Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1952 — Page 3
1082 SATURDAY, MAY 3, 288 __. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ PAGE 8 ro | After Divorce—What? «+ : No. Hoosier Profile i : Bn Harner I ald Rest of Their Lives Is af Stake By Carl Henn
oe By MORRIS L. ERNST and DAVID LOTH De : _ " partment who doesn't own a uniform is a pabeet di THE COUPLE sat in their lawyer's office looking Morrie L. rast te the wif.” trolman with 25 years, 2 months and 12 days of rly today rather less ill at ease than most who come “on their has handled many divorce service. fl ar-old J W. Grah an {llegal, mission—divorce. cases. David Loth is a former y- ve Years ames { raham, , who int, 2 . newspaper editor and blogra- "| SAIN back 10 the force Thursday after four Years by Excise They had tried hard. Each had given some time i ag in zetitement, will be sh nveluntary “plain. and Madi. out of a useful and popular Here the authors advocate Clothes Doliveman untl his Rew Enifon 4 ready. s Brogdon career to make their marriage Especially in families with cpanges In our divorce sys- da Sal my any om n “Th ory said big, ed Parrot work. They couldn't do it, but Shilgren, ge Jiivase fhouid tem. ‘This Is the last of a b i gin Jim Lira. i ® only thing 1 kept their consciences were clear, ainienance or e ro book, ' ny their soRSclences were Clear. cneolrdgenan if H0%as in seria _ ~ hog Fook. rok It's the same service weapon that hung at his raion, i We oy Tio, avyera which the children have the best ished by Marper & Bro hip while he walked a beat, operated the depart- , 4 ) ment's ‘first teletype machine, drove one of the artender.” ted him t h th chance to develop health of | po ge. expect rh i . how hii Tog mind and body, to’ beconfe in ers. =: first radio patrol cars and chased wrongdoers as liquor set- “Well oy ses.” he a ig their turn adequate parents and: a court and make a simple a detective sergeant, oa ersons to “You've got a house in Conneo. citizens. A divorce system declaration of their intention unlicensed ticut where you spend most of which negelects this will fail, no to dissolve the marriage, as un- IT STILL SHOOTS pretty straight, too. your tige, We could arrange it matter how. drastically it holds complicated as notice of inten- | “There's never a month went by while I was arrested there on grounds of cruelty.” couples _ together or. how tion to get married. the ey a’ as 150 0 Jor 2 te Jurget Prag: i on mo Froude of cruelty: pleasantly if parts them. This preliminary stage should | YE ad, shy Loot Wer 30 today, Wes ~~ > . * » = not constitute a public record. | . d Steven. We've never been - cruel to THEREFORE, we propose In fact the fs would ‘en- His- Colt revolver has seen a lot of use, In ath as a each other. that any childless couple or. courage them to keep it secret | fact, it has been the instrument of quick death yk the job In New York you two couple with grown children for a time to minimize inter- | for several criminals, shot by Jim in line of duty. olman and could get it only on grounds should be able to apply to an ference and pressures from Once, in 1944, Jim was slugged with his own form. of adultery,” the lawyer appropriate court for a dissolu- = outside. nightstick in the midst of a melee at Delaware . went on. and South Sts. Although the blow fractured his
enough.” in .an atmosphere of friendl became fll, and worked for a time here with an " ~ Y Joly n “Ah,” sighed husband and or is wntrained- tor calm. y ding In Acnite Sm, But the company replaced wb ey ' ne at Jong. beter 1 wife in unison. “That is f FIVE If at the end of that time di- ited Press Telephoto. m a younger man, and left Jim at loose “ ’ us. How do we arrange it?” > Vraa the wife Is NOt ore stil; sremed io be. the FOR HER HUSBAND—In St. Paul, Mrs. William Oatis, whose |ends. I'l never forget the day when he swore us
