Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1940 — Page 7

THURSDAY, JAN. 11, Betty Hazeltine ‘To Be Progressi

Shower for Flora Schott Sunday

1940

and Her Fiance ve Party Guests;

Barbara Strack Honored With Miscellaneous Affair At Home of Maizie Ruth Tyner; Mesdames Mellene And P. F. Carr to Entertain for Anne Carr.

Brides-to-be will have a busy. week-end starting with showers tomorrow and continuing through Sunday. Miss Betty Hazeltine, Columbus, Ind.,, and Larry Willson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Willson, Indianapolis, will be entertained Saturday

night at a progressive party given

by Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kinnear

and Ralph Triller. The couple will be married Jan. 27 in Columbus.

Guests at the party will include the Misses Natalie Bird, Dorothy Spahr, Marian Gearen, Mr. and Mrs. James West, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Umphrey and Messrs. Ralph Triller,. Robert Lindgren, Bill Ramey, Bert Kingan Jr., John Westfall, Grif Marr and Frank Reisner.

# 2 =

Mrs. Arthur J. Timpe will entertain Sunday afternoon with a tea and kitchen shower in honor of her sister, Miss Flora Schott, whose marriage to Burgess Stewart will be Saturday, Jan. 20, in Sacred Heart Catholic Church.

Guests will include Mesdames Raymond Steffen, Theodore Schuster, Michael Schott, Elsie Timpe, Henry Schott, Fred Otting, Charles Schmalz, Fred Erber, Leo Schanke, Francis Hearn, Charles Stewart, John W. Jessup, Carl Beck, and the Misses Irene Lippert, Helen Frances Stewart. Ruth Timpe and Esther Springman. : 2 = = Miss Maizie Ruth Tyner, 3007 -N. Delaware St., was hostess last night at a miscellaneous shower for Miss Barbara Strack, whose marriage to Morris B. Hancock will be next Thursday. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. J. T. Tyner. Guests were Mrs. Verna A. Strack, the bride-to-be’s mother, Mesdames Frank Woods, Oral Bridgford, R. E. . Shuman, F. G. Jones Jr. Loy Baxter, J. F. Overman, J. W. Donewald, Don Trusty and the Misses Mary Hancock, Adele Dunn, Norma Win‘ter, Elizabeth Mahin, Joan Ferguson, Virginia Shappell, Betty, Ruth Henry, Denzel. Moffett and a Small. Ef J 2 = Mrs. William Mellene and her sister, Mrs. P. F. Carr, will entertain tomorrow night at Mrs. Mellene’s home, 3306 N. Keystone Ave., with f crystal shower for Miss Anne Carr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Carr, 4306 Park Ave. Miss Carr and Dr. Herbert H. Wilberding, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Wilberding, 102 N. Euclid Ave, will be married Wednesday in St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church. Guests with the bride-to-be and the mothers of the couple will be Mesdames P. B. McShane, John F. Carr, L. J. Wilberding, W. L. Snodgrass, Edward Hegarty, Hopson Ramsey, C. J. McCarthy, Cincinnati, and the Misses Helen, Peggy and Mary Carr, Aletha Hayden, Gertrude Wilberding, Ann Hegarty, Margaret Fitzgerald, Peggy and Kathleen Biggins.

2 » "

Invitations have been issued by Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Dunn for an informal party tomorrow, following the wedding of Miss Norma Williams and their son, Richard K. Dunn. Among the guests will be Messrs. and Mesdames Louis Dunn, William Danz, Austin Hurt, Walter King, Lee King, Floyd Conover, William Conover, John James, Henry Snider, Harry Dahz, Herbert J. Wright, George Dunn and Louis Dunn, the last three couples from Milwaukee, Wis.; the Misses Betty Dunn, Alma Fettle, Mary Ann Dunn, Mary Alice Cooper, Kathleen Smoot, Betty

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Miss Florence Louise Wepler, daughter of William H. Wepler, 1547 S. Belmont Ave. entertained recent-

ly at a buffet supper and party for members of her wedding party. She|

will he married Saturday to John F. Morell, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Morell, Ft. Wayne. Guests at the party were Miss Fluella Neild, maid of honor; Miss Pauline Elliott and Miss Opal Nance; Robert Hughes, Ft. Wayne, best man, and James Weaver, Max Harding, Robert Wepler and Jesse Wepler, ushers.

