of the fall conferences will be Sept. 18 at Spring Mill State

Ld

nd we made a bargain that no A little while ago I told him | and I hate to stand up He

this month. I did,

I like him so much SWEET 20.

Park.

Card Party Set By Cervus Club

A card party, picnics and busi-

the curtsey. The first official communication from London on the Duke since the notification of his appointment as governor came yesterday from the secretary of state for the colonies. It expressed the Duke's gratitude for a message of welcome and for assurances of co-operation with him. The Duke, the message said, looks forward with interest to his arrival in the Bahamas to take up his appointment. Bahamas society is somewhat annoyed at the lack of definite news of the Windsor's arrival, because no functions can be arranged and no welcoming entertainments planned. Ordinary people seem apathetic. Lady Mendl, the former Elsie de Wolfe of New York, is expected to help the Duchess redecorate Government House. An appropriation of £2000 ($8000) for redecoration awaits the Duke and Duchess. Government House is crammed with pictures of England, including some of the coronation of King George VI, the Duke's successor. Also the Government House swimming pool still shows marks of the royal crest of the Duke as Edward VIII during his brief reign. This crest was painted over in favor of that of George VI, but the one of codward is being repainted.

| | |

A bridal dinner, a personal shower and a luncheon for a recent bride

and a bride-to-be are included in today’s nuptial notes.

Mrs. Morris B. Hancock and Miss Mary Hancock, 2161 N. Meridian

Answer—When a boy has proved over and over again that his interest in a girl is weak, to say the least, I believe that she should give up. Her persistence in hanging on is not so much due to the fact that she is really in love as to the fact that her pride simply will not admit defeat. Take this young man for example. He made dates with you and failed to show up. If you had cut him off your list at this point, he would have had much more respect for you. As it is he knows he can treat vou as he pleases without diminishing your regard for him. You do not demand consideration and hence do not get it. If you break a date with another young man in order to keep a tryst with one who has consistently proved his unreliability, you ought to be spanked. What you need is more self-esteem. Where's your spunk? = 8 n » =n = girl in high school. I four months and then

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a young met a boy in March. We went steady for one night he failed to come. From then on he would come in the day time and at night he said he met another girl. I don't know whether he said this to make me mad or not. When he sees me out in company he acts as if we have never met. He flirts with my girl friends. What can I do to get him to stop talking about other girls and come to see me? BLUE EYES.

Answer—Wouldn't 1t be nice if every girl knew exactly how to make a boy jump through when she wanted him to? Unfortunately it is not given to any individual to have this much power over another. All you can do is to make yourself as charming and agreeable as possible, and when he fails to treat you according to the recognized rules of courtesy and good breeding, give him the air. The night he failed to come was the time for you to have put vour back up and refused to see him again. This attitude would have forced him to eat a little dirt or let you alone. Instead you let him spend his days in telling you about his evenings with another girl. Surely you can find a boy with a more interesting line of conversation than this! JANE JORDAN.

Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.

Riviera Club Swim Party Is Sunday

The Riviera Club Boosters will | have a breakfast-swim Sunday at the club. Swimming is to precede ; and follow breakfast. Mrs. W. L. Business Meeting Set Bridges has arranged novel water stunts for the event.

Whipple,

-

tonight at the club. C. W. Cole molting.

.

is chairman of the entertainment committee, assisted by Messrs. and Mesdames C. K. Harris, W. A. Kassenberg, C. E. Griener and Paul

The Beta Chapter of Sigma Delta |Sigma Sorority will meet Monday The weekly dance will be held night at Craig's for a business

ness meetings appear on club pro LlUncheon Honors

grams for the next few days. . The CERVUS CLUB will hold a Mrs. Martin Mrs. Myrtle Armel and her daugh-

business meeting at 1 o'clock Monday afternoon in the Hotel Wash- . ington. Card playing will follow at ter, Mrs. Irvin Gamerdinger, enter2 o'clock. tained recently at their home, 1219 Laurel St., with a luncheon in honor The BIG FOUR AUXILIARY 16, of Mrs. O. W. Martin, who is leavAMERICAN LEGION, AND POST, ing soon for a visit in Petoskey will hold its annual picnic at Long-| Mich. acre Park Sunday. Mrs. Llovd Far- | Besides Mrs. Martin guests were rington and Paul Pursian are chair- Mesdames Chester Armel, Lewis men. Armel, Clyde Armel,

The DEMOLAY MOTHERS Sadie Gage, Nettie and Nell Mount.

