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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 10
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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 10

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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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10
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-PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE; TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1937- 10 Annual Tea to Take Place Next Tuesday in Children Home ot Pittsburg Evening Presented At Supper Dance Authorized Criminologist Talks to Century Club 0 'Science Turns DetectK By Emma B. i TORIES OF CRIME DETECTION r- Holmes, were related to the Twenty-; -morning by James M. Hepbron problems, one time instructor in Mrs. H. Fred Mercer Heads House Committee Making Plans for Party Mr.

and Mrs. Lewis A. Park to Give Dinner And Dance in Honor of Nancy Byers And John William Young Martin. By Doris Duquesne ONE WEEK FROM TODAY, the Children's Home of Pittsburgh will have its annual tea combined with one of the donation days that practically every institution has had this fall. The party which is always attended by the women interested in the home, and a great many of their friends laden with gifts, will be given in the home at 467 South Aiken avenue.

At the tea tables will be Mrs. H. versity and now acting director of the Association. Speaking on "Science showed how the criminal today makes Wedding Saturday Booth-Eyman Ceremony In Mifflin Avenue Church. Before an altar of tiered ferns, flanked by tall candelabra, jmiss Dorothy Jane Booth, daughter ot Dr.

and Mrs. Cecil O. Booth 01 Ja Clair avenue, Regent square, itts- burgh, became the bride of Albert Thomas Eyman of Forest Hills, N. son of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Albert Eyman, in the Mifflin Ave nue Methodist Episcopal t-hurcn, Wilkinsburg, at 8 o'clock Saturday evening. The marriage climaxed a ro mance which began on the campus of Carnegie Institute of Technology, where both the bride and bridegroom were graduated last June. Many of their classmates were in the wedding party. The Reverend W. L.

Hogg offi ciated. The bride wore a white satin gown of her own design, fashioned in princess style. Her headdress was of white roses, beneath a three-quarter length veil. She carried white roses. Miss Lois Booth, the bride's sis ter, who served as maid of honor, wore a princess style gown of rust velvet moire, and Miss Mary Neely and Miss Mary Wettach, bridesmaids, wore princess style gowns of blue velvet moire.

The bride's attendants carried baby chrysan themums. Mrs. Booth, mother of the bride, wore a gown of lame and velvet. She carried red roses. Stuart Mehl served as best man and ushers included Richard Ohner, Raymond Keown, Brooks Ely, Robert McCauley and Edwin Booth, brother of the bride.

Following the ceremony, a recep tion took place in the University Club. Mr. and Mrs. Eyman will reside in Forest Hills, N. Y.

means to protect himself "It is aO fallacy," he said, "to believe that it takes a thief to catch a thief-it takes some one smarter." Intelligence tests, it was elaimevi. show the criminal to have a grade of mentality much higher than the average person. In penal institutions the criminals tested reveal higher mentality than those of the guards or the wardens. Incidentally, the speaker remarked, he would like to see those tests tried on our congressmen! Careful Plans of Criminal Reveal Three Elements It was shown by apt illustration how carefully the criminal lays his plans, composed of three elements the approach, the build-up and the getaway. A typical case which Mr.

Hepbron was sent to England to investigate concerned forged securities by an American which covered a period of years to develop, which had successfully hoodwinked the Bank of England and cost that institution many thousands of pounds to detect, demonstrating most involved and ingenious plans tlin Tiarf rf tVi a criminal Serena Dandridge Pendleton off for Trinidad, British West Indies. Miss Pendleton will sail Saturday for Port of Spain, where she will be married when she arrives to John Hoogerwers. They will make their home there. Ice Carnival Has Benefit For Hospital Allegheny General's Social Service Department To Get Proceeds. fw 1 i fi wjf i ft i 1 I 4 feH LV-v 1 s3 -I 'i pivf 2- 'ts -J I Mr 'I- more ideii' What science is doing tpday to jean be UCLVb tlUUC 111 LUC Ul ctU- i IlHll'ilf ij 3 vanced finger-printing was related.

We were said to be far behind in this art. The Chinese were experts in it 300 years B. C. and Europe enr ever 1 Expert Use of ScVn 7 rr science The said Xn action i -actim p-Dr. Wf.nem thp nvs.

scser.on, cf Cies enn'e? s-ti'! hut is does ii, the evr-- to be a vs' persons are th plained: bullets same it i print a stated, distinc'iv bulio's a -f hi, afTin hi? parlicirs of (ills; testimony. Each own distinctive -t i- -v suits sibility of r-posed hody frm 'Wi The future aiivar.ee held to be ur.rred;, -a Frenchman has ir.r.r'i the is car b'e sound waves frnrr. u-i whv could it up a wave whkh ss month, a year or ago. We rr.av rf Antony make speech! K. K.Membersh'pC- An extensive ir.eir.'ri.s for the K.