"

8 »

Miss Dorothy Squires, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Squires, Miami, Fla. whose marriage to L. Gordon Anderson will be Saturday, Jan. 20, will be entertained at. a personal shower and bridge party tomorrow night at the home of Mrs.

| Oscar Headlee Jr., 1028 W. 35th St.| Mrs. Headlee’s mother, Mrs. G. C.

Druley, will assist her. Guests will include Mesdames H. T. Neat, Ernest Sutton, Ray Headlee, Richard Askren, O. N. Headlee, Everett Holmes, George Russell, Frank Hiland, Max Gibbs, Conrad Barrett, G. L. Heinrich, Horace Payne and the Misses Irma May Steele, Marjorie Siefert, Katherine Ethel Neidlinger,

Ann Payne.

8 » »

Mrs. Edward Kirschner will be

hostess ‘tomorrow night at a miscel-

laneous shower for Miss Helen}

Sprong, whose marriage: to Herman Scheurer will be Jan. 27 in the St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Ann Spring, Mrs. John Pinkcrton and Miss Eleanor Kirschner. #2 = = Miss Wilma Williams and her fiance, Donald Bryson Boyd, will be honor guests at a kitchen shower tomorrow night at the home of Miss Janet Morgan, 4841 N. Capitol Ave. Other hosts and hostesses will be Miss Evadine Koch, Stewart Tongret and Harold Christy.

The bride-to-be is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Williams, 944 Hervey St., and Mr. Boyd’s parents are.Mr., and Mrs. James G. Boyd, 320 N. Rural St. They will

be married Saturday, Jan. 20, in the Central Christian Church. 4

4 Nominated

Mrs. Frank B. McKibbin was to be nominated for the office of first vice president of the Indianapolis Public Health Nursing Association at the annual luncheon eeting held today at the mg Mrs. Montgomery S. Lewis was to be named by the nominating committee as candidate for third vice president, Mrs. George A. Kuhn for recording secretary and Wilson Mothershead for treasurer. Nominations from the floor are unusual and persons nominatéd by the committee are generally elected. Nominations for board members

Jito serve for the term 1940-'43 were

to be Mesdames Smiley N. Chambers, Othniel Hitch, Edwin M.

McNally, Marlowe Manion, John

Roberts, Ernest Rupel, Wendell Sherk and Miss Deborah B. Moore,

Nurses’ Chief Speaks

Miss Eva MacDougal; chief of the Bureau of Public Health Nursing of the State Board of Health, addressed the group on - the contribution of a privately financed public health nursing association in a public health program. The speaker pointed out that the private agency can experiment and

initiate new services such as school |

nursing, which was begun by visiting nurses and later adopted by government organizations. Tax supported programs, she said, can be only skeletal and private agencies fill in the gaps. Such agencies as the P, H. N. A, Miss MacDougall said, are able to give bedside nursing care and instructive nursing service of which public programs. can include little. Fifty per cent of deaths from pneumonia, she said, could saved by nursing care such as the P. H. N. A. can give.

Provide Nursing Service

By providing hourly nursing service for which the patient may pay if he can, Miss MacDougall said, the P. H. N. A. gives the middle classes care indigents long have had. She cited the private agencies as a training ground for public health nurses. “Such experience ' is basic to any phase of public health nursing,” she said The P, H. N. A. nurses made 61,051 visits to 11,247 patients during the year, according to Miss Beatrice Short, superintendent, who reported on the association's work from Nov. 1, 1938, to Oct. 31, 1939.

‘Defense’ Is Subject

For Legion Session

Lieut.-Col. J. H. Davidson of Ft. Benjamin Harrison will speak on “National Defense” at a luncheon sponsored by the State American

| Legion Auxiliary at 1 p. m. Sunday

at the Hotel Antlers.

Nursing Group to Dine

The Public Health N ciation of Indianapolis will hold its

annual luncheon today in the Clay “1A

pool Hotel. Miss Eva MacDo of the State Board of Health

Ruth, |.

dinner dress of black silk crepe.

New Paris ‘Patriotic’ Styles | Find Favor All Over World

. By ROSETTE HARGROVE

PARIS, Jan. 11 (NEA) —So far

patriotic to dress for the evening whenever the occasion demands it.