“It's a formality. It's not a nice one and it can hardly be handled with taste. Of course there was a case of a man who had scruples about adultery, but so badly wanted a divorce that he allowed himself to be caught in .tagrante delicto with a shop-window dummy—a blonde, incidentally. His wife got a divorce.” The couple shook their heads. The husband thought a window dummy was hardly more tasteful than a live woman. “And finally there is Mexico,” the lawyer concluded. “There simple incompatibility is
» E = SINCE they both had plenty of money, it was easy. What could not be arranged so readily was the rest of their lives. Yet, when a couple face divorce, as when they face marriage, it
--i8 the rest of their lives that
matters, Neither a couple who get an easy divorce in Mexico nor a
<e
tion of marriage and get it on the merits of their case rather than on the amount of animosity they can engender or the amount of chicanery they are willing to expend. The state should concern itself only with these points: ONE—That the action is not hasty or hysterical. TWO—That the couple have had help in trying to take their marriage work, THREE—That the marriage has every chance to heal itself while divorce is under consideration. FOUR — That the wife has not accepted a monetary settlement under duress or through ignogance of her rights, espe-
~ » » THEN they would go before
—
‘About Normal’
May Due Here
WASHINGTON, May 3 UP)—|
On the basis of their declaration, the court would inform - them. that there must be a waiting period, say six months. The court would appoint a skilled counselor — psychiatrist, marriage advisor, clergyman, doctor — to consider their problem with them, perhaps once a month during the waiting period. It would be his duty to discuss with them the real basis of their decision — not some trumped-up reason or evidence to fit the law—and the probable results.
. 8. { SUCH discussions would give
them a chance which few now get to appraise their marriage
solution, the couple would be
entitled to it without further |
argument or delay. The net result of this system should be less divorce rather than more, and certainly better results after divorce, especially for the children.
(END OF SERIES)
|
mate has been held more than a year by Reds in Czechoslovakia yarn to knit socks for the newsman. She is | certain Mr. Oatis will be wearing them soon.
on spy charges, bu
THE ONLY man in the Indianapolis Police
skull, Jim drew and shot four times, ending the battle in a hurry and sending one man to the morgue. He's heard bullets comfng his way, too. A burglar on the North Side threw a couple of #5-caliber slugs at Jim before escaping on foot. The bullets hit a wooden fence behind OMcer Graham and sounded, he said, “like bricks hitting a billboard.” ¢ * &
ALTHOUGH HIS HAIR is snow-white and thinning, Jim insists he is in perfect health. + He thoroughly enjoyed the year he spent in Miami, Fla., after leaving the force. He worked for Eastern Airlines and soaked up the sunshine, Even though he went through the 1948 hurricane, the worst to hit Florida in many years, Jim said he'd go back in a minute df he had another chance. He returned to Indianapolis when his father
“I'm tired of being retired,” Jim said, explaining why he applied for reinstatement. “Besides (that, it's a means of livelihood.” | He's not the first policeman or fireman to dis-
Flier Gets Discharge;
{cover that the $100-a-month pension is ridicu-
JAMES W. GRAHAM—Kept his gun.
And, little though it is, taxes must be paid on it, Jim {4 returning to the force with few ile lusions, “There's no glory in it,” he said. “It's a mats ter of doing your duty and survival of the fittest ~-just like when I fought in World War 1."
$ & ¢
BUT HE'S DETERMINED to stay on the force “from now on,” especially since he's serving ynder the man who swore him in Dec. 19, 1922, was his sergeant later his captain—John Ambuhl, now Chief of Police. “Chief Ambuhl is the finest man I've ever
in. He looked us straight in the eye and said, ‘I hope I'haven't made a mistake.’ “Now that the Chief has had enough confi= dence in me to recommend my reinstatement, I'm going to show my appreciation by serving to the best of my ability.”
lously inadequate to cover living costs today.