L. K. in progress. Girls cf th l-20 years are open mertirs to be afternoon the Y. M.

4 W. Miss Pauline sorority, will preiif. Tea for Bride-Elect Mrs. J. Amos Burfr-s A avenue, entertained r.Ji tei shower Saturday of Miss Dorothv of Mr.

and Mrs. Edward Elf today is in advance of us. Today to we can wire fingerprinting. The wax. so tn.t science is no longer ridiculed, as it! not only wear saves time and money and has1 his proved important in detecting! Analysis nf Alice Elizabeth Gasaway Reviews Modern Books For Sewickley Valley Club afternoon of the Woman's Club of THE MEETING yesterday Sewickley Valley, in the Edgeworth Club, the guest speaker Mark Fred Mercer, chairman of the house committee, and general chairman of the day's event, with Mrs.

Clifford S. Heinz and Mrs. H. K. Holmes.

Mrs. Holmes is a new member of the house committee, representing National Park Seminary alumnae, one of two such groups that make the support of the institution a major part of their year's work. The other school group interested is the Briarcliff Alumnae Association, represented on the committee by Mrs. C. E.

Robinson. Mrs. Robinson will be one of the party aides, and others will be Mrs. S. B.

Heppenstall, Mrs. C. B. Gibson, Mrs. James C.

Bradley, Mrs. Stephen C. Taylor, Mrs. E. M.

Gerst, Mrs. William R. Gellatly, Mrs. V. A.

Kober, Miss Lydia Cypher, Mrs. Paul S. Hardy, Mrs. J. R.

Munce, Mrs. John B. Luckie, Mrs. C. A.

Rehtmeyer, Mrs. H. G. Shirk, Miss Janet Hardie and Mrs. William McKelvy.

Lewis A. Parks Will Entertain Mr. and Mrs. Lewis A. Park will be hosts Saturday night at a dinner in their home.

Hillside, Sewickley Heights, in honor of Nancy Lee Byers and her fiance, John William Young Martin, who are to be married next Monday, at which the bridal party and out-of-town guests will be entertained. After the dinner there will be a small dance. Sewickley Guild To Serve Luncheon The Woman's Guild of St Stephen's Episcopal Church will seive an open luncheon on Friday fromj 12 to 1:30 Clock in the narish house in Frederick avenue. Mrs. L.

Thayer Lyon is general chairman, with Mrs. Alfred G. Harlow chairman for the day. Mrs. Harlow will be assisted by Mrs.

James West Arrott in, Mrs. William Boyd, Mrs. Alexander M. Brooks, Mrs. John W.

Cappeau, Mrs. L. Brookman Cuddy, Mrs. Charles L. Doyle, Mrs.

Henry Chalfant, Mrs. Charles Denby, Mrs. Jan R. Dunsford, Mrs. David Mead Gilmore, Mrs.

Tracey W. Guthrie, Mrs. Charles T. Harbaugh, Mrs. Charles E.

Irwin, Mrs. Richard G. Jennings, Mrs. Benjamin F. Jones III, Mrs.

James M. Leonard, Mrs. John J. Lincoln, Miss Lucy Moore, Mrs. Charles J.

Ramsburg, Miss Dorothy Slack and Mrs. Donald Thompson. Sails Saturday For Trinidad Miss Isabelle Pendleton and Hugh Nelson Pendleton, of Howe street, will be in New York Saturday to see their sister. Miss was Miss Alice Elizabeth Gasaway of New York, Oxford graduate, "writer and lecturer, who reviewed modern books in lively and Interesting manner. Mrs.

J. D. Adams Morrow, chairman of literature in tiic club, was in charge of the program, and Mrs. William Booth, the president, introduced the speaker. book was written with the purpose of social betterment.

"Cronin shows how the circumstances of modern life keep the medical profession from attaining its highest achievement, and has written a good story, packed with incident." Other books reviewed by Miss Gasaway included "Europa in Limbo," by Robert Briffault; "Look Eleven Years Younger," by Gellett Burgess; "Enchanter's Nightshade," by Ann Bridges; "Katrina," by Sally Salmine; "Recapture the Moon, by Sylvia "American Dream," Foster. Thompson; by Michael Parry Photo. EL.LKX AND SUZAXXE MARSHALL The Marshall eirls were presented lv theiir avenue, at a supper dance Saturday night In the parents, Mr. and Mrs. S.

S. Marshall of Malvern Twentieth Century Club. of hilth avenue, Miss Yeliig will E5md I rember eichth to Leotard Car William Aurelius Clark And Bride on Wedding Journey to Bermuda Jane C. Booth Engaged to Wed Edward B. Yellig Dr.

and Mrs. W. W. Booth of Carnegie, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Jane Culbertson Booth, to Edward J. Yellig, of Alvin, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Edward B. Yellig of Fifth avenue. The wedding will take place early in January. Both are graduates of the University of Pittsburgh.

