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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 6

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Indianapolis, Indiana
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6
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THE INDIANAPOLIS 5TAK, SATtTRDAY, FEBR0AHY 25, 1935. HEADS AUXILIARY. BOLTE-KINNAIRD RITES TO BE TODAY THE MARRIAGE OF MISS KATHERINE SUE KINNAIRD, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S.

Klnnalrd, 207 West Forty-fourth street, to Charles Guy Bolte, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Willard Bolte, will take place at 11:30 o'clock this morning in the Elizabeth Good- Angel Child Organdie Guimpes and Jackets on New Dinner Dresses Benjamin Harrison for the auxiliary of the 38th division. MISS MARGARET SULLIVAN, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

H. P. Sullivan, 2113 North New Jersey street, who attends St. Mary-of-the-Woods at Terre Haute is in South Eend this week-end where she will attend the Notre Dame junior prom. MISS HILDA CUNNIFF of Bangkok, Siam, will entertain a group of friends tonight at the English theater to see Walter Hampden.

Afterward she will entertain the group with a supper party at the Spink-Arms hotel. MRS. E. G. GARSKE, 5218 College avenue, and Mesdames Harry Hill, Harry Irwin, F.

W. Law, J. W. Potter and J. K.

Lang motored to Peru Thursday to visit Mrs. Albert Ward, 5010 Washington boulevard, who has been there for the last two weeks. now chapel of the All Souls Unitarian Church. Dr. F.

S. C. Wicks will read the ceremony in the presence of the im mediate families and close friends tfpll before the fireplace which will be i banked with greenery and lighted by cathedral tapers in standard candelabra. The bride-elect and bridegroom-elect will enter together unattended. Mrs.

Rons Caldwell, pianist, will play the wedding march from Lohengrin. The bride-elect will be married in her traveling costume, a dawn blue vard. Mrs. Wheeler before her recent marriage was Miss Frances Hamilton, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.

Frank A. Hamilton, Woodstock drive. Miss Dissette was assisted by a group of her friends, including the Mesdame John P. Collett, Thomas Madden. Henry C.

Atkins Thomas R. Kackley R. Kirby Whyte and the Misses Josephine Madden and Harriett Denny. Mrs. Collett and Mrs.

Madden poured. Appointments for the tea table were white tapers in silver holders and a raised plateau of white freesias, sweet peas and gardenias formed the centerpiece. Miss Mary Goeke of Wapakoneta, 0., the house guest of Miss Madden, was an out-of-town guest. MISS DOROTHY SCHLESINGER, 260 Hampton drive, will entertain with an informal tea from 3 until o'clock tomorrow afternoon for the members of the local chapter of Hadassah in honor of Miss Esther Brill of Chicago, Midwest regional president. There are no invitations.

Miss Brill will be an honor guest at the annual membership-dance of the local organization to be held tomorrow night at the Columbia Club. dressmaker, suit trimmed in gray fox and worn with a white crepe blouse. Her accessories will be of navy blue and she will wear a shoulder corsage of gardenias. Following the wedding the couple will leave on a motor trip and will be at home in Terre Haute after March 15. Miss Kinnaird and Mr.

Bolte were graduated from Butler university. The bride-elect is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority and the bridegroom-elect is MRS. C1ACDE FRANKLIN. Mrs. Franklin was recently elected president of the Letter Carriers' State Auxiliary.

Other officers elect What Fizzes Up Your Costume? What Adds Dash to Your Wardrobe? What's the Women's Choice for 1933? Right! You Guessed It the First Time! ed were Mrs. Sarah Davis of Fort 5 TTKw7Ky J-v-. 0i Wayne, secretary; Mrs. Julia Harris member or Sigma um fraiernuy. Mr.

and Mrs. Bolte entertained of Muncie, treasurer, and Mrs. Mary Young, vice president. Mrs. Meta Gilberts was elected a Rye in delegates at large to the national con last night at their home, 243 Downey avenue, with a family dinner for their son and Miss Kinnaird.

Guests included Mrs. John Haver Willard and Mrs. Fred Starbuck, both of Chicago, and Mrs. Alma Rogers and son, Roy Rogers, of St. Louis, hire for the weddine today, and Mr.

vention at Atlantic City, N. in September. F. B. McKIBBEN has returned from Washington to the Spink-Arms hotel.