At the outbreak of war, it was

away all party clothes, but now the men are coming home on leave, it is up to the women to look their most charming to make them forget

[fon

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(crazy. Turbans,

complete plans for an Spe house. to | be held Feb, 11 in celebration

» 8 »

as Frenchwomen are concerned, it's

a natural feminine instinct to put

the war. Fashions always reflect the “climate” of the moment and the recent creations shown by the Parisian designers for “dressing up” occasions are full of allure, yet at the same time practical and simple. On the other hand, they are styles which will appeal to women the world over. Paris suggests two alternatives— the formal street-length dress or the full-length dinner gown. The formal decollete evening dress has naturally disappeared from the Parisienne’s wardrobe. The long dinner or theater dress usually has long sleeves and a high neckline, but sleeves “pushed. back” over the elbow are as smart. So far as line is eoncerned, both long and short skirts preserve the slim: hipline and the nipped-in waist effect, but nearly all show varying degrees f fulness. Application motifs—these most inicately worked and providing the ost delicate workmanship—have )een revived with much success. | The full-length dinner gown yles differ little from the shorter tion, although they do come in ther colors but black. Carbon, editerranean and the very popular ‘“Alerte” or blackout blues lead in e color card, with soft raspberry eens, old gold and other dark yellows, browns, grays and some bright eds also featured. Hats accompanying restaurant esses, both the long and short vaety, are becoming and not a bit toques, smallimmed hats—all these are smart— th the “profiled” beret making a etermined comeback. The vogue { te fur toque has not diminished.

G. O. P. Group Hears Lawyer

Clarence E. Benadum, Muncie atrney and Republican gubernarial candidate, today attacked the oups which seek to name both ies’ candidates. He spoke this ternoon before members of the arion County Council of Republican Women in the Columbia Club.

p

“This bi-partisan political activity |

in Indiana lays the groundwork for a| Fascist state,” Mr. Benadum said, “by establishing a favored clique which remains in power regardless of the people’s will.” He said the Republican party must be on guard against captains of high finance who believe the Republicans will win in 1940 and are putting forth efforts to elect a man of their liking, Mrs. Cecil Chittenden spoke on “The Apathy of Youth Today in the Republican Party.” Mrs. Burton L. Beville, recently elected president, presided at the meeting. New committees were announced.

Broad Ripple Club . Will Meet in Cafe

“The Broad Ripple Business and Professional Women’s Glee Club will lunch next week 'at the Main Cafe, 914 E. 63d St. The group was formed at a recent meeting in the home of Dr. Gertrude Hinshaw. Mrs. Catherine Tilley will entertain the group at a “come as you are” Valentine party on Feb. 12, at her home, 713 Day St., Apt. 11.

Chapter to Meet The PF. E. M. Chapter of the SubDeb Club will meet Monday evening at the home of Miss Jean Huff to

|terence. last month

PAGE 7!

Gallup Poll Shows—

PUBLIC FROWNS ON FORMING OF | UNIONS IN WPA|

Survey Reveals Federal Job Aid Is Regarded as Kind of Charity.

By DR. GEORGE GALLUP Director, American Institute of Public Opinien :

"PRINCETON, N. J, Jan. 11— Despite the fact that most voters throughout the country have accepted the principle of labor unionism, a national survey of public opinion indicates that the or

‘|have apparently not yet accepted

the idea of unions among the unemployed workers on relief. In a press con-

President = Roosevelt expressed the opinion that while persons on relief had a right to or- INST ganize into §PUBLIC’OPINION unions, they had no right to strike. To find the attitude of the public on this question, the American Institute of Public Opinion put before voters in a national survey the two issues posed by the President. The results show that while the majority agree with the President in opposing relief strikes, they do not agree that relief workers have a right to organize into unions.

Against Strike Rights The specific questions in the national cross-section survey of the public were as follows: “Should people on WPA be alIowed to form WPA unions?”

AMERICAN INSTITUTE

“Do you think people on WPA should have the right to strike?”

Only one person in ten, on the average, expressed no opinion on these issues.

This vote does not mean, however, that labor unions in general are condemned; it is only the extension of unionism to relief workers that has not yet been accepted. For when, in a recent study, the Institute asked voters the general question, “Are you in favor of la-

whelmingly (74 per cent) in the affirmative.

Charity Angle Taken

In this survey, as in every other, the Institute made a special analysis of the reasons given by voters for their opinions. The results are helpful in understanding why it is that the majority have not accepted relief unions or strikes by reliefers. . The voters, judging by their statements, regard the relief program as having an entirely different basis from ordinary labor in private industry and for that reason consider that union principles do not apply. Thus, the most frequent comments are that “WPA is a form of charity,” that the “government and the taxpayers are simply trying to take care of these men, and are not bar-

gaining for labor the way an employer does.”