Miss Booth is a member of Delta Delta Delta. R. AND MRS. WILLIAM AURELIUS CLARK are on their way M1 Allegheny General Hospital's social service department will receive the money made at last night's ice carnival in Duquesne Garden. Because the general chairman, Mrs.

Joseph Judson Brooks II, is a Sewickleyan, and many of the members of the women's senior and junior boards of the hospital live on Sewickley Heights, the Heights and the Valley sent a great many people to see the ice show. Among those present were Mrs. Van Lear Perry Shriver, Mrs. J. Crossan Chaplin III, Mrs.

Frank L. Williams, Mrs. Ralph S. Richards, Mrs. Andrew B.

Berger, Mrs. Percy Donner, Mrs. Frank R. Stoner, Jr, Mrs. Albert Burchneld Craig.

Also Miss Bertha Brooks, who came from Harrisburg, for the show, and to remain through the week; Mrs. Edward K. Klingel-hofer. Mrs. William C.

Robinson, Mrs. Alexander Laughlin Robinson, Miss Margaret and Miss Fredericka Holdship. Boxes were taken for the bene fit by Mrs. J. Verner Scaife, Mrs.

William Frew, Miss Martha Jamison, Mrs. John G. Frazer, Mrs. Xtmn r- A i tit Tl.ffe PJtlTnA Evans Mrs. ichard k.

Mellon, Miss Isabella Chalfant, Charles Oliver, Thomas Mellon, Mrs. H. Hughart Laughlin. Mrs. Howard Hale McClintic, Mrs.

Howard S. Evans, Mrs. A. E. Braun, Miss Eleanor Park, Miss Sarah Ricket-son, Mrs.

Terrell Johnson, Mrs. Charles Dickson. Mrs. Edwin Hodge, Marshall McCune. Also Mrs.

James B. Laughlin, Mrs. A. S. F.

Keister, Mrs. E. T. Weir, Mrs. Charles A.

Painter, Mrs. Edward W. Gwinner, Mrs. J. Frederic Byers, Mrs.

Frank G. Darlington, Mrs. William Cordes Snyder, Mrs. Robert Milligan, Mrs. William Larimer Jones, Mrs.

William R. Blair, Mrs. Alfred G. Harlow, Mrs. Benjamin Franklin Jones, Mrs.

Maitland Alexander, Mrs. William Christopher Robinson, Mrs. George Harton Singer and Mrs. William Penn Snyder, Jr. Villa Circle Bazaar The annual bazaar of the Villa Circle of the Brentwood Presbyterian Church will be held Friday afternoon and evening.

The bazaar will be in the form of a general country store with a post office as an added attraction. A Christmas play "Mimi Lights Her Candle," will be presented at 8 o'clock. Mil fo rmerlv 50.00 to $35 to $83 formerly 75.00 to i $45 to $95 I hi I to Bermuda, on their wedding home in Farragut street. Miss Gasaway reviewed both fie tion and non-fiction, giving brief and pointed criticism of a good list of modern books. Eugene Lyons' "Assignment in Utopia" Miss Gasaway finds unusually interesting, "as a judgment of the Russian experiment by standards of a sympathetic observer.

The author was born a Communist, and his sympathies were deepened by his experiences in the New York slums. When in 1918 the Soviet came into existence, Mr. Lyons, a ready-made Communist, was sent to Moscow by the United States. His disillusionment is complete, and in his book he has reported the Russian experiment from the inside." Miss Gasaway finds Hendrik Wil-lem Van Loon's "The Arts" an amusing and confidential "fireside chat" about the arts, with witty biography and criticism. A "corking good story packed with incident, full of varied and many-sided characters, and reeking with color and atmosphere," was her description of Louis Bromfield's "And the Rains Came." Of the controversial "To Have and Have Not," by Ernest Hemingway, Miss Gasaway said that it was "raw and brutal, and very savage." She feels it has artistic drawbacks, in that it is badly paced and there are dull "pedestrian" passages.

But she finds Mr. Hemingway's style and method of writing "marvelous," and declared that no one else today, writes such "brilliant, vibrant and luminous prose." "And So, Victoria," by Vaughn Wilkins, Miss Gasaway described as a "second rate 'Anthony Adverse' and a stew and hash of all romantic novels of 100 years." A. J. Cronin's "The Citadel" she finds interesting as a propaganda novel, which sets the author apart from other novelists of the day just as Dickens in his day, because the They were married last night in the home of Dr. and Mrs.

George A. Urling of Farragut street, parents of the bride, the former Miss Sarah Elizabeth Urling. Mr. Clark is a son of Dr. and Mrs.