MISS HANNAH NOONE, 402 North Keystone avenue, and Miss Mary Biegler, 861 Sanders street, will leave by motor tomorrow for Washington to attend the inauguration, of Franklin D. Roosevelt as President. SUNRISE INITIATION SERVICES will be held this morning by Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority at Butler university. The initiation services will follow the formal ceremony. Miss Geral-dine Kuntz, president, will conduct the services.

A formal banquet at the chapter house will be held tonight in honor of the new members. The initiates will be presented with corsages and white lace handkerchiefs as gifts from the chapter. Following the dinner the members will attend the annual formal dance of the Franklin college chapter tf Zeta Tau Alpha which will be held at the Hotel Lincoln. OMICRON CHAPTER of the Chi Sigma Sorority will hold formal initiation service tonight at the Columbia Club. Miss Mildred Saffell, national vice president, and Mrs.

Paul Perrin, pro-vice president, will have charge of the initiation with Miss Winifred Kavanagh, chapter president, and Miss Mary Finnegan, chapter vice president, assisting. Miss Lillian Beck is initiation chairman with Miss Edith Spees and Mrs. Kinnaird and Mr. and Mrs. Mark, Faye McComlskey and Clau-dette Wayman and Mrs.

Dorothy Eggerding. John Bolte. MISS ALBERTA PEYTON and Mrs. James N. Nelson are in charge of the pajama party tonight at the Robinwood inn, the second of a series of rush parties being given by the Chi Delta Chi sorority.

Guests will be the Misses Daisy Sanders, Louisa Wilcox, Lavonne Van der Mrs. Alfred Eggert, 1217 Shannon MRS. HENDERSON WHEELER avenue, will be hostess 'luesday night for a depression party. She will be assisted by Miss Cleo Jeffers. was gupst of honor yesterday at a tea given by Miss Eunice Dissette at her home, 3685 Washington boule GUARANTEED MRS.

D. LAURANCE CHAM BERS, 5272 North Meridian street; Mrs. Vonnegut, Mrs. William What Have We Here? H. Stafford and Mrs.

Alex Holliday are spending several days at French Lick. lfi $39.75 I Silk Hose, 85c In four short days all smart Indianapolis has taken to ''Rye!" Why? Well, just name your costume and "Rye" will go with it! It suits every taste because it's a soft, spring brown, mixed with sun-tan and even gray to make it go smoothly with every color or color combination under the 1933 fashion sun Sizes for women and misses. No Mend Hose Are Exclusive With Blocks'. BY THE STROLLER. MISS CAROLINE SINCLAIR, Alfred and Lynn and Noel Iff Ar daughter nf Mr.

and Mrs. Robert S. Sinclair, 3736 Spring Hollow road, is expected home from Paris, France, the middle of next month. She has been studying art in Paris a year. NEW YORK, Feb.

24. WERE lucky enough to be squired to CHAPLAIN AND MRS. ALFRED PHI TAU DELTA Sorority will meet at 7:30 o'clock Monday night for a dinner in the blueroom of the Spink-Arms hotel. OLIVER will entertain from 2 until 5 o'clock with a tea today at Fort Hosiery Shop. BLOCK'S Floor.

Noel Coward's new play, "Design for Living" (you can't get tickets for love nor money) by a gentleman very much au courant with what goes MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME Junior-Debs! Vm Telling You The Indianapolis Star's Daily Pattern. CHARMING, GRACEFUL. PATTERN 2306. k- iwr tl on in the big city. Noel Coward is to this century what Oscar Wilde was to the last.

In the play Lynn Fontanne is gowned by Bergdorf Goodman, and the gowns are quite dreadful, except for a yel low negligee in the sec ond act which is immoral' ly beautiful and in the very nature of things could come to no good end. Put This In Black and Block's Has The Snootiest Assortment of Our Kind of Dresses in Town! It's ft dress-up frock for going places and doing things, when you want to look your very best and we suggest you use the gay, giddy prints those that make festive occasions still brighter. Notice the novel shoulder treatment, two very graceful, very full flares, the slender seamings and clever contrasting bodice what more could you do to enhance your loveliness? Pattern 2506 may be ordered only in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40. Size 16 requires three and one-eighth yards of thirty-nine-inch fabric and one and three-fourtha yards contrasting. Illustrated step-by-step sewing instructions included with pattern.

