Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1940 — Page 13

TUESDAY, AUG. 13, 1940

vy SOCIETY—

Dorothy D. Goode’s Engagement Is Announced by Her Parents

Dr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Goode, of Indianapolis and Ft. Lauderdale, Fla, announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothy Damon, to Frank Kinloch Nelson Jr, son of Mrs. Frank Kinloch Sr., Brookline, Mass. The wedding will take place at Reading, Vt., where Dr. and Mrs. Goode are spending the summer.

. Miss Goode attended Sweet Briar College in Virginia and DePauw University. The bridegroom-to-be attended Dartmouth College.

Mrs. Frederic Ayres to Visit Sister

i Mrs, Frederic Ayres will leave the latter part of August for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Charles Bell, at Cape Cod. . . . Robert Goodman, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Goodman, will return to Morgan Park Military Academy this fall. . . . Mrs. A. L. Gordon, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Charles L. Smith, will go to Cincinnati, O., in a few days to visit Mr. and Mrs. George Gordon. . . , Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Moore left this week-end for a tour of California and a visit in Seattle, Wash. They will return the first of October. . . . Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Cavins are spending two weeks at Maxinkuckee. . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Griffith spent the week-end in Culver visiting their sons, William Jr., Perry and Walter, who are enrolled in the academy. With them were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Griffith, Detroit, Mich. and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Griffith.

Propylaeum Bridge Luncheon Tomorrow

The monthly morning contract-bridge game and luncheon will be held tomorrow at the Propylaeum. Bridge will be played at 10 a. m. and luncheon will follow at 1 p. m. Mrs. Allan Hendricks will entertain her card ciub at two tables in honor of her niece, Miss Elizabeth Dilks, who is visiting her from Philadelphia. Pa. Others who will attend are Mesdames William B. Burford, Ethel M. Rathert, Howard J. Lacy, Andrew W. Hutchmson, George V. Underwood, John J. Bibler, Paul Richey, Miss Anna Reade and Miss Juliette Bryan.

Elizabeth Best Honors Classmate

Miss Elizabeth Best, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claus Best, entertained with a luncheon at the Propyvlacum yesterday in honor of her guest, Miss Nancy Schmick, Baltimore, Md. The girls were class= mates at Bradford College. Qther guests were Mrs. Vernon Roth, the Misses Judy Hamer, Ann Bishop, Mary Lou Westfall, Mary Beck, Helen Kemper, Dorothy Everett, Jane Renard, Jane Arnold, Marilyn Whitaker, Patricia Federman, Jane Wright, Margaret and Barbara Winslow.

Informal Buffet Planned for Couple

Mrs. Kenneth Kinnear and Miss Dorothy Spahr will give an informal buffet supper Saturday night at the home of Mrs. Kinnear's mother, Mrs. G. L. Ramey, 5686 Washington Blvd. honoring Miss Mildred Erma Thiesing and Norman Essex Titus, whose marriage will take place Aug. 29. Other guests will be the Misses Joan Dougan, Joan Stedfeid and Lois Jeanne Nicolai; Frank Reisner, William Ramey, Robert Hutton, Floyd DeVinney, Merrill Thiesing and David McKinstray; Messrs. and Mesdames E. N. Trago, Nicholas Demerath, Warren Ruddell, Jack Kittle, Larry Willson, Robert Straughn, Frank Fairchild, Jack Gulling, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Wisehart, and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Campbell, Cincinnati, O,

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I have been married 16 years to a man who all those years has been cruel to me, stepped out on me, and done everything a husband should not do. He knew how much I loved him. Due to his temper, neglect and abuse my love has died to such an extent that I have become a poor housekeeper and do not want to be in his presence.

I have told him that I do not love him, that I'll never love him again, and that I love another man who makes me happier in the few hours I have spent with him than my husband has in all the vears I've been married. I have tried to leave twice and each time he stops me with threats on his own life. He cries all the time, can't eat or sleep, but this makes no impression on me for he has hurt me so deeply. I am hard and cruel for he has never hesitated to hurt me, and now his tears do not move me. He has never wanted a family and I have been denied my woman's rights. Now he wants a child when it would endanger my life. My husband is neurotic, has threatened self-destruction a number of times and has been in a hospital three times for a mental condition brought about by liquor and disease. During this time I was forced to rely upon the man I have learned to love for help. He has stood aside for 12 years and watched my husband drink and abuse me and never spoke his heart until recently. Since I have got to know him better I love him with my very life. He is everything my man is not. I have promised my husband to stay until spring, but I intend to leave him regardless of what he does. I feel like he has had his chance to make a good husband and has not cared to do so until he found out I was planning to leave. I'm 35, not a child, and have had a hard life. I have no parents; so please advise me. Do you think me a fool in waiting until spring to go to the man I love? Do you think that my husband will get used to my loving someone else by then? HEARTSICK.

