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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 3

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THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1937. FRANCIS IRWIN, 81 ELECTED NEW DIRECTORS OF BUTLER UNIVERSITY. DAVID LYONS, STRAUSS SAYS: (Rrrtimnn photo.) 92, Native of Ontario, Canada Civil War Veteran Succumbs to Injuries Suffered in Recent Fall. Was Official of Local Singer Branch. DIES HERE NX Francis William Irwin, 81 year MfW M4kv 5l As old, 126 Dickson street, an official of the Indianapolis branch of the Singer Sewing Machine Manufactur ing Company, died Monday night after a brief illness.

V. V'iV 1 -C I I Yi I Mr. Irwin was born in St. Cath erine's, Ontario, Canada, May 27, David Lyons, 92 years old, a veteran of the Civil War and last surviving member of the Pat Thomas Post, G. A.

in Greensburg, died yesterday in the Methodist Hospital as the result of a fall suffered Jan. SO. Mr, Lyons, who lived with his grandson, Dr. M. C.

Lyons, 112 East Walnut street, had been a patient in the hospital since Feb. 3. Mr. Lyons was born in Woodford, Jan. 22.

1S45. He came to Ripley county with his parents when he was an infant. Later ho moved to Greensburg where he lived thirty-seven years. He served with tho 6Sth and 123d Indiana regiments during the Civil War. Mr.

Lyons cama to 1855. He was a member of the Holy Cross Catholic Church and a charter member of Fort Wayne Council No, 451, Knights of Columbus, and its oldest living member. In Foreign Offices. Mr. Irwin spent his early life in SAYS EPISCOPALIANS HAS LEADING ROLE IN CHURCH PLAY New directors of Butler University elected yesterday are, left to right: the Rev.

George A. FranU of Indianapolis, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church; Glen R. Hilils, Kokomo attor. ney and capitalist; Mrs. A.

SI. Robertson, Indianapolis civic leader, and J. H. Trimble of Indianapolis, president of the Trimble Realty Corporation. Bufalo, N.

Y. He became assocl ated with the Singer company in po sitions in Canada and the United A Large Company of ALPAGORA TOPCOATS has just come in Alpagoras are the soft topcoats that give 50 more wear than the general average are V4 pounds lighter and 25 more comfortable (these are laboratory proved facts). As fine as they've been they're stepped up for the spring of 1937 especially in the inner construction which means even better fit even greater satisfaction. States and was superintendent of thy MUST FACE PRESENT company's offices in Argentina and Brazil for more than ten years. Mr, Irwin's wife died in 1927 and a year later he retired from active service, but continued as a member fr live with his grandson here four years ago.

He was a former commander of tho G. A. R. post in Greensburg. Military funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the Methodist Church in Greensburg.

Burial will be in South Park cemetery there. GEN. PERCY HALY, YOU'RE WRONG ABOUT DENTISTS, THEY'RE NOT PAINFUL-UN LESS of the company advisory board. He moved to Fort Wayne in 1893 and lived there until 1905 when he came to Indianapolis. Services Tomorrow.

Survivors are four daughters, Miss Helen May Irwin, church news editor CHICAGO, Feb. 16. (Jp) A lot of people won't believe him, but Dr. H. W.

Opplce insists it's mostly imagination you feel when the dentist goes to work. To overcome it, Dr. Oppice, teacher in the dental department of Loyola University, said today at the Chicago Dental Society convention, dentists are using psychology and technique 70 per cent psy of the Journal-Gazette, Fort Wayne; Sister Joseph Margaret of the Sisters of Providence, St. Simon's Convent, Washington, and Mrs. Louise Bigelow and Mrs.

Agnes Vollmer of POLITICIAN, DIES Former Kentucky Adjutant General Stricken After Flood Service. Indianapolis; three sons, Robert Irwin and Arthur E. Irwin of Indian chology and 30 per cent technique apolis and George L. Irwin of Mun- $27.50 "Actually there is very little pain in modern he said. "The vibration of the drill gives a sen cie; twenty grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held at 8:30 o'clock tomorrow morning at the home and at 9 o'clock in the Holy Cross Church. Mgr. William Keafe will officiate. The Rev. Francis B.