Walden Allen Clark of Jancey street. Their wedding ceremony was per-O i rabowshev nr Fll iSCw 514 tad -J 16 WOOD STRf FT PI arnc ays The Caldra Players of the Carrick High School Alumni Association will present two one-act plays, "Mrfrder in Hollywood" and "Dirty Work in the Old Mill," plus a one-act play given by the King School of Oratory, Knoxville, tonight in the Carrick High school auditorium at 8:15. The directors are Mrs. William Naylor and Carl Long. Music will be furnished by the Carrick Community Orchestra under the direction of E.

M. Goehring. All proceeds from the plays will go to the scholarship fund sponsored by Carrick High school Individually Styled, finer Fur Coats re-priced for Quick Selling deductions rendome We've gone through our fur stcc by piece, and to reduce it mate this time, we've taken no less reduction on some of cur nnest i-Coats of matchless Grabowsky One of a kind so en trip, and will make their future powder blue chiffon and a corsage of gardenias, and Mrs. Clark, wisteria velvet, with gardeniasi Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Adair of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph William Kennedy of Cleveland, and Miss Margaret Clark of Steubenville, O. Safyan-A brams Announcement Mr. and Mrs.

Israel Safyan of Darlington road announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Esther Safyan to Sol Abrams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Israel A. Abrams of Adelaide street. The bride-elect is a graduate of Carnegie Institute of Technology.

Mr. Abrams is a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh. Talk on Crime Detection "Crime Detection" will be the subject of a talk by Thomas Mc-Quaide at the meeting of the Mothers' Club of Carrick tomorrow at 2 o'clock in the clubhouse. Mr. McQuaide, one of five to be selected from the state of -Pennsylvania, has just completed a course in the school conducted by J.

Edgar Hoover, under the Federal bureau of investigation, in Washington, D. C. Name Plate Glassware i space to tcrite your guests' names for their use orly yes the name is vash-off-able. Cocktails to brardy and soda, 6.00 to 75.00 dot. Little dinners or big parties, bridge luncheons or cocktail parties find many things to express you at Re'uenstein's.

And, gifts a'ore throughout the store to please your taste and purse. 625 Liberty Ave. AT. 6070 Name Plate Glassware Has a space to tcriie your guests' names for their use fj orly ues the name is vash- ifl off-able. Cocktails to brardy fd 1 and soda, 6.00 to 75.00 dot.

Little dinners or Diq parties, Ij 1 formed by Dr. George Fisher of the Highland Presbyterian Church. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore white satin, with a yoke of seed pearls, and her tulle veil was held by a wreath of orange blossoms. She carried white roses. Miss Janet Clark, the maid of honor, wore beige brocaded moire, and the bridesmaids.

Miss Charlotte Davis of Sewickley, and Miss Katherine Davis, wore turquoise blue brocnued moire. And the three carried Talisman roses. Javnes L. Callahan of Meadville, was best man, and ushering were William H. Bierman and W.

S. McArdle, the last of New Castle. Cibotium ferns formed a background for the service, and yellow chrysanthemums decorated the dinner table. Mrs. Urling wore a gown of MRS.

NATHAN SELTZER. Mrs. Seltzrr is chairman of flowers for the annual mother and daughter banquet to he ziven tonight at 6 o'clock by the Beth Shalom Sisterhood. Mrs. H.

L. Hausman is general chairman and Mrs. H. Morairtz and Mrs. Julius Lapidus are in charge of reservations.

Banquet Aide W' 1 "i I 'J m. it, IK 5 is fi Jf v- i CoslUmM rmerlv 125.00 to 3j $85 to $225 JL MINK COATS, ire re c-j-' $1,400 A roup of Coats 12.5.00. ow, A group of Suits 125.00. ow NOW, $900 to HI' I'i I I I 1 I That Midas-Toucl BLACK PERSIANS, ven NOW, $275 to $450 GREY PERSIANS, Ogilvie Sisters are famous for bringing glistening highlights the precious sheen of health to drab hair. Ida Vollmar, appearing in Walter Wanger's Vogues of 1938 fr 50.00 OH $35 to $85 A group of Hats formerly 15.00 to 25.00.

$10 owes the loveliness or her hair BLACK MOIRE CARACULS, u-ere $165 to NOW. $325 to S5 NOW $395 NOW 5415 1933 to HUDSON SEALS, Mrs. Mabelle Steffens, special representative for these well-known preparations, is in our Toiletries Section this week. Let her prescribe scientific treatments for your individual hair problems. i group Vcndome Accessories greatly reduced KAUFMANN'S ELEVENTH wire I 1 ALASKA SEALSKIN, NOW $335 JOSEPH HORNE CO Toiletries.

Street Floor Today's charge purchases bhe. "liirir-rii mm II.

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