Send FIFTEEN CENTS 15c) In coins or stamps (coins preferred), In the first act the in-comparable Lynn wears a black skirt and a blouse which looks exactly like a lumberjack's shirt with big red and black squares, and is tied under her chin with a large and silly bow. (Lnn is getting a bit fattish about the waist, and shirtwaists and skirts were never meant for ladies fattish about the waist. Mercy In the second act she wears the lovely lemon yellow chiffon over cream satin negligee fashioned in a flow ing Greek style which so becomes her statuesque type of beauty. This is the famous negligee that completely dc molished two men and took a fatal whack at a third. 1 j' for this pattern.

Write plainly your You'll not be able to exist without a dress with the Gibson Girl bicycle sleeves or a little srirl guimpe of organdie. You've no idea how utterly feminine they make- you look, and you couldn't imagine how they inspire that protective instinct, thev sav, men still have. The Angel-Child guiinpe effect sketched at the top boasts Chanel's new yarn embroidery on organdie, $16.75, and the jacket frock has exquisite flower applique, $00.73. In black or brown crepe both are the crispest, newest of dinner fashions, and the perfect Sunday night solution. Misses' FJnnr.

BLOCKS name, address and style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE THE SPRING FASHION BOOK contains thirty-two colorful pages of lovely Paris-inspired models for iUT again in the last act, Bergdorf, Goodman every spring need. It shows how to be chic at every hour of the day. Every style is practical and easy to doesn't do right by our Lynn and presents her in make. There are models for the KrlfW I itrmfS- 1 .3 Aai larger figure and pages of delightful junior and kiddie styles.

Lovely spring lingerie and accessory patterns, too. SEND FOR YOUR COPT, PRICE OF CATALOGUE, FIF TEEN CENTS. CATALOGUE ANIJ PATTERN TOGETHER TWENTY- 2506 nl uA FIVE CENTS. Address all mail or ders to The Indianapolis Star Pattern Department, 243 West Seven teenth street. New York city.

Wellington Success Gained by Care On Military Details, Guedella Says GIVEN IN MARRIAGE. Thirteenth Phase of "Revelations of a ife" Sequel to "Heart of a ife." BY ADELE GARRISON. (Cnpyrtrht. 10.13. Kin Features Syndicate, Inc.) a white evening gown that verges on the banal and utterly fails to interpret the dripping sophistication of this most brittle of American actresses.

We can scarcely toss "Design for Living" aside with only a casual mention of Miss Fontanne's gowns. The play, which is that unbelievable geometric pattern, a new version of the eternal triangle, presents three people a woman and two men who can not make an adjustment to life without each other. The action of the play is their endeavor to break up the triangle in order to live in the ordinary socially accepted order of things, and the solution of their problem is their failure. So it ends on the note of their taking up life again at the point where they broke off. Which, as Robert Bcnchley says, is no solution at all because in real life the problem would begin just there.

Every line scintillates as you know it would, being by Noel Coward. It's Alfred Lunt's play though. All the best lines are thrown to him. But the Lunt-Fontannc Coward combination is unsurpassable in the modern theater and the play affords a night of rare good fun even if the lines did knock us galley west every once in a while, us being just a child from the soi-disant hinterland. "Biographies should never be writ-1 English theater yesterday morning ten hv contemporaries of the sub- Mr.

Guedella was introduced by jects," said Phillip Guedella at the luncheon which followed his lecture on "Wellington, the Duke and the 1f TirAxU ramieef that brought nakedly into the open in the stress of that awful experience, which had so nearly spelled tragedy Man" in the Town Hall series at the I stop at the Larches in nrrfer that shfi micrht tele- 3 Ki flt Asked at the luncheon on what subject he was engaged Just now, Mr. Guedella confessed he is reading the proofs of the first of a two-volume book he is editing of the correspondence of Queen Victoria and Gladstone, a series of several thousand letters which passed between the Queen and her minister between 1845 and the date of his death in 1898. Private Papers Invaluable. A STYLE A DAY. for all ot us.