Boeres of Notre Dame University sation which registers fear in the brain, but the anticipation causes LOUISVILLE, Ky Feb. 16. CD-Former Adjt, Gen. Percy Haly, 62 Camelshade Oxford Gray Cambridge Gray Silver Gray A New Tan years old, a prominent figure in Kentucky politics since the Bockhani administration In 1900 and doputy provost marshal of the Louisville BT. REV.

BENJAMIN F. P. IVINS. more pain than the operation. "Fear of the dentist is inherited a fear of the unknown and it is magnified by education in the home.

Parents who have been to the dentist and discuss their experiences cause much of the fear in children. POLICE PRESS ASSAULT QUIZ Wife and Naval Lieutenant Called Again for Questioning in Honolulu. will attend the funeral services. Bur. lal will be in Holy Cross cemetery, MRS WHITEDIES; i military district in the recent flood emergency, died hero tonight.

Bishop Ivins Compares An Gen. Haly did night nnd day duty L. STRAUSS AND COMPANY THE MAN'S STORE MOTHER OF JUDGE cient Macedonia to Present in Lenten Address. at city hall throughout tho Hood crisis. When tho situation was in hand ho was taken to a hospital here suffering from pneumonia.

Sev eral days ago ho appeared to im Miss Rose Kllen Gray hns one of the leading- roles In the play, "Dollars to Doughnuts," to be given by the Woodruff Place Baptist Dramatic Club In the church recreation hall Friday night, Feb. 2fl. Otbrrs In the cast are Martha Alice Smock, Jane Kllen Walden, Helen Currle, Knthryn Hays, Majhello Smith, Hurley Campbell, Robert Smock, Don MeCloskey, James Itunyan, Timi! Me tea If nnd Linden lieatty. The committee In charge Includes Charles Kunyan, chairman, Ksther Morrison and Vlda Mario Dennett. prove.

BOOKED FOR BALL The congregation of the Episcopal Gen. Haly never aspired to elec-Ive ofllce, preferring to advocate REFUSES OF CLUB MANAGERS Dentists are trying to educate that fear out of them." He left a loophole for those who doubt him about pain. It varies in volume with the patient, he said. Psychological treatment to reduce dental phobia, he said, included improvement of the doctor's personality, modern arrangment of offices to make them more "home like," and hiding instruments when not in use. Incidentally, Dr.

Oppice opined, dentists now talk less and work more because with fear decreased there is less need of conversation to divert the patient's attention. Pioneer Resident of Tipton County Was Last Surviving of 15 Children. behind tho scenes a philosophy of political and economic liberalism church must face the present religious life, its opportunities, privileges and responsibilities, the Rt. Rev. Benjamin F.

P. Ivins, bishop which made him ono of the earliest Kentucky supporters of President Roosevelt. of the Milwaukee (Wis.) Episcopal' church, said yesterday at the noon Prnlses Work. "Louisville will have full Federal HONOLULU, Feb. 16.

(-fl-Police intensified their investigation today of the assault story told by Mrs. Bennett S. Copding, 24 years old, wife of a naval officer, as the young woman held to her original account of the incident despite the report of an examining physician that he found no evidence of criminal attack. The officers asked Mrs. Copping and her husband to appear again for questioning.

Mrs. Copping reiterated that an day Lenten services in Christ Episcopal Church. Recalling the vision or bt. faui, Dowse 9 Keeps Reeves's Physician From Taking Medicine as "Poison" Trial. help in getting over the flood," he said In one of his last comments of when the Macedonians called him to 'come over into Macedonia and help public affairs, "because now tho Gov JOHN B.

JAMES, 93, ernment is being run for the people." G. H. COFFEY DIES; INSURANCE AGENT us," and describing tne situation which Paul found. Bishop Ivins compared it to the condition of our com Ihcse words epitomized the creod he learned as a fighter with Gover munity, national and international life today. OF HEW ALBANY DIES nor William Uoetel, Uoehel was slain by an assassin as he tho "Many people know about uoa, Legislature that declared him Governor, The thon youthful J.

C. W. Beckham carried on his policies, one he said, "yet have no experience of Him as a motivating reality in their WHITE PLAINS, Feb. 16- UP) Dr, Albert W. Page, chief prose lives.