CLUB was to entertain the De-| Engaged

,

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Molay Mothers Club of Terre Haute, Ind., today at a covered dish picnic

in Brookside Park. |

The regular meeting of the T. P. CLUB will be held at 7 p. m. today | at the home of Miss Virginia Foster, ! 2859 N. Capitol Ave.

The NORTH END GARDEN = CLUB was to meet at 2 o'clock to- E : ; day at the home of Mrs. E. D. Par-| = he | sons, 3415 College Ave.

4

Kappa Sigma Party Will Be Aug. 23

Judge Curtis Shake of the State Supreme Court will be principal speaker at the rush party to be! given by the Indianapolis Alumni * Association of Kappa Sigma Fra-| Y ternity at Meridian Hills Country Club Aug. 23. FE y | Judge Shake is an alumnus of the = + © aS Indiana Chapter. There will be YL | talks by representatives of the ac-': . 3 3 3 tive chapters at Purdue University, To Indiana University and Wabash| Fritsch Photo College. Prospective freshmen at Miss Louise Mary Obergfell will these three schools will be guests| be married to Albert E. Miller of and active members will attend.| Peru, Ind. Sept. 7 at the Sacred Virgil W. Simms will be general] Heart Catholic Church. The

chairman and Dan C. Hess will be| bride-to-be is the daughter of toastmaster. Mrs. Mary Obergfell.

the Misses

St., will give a personal shower Monday night for Miss Maizie Ruth Tyner who will become the bride of Roland F. Knox Sept. 6.

Mrs. Hancock's mother, Mrs. Verna Strack, will assist.

will attend with Miss Tyner, her mother, Mrs. M. Eunice Tyner and the mother of the bridegroom-to-be, Mrs. Zenus B. Knox, are Mrs. Horace Harvey, Mrs. Robert Armstrong and Miss Mary Tyner, New Castle, Ind.; Mrs. Richard T. Tyner, Camp Hill, Pa.; Mrs. Thomas Walsh, Toledo, O., and Miss Mary Zell Tyner, Hollywood, Cal. Local guests will be Mesdames Charles Kilgore, Frank Jones Jr., Robert E. Shuman, George H. McKamey, Loy Baxter, Lawrence Sparks, Hugh Smeltzer, Joseph Overman, Roland Singleton, the Misses Adele Dunn, Elizabeth Mahin, Virginia Shappell, Joan Ferguson, Denzil Moffitt and Winifred Schmoll.

" ” 5 Mr. and Mrs. Chester L. Robinson Sr. will give a bridal dinner tomorrow night at Horuff’'s for their daughter Jane and William Merrill, whose marriage will take place Sunday. Guests with the couple will be Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Deupree, Clyde Robinson, Chester Robinson Jr., John

Robinson and Philip Thompson, Mrs. T. W. Robinson, Mrs. T. M. Deupree, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Robinson, Miss Pauline Brown, Miss Doris Harmon, Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Mer»ill, parents of the bridegroom-to-be, and Mr. and Mrs. William J. Merrill, Worthington, Ind.

Honor guest at a luncheon given yesterday at Cifaldi’'s by Mrs. Frank

IM. Boswell and Mrs. Roy Griffith

was Miss Violet Nordberg, whose marriage to James M. McCreery will be Sunday in the East Tenth Street Methodist Church. The party also was for Mrs. Dalton Barnes who was Miss Marjorie McCreery before her recent marriage. Miss Nordberg is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar F. Nordberg, 1330 N. Oakland Ave. and Mr. McCreery’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo McCreery, 1321 N. LaSalle St.