Hwe State Airmen] Missing in Crash
LOCAL DEATHS
* The Weather Bureau said today| P T D d “calls for temperatures to aver|age above seasonal normals over thing, either good or bad. {the Great Plains with greatest The system in this country departures in northern portions.” is a failure, whether in Nevada | “Cooler than normal weather is and Ohio where divorces are indicated along the Pacific and granted on many grounds, or in Atlantic seaboards,” the bureau
TAMPA, Fla, May 3 (UP) a A A Bo. By United P Good ak a., May ~— LINGER, 61, of 1 LeGrande EL PABO, Tox. May 3—Altltonm mote Io vomld vestgn|TWo Indiana airmen were listed Ave, Services 10 a.m. Monday in (Co. Services 11 a.m. Monday in Force 1st Lt. Verne Goodwin " today among seven members of Cecil R. Hurt Shefleld Chapel. Flanner & Buchanan” Mortuary, . sand take a discharge “under con- a 14.man B-29 crew missing and|Burial, N Crown. Re atlas originally sentenced to two years ditions other than honorable. » A ed dead ft h ian a ew Buri orth rty. hard labor in prison and a dis- ev after the plane ”
Goodwin accepted, and his “ap-i,),no0q § the Gulf Mexi ELH or 68 ; honorable discharge for refusing|njication” confirming the fact was|. d into the Guilt of Mexico, JOHN J. EGELHOFF. 88 R.R.\woynded Youth Says to fly, will be permitted instead to/¢e1e aph immediately to 8th near here while practicing low-/1, Plainfield, former Indianapolis
R.R. 17, Box 532. Former ems
man who cannot get a divorce | ployee of old Lauter Furniture
at all because his wife does not believe in it, have proved any- By Hoffman Specialty Co. Two new directors were elected yesterday by the Hoffman Specialty Manufacturing Co., 1001
York St.
One was Earl R. Carpenter, : South Carolina where until said. “In other areas tempera-former president of the Paul G.|resign and accept a “lukewarm” 'Air Force headquarters in FY. level gunnery. Feaident. Upholséree pi Srey. His Father Shot Him 1949 they could not be had at tures are expected to average not|Hoffman Co. of Los Angeles, and discharge. |Worth for indorsement.’ The pa-|, Survivors said the 4-engine hound Lines, no, years, A 15:year-old boy was shot -
| i 0: . m. Monday in Lauck The action, disclosed at BIRES|,o.c win go from there to “higher rhomber crashed into the water|ices 1 30. a.m y in
Air Force Base last night, was W nose first yesterday, broke in half| Funeral Home. Burial, Crown credited by Biggs authorities to{Ruthority,” the Biggs public In-|_ "oo “in "one minute. Hill,
‘new policies and regulations,” fOrmation office said. "=
all. It fails both from the standpoint of the law and the people. It has been found in study-
early today while he was “trying to protect mother” during a family argument. : David Dodson, 123 N. Harding
far from seasonal normal. ex-director of Studebaker of the “Précipitation is predicted to Pacific. be subnormal over the northern! The other was Harry T. Ice, |,
{half of the nation from the of the law firm of Ross, McCord, | The missing included the navi-| 4; pERT E. HENDESON, 54, Ig the Soods i eal {Rockies to the Appalachians. Ice & Miller. DE nary nem Lon In-Between Discharge gator, Capt. James L. Seston, 37, o¢ 755 W. New York St. Carrier|St. told police his father, Carl, not increasingly higher a Near normal amounts are in-| The firm, which makes heating ion ments. & | The Alr Force refused to ex- Bast Chicago, Ind., and Alrmane,. ine Indianapolis Recorder, 63, chased him and his mother, along the lower reaches. Dams dicated elsewhere, except foriand plumbing equipment,. re-| "gi the Air Force refused to ex-|plain the%exact status of the dis-|Second Class Hugh B. Hampton gervices 1 p. m. Monday, Jones Mrs. Cordia Dodson, 68, out of
the house with a 32-caliber ree
abundant showers along coastal elected Paul G. Hoffman chair-|,.i what the “new policies” are..charge. r ze re ’ volver, firing four times.