There are many who substi tute for religion all sorts of philoso cution witness against Chang Foo of his first acts belnR to appoint Haly as his adjutant general. Ho retained this military title tho rest of his life. phies, strange gods, spiritism, numerology and astrology. It is evident that in spite of all human ef Mrs. Emily M.

White, 89 years old, mother of Judge Dan V. White of Municipal Court, Room 2, died of pneumonia at her home in Elwood yesterday. Funeral services will be held in the Friends Church at Hazel Dell, one mile south and one mile east of Windfall, at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon. Mrs. White was a pioneer resident of Tipton county.

She was born at Kempton Sept. 22, 1847. Her father was Joseph Goar, one of the first two associate judges of the Tipton Circuit Court. last Surviving of 15 Children. She was the last surviving member of a family of fifteen children, and was married to Aaron White in December, 1867.

Mr. White was a member of the 117th Indiana regiment in the Civil War. He was an early Tipton county farmer, clearing the land where he established hi3 farm. Mrs. White taught school near Kempton before her marriage.

Besides the son, survivors are three grandchildren, Mrs. Minnie Webb of Los Angeles, and Don E. White and James R. White, sons of Judge White; four great grandchildren and three great-great grandchildren. Mrs.

White was a member of the Society of Friends Church and an active church worker. forts to oreamze. unify and integrate unidentified man grabbed her as she left her hotel cottage room about 5 o'clock yesterday morning, dragged her seventy-flve feet across the lawn to a garage and attacked her. Woman Telia of Drinking Party. Police Chief William A.

Gabriel-son said Mrs. Copping told of a drinking party the preceding day and night from which her husband retired comparatively early. Officers Interviewed Naval Lieutenants VV. Johnson and W. R.

Allen and Miss Dolores De Beck, a nurse. Gabrielson said the Coppings, Johnson, Allen and Miss De Beck attended the party Sunday; that It started during the morning, and that Lieu our lives, there is a terrible lack of unity, purpose and motive." Spacial 1o Th Indlanapolli Slar, NEW ALBANY, Fob. B. James, 93 years old, believed Indiana's oldest practicing attorney, died today of pneumonia. A native of Alsace-Lorraine, he came here with his parents at tho age of 3.

Ho taught school at 18 in Indiana and Inter In Illinois, then took up law and practiced fifty-two years. He organized the Floyd County Abstract Company of which he was head at the time of his death. Mr4 reform Bishop Ivins will speaK at tne noon Lee, Korean houseboy on trial on charges of attempting to poison Mr. and Mrs, George W. Reeves of Indianapolis, was saved twice today by Judge Gerald Nolan from taking "poison" in court.

Dr. Page, who the defense claims unwittingly poisoned the Reeve couple while treating them for an Illness, offered to take as injection twice the amount of medicine he gave the Reeves during his treatment Judgo Itobort Worth Bingham, United States ambassador to Great Britain, deplored Gen. Haly's death with tho tribute that Haly was "tho most unsolflsh man I havo over known." John C. Butler Funeral Conducted Near Culver services today, tomorrow and Fri-Anv nnd at an interoarochial Lenten rally of young people at 8 o'clock fa tonight in the unurcn oi me auvcui sister, Mrs. Ira S.

Dresbach of Spocial lo Th Indianapolit Star. tenant Copping, commander of the Tiffin. O. CULVER, Feb. services were held today at the Funeral services will De neia in me home and burial will be in Crown suDmarine S-28 left the afternoon to return to his hotel.

Gabrielson added that Lieut. Johti- home, near here, for John Campbell Hill cemetery. Time of the services Bon and Lieut. Allen and Miss De TIIKODORR AVK-LALLKMANT. MILWAUKEE, Feb.

16. UP) Theodore Ave-Lallemant, 58-year-old economist and former Instructor at Marquette University, died yesterday after a long lllne.is. He was born In Kellcrsville, Dubois county, Indiana. Butler, 76 years old. He was a na has not been set.

Mrs. Ruth A. Willhite DICK JUKOKN3. Entertaining at the Club Managers of America convention banquet and ball tomorrow night In tho Indianapolis Athletic Club will be Dick Jur-gens end his orchestra. These musicians recently completed a four months' engagement at tho Drako Hotel in Chicago and are known widely as a result of their radio brosdeasts.