When the end of that experience came I knew two things. Hugh's silent, repressed love lor me was not only stronger than ever, but it was growing increasingly difficult for him to crush and conceal it. Also Dicky's omewhat as if I were a pawn in a chess game, being moved from Square to Bquare jealously of Hugh was a stronger and more batter thing than it ever had been before. A tribute to the value of old papers And do they fit! As Smooth as a Senior's Line, My Vets! Block's Specialize in Sizes 11 to 15. The one sketched (only one of hundreds equally alluring) is of black crepe with white tires rolling all over it giving you black and white Paris's first lesson In sophistication! It has zooming sleeves that halt below the elbow! A cape that does jaunty, Guardsman-ish things to one's shoulders and is simply too cocUy with one side thrown back! A dashing white collar and flower.

Then just for a fiery accent a red suede belt with a metal buckle. You go for It? Well, get going fast then, because its price Is only Jun'mr-Dcb Fit op Second Floor. BLOCK'S and letters was paid in the lecture when Mr. Guedella told of his study of the private papers of Weelington truth, and mv lips twitched as I re before undertaking- the writing of his biography. In these papers, many of them bills and accounts, he feels Hush's Sacrifice.

But Hugh had not failed me. Without an instant's hesitation he had thrown to the winds his cherished plan to settle down in America, after his long and enforced wanderings in foreign lands, and 1 knew that he was only waiting for Marion's birth- mcmbered numberless instances of contrast between the good-natured that he learned the true secret of A'ln but undeniable indolence of bam ana Wellington's success. if 4 there had come flowers for me wit'i his card and Lee Chow's both in-olosed. But I had been able to avoid meeting him until now. Meeting Hugh Again.

I was caught fairly now, however. It was impossible for me to explain to Mrs. Ticer why I did not wish to Jerry Ticer and the sturdy, quick ways of the woman who ruled both with no volition of my own concerning the di- rection in which I was going. I remembered rebelliously Lil- lian's whimsical declaration, upon Mrs. Ticer's ap-pearance at the farmhouse, that it looked as if fate insisted upon making me use Hugh Grant-land's telephone.

For when I had realized that I must telephone Phillip Veritzen about his silence concerning the I i a tion we had sent him to One of the papers was the bill for a list of books-which the young offi of them She was out of the car as Fhe spoke, and I wondered If she meant to come around to Hugh side and try to help him with me; but instead cer bought when he was going out to India, a list which gave a key to his mental processes. Others of the papers Bhowed the attention he gave to the "housekeeping" part of the conduct of his army, a method that insured, his success in Spain and Portugal where It was not possible enter The Larches. In Harry tin Because of Dky's Unreason' able Jealousy of Hugh Grant-land, 'adg is Reluctant to Go to fie Larclics For the Purpose of Telephoning Philip Veritren. derwood's parlance, she would have i Rh'e busied herself with a search for "sniffed two or three mice, and my a small package, which I guessed cheeks flushed at the thought of the was a mythical one, while Hugh speculations my kindly neighbor opened the car door and looked re-would put upon that reluctance, So proachfully at me, as he saw the for an army to live on the country as the French had erroneously sup day and the revelation which Lee 1 braced myseii tor mis nrst meet- cane. Adele Garrison, ing with Hugh New Personnel Service Chow seemed to be holding for that day, before going again into the far places where he had spent so many "Here we are, already Mrs.

Ticer said as we turned into the curving driveway of The Larches. years. He was doing this because he In Hugh's Arms. "You still have to use this, and yet you are driving a car!" he said. I wanted to remind him that many cripples drove cars, but forbore because of the genuineness of concern.

And then, as I leaned forward to take the hands he extended to help me out, he made a quick, deft maneuver and, lifting me bodily from the car, carried me up the steps, 8 posed. One Great Moment Recalled. The speaker set forth his belief that the great man always fastens himself In the public memory by one great moment so that we think always of Washington as crossing the Delaware, and of Wellington as sitting on his horse on the ridge at Waterloo. He said that the interpretation of the course of history as due to blind impersonal forces is incorrect and held that events are due rather to "the moulding power of human hands on that soft material at the decisive moment." CLUB TO HAVE DINNER. The Riverside Democratic Club will have a dinner in the Foodcraft shop.