Tabernacle, AME Zion Church, regions of Washington, Oregon,
Burial, Floral Park.
But Mrs. Goodwin said Jr., 28, New Albany, Ind.
and reservoirs, reforestation man and Nell D. Skinner, presi- The Biggs announcement said Lt after & visit with her husband| Ts, body of one of he victims
& and contour plowing a couple
England.” y was recovered by deep sea divers of thousand miles ‘sway prove |snd 177 Fenn dent. |Goodwinis to benent under a dein; “he's being allowed 10 Te-Iiut wa mot identified Smmediy IRVIN C. STEVENSON, 68, of iospial for freaeg ot Gentenl damage below. ‘Shortwave News ‘Hansen Named Head retary Thomas Finletter to make sign his commission, but is Sk {may 4705 Carson Ave, who worked|ipnis right thigh. His father, cap
in State Auditor's office. Serv-
ices 1 p.m, Tuesday in Flanner garage, was cha with assault |& Buchanan Mortuary, followed Sad battery I Ie
the new code retroactive in hising an in-between discharge.’ tured by police as he hid in the
| case. The discharge is “neither hon-
poor shortwave radio teception| Richard T. Hansen of the Citi- Two-year Sentence orable or dishonorable,” she said, that has been plaguing thisizens Gas & Coke Utility is new| Lt. Goodwin, 30, balked at a but is “neutral-—classed as ‘other method of communication the past president of the Indianapolis Jun-|flight to England last December span honorable.” The definition) week will continue for three morejor Chamber of Commerce. Hebecause he feared the strain, ....... ho said that it is the days, forecasters at the Nationalisucceeds Paul H. Buchanan Jr. would be too much on his preg-|.., ierpart to the Army's “blue Bureau of Standards predicted ian attorney. nant wife, As result, he was given discharge.” this morning. Listening conditions| (Others elected at Club 52 last/two years.in prison at an Apr. 16 ne announcement from Biggs are expected to improve mnext|jignt are: court martial. followed by several weeks WashTuesday, they said. Norman F, Bryan, vice presi-| He was one of 14 air Sfiliogrs ington reports that the Defense 7 dent; Ward Glenn, secretary;lat Biggs, Randolph Air Force pe nt was considering|8t, driver for United Cab Co, area. Capt. Charles F. Garrison, The Work of reporters all over|\,. we derson, treasurer, and Base, Mather Air Force Base and|“softening” of the Air Force at-|said he had picked the men up nan. Se IVE 4 bo, Stay In a naval aviator at the Naval War the world is served up for you Arthur Gemmer, William McCord, Keesler Air Force Base who re-|titude toward the filers charged|at the bus station and taken them pyyia) Monday in Latayette College at N R. I, will in World Report, each Sunday|Gerald York, Joseph Tuohy and|fused to fly. with “willful disobedience” for|to the 3000 block W. Washing- : succeed Capt. Woelfel on or bein The Times. Dan Critchlow, directors. Yesterday the Air Force offeredirefusing to go up in airplanes. ton St. ORLESTUS MAYHEW, 82, of fore Sept. 1.
By Science Service
a 28 | SIMILARLY, the remedy for | Noten teres Of Junior C. of C.
the floods of divorce does not lie in building higher dikes, whether these take the form of a pile of ever more “liberal” divorce laws or a rigid bulwark against any divorce at all, Far better would be some wise social engineering at the sources. Any plan for a system of divorce to serve people living in our culture—the only kind we are talking about—should have as its aim the improvement of human relations among people who live in families.