The club managers are holding their annual convention in the Hotel Severin. tive of Marshall county and had served as Its surveyor and as city engineer of Plymouth. Trior to his Beck accompanied Mrs. Copping to the hotel late that night. They said Copping was asleep.

Seized by Throat, She Says. Several hours later, Mrs. Copping Dies at Sisters Home retirement to tho farm near Culver, of them. Judge Nolan ruled "such a procedure would prove nothing" and declined to permit It. Asked to Drink Contents.

Later Dr. Page was asked by. Charles Lewis, Chang's attorney, if he would drink, dissolved in water, tho contents of four test tubes which, Lewis produced with the explanation they contained amounts of two poisons equivalent to those found in the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Reeves by laboratory technicians.

Again Judge Nolan, agreeing with prosecution objections, declined to permit tho doctor to take the stuff. Charges Fear for Legacy. The state alleges that Chang, mis Mrs. Ruth A. Willhite died yester hn nlno had been surveyor for Cul ver Military Academy.

Survivors are day at the home of her sisters, Mrs. the widow, a daughter, ono sister INDIANA PAROLEE GETS LIGHT TERM; SYSTEM CRITICIZED GEORGE H. COFFEY. George H. Coffey, 66 years old, an agent for the Life Insurance Company of Virginia more than twenty ycar3, died yesterday in his home, mos W.

Reagon and Mrs. Ketia u. and two sons, Including P. V. Butler Morgan, 3246 Central avenue, aiiui of Indianapolis.

an illness of three momns. aim. iiriiiuif it vri nM. was the widow Mrs. Edward T.

Coney, 63, Stricken in Hospital Mrs. Helen M. Coney, 63 years old, 2312 North Pennsylvania street, a resident of Indianapolis since 1901, died yesterday in St. Vincent's Hospital following an illness of several months. Mrs.

Coney was born in Danville, 111. She attended the Millersburg w. i. HoniNscm. of Charles D.

Willhite. She came to 529 East Twelfth street, following an SNOWSTORM, DRIFT UNABLE TO DELAY VERSAILLES, Feb, Indianapolis from her home in nev- illness 0f jx months. erlv Hills. and became ill snort- Funeral services for W. D.

Robinson will be held at 11 o'clock tomorrow FIRST LADY'S TRIP morning at the Versailles Methodist Episcopal Church. Charles Page Perin Dies; Consulting Engineer reported she came out of the hotel bungalow to go to a washroom and that she was seized by the throat and dragged to the garage whore she lost consciousness. Dr. Henry A. Akina, assistant city-county physician, examined Mrs Copping twice and reported he found no Indication that she was attacked.

A third cxaminat.on was ordered. The Coppings have been married Beven years and have a sma'l daughter who spent the at the home of her paternal prandmother. Fire Rages Three Hours in Hospital for Insane POUGHKEEPSIE. N. Feb.

16. (JP) Fire swept for three hours tonight through the upper floors of the main building of the Hudson River State Hospital for the Insane near here but was extinguished without injury or loss of life among the more than four thousand inmates. Dr. Ralph H. Kolsom, superintendent, estimating the damage at $13,000, Mr.

Coffey was born in Washington county. He lived in Brownstown many years before coming to Indianapolis twenty-two years ago. He was married to Miss Elizabeth Kettler, Sept. 7, 1926, in Greenfield. Mr.

Coffey was a member of the English Lutheran Church. Survivors besides the widow are three daughters, Mrs. Nellie Mascher, Mrs. Edna Applewhite and Mrs. Catherine Finney, all of Indianapolis; three sons, Wilbur Coffey of Indianapolis, Earl H.

Coffey of St. Louis, and Maynard Coffey of Atlanta, all children by a former marriage three brothers, Wade Coffey, Ernest Coffey and Harvey Coffey all of Salem: two sisters, Miss Mary E. Coffey and Mrs. Anna Denny, both of Salem, and his mother. Mrs.

Mathilda Coffey, of near sion-reared Korean, poisoned Mr. and Mrs. Reeves because he feared they would Interfere with a legacy he be-" lleved he wodld receive from Mrs. Ida L. Churchill, 83 years old, Mrs.

