Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1938 — Page 5

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FMONDAY, AUG. 1, 1938 Mrs. Keenan Announces 7th District Federation Of Clubs Appointments

Mrs. Frank Symmes Named Chairman of American

Citizenship Committee;

Mrs. John Thornburgh

And Mrs. Philip Zoercher Head Law Group.

* Mrs. William D. Keenan, Seventh District Federation of Clubs presi@ent, today announced department and committee chairman for the

coming year. % They are as follows:

American citizenship, Mrs.. Frank Symmes,

chairman; Mrs. Arthur Robinson, vice chairman; law observance, Mrs.

John Thornburgh, Mrs. Zoercher, chairman and vice chairman; Americanization and citizenship training, Mrs. Bloomfield Moore, chairman; Mrs. Bert Gadd, vice chairman. American home, Mrs, Felix T. McWhirter, honorary chairman; Mrs. William C. Bartholomew, chairman; Mrs. Charles L. Hartmann, vice

chairman; division of home eco-.

~“momics, Mrs. J. C. Barnhill Jr, chairman; home extension, Mrs. Henry E. Ostrom; homemaking, Mrs. Carl Weinhardt; mothercraft, Mrs. Curtis Hodges; education, Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge, chairman; Mrs. John M. Williams, vice chairman.

Adult education, Mrs. M. E. Woolf _ public instruction, Mrs. K. V. Ammerman; character education, Mrs Fred L. Pettijohn; library extension, Mrs. Carl L. Withner; motion pictures, Mrs. T. W. Demmerly; conservation, Mrs. H.\P. Willwerth.

Mrs. Jackson Named

Roadside council, Mrs. Andrew Uackson; Epsilon Sigma Omicron, Mrs. William L. Sharp, chairman Mrs. A. H. Off, vice chairman; fine arts, Mrs. Chic Jackson, chairman; _ Mrs. A. L. Duncan, vice chairman; art, Mrs. E. E. Lett, chairman; Mrs. Ernest B. Foster, vice chairman. Literature, Mrs. Frederick Alberghardt, Mrs. James D. Ermston Bible literature, Mrs. Grow; poetry, Mrs. R. B. Malloch; drama, Mrs. E. B. Schofield; music, Mrs. Frank 8B. Hunter, chairman; Mrs. H. H. {Arnholter, Mrs. Herbert T. Grouns, vice chairmen; Mesdames S. B. Walker, Ralph Cradick, Albert Gray end M. D. Didway; student loan fund, Mrs. E. H. Souffiof, chairman; Mesdames Colin E. Lett, Jerauld McDermott, S. S. Faussett, Wayne Reddick, George Roberts, H. D. Merrifield, Eugene Wright, William R. Castleman; juniors, Mrs. Melissa Cornish, chairman; Mrs. E. A. Kelly, vice chairman; Mesdames T. A. Kimberlin Jr., Paul D. Whittemore, Roland B. Rust. International relations, Mrs. Walfer L. Carey, chairman; Mrs. Charles H. Winders, vice chairman; Mesdames Grover Workman, Louis Wolf, Katherine Heath; legislation, Mrs. Robert Shank, chairman; Mrs. R. E. Kennington, cochairman; Mesdames D. O. Wilmeth, David Ross, J. E. Barcus, Wolf Sussmann, Emma, Comminers; public welfare, Mrs. M. E. Robbins, chairman; Mrs. Charles H. Smith, consultant.