Cab Driver Reports He Was Slugged {by cremation,
A 62-year-old cab driver told| THOMAS 'L. WRIGHT, 95, of police he as slugged three times|3920 E. Michigan St. Services 1 early today by two “fares” who Pp m, Tuesday in Memorial Park fled across the grounds of CentralfChepel Evanston, IH, Burial in State Hospital without attempting anston. at Purdue University, il bg re to rob him. assigned as commander of a des LOSS A ESON, 5, o Grover Easter, 920 N. Alabama x 3 gd \oESoN, 5.5 stroyer squadron in the Pacifia
%
‘Resigns at Purdue LAFAYETTE, Ind, May 3 (UP) ~—Capt. J. C.. Woelfel, som mandant of the Naval ROTO
Covington Coffeenians
Win Youth
. By AGNES
Competition
H. OSTROM
» Times Woman's Editer ; NNOUNCEMENT of The Coffeenians Club, a Covington junior group, as state winner of the “Build Freedom With Youth” contest climaxed the 62d annual convention of the Indiana Federation of Clubs.
The $500 prize for first place was presented to Mrs, Earl Fairchild, ¢lub president, at the
Mrs. Victor A. Selby
closing banquet last night in the
Claypool Hotel. Kroger Co. and. the! General
: Federation of Women's Clubs
jointly sponsored the competition. Through work w Covington young people, the clup opened Covington Youth Center, began a kindergarten and started a baby-sitting course among other projects slated to aid the younger generation,
OTHER "AWARDS in the contest went to North Jugizon Progress Club, second place; Griffith Woman's Club, third; Hobart Federated Junior Woman's Club; fourth, and the Al‘exandria Junior Woman's b American
oi piven es Mrs,
Lon Nossel
was elected IFC junior trustee in the only contest for a state officer.
MRS. VICTOR “A. SELBY Fairmount, took over the pres® ident’s gavel from Mrs, Claude 8. Steele, Knox, presiding officer in convention. She will meet for the first time with her official board June 25 in Turkey Run. Also elected yesterday, they include Mrs. H. P. Humphrey, Osgood, first vice president; Mrs. D. W. Barr, Winamac, second vice president; Mrs. Dale Kight, Poseyville, third vice president; Mrs. Urba Joyce, Connersville, recording secretary; Mrs. George L. Miller, South Bend, corresponding secretary, and Mrs, H. L. Smith, Blomington, treasurer, and holdover trustees. "Price of The Clubwoman, IFC magazine representing 593 federated clubs and more than 22,000 Hoosier clubwomen, will be doubled this fall, it was announced by Mrs. Barr, subscription manager.
” # #” + “WOMEN HAVE a stake in the life of the country that necessitates their being active participants in it,” Dr. Allen A. Stockdale, New York, National Association of Manufacturers, told the clubwomen at last night’s banquet. “Women have the power to change thinking as to homemaking,” Mrs. Marjorie P.Husted, Minneapolis, the original Betty Crocker, told gonvention in the afternoon.
Plan Martinsville Visit Crooked Creek Garden € Club visit it Martin on Thurs- _ i Bicknell - Wilpon on id Flowers of
THE GREAT FIRE—Show card painting by Mary Anne Barothy, 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and
Mrs, C. F. Barothy, 1140 Ivy Lane.
Inhibitions Don't Worry Young Artists
By JEAN SPICKLEMIRE
WHATS the story be-
hind a children’s art exhibit? Why do they create the things they paint, pencil, mold. or crayon? The current exhibit to run through May 11 at Herron Art Museum is a typical example. Fascinated by abstract. degigns, the majority of the children have used light paper in their work. The products of the youngest (they never know there’s anything they can’t do) are the most uninhibited. ® & x - AS THEY grow older, they want to finish things. This work is usually colorful, often dramatic, sometimes story-tell-ing. One particularly adult collage (the pasting of various textured papers one upon another to make" designs in third dimension and varied texture) ‘plays grasses and flowers scattered carelessly against a green paper background and fastened there. The design is a definite asymetric pattern attractive, but too much so to be JakSidental, . : The RUPIA orien 2 use museum
material as inspiration, A group of colorful monograms was taken from manuscripts there. Another did book covers with bird and animal motifs- from Persian pottery. » » » THE. SMALLEST tots sign their names in large letters, often as a part of the design. Ancient Oriental wood block engravers used to do the same. thing—and in red. Cartoons figure heavily in the show. Channels chosen are those which would normally in- .
terest juveniles, their own favorite occupations, for example.