» » » » ¥ » Answer—The mistake vou have made is in waiting 16 years to leave. A marriage is contracted to be of benefit to two people. When it benefits only one, the other is legally entitled to a release from

the contract. No woman worth her salt will eat her heart out year atter vear over & man who not only does harm to her but harm to himself, If you were doing the man any good by living with him there might be some reason for perpetuating your marriage, but you are simply providing him with further opportunity to destroy your happiness as well as his own. I do not say it will do him any good to leave him. At least it will prove to him that a woman will not put up with his conduct simply because she is married to him. The thing that makes me doubt him most is his threat to destrov himself if he can’t have his own way. This 1s the last cry of the ‘coward who has failed to mold reality to his liking. The hostile impulses which he visited on other people are now turned toward himself for want of an external object to persecute. He tries 0 throw the guilt on you by saying, “see what you've done to me.” but after all he has done it to himself. I am glad your heart is hard. I deem it unfortunate that he knows there is another man, tor he may be able to cause you trouble. It would have been wiser tor vou to have secured vour divorce for which vou have ample grounds before this fact became known. What earthly good could come of waiting until spring? we be any more of a man then than he is now? TI think not. JANE JORDAN.

Will

Put vour problems in a letter to Jane Yordan wha will answer : your questions in this column daily,

FOOD

AFTER a day in the country, or after a long drive during a warm afternoon, the thought of preparing dinner for the family isn’t the most pleasant in the world. But the family must eat. With a little careful forethought and the use of simple, quickly cooked ingredients, a first-rate dinner can be prepared in a short time when vou return. This type of menu is not only easy, but it actually fills the bill for a regular meal despite the fact that mother has been away all afternoon: chilled fruit juice, quick vegetable plate (peas, cut corn, cauliflower), crisp bacon strips, potato chips, cabbage and apple salad, cottage pudding with crushed fruit sauce, coffee, milk.

Cabbage and Apple Salad

(Serves Six) 1 Package lemon - flavored gelatin 1 pint hot water 4 teaspoons vinegar 1; teaspoon salt

Dissolve gelatin in hot water. Add vinegar and 4 teaspoon salt, Chill until slightly thickened. Season cabbage with 4 teaspoon salt add remaining ingredients, and fold into slightly thickened gelatin. Turn into individual molds. Chill until firm. Unmold on crisp lettuce. Garnish with mayonnaise.

Cottage Pudding

(Serves Six) 2 cups sifted cake flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1; teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons butter other shortening

Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder and salt, and sift again. Cream butter, add sugar gradually, and cream together well. Add flour, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time, beating after each addition until smooth. Add vanilla. Bake in greased pan, 8 by 8 by 2 inches, in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 50 to 60 minutes, or until done. Serve hot with crushed fresh fruit. The hot pudding with its colorful and delicious crushed fruit will give that after-a-day-out dinner a substantial look and taste. The pudding can be cooking while you prepare all the other dishes, except, of course, the cabbage and apple salad which you should make in the morning and chill all day in the refrigerator,

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX

1 cup shredded cabbage 1 cup diced apples iti cup chopped sweet pickles.

1 cup sugar 1 cup milk 13 teaspoon vanilla or

Recent Brides Share t

2

‘Mary A. Tindall,

Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Tindall,

Church. The announcement! was made at a party last week-end at the Tindall home. Guests were the bridegroom-[to-be’'s mother, Mesdames Robert Wagener, Fred J. Grumme Jr, David Gifford, John Horuff, Gordon

Dorothy Springer, Betsy Murbarger, Margaret Parrish and Betty Grauel, Indianapolis; Mesdames Kenneth Craig, Thomas McCullough, Paul Tindall, William P. Kirk. the Misses Mary Hayes, Pauline Thomas, Betty Bennett, Crystal Linville and Rosamond Terry, Shelbyville, Ind. » » ”n Mr. and Mrs. Adam C. Miller, Washington, formerly of Indianapolis, announce the approaching imarriage of their daughter. Merle, to Earl Wallis Pritchett, Washington. The wedding will take place | Aug. 21 at the Rhode Island Avenue Methodist Church in Washington. Miss Miller's attendant will be Miss Rosemary Horn, Indianapolis, {who will leave here Friday to at- | tend the wedding.