Reeves's wealthy aunt and Chang's, employer. Tho defense contends Dr. Page 1 poisoned them unintentionally. Both Mr. and Mrs.

Reeves now are invalids an alleged result of the poisoning. The prosecution Insists that the medicine Dr. Page gave the Reeves did not contain a sufficient quantity of poison to injure them. Dr. Page spent most of the day on the witness stand, following Mrs.

Reeves, who was carried Into court on a stretcher. She bluntly accused Chang of giving her poison in CHICAGO, Feb. HI. OiOpcn criticism of Indiana's parole system wus made by Judfto Frank M. I'addcn In Felony Court today when he sentenced John Morning Star, an Indian, 31 years old, to six months In Bridawell prison on forged check charge.

While telling the court about a 32 check he admittedly gave to a Chicago grocer. Morning Star said he was paroled from the Indiana State Prison In 1933 while serving a three-to-ten-year sentence for forgery. A condition of the parole, he claimed, direcetd him to leave Indiana at once. "It li a line state of affairs when a state shirks its duty to look after Its own paro'ees," judge I'udden said. "I will Impose si relatively small enlence here only upon condition that you return to Indiana as soon as you are released." ly after her arrival.

Mrs. Willhite was born in Clermont. She moved in 1899 to Indianapolis, where she lived until when she went to California to make her home with two daughters, Miss Yuba Willhite and Mrs. Arthur H. Webber of Beverly Hills.

She -was a member of the Central Christian Church. Funeral services will be held at the Hisey Titus funeral home at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, with Dr. William A. Shullenberger, pastor of the Central Christian Church, charge. Burial will be in Crown Hill C6rnct6ry.

Besides the daughters and sisters, survivors are a grandson, Arthur H. Webber Jr. of Beverly Hills, and a brother, A. H. Barnhill of Oakland, Cal.

Mrs. Artie C. Mills Dies; III Five Months Mrs. Harriett Hudspeth Mills, 51 years old, a resident of Indianapolis thirty years, died yesterday in her home, 1934 North Delaware street, following an illness of five months. un Mills was born in Boswcll.

NEW YORK. Feb. Charles Pago Perln, 75 years old, well known consulting engineer, died of pneumonia early today. Perln had been prominent for years in the steel and Iron industries and was a pioneer in the manufacture of pure iron by electrolysis. Ho was head of the engineering firm that bore his name.

He rnndi) a study of fuel supply for the Trans-Siberian Railway and developed Iron resources of India. He also was engaged in mining operations in China. In 1913 I'erin served as chief engineer of the appraisal commission, attached to the peace commission. WASHINGTON, Feb. 16.

(.11 A heavy snowstorm failed to daunt the energetic Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt today. While the President was tulking to reporters, Mrs. Koosovolt rushed in to say she was off to some ceremonies at Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.

"I Just called to say goodby," she said. Noting the snow falling outside, the President replied: "Goodby, If you get stuck In a snow drift telephone me." "Oh yesj I will telephone you from the snow drift," Mrs. Roosevelt retorted, before sho vanished. "And, she would too!" the President commented to tho laughing reporters. CLUB TO HEAR TODD.

Dr. William H. Todd, superintend home-concocted tooth cleaning pow said he would launch an immediate der. Female Seminary in Millersburg, Ky. She was married to Edward T.

Coney of Indianapolis, July 3, 1903. Mrs. Coney was a member of Christ Episcopal Church, Leestown, W. chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy and the Electa Circle. Survivors are her husband; a daughter, Mrs.

W. D. McAbee, and three grandchildren, William T. McAbee, Marjorie H. McAbee and Kenneth E.

McAbee, all of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon in the home. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. The Rev. J.

Ambrose Dunkel, pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, will have charge of the services. William C. Haugh Dies; of Pioneer Family Here William Cameron Haugh, 63 years old, member of a pioneer Indianapolis family and a salesman for the Indiana Paper Company more than fifteen years, died yesterday in his home, 2431 Park avenue, following an illness of two months. He died the day following his sixty-third birthday anniversary. Mr.

Haugh was born in Indianapolis Feb. 15, 1874, the son of Charles E. and Margaret Cameron Haugh. He attended the public schools here and was graduated from Shortridge High School. Mr.