Pictures of Christmas trees
To Meet Tuesday
The Women's Auxiliary to the Indianapolis Branch, National Transport Association, will meet at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday .in the Woman's Department Club, A style show of garments ‘made by the women during the year will be held and will be presented to . Miss Margaret Wiedich for the Julia Jameson - Nutrition. Camp. Mrs. Paul. .Strause will are a chalk talk,
Bridge Talk—
TARTING times for two tournaments and results of play are announced in
local bridge circles.
The South Bend sectional tournament today and tomorrow in the Oliver Hotel will include women’s pair and men’s pair sessions at 1:30 p. m. today; mixed pair at 7:30 p. m. today, and open pair tomorrow with 1 p. m. qualifying round. . » - : EVENTS at the Miami Valley Championships May 16 through 18 in the Miami Hotel, Dayton, will be women's pair and men’s pair events at 2 p, m. May 16; mixed pair, 8 p. m. Muy 16; two session open pair at 2 p. m. and 8 p. m. May 17; «special one-session pair game at 8 p. m, May 17; two session team of four at 1 p. m. and 6:30 p. m. May 18, and one session junior master pairs event at 1:30 p. m. May 18, Local winners in this week's play follow: Women's Contract
Convention
and celebrations, Madonnas,
skating parties, pets, swimming tion of Parliamentarians
contests; dolls, ships, trains, city streets, trees, flowers, fires and dancers are to be found everywhere. » - »
MUCH COLLABORATIVE work is on view. Such as the mural, “Frieze or Parade of Clowns,” in show card color on brown wrapping paper. The smallest young fry did this as well as a - cut paper mural, ‘“Blossoming Tree.”
. In the latter each child made flowers, birds and animals and pasted ;them at will upon the tree they painted first. One of the older classes. cole laborated on stencilled hangings of cloth. Paper masks in gay colors and animals modelled from paper in decorative designs form other dis-~ plays. The exhibit includes the work of 300 children in the Saturday morning ~ art classes at
- Herron, Two groups are repre-
sented, pupils from the public
and parochial city schools, who
come on scholarships provided
by the Indianapolis Art Asso-
ciation, and children of Art Assosiation members, :
Yo
1-0. Ly T— Le REL SRE
Two Tournaments Are Sc
Cliib,. Thurs. afternoon, master point game: N & 8 (Possible score 240)—Mrs. M. L. Thompson, Mrs: Joseph Brower 144; Mrs. V. R. Rupp, Mrs. R. F. Banister 142; Mrs. George P. Ryan, Mrs, B. Mi Angell 132.5; Mrs. Arthur Pratt, Mrs, Carl Rusie 130.5. BE & W (Possible 220)—Mrs. R. C. Goodwine, Mrs. C. E. Morgan 135.5; Mrs. R. F. Pasho, Mrs, J, E. Morris 122; Mrs. L. J, Blackmore, Mrs, K. L. Nielsen and Mrs. J. E. Worner, Mrs, 8. R. Richardson 113.5 (tle). : : » ~ ~ 2 ST. JOAN OF ARC CLUB, Wed. night: N & 8 (Possible 189)—Mrs, Rupp, Mrs. C. F. Hummel 115; Mrs. D. A. Sweeney, Mrs. Don Schort 108.5; Mrs. Claude Lett, Mrs. Richardson and Mrs. Banister, Mrs, J. T. Cracraft 106.5. E & W (Possible 168)—Mrs. ~ Wallace Simpson, Maj. H. W. Allen 985; Miss Mary Nees, Mrs, E. C. Ball 93.5;
Charles LeFebre, Mrs, Paul Hiatt 90.5. Marott Club, Tues. .night:
Date Set
By Parliamentarians
THE ninth annual convention for the Indiana Associa«
will be at 9:30 a. m. Thurs-
day in the Hotel Lincoln. Mrs. W. C. Bartholomew will
preside. The nominating committee has announced the following slate of officers to be elected during the morning session: Mrs, Rose Marie Cruzan, president; Mrs. Guy O. Byrd and
BPW to Visit Phone Building
A dinner meeting of the Elizabeth Rainey Business and Professional Women’s Club will be at- 6:15 p. m. May 13 in the Spink. Arms Hotel. Members will tour the Indiana Bell Telephone Co. after the business meeting and will be shown the inside mechanics of the telephone system. . On Saturday, beginning at 8 a. m,, a rummage sale will be held by the chapter at 607 W. Washington St. Members will donate jewelry, wearing apparel and household goods for the event. ‘Proceeds go to charity.