Sorority Plans Auto Picnic

Members of the Beta Alpha Chapter of Pi Omicron Sorority will hold an auto picnic Wednesday at the home of Mrs. J. Russell Hamilton, McFarland . Road.

Miss Amelia Cook has been named “chauffeuse” for the picnic and her assistants will be Miss Helena Magee, Iota Gamma Chapter; Miss Elsie Ruark, Beta Beta Chapter; Miss Maida Johnson, Kappa Xi Chapter and president of the Indianapolis Council, and Mrs. Truman Wise, Beta Alpha Chapter. Members of chapters at Crawfordsville, Ind, and Muncie, Ind. will attend.

Those who

Betty Shimer Weds Tonight

Miss Betty Jo Shimer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Shimer, will be married to Meredith L. Scott, son

of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Scott, at 7 p. m. tonight in the Centenary Christian Church. The Rev. David S. McNeeley will officiate. Miss Shimer will wear a white pussy willow taffeta gown made with a sweetheart neckline, puffed sleeves and a flounced skirt. Her tulle veil will fall from a crown of shirred taffeta. She will wear a Carmen bracelet and ring to match, gifts of the bridegroom, and will carry white lilies. Her attendants, Miss Mildred Byrd, maid of honor, and Miss Dorothea May Smith and Miss Vir- | ginia Smith, bridesmaids, wil] have | dresses fashioned similarly to that {of the bride. Miss Byrd and Miss | Dorothea May Smith will be in shades of pink and Miss Virginia Smith will wear powder blue. They will have wreaths of gardenias and pink roses in their hair and will carry bouquets of similar flowers. Byron Cassidy will be the best man and Roland Reeder gnd William Hurst Jr. will usher. A reception at the home of the bride's parents will follow. The couple will leave on a wedding trip

Party to Honor Patsy Boggs

Miss Eileen White, 3339 Ruckle St., will entertain with a luncheonbridge at the Athenaeum at 12:30 p. m, tomorrow for Miss Patsy Boggs, who will become the bride of Richard Vincent Ware Sept. 4. Guests besides Miss Boggs, her mother, Mrs. Harry Boggs, and the mother of the bridegroom-to-be, Mrs. Harry Ware, will be Mesdames Donald De Haven, Edwin Dunnington, Donald Underwood and the Misses Jane Renard, Sally Hunt, Mary Dunwoody, Betty Kuss, Lura Webb, Martha McConnell, Marjory Pyke, Marjory Bunch and Betty Sanders.

Sub Deb Club to Have Shafer Lake Party

A house party for members of Theta Delta Chapter, Sub Deb Club, will be held next week at Ideal Beach, Shafer Lake. Mrs. James Richey, Mrs. Clyde E. Lindley and Miss Jane Patrick will be chaperons. Girls attending will be Misses Virginia Peterson, Betty Thomas, Georgia Lindley, Betty Volstad, Marjorie Patrick, Evelyn Cox, Ina Clark, Wilma Schmitt, LaVonne Piersall and Dorothy Service,

Liquor Traftic Is Likened to ‘Fifth Column’

CHICAGO, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—The Women’s Christian Temperance Union meets today in 66th annual convention to organize a new anti-

liquor crusade which its leaders said would be a “Temperance Foundation” under the national defense preparedness program. Mrs. Ida B. Wise Smith, national president, predicted that within a few months legislation would be introduced into Congress to prohibit the sale of alcoholic beverage, just as the 18th constitutional amendment sponged the nation dry during the World War. She said that the W. C. T. U. would compress into the next year all the work done in 46 years before the World War for liquor restrictions. In her opening address before the convention, Mrs, Smith likened liquor traffic to a “fifth column boring from within and threatening our very rights as a free people. “No nation eaten at the core by self-indulgence can long survive,” she said. “God grant that the citizens of this nation may place in authority those who will ‘promote the general welfare’ by abolishing the liquor traffic and its attendant evils and lifting again the standard of clean and righteous government.” She said the W. C. T. U. undoubtedly would reaffirm its opposition to peace-time conscription and predicted that the Burke-Wads-worth conscription bill would be defeated in the Senate. She said the bill would be “the first step in the gradual taking away of the rights of the people under a free government.” She recommended that members “vote as we pray” in the November elections after studying the candidates and their platforms.