Haugh was married to Miss Florence Tucker of Indianapolis June 3, 1903. Survivors are the widow; a son, Charles Tucker of Indianapolis, and Funeral services will be held at 2 1 investigation into the cause of the o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the blaze which broke out In the women home. Burial will be in Crown Hill employes' quarters on the fourth cemetery. floor. Two More Terre Haute Police Officers Demoted TERRE HAUTE, Feb.

Dr. Robert Greenough, Cancer Specialist, Dies BOSTON, Feb. 16. MP) Dr. (U.P.) In the second police depart LIVELY STEPPERS FOR WASHINGTON DAY BALL ment shakeup within a week, De Robert G.

Greenough, 68 years old, tectives Lewis A. Wheeler and Robert Schroeder were reduced to pa trolmen. Their reduction followed demotion of James C. Yates from ent of tho White River Conference of the United Brethren church, will discuss "Beliefs That Matter in Thinking About God," for tho Young Men's Discussion Club at its meeting in tho Y. M.

C. A. tonight. A baked bean dinner at 6 o'clock will precede the address. chief to patrolman.

W. Robert Page, of the Board of Safety, said the reductions were made as an economy measure nationally known cancer specialist and former president of the American College of Surgeons, died today after a heart attsek. He was a member of the American Surgical Society, the Clinical Surgical Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for Cancer Research. Dean of Northwestern Commerce School Dies CHICAGO, Feb. 16.

JP Ralph E. Heiiman, 50 years old, dean of the Northwestern University College of yf She came to Indianapolis in 1907 and was married to Artie C. Mills of Indianapolis Aug. 10. 1925.

She was a member of the Boswell M. E. Church. Survivors are her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Oliver Mills of Indianapolis: her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Samuel P. Davis of Lafayette; three brothers, William G. Davis, Harry L. Davis and Samuel A.

Davis of Lafa-vette, and three sisters, Mrs. Elwood Stump of Frankfort. Mrs. George May of Kokomo and Mrs. Raymond E.

White of Dayton, O. Funeral services will be held in the Wald funeral home. Burial will be in Boswell. Time of the services has not been decided. Jeffersonville Refugee Dies in Hospital Here Frank B.

Collier, 65-year-old Jeffersonville flood refugee, died yesterday in the Flower Mission Hospital. The elderly man had been ill for several days. EDWABD DEBIASE. Edward DeBiase, 48 years old, 124i Virginia avenue, died yesterday morning after an illness of two days. The widow, Mrs.

Anna DeBiase of Indianapolis, survives. Funeral services will be held at 9 o'clock this morning in the St. John's Catholic Church. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Commerce, died today after an ill-1 TODAY ness of ten days, following a general breakdown suffered last year.

Dean at Northwestern since 1919, That Seville has a reputation for old fashioned CREAM PIE that competes with Grandma's 1 the secret of its goodness lies In k.i.ln If In flakv shell. Heiiman was author of many articles dealing with public utilities. G. B. McGinty, 58, I.C.C.

Old Fashioned Cream Pie 10c i uannifi o.v 1 -n- -frifffitrrrn f'i w-i-r-m-l The Best Location in New York od there's a certaio wme-thing about the atmospherr which msket people (tad they chow the HOTEL New Westo. MsdlMB Ave. at SOth Street Sinfle $4.00 Double 16.00 Suites $8.00 Secretary Succumbs WASHINGTON, Feb. George B. McGinty, 58 years old, secretary of the Interstate Commerce Commission since 1913, died at his home here today of pneumonia.

McGinty was a native of Monroe county, Georgia, and went to the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1908. 7 N. MERIDIAN INDIANAPOLISc Left to riRht: Rosalyn Lndwlg. Bemlce Holtman, Hilly Jean Kedmon, Joan Degiwher, Betty Uertels, Barbara Hamilton and Margie White. As members of the "Hoosler Lively Steppers" these dancers will participate in the lloor show to be presented during the Fifty C'lub'a Washington's birthday ball Saturday night on the Hotel Severin roof.

Courtland C. Cohee is chairman of the entertainment committee, Norman O. Wolf Is chairman of the arrangement committee and Paul C. Beckner will be master of ceremonies. BWmm TA ri.

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