» » ”

| Miss Julie Turner gave a silver { shower last night for Miss Martena | Margaret Sink, whose marriage to Harold C. Kost, Toledo, O., will be Saturday. Guests with Miss Turner and her

Kibler,

Jerseyite Plans Shower Here

Mrs. Fred Grumme Jr, Irvington, N. J, will entertain tonight with a crystal shower at the home of her

| mother, Mrs. Elmer Brown, 5538 | Broadway, for Miss Rosemary Highsmith, Flat Rock, Ill, whose mar[riage to Wilson Lewis Ford will take {place Aug. 25. Guests will be the Misses Betty |Grauel, Dorothy Jones, Betsy Mur{barger, Mary Ann Kibler, Margaret {Parrish, Marylin Mitchell, Mary | Roberts, Phyllis Pennington, Mary Ann Tindall, Mary Janet Mummert, Edelle Smith, Dorothy Springer, { Dorothy Gimbel, Margaret Brooks {and Mrs. David Griffith.

! ———————— | >is Auxiliary Plans Luncheon | Brightwood Auxiliary of the Or|der of the Eastern Star will hold a {covered dish luncheon and business {meeting at the Masonic Temple, | Roosevelt Ave. and Adams St, | Thursday noon. Mrs, Odessa (Thaugh will be hostess.

Long | By ALICIA HART

For the first time in vears, coiffure experts are showing hair stvles designed especially for women with really long hair as well as for those who would like to pin up their long bobs. And the first thing one notices about these new coiffures is that the bun just “ain't what she used to be.” Not at all. In the first place, the bun is most likely to be a handsome scroll, reminiscent of a “figure 8.” Or it may be an intricate arrangement that somewhat resembles the {turned-under ends of a Page Boy bob.

| ” » » | SOMETIMES back hair is thinned |and tnen pinned under a wide braid {or a double-section twist so that the {braid vather than a bun shows. Thus | the shape of the head isn't altered {—an objection that always has {been raised whenever long hair was | mentioned. Today's coiffures for {definitely do not make one look (older, In fact, many of them cre{ate a more youthful line than upswept effects which expose ears, {neck, forehead and sides of the face and do nothing to soften the features. The girl who wants to join the long-haired ranks—in which the socially prominent Mrs. William Rhinelander Stewart and several other notables have retained membership through an -era of short hair—will be impressed by the new uses of halo braids. Instead of smoothing the hair back and pinning the braid around it, hairdressers place a wide, deep wave from ear to ear across the top of the head and put the braid just behind the wave. Sometimes a row of soft curls is used instead of the wave, Sophisticated no end is a coiffure

long hair

left side is brushed “up and over across the top to join hair on the right side and is finished in a thick roll low on the right side of the neck. As angelic as the other is sophisticated is back hair in a neat, small

Foxworthy, the Misses Mary Ann |

in which the very long hair on the

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

he Spotlight With

y

PAGE 13

Donald Wagener

To Wed Aug. 30 in Central Church; Merle Miller to Marry in East

Announcement of an engagement and an approaching marriage \appear with a bridal dinner and showers for brides-to-be.

1307 N. Alabama St., announce the

. 950 N. Garfield Drive. The wedding

‘mother, Mrs. John Sink, were Mesdames Doyle Nicely, Turpin Davis, {Richard Cain, John Dallas Medenwald, Clarence Chaney, W. 8S. Turner, Miss Juanita Carmichael and Miss Anne Brown » » n Miss Ruth Olson, whose marriage to Irvin L. Baxter will take place Aug. 30, was honor guest at a dinner party last night at Bluff Crest given by members of her club. Other guests were Mesdames Deford Lyons, Lee Roy Hull, Magdalene Jones, Miss Marie Ernst and Miss Helen Filcer. | ® = = showers have few days for whose marSmartz will