Child Welfare Aid

Child welfare, Mrs. Otis Carmichael; delinquency, Mrs. E. H. Niles; community service, Mrs. Irving D. Hamilton; industry, Mrs. Roy Horne; mental hygiene, Dr. Ada Schweitzer health, Mrs. John G. Benson. Special committees are: Auditing, Mrs. Laura E. Ray, chairman; Mrs. E. H. Hughes and Mrs. A. L. Pauley; book memorial, Mrs. E. V. Lucas, Mrs. C. V. Montgomery, cochairmen; Mesdames T. M. Staver, Lena Blondin, Harry Burkhart, George Maxwell, W. R. Burcham, D. T. Brownlee, Paul Rochford, Bert L. Combs, P. A. Cooling; club extension, Mrs. Rudolph Grosskopf, Mrs. R. O. McJAlexander, cochairmen; Mesdames John Paul Ragsdale, J. Farl Brown, Charles W. Fields. ; - Club institute, Mrs. A. R. Tomlin, Mrs. John Carter, cochairmen; Mesdames J. C. Teegarden, C. M. Finney, PF. S. Bowlby, W. R. Burcham, I. W. Riggins, Orval Stone, Arthur Pittenger, Olive Gauker and H. .C. Tope; Indiana Club Woman; Mrs. W. H. Polk, Mrs. ©. L. Kranz, cochairmen; Mesdames Robert Mottern, S. G. Campbell, oseph Schmidt, Paul Oren, Walter oolf, Charles E. Appel and Miss e Jeffries; constitution and byws, Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, Mrs. eorge Cornelius, cochairmen; Meslames H. M. Phipps, John Thornburgh and C. J. Finch. - Co-operation of the blind, Mrs. , fT, Kittle, Mrs. Charles Wintercochairmen; Mesdames J. rowning Gent, M. B. Spellman, arry Burkhart, George Dyer, Walr L. Jones, Floyd Dodderidge, vin C. Thompson and F. B rsh; directory, Mrs. Frank X. ern, chairman; and board mempers; federation pin, Mrs. John wning Johnson and Mrs. Thomas ndman; foundation fund, Mrs. G. A. VarlDyke, Mrs. Horace Casady, * icochairmen; Mesdames Walter Stayn, Paul T. Hurt, C. T. Austin, archus Brown, C. J. Finch and g. W. Moore.. i Hospitality, Mrs. E. V. Mitchell, R. B. Barnes, cochairmen; esdames Elmer Beanblossom, Rusgell Clift, Forest Chenoweth, Lawrence Miller, Charles E. Thomas, Walter (C. Hiser, E. A.; Henley, Martha McClain, Max Norris, Earl Spradley, Louis Markun, Sam Dorfman, J.| B. Gaul and Miss Betty Zimmerman; Indianapolis history and markings, Mrs. E. L. Pedlow, chairman; Mesdames Carl Taylor, Lawrence Orr, Tilden F. Greer, C. T. Austin, John T. Wheeler and E. A. Williams. Luncheon arrangements, Mr Ernest B. Thompson, Mrs. Walter Geisel, cochairmen; Mesdames' J. Frances Huffman, Fred Kepner, Henry Laut, James T. Hamill, Durwood B. Wood, O. M. Richardson and n Ward; old Fauntleroy home, Mrs. Isaac Born, Mrs. Arthur Randall, | cochairmen; Mesdames Carl Foltz, Harold Bartholomew, L. B. shultz, Carl Taylor, Fred Schmitz and E. L. Burnett.

\ Others Chosen Pages, Mrs. E. Monty Campbell

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‘ chairman; Mrs. Merle Safford and

Mrs. Alvin G. Jose; program, Mrs.

3. W. Moore; radio, Mrs. W. F.

Holmes; radium, Mesdames John Engelke, A. J. Hueber and Keenan; reciprocity, Mrs. E. W. Fullenwider chairman; Mesdames John R. Na dolny, E. D. Farmer, Burton Knight, Loan Jenkins and Frank L. Church-

man. Registrat ons and elections, Mrs. William de Pearl, Mrs. Harry Southard, cochairmen; Mesdames Carl Day, Robert Berner, Robert Mottern, James B. Gaul and T. D. Moffit; cancer control representation, Mrs. James E. Gaul; luncheon

D. Pyle,

TRID Gtr

Mesdames Mary Hendren, Harry Southard, O. L. Kranz, S. 8. Faussett, W. H. Pearl, M. B. Hedges, C. A. Hilgenberg, L. S. Shultz, Badger Williamson, Louis Kruger, E. F. Hamaker, R. V. Sigler, Wayne Reddick, Walter Stayton, Robert Berner and Miss Minnie Kiefer. Resolutions, Mrs. W. H. Hodgson, chairman; Mesda. John Downing

HE famous Crosley Tower, WLW, Cincinnati, 500,000 watts, the Worlds most © powerful broad- ¢ casting station.

Ji * Severin Buschmann, Hurt, Balz, W. C. Hartinger and Helen T. Brown; rural co-operation, Mrs. S. S. Sutton; safety, Mrs. W. E. Balch, chairman; Mesdames Ostrom, Morgan and Lee Ingling; smoke abatement, Mrs. D. T. Weir, Mrs. P. A. Keller, cochairmen; Mesdames Forrest Danner, Will Bernhardt and Grant Zimmerman.