Century building, at 6:30 o'clock tonight. A eard party will follow. Mrs. Charlene Rav is chairman, assisted by Mrs. Cl4rence Marley, Marion Bluestein.

Cecil Whitley and Hal M. President Harding's conference on unemployment in 1921. Associated with Mr. Kleinsmith are James C. Jordan and Miss Helen A.

Lesher. Mr. Jordan was chief accountant for the Keyless Lock Company ten years and more recently was office manager for the Furnas Furniture Company. Miss Lesher has charge of the woman's department. She has had several years' experience in personnel work in Indianapolis.

Stetson Goes to N. E. A Convention; Will Speak Paul C. Stetson, superintendent of schools, left yesterday, for Minneapolis, where he will attend the convention of the National Education Association opening Monday and continuing through the week. Mr Stetson will make an address before the department of superintendence Monday afternoon on "Our Public School Crisis and Teacher Training." attend the wedding of Mary and Noel, and that I could not talk to him.

within earshot of Mary'a captious grandmother, I had planned to use Mrs. Ticer's tele- phone, or even the public ones in Bridgehampton, in preference to en- i tering the Larches. Dicky' Jealousy of Hugh. It was easy for me to analyze this reluctance of mine to see Hugh Grantland, for, of course, that was only reason for avoiding the hospitality of The Larches, where Hugh Grantland and his high born Chinese friend, Lee Chow, were living. They were to remain there until Marion's birthday and the opening of her lock box, the danger of whose secret compartment Lee Chow had so recently and melodramatically demonstrated, with nearly fatal consequences to himself.

It wns because of those tense nights and days in the mountains at the time of Marion's kidnaping, when emotions and pas-ins, masked for yeara, were Is Established in City Establishment of the National Personnel Service, 512 Insurance building. Monument circle, was announced yesterday by Fred Klein-smith, president. The new organization has correspondents In all principal cities, Mr. Kleinamith said, and supplies executives, sales and office managers, accountants and general office workers 1 to employers. In addition to personnel service, the company also handles investment work and negotiates capital requirements for various types of going businesses.

Mr. Kltinsmith for the last ten years has been secretary and treasurer of a similar organisation. He was chairman of the employment commission of Indiana during the world war and was Federal and state director of the United States employment service. was a member of feared Dicky's jealousy of him would make me miserable should he remain in this country, where he could see me occasionally, and where he could come to me quickly should I desperately need him, as I had done during more than one emergency since I had known him. And Dicky's reaction to the knowledge of this sacrifice of Hugh's had been a sneer at the "Sydney Carton gesture." I could not bring myself to feel that I was right in accepting such a sacrifice, and I knew that if I bade Hugh stay if he though I needed him he would gladly adhere to his original plan of settling down in America.

It was that feeling, that knowledge, which had made me glad of the twisted ankle that kept me in the city and away from any possible meeting with Hugh. He had called at the farm house since my return, "My, but you sure can make a car cover the ground," she added admiringly. "I hope I didn't irighten you," I said absently, for Hugh, evidently having seen the car, was coming down the steps to greet us. "Shucks I've yet to see the speed that would frighten me," she returned, with truth. And then we were at the door, and Hugh was saying protestlngly Mrs.

Ticer Delays. "Is this wise? With your ankle? Should you be driving? How do you do, Mrs. Ticer. Please wait until 1 get Graham out of the car, and I'll come round to you." "Shucks! I wouldn't know what to do with anybody helping me out," she said. "I'm always out before my men folk start to think about getting down." calling to Mrs.

Ticer to bring my cane with her. It was only at the wide open front door that he paused, and I heard him mutter to himself, "Why not?" And then, Inexplicably, but with infinite tenderness, he set me down upon my feet and, holding my arm with one hand, handed me the cane. But I was filled with natural feminine curiosity as to why he had halted at the threshold, when a few steps farther would have brougU me to a chair, A three -quarter lertgtk loVe leather coat in the sesigorts favored colora is a. smrt acLdLitiort, to tKe William Brown ii president of in the courteous, perfunctory solici girlfc thVeiub, Fair. (Continued Monday.) tude tr.at any friend might offer, and I knew that sha spoke only the C'.

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