Several surprise been given the past Miss Tosca Guerrini, riage to Kenneth M., take place Aug. 25. Mrs. Rose Stewart and her mother, Mrs. Mary Aristofni, recently entertained with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Guerrini. Guests with the bride-to-be and her mother were Mesdames Mabel Moats, Ed Baker, Emmet McCormick, Louise Gandolf, Anthony Guerrini, Louls Oneto and Miss Helen Guerrini, sister of the bride, and Miss Rickie Oneta, her aunt. Miss Oneta and Miss,Helen Guer|rini also gave a surprise miscellaneous shower for Miss Guerrini rejcently, Guests were Mesdames Anthony Sansone, Tarquinio Agnelneri, Michael Saldino, Adunia Gailuzai, Oswald Marriuto, Mario Zambon, Anthony Guerrini, Louis Oneto, Tony Hessman. Dominick Santarosso, Dante Gastari, Everett Smartz Dominick Guelieri, Louis Tofiolo, Otto Faenzi, Ward Engle, Charles Kuhlman, V. W. Baker and Marco Costantino. The grandmother of the bride-groom-to-be, Mrs. Victor Baker, recently gave a garden party at the home of Mrs. Josephine Gohn, Ben Davis. Guests with the honor guest were the Misses Helen Guerrini, Charlotte Smartz, Rickie Oneto, Elizabeth Engle, Mesdames Guerrini, Smartz, Engle, Oneto, Darrell Stewart, Anthony Guerrini, Charles Davis, Harry Dixon, Edward Voltz, [Robert Borger, Harry McKinney, Josephine John, Julius Oberting,

|L. T. Haskett, F. M. Walters, Stewart

and Margaret DeWard, the Misses Lena Sansone, Marian Sansone, Edna Galluzzi, Erna Santarossa, Mary Toffolo and Lecia Toffolo. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Harry Shuck, Franklin, Ind, and Mrs. Caroline Otts, Tucson, Ariz.

%

Kingsbury, |

engagement of their daughter, Mary Ann, to Donald D. Wagener, son of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Wagener will take place at 3:30 p. m,, Aug. 39, In the Central Avenue Methodist

1. Before her marriage Aug. 3 in the Englewood

Christian Church, Mrs. Thurman

Emminger was

Miss Dorothy Reich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar

Reich. Mr. Emminger is the son Joseph Emminger. (Fritsch Photo.)

9. Mrs. Theodore Paul Mantz of Kanawha Vil=was Miss Carolyn Roth,

lage, Charleston, W. Va, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Meridian St., before her recent man Photo.) 3. Mrs. Jess Hallert

penheimer before her marriage in April and Mrs. Sol Oppenheimer, 3416

daughter of Mr Broadway. Mr. and Mrs. Hallert Evansville, (Ramos-Porter Photo.) 4. Miss Mary Magdalene Thuer of Joseph A. Rathz in a ceremony

Coeds In Charge Temperance Viewed as Factor In Final Outcome of War, WW. C. T. U. Convention Told

Of Butler Tea

Butler coeds will be hostesses to several hundred voung women, recent high school graduates, at Butler University's annual tea at 2:30 p. m, Thursday in the Formal Garden. Miss Mary Clay is general chairman of the tea, Coeds who will be in the receiving line are Miss Betty Rose Martin, president of the Panhellenic Association, Miss Clay and Miss Mary Bell, chairman of the Butler Y. W. C. A. chapter. Dr. Elizabeth B. Ward, new dean of women, will receive, as will Mrs George A. Schumacher, Mrs. D. S.

| Robinson, who was to be in the line,

is out of town. Committees in charge of the tea

are the Misses Mummert, Janet Murphy and Lois Foreman, invitations and name cards; Miss Charleen Dabbs and Miss Dorothy Evans, telephone; Misses Patricia Stayton, Phyllis Hadden and Lucy Bosler, honor invitations: Misses Mary Frances Paul, Joan Hixon, Evelyn Fosgate, refreshments; Misses Marion Driess, Maxine Fields and Mary Helen Yates, entertainment, the Misses Virginia Johnson, Janet Williams and Edelle Smith, decoration.

Hair Styles Staging a Comeback

marriage.

was Miss Helen Marie Op-

of Mr. and Mrs.

Photo.)