Shortridge S. S. Club

Goes to Wawasee

. Members of .the S. 8. Club of Shortridge High School began a two weeks’ vacation at a Lake Wawasee cottage today. Mrs. Paul Roush is chaperon. Included in the group are Misses Barbara Weaver, Barbara Jean Kern, Eleanor Roush, Betty Jackson and Maxine Buser.

Bridal Shower Planned

Beta chapter of Phi Theta Delta will hold a shower tomorrow night for Miss Marianne. Wolfe, whose marriage to Dan Wilson of Muncie will be Saturday. Miss Ruth Funk

It’s the Woman

Who’s Realist In Marriage

‘By RUTH MILLETT The big trouble with marriage is men. And the trouble with men, it seems, is that they have a great deal in common with sheep who hanker for the grass on the other side of the fence. A man dates a procession of women until he finds one that he doesn’t want to get away. She suits him better than anyone he has ever found. And so he mar-

Romantic stories stop there. But marriage goes on. And man, being a naturally perverse creature, begins to wonder if what he has is really as excifing as what he

hasn't. : Bound to Wonder

Whether or not he sets about finding out depends on the kind

For she is perfectly satisfied with the man she married. He has his faults—but she always knew that. For women are realists. They know without experience that men are men, and if being married to one is not as exciting as they hoped, being married to another would probably be just as much of a letdown. But a man is bound to cling to the romantic notion that the woman he has just met has all sorts of possibilities, That is why he finds a woman, not half as attractive as

his wife, infinitely more fascinating. |-

It is why he plunges into admiration for any halfway attractive girl, who, if he knew her well, would soon bore him.

! Women Are Hunters

If you doubt that this is purely a masculine weakness, watch the next time you are out for an evening's fun. The men. in the crowd will talk for 10 minutes about the beautiful girl‘ across the room. But not a single woman will mention how much like Gary Cooper the man at the next table looks. Women aren't sheep but hunters.

wiil be hostess at her home, 438 N. | of man he is. But he is bound to | And as hunters they have a deep

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Guard Ideal ; With Care, Expert Says

Children More Sensitive Than Parents Believe Possible, She Adds.

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON One time I saw a spirit die. It was in a hotel, and the little boy had come in with his mother and father

for Iunch. ! He was tired and restless and he was being reminded of his mapners every second. Finally he knocked over his water glass. His father reached out and in some way hurt the child’s hand. He had seemed like such a good father, and I expect he was, in his way. But I saw the little fellow gasp, lean over in agony and start to say, “Oh, you hurt—" then noth

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ing more. He glanced into space with a look that wrung my heart horribly. It was startled, like eyes of a fawn that has just enough time to feel the arrow in its heart before it drops. Then down went the boy's head on the table and slow tears welled and fell.

Children Are Sensitive His hand did not hurt particularly. It was just that an otherwise good parent had shown his son the latent cruelty in him. Never again would the little fellow dress his daddy in the god-like qualities he had imagined before. Children of four or five, despite their apparent stoicism, are more sensitive about their parents’ actions than we think possible. They pride themselves on their partnership. A break in faith is ruinous. The promise which is so easily given, for instance, is taken as gos= pel by the child. A broken promise is a blow and the injury lies in the shattered faith of the child. Weigh promises, good mother, and urge your husband to weigh his. Keep the promise, unless there is some extraordinarily good reason for breaking it. What we should try to do at this tender age is to hold fast to the trust of our children :

SNES

PAGE 5

Urbains’ Return Is Due Sept. 1

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph P. Urbain will be at home at Broadway on Sept. 1 following a wedding trip. Mrs. Hrbain was Miss Gretchen Browne Drake, ‘daughter of Mrs. Pearl B. Drake, before her marriage Saturday at the Carrollton Avenue Reformed Church. Mr. Urbain is a son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Eldreth Urbain, Castleton. 3 The bride wore an empire-styled white marquisette gown and a tuile veil. She carried a dresden colonial bouquet. Miss Gertrude Atherton was maid-of-honor. George Arnold was best man and Robert Crouch, Richard Wilson and Herbert Arnold ushered. - A reception for the bridal party and immediate families followed at the home of the bride’s mother, 2636 Guilford Ave.

Spend Week-End at Park

Members of Epsilon Chapter, Epsilon Alpha Sorority, spent the week-end at McCormick's Creek State Park. Members of Alpha and Gama Chapters were guests.

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