To “Widen” Windows To make narrow windows appear wider, buy curtain rods some inches longer than the actual window width so that the curtains will fall over the wall as well as over the window. And don't skimp on curtain material. Full, ample folds of the right length for your window, give a luxurious effect.

Lawn Social Tonight

The Hillside Christian Church will have a lawn social and supper from 5 to 7 p. m. tonight at the church grounds. A band concert will follow.

FRIDAY, AUG. 9, 1940 Orphans Home To Celebrate

Anniversary

Program Sunday Marks 73d Year.

Friends and officials of the Gene eral Protestant Orphans Home and the 30 children now living there will join in an annual feast day Sunday in celebration of the 73d anniversary of the home's founding. The program, which will begin at 2 p. m. at the home, 1404 S. State

St., is to include a concert by the Rinne Accordion Band, games and contests. A supper will be served at 5p m Officers of the home are William F. Wagener, president; Edward G. Iske, vice president; Edward A, Gardner, secretary; Joseph C. Garde ner, treasurer, and Alfred A. Reger, financial secretary. The board mems= bers include Louis C. Brandt, Henry C. Baase, Fred Baase, Herman Behrens, George H. Herrmann, Philip Klein, John Nelson, Alfred Leeb, Edward C. Wiebke, Henry Walters and Tobias Roch. Miss Juliana Thorman is the home superintendent. The home was founded in 1867 and is open to any dependent child of any religion. It is supported entirely by membership dues, bequests and endowments. The home has provided residence for more than 3000 children, ranging in age from 4 to 13 years, in the nearly three-quarters of a century. The institution has classes in handcraft for girls and woodcraft for boys. Outside privileges for the children include parties, movies, swimming and picnics. The chile dren attend city schools.

Personals

Mrs. H. S. Cheney, 2539 Tyrone Drive, has returned from New York.

Miss Dorothea Allanson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Allanson, 3141 N. Arsenal Ave., will leave tomorrow to spend a week with friends at Edgewater Beach, Green Bay, Wis.

Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Woodward and their son Douglass Woodward, 1436 W. 28th St., are in Daytona, Fla.

Mrs. W. W. Reedy, president of the Central W. C. T. U. organization, left yesterday to attend the national W. C. T. U. convention in Chicago. She will stop at the Hotel Stevens, where all sessions will be held.

Miss Margaret Gibbons, 1228 Wade St., will return this week-end from a two weeks’ vacation in New York, where she visited the World's Fair.

Couple's Aunts To Be Guests

Miss Jeane Elizabeth Evans has chosen Mrs. J. F. Free as her matron of honor for her marriage Aug. 30 to Robert Page. Charles Edward Page, brother of the bride-groom-to-be, will be best man. Aunts of the bride and bride-groom-to-be will be guests at a linen shower to be given tonight for Miss Evans by Mrs. Everette C, Beaty Jr. Rosemere Ave. Miss Evans’ grandmother, Mrs, Charles F. Behrent, will attend. Aunts of the bride-to-be are Mes=~ dames Ernst Dreier, Hugh Secor, Oscar F., Herbert H. and Lawrence Behrent and Miss Nora Behrent. The bridegroom-to-be’s aunts are Mesdames Dorsey Matthews, E. C. Page, E. M., Charles and Fred Bene nett. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin B. Evans, 4825 E. Washington St., are parents of the bride-to-be.

Arthur Reunion Sunday

The 28th annual Arthur family reunion will be held Sunday at the Albert Arthur Grove, one-half mile south of Gem, Ind. Carl Arthur is president of the reunion and

Mrs. Hazel Miles, secretary.

At

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CLOSES SATURDAYS

During the Summer