J. Roth, 3819 N. (Bretz-

She is the

are at home in

became the bride Pendleton, Ind,

July 9 in Sacred

l'in

ee Special

CHICAGO, Aug. 13.—Temperance may prove a factor in determining the nutcome of the European war, Mrs. Ella A president, told delegates to the 66th annual convention of the Women's Christian Temperance Union in Chicago yesterday. of the flow

She stated that curtailment

liquor industry would

Club Members To Hear Review

Business meetings will be the main activities of club members the next few days. THE IRVINGTON GARDEN CLUB will meet Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. H. B. Tilman, 970 Campbell Ave. Mrs. W. F. King will review “Gardening in the Shade" (H. K. Morse).

Mrs. Pearl Hopkins, 5500 E. 19th St., will entertain members of the FAHOLO CLUB tomorrow night.

THE WOMEN'S DEMOCRAT HARMONY CLUB, Center Town-

ship Outside, Precinct 2, will hold its |

monthly meeting at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the home of Mrs. William Gigerich, 2165 S. New Jersey St.

THE NORTH SIDE RECREATION CLUB was to hold a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. today at the Colonial Tearoom. Mrs, Roy Ratliff was to be in charge,

Heart Catholic Church. and Mrs, William Thuer, 527 Sumner Ave.

5. The marriage of Miss Helen Cafouros, daughter of Mrs. Aline Cafouros, John E. Anderson, son of Mr derson of Beech Grove, will be Sept, 1 at the home of the bridegroom's parents. 6. An Aug. 30 wedding will be that of Miss Ruth Olson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Olson, 2021 Olney St, to Irvin Baxter, son of Mrs. George Baxter, The ceremony will be in the Chris tian Tabernacle Church. (Holland Photo.)

make warring supplies

Boole said, ment tities of grains and sugars allowed

in the manufacture of alcohol on the ground stroys the nutritive values of these foods and Great conserve food.

yesterday opposing war in principle, but favoring “adequate national defense and preparedness peace.” defense plans provide for refusal to grant permission to liquors, including beer and wine, in canteens, training camps and |ritories adjacent to them,

ation of war psychology teria,” pledged itself to remain on guard against ities and urged all possible efforts to keep out of war,

meet at 8 o'clock tomorrow night at Ft. 5420’; E. Washington St. |via Benner is noble grand.

Two Who Are to Be Wed in Late Summer

Couple on Trip After Wedding

Limes Special ALEXANDRIA, La, Aug. 13.—Mr, and Mrs. Nathaniel C, Fick are on a wedding trip following their marriage here, Aug. 7, in the rectory of St. Francis Xavier Church. Mrs. Fick was formerly Miss Mar= garet Marie Smith, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. John L. Smith, Alexandria. Mr. Fick is of Lake Wawasee and Jersey City, N, J. The services were read by the Rev, [F'r. Aloysius Olinger in the presence of the immediate families and friends. Miss Kathleen Grass, Alexandria, was maid of honor, and James Fick, Indianapolis, was his brother's best man. Afier a reception at the home of the bride's parents, the couple left for Jersey City. They will stop al Little Rock, Ark. Chicago, Indian= apolis, Lake Wawasee, Dayton, O, and Pittsburgh, Pa. They will be at home in Jersey City Aug. 19 The bride is a graduate of St, Anthony de Padra Hospital, Chicago, and was a member of the stafl of T. C. I. Hospital, Birmingham, Ala., before her marriage. The bridegroom received his B. S. degree in chemistry from Butler University, He received his Master's degree in metallurgy and metallography at Purdue University, While at Butler he was president of the Butler Independent Association,

She is the daughter of Mr (Fritsch

1469 S. Meridian St, to and Mrs. Carl A. An-

Miss Hennis

[Luncheon Guest

Mesdames Arthur FE Wilson, Ralph Brafford and Henry Moffett will entertain Saturday at 1:30 p.m, with a dessert-bridge luncheon for Miss Marjory Louise Hennig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam G. Hennis, who will be married to Dr, Jack D. Carr Sept. 14, Guests with Miss Mrs, Hennis and Mrs. J. B. Carr, mother of the bridegroom-to-be, will be Mesdames Burchard Carr, Lyman G. Hunter, Ralph B. Coble, Edward Humston, John Kingsbury, Dudley Hutcheson, the Misses Elysee Cro=sier, Dorothy Dunkle and Cather=ine Heard. Out-of-town guests will be Mrs. David Holmes, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Mrs. John Hopkins, Rensselaer, Ind, and Miss Marilyn Knauss, La Grange, Ind. The hostesses will be assisted by their mothers, Mrs. Wilson's mother is Mrs. Marshall Oberholtzer; Mrs, Moffett’s, Mrs. Charles Brandt, and Mrs. Emma Draper Lutz is the mother of Mrs, Brafford. Mr. and Mrs. Burchard Carr, 920 E. 46th St., will entertain Sunday with a 6 o'clock dinner for Miss