a 8 ,
Mrs. Fred Hobbs, first and second vice presidents; Mrs, Clarence L. ‘Kittle and Mrs, Paul Thiery, recording and corre sponding secretaries, and Mrs. W, H. Vinzant and Mrs. John Downing Johnson, directors, Convention registration will be under the direction of Mrs. R. 8. Miller. Mrs. John R. Donagh will be in charge of credentials. » » ~
THE THREE members taking part in the panel, “The , Value of Parliamentary Law in Business,” will be introduced by Mrs. Guy O. Byrd. They are Harold - Schuman, secretary of personal and in--dustrial relations division, Indiana Manufacturers Associa-’ tion; L. J, Badollet, member of the Indianapolis Power Light Co., and Weymouth oe assistant Xalager of of
neduled
N & 8 (Possible score 192)— Mrs. E, W. Chaille, Robert Heaton 113; Mrs. Catherine Lewis, Mrs. Frank Abbett 106.5; Mrs, Reba Buck, Mrs. Banister and ‘Mr. and Mrs. Edson T. Wood 104 (tie) E & W (Possible 168) ~Mrs. William Epstein, Mrs, Arch Falender 93; Miss Marge Quinn, W, H, Weindort® 92.5; Mrs. Kenneth Pettijohn, Mrs. Arthur Pratt 89. gi Club, Mon. night: N a 8 "(Possible score 312) —M, IL, McManus, M. Steele Church« man 198; Homer D. Eberhart, Harold R. Milburn 190.5; Wil« liam R. VanVactor, Charles H, ' Rowe 1775. E & W (Possible 312)—David Knight, C. Law« rence Price 188; Lawrence B, McArthur, Albany, N. Y., J. H, Nieberding, Park’ Forest, Ill, 187; Mr, Nielsen, Karl J. Zine kan 180. Mallory Club, Mon. night; Howell movement: Mrs. D., H, Giffin, Mrs. Helene ' Schults first; Col. and Mrs. Warren BE, Cleveland second; D. R. Taylor, Jack Soots third.
Couple Moriedic In Church Rite
Mrs. Jane Martin: White and Robert J. Binford Jr. were mare ried at 10:30 a. m. today in the First Presbyterian Church, Dr, George Arthur Frantz officiated, | Mrs. White is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Clarence R., Martin, 2027 N. Delaware St.
Mrs. Binford is the son of Col, Binford, San Diego, Cal. Mrs, Jack C. Daw and Frank L, Binford were the attendants. A reception at the Marott Hotel was held immediately after the ceremony. The couple will be = * at home after May 15 at 5337 Kenwood Ave.
Names Officers
New officers of WE Garden
president; Mrs.
Johnson, vice president; Mrs, Edward Blankenstein, secretary, and Mrs. George a treasurer, : :
Te