Hennis. | Guests with

Boole, Brooklyn, N. Y..

the food

of farm able

products to nations to conserve The British W. C. T. U, Mrs. has urged the Governto further reduce the quan-

Hennis,

that fermentation de-

Britain needs to

The union adopted a resolution

to insure The resolution urged that

sell alcoholic ter-

The convention deplored the “creand hys-

fifth colunn active

the couple will be

Rebekahs to Meet |Miss Elysee Crosier, Miss Dorothy

Irvington Rebekah Lodge 608 will Dunkle, Dr. William A. Livingston, Wayne, Ind, Frank Reissner, Mrs. Syl- Mr, and Mrs, Edward Bradford, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Moffett,

Personals

Mrs. ¥. H, Miller and her daughter Jane are in Atlantic City, N. J. Miss Edvthe Hall, 1506 E. La Grande Ave. and Miss Helen Lamb, 1821 E. Minnesota St., have returned from a vacation trip through the East. They stopped in New York, Washington, Mt, Vernon, Va. and Atlantic City. Mrs. D. H. Alden and Mrs. John Kiemeyer will attend the Miami Valley Persian Society convention in Dayton, O., Sunday. Both are resident members.

Society Arranges

Picnic and Luncheon

Indianapolis Lodge 137, Ladies Society of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen ahd Enginemen, have two events scheduled for this week and next. Thursday at 4 o'clock the group will hold its picnic at Garfield Park.

Aug. 20 is the date set for the birth-

day luncheon at in Castle

Hall.

noon

Tozer-Yelton Rite Will Be Saturday

The marriage of Miss Catherine

| Yelton, daughter of Mrs. Mary Yel-

Long hair, and the use of braids and other hair pieces with which to achieve long-haired effects, have brought back simple, charming,

easy-to-manage hair styles such as this.

Modeled by Lucille Fair-

banks, who stars in the motion picture, “The Sea Hawk,” the coiffure

is waved up and away from the

head and ends in a rolled bun at the back.

face. The twist goes around the

‘bun on the nape of the neck with a

fringe of long bangs across the front.

The long bob may be brushed upward all the way around, arranged .in curls on top of the head and held

in place by invisible pins or a ribbon band. Or it may be brushed up from front and sides with a few curls on top and the long back ends gathered into a clip :

ton, to William Tozer, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Tozer, Brazil, Ind, will take place at 7 p. m. Saturday at the Yelton home, 218 W, 36th St. The Rev, Fr. Joseph B. Tieman will officiate.

Hostess Is Selected

The Y. A. M. Club will meet tonight at the home of Miss Mary Lou Mitchell, 719 E. 25th St. Her sister, Miss Elizabeth Mitchell, from Towa, will be a guest at the meet‘ing. v

L. S. AYRES & CoO.

COLLEGE STARTS TOMORROW! WITH

Ayres’ A ooh cole

Fashion Show

At 2:30 Tomorrow, Wednesday Afternoon, in the Air-Cooled Auditorium, Eighth Floor

See the clothes that are right for YOU becauss they were picked by college girls: passed by our College Board. Modeling by Ayres’ own models as well as

School

Western Ball State Teachers Earlham Stephens St. Mary of the Woods DePauw Purdue Wellesley Butler Swarthmore Indiana University Ind. State Teachers Northwestern St. Mary of the Lake Ayres

Name

Judy Bosson .........s Sara Jane Wyatt...... Barbara Bogue Albertine Palmer Shirley Montrose Dede Beem Erma Berry Peggy Winslow .,, Jean Smelser Sarah Lindley Gerry Gates Eva Mae Chalille Marjorie Allardice ... Josephine Welch Iudi Blackley ....