Gratitude Expected

Others point out that relief is only a “temporary program,” while a few argue that reliefers should be “grateful for what they get” and “shouldn’t bite Santa Claus.” The minority of voters feel, however, that ‘relief workers have just as much right to protect themselves as anybody else,” and that WPA unions are necessary to ‘avoid discrimination and to provide a channel for grievances and protests.” The issue of relief unions finds Democratic and Republican voters in substantial agreement, for the rank and file in both parties vote more than 8 to 2 against strikes by reliefers, and are opposed by almost the same majority to WPA unions.

bor unions?” the replies were over- |

‘Bleacher-Like’

In Church_Called Disturbing

Architecture Expert Cites ‘Competition’ Between Singers and Pastor for Attention.

ELIMINATION OF COMPETITION for attention between Protestant ministers and attractive members of their church choirs during services is the aim of the Rev. E. M. Conover of New York. Director of the Interdenominational Bureau of Architecture, Dr. Conover is in charge of a display of Church Architecture today, tomorrow and Saturday at the Hotel Severin.

“Too frequently while the minjster is preaching, more attractive faces than his compete for attention,” the Rev. Mr. Conover said. “The choir, seated in a bleacherlike arrangement facing the congregation is a disturbing element in the church service. . “The tendency today is to have the choir arranged in pews parallel to the sides of the chancel, facing toward the center.” Not only does this focus the at-

‘tention of the congregation on

the minister, but it makes for a better mixture of vocal music from the choir, Dr. Conover pointed out. “There is strong objection ,today to having the choir leaders perform in view of the congregation during the service of worship. It is felt that the choir should sing to God rather than seem to give a concert to the people. This trend fits mn with the movement toward a churchly style of chancel which in all Protestant denominations is coming to displace the pulpit platform. The term church ‘auditorium’ is giving way to ‘sanctuary’,” Dr. Conover added. 2 n 8 THE EXHIBIT at the Hotel Severin shows modern trends and developments in American Church building. It is open to the public, Dr. Conover said. Altars and religious symbols, especially the cross and candles, are becoming objects in- churches of the most pronounced by Protestant and “low-church” types, he said. Another departure in church construction pointed out by Rev. Conover is a division of Sunday Schools into departments and classes according to age. " “The mass meeting type of Sunday School, which was more nearly like a convention or pep meeting than a school, is now about obsolete. This calls for a tremendous program of remodeling existing Sunday School buildings and the erection of new additions

‘connecting with existing struc-

tures,” Dr. Conover said. The Church. architectural display will be held in connection with the annual meeting of the Home Missions Council beginning tomorrow at the Severin.

A “Sanctuary Dinner” will be held at 5:45 p. m. tomorrow at the Roberts Park Methodist Church. Dr. F. W. Mueller of Philadelphia, Pa., superintendent of the department of church. extension of the Board of Home Missions ‘ and

. Church Extension of the Method-

ist -Church, will observe. » ” J

DR. CONOVER WILL give a stereopticon lecture on ‘Present Trends in Church Architecture,” and Dr. Charles M. Dinsmore of New York, secretary of the Department of Church Extension of the American Baptist Home Missions Society, will talk.

The Interdenominational Bureau of Architecture is maintained by the Building Committee of the Home Missions Council. The Bureau gives counsel and advice on ecclesiastical architecture, but does not engage In construction work. The Building Committee is composed of executive officers of boards of church extension of 22 leading Protestant bodies in the U. S. and Canada. Its members administer for their respective denominations

‘permanent loan funds aggregating

more than $30,000,000 They also handle other funds given to their churches as gifts. Those in build= ing or remodeling sanctuaries, educational buildings, recreational halls and parsonages. Part of the funds also are used to rescue church property from mortgage foreclosure by non-religious

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PLAN 3-DAY MEAT | PROMOTION HERE

A three-day program to promote merchandising and use’ of meats will be held here Jan. 15-17 under auspices of the National Live Stock and Meat Board. Edward Zink, vice president in charge of trade promotion at the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, announced M. J. Carr of Kingan & Co. is general committee chairman. R. O. Roth, Chicago, National Live Stock and Meat Board specialist, will discuss methods of displaying and merchandising meats at 8 p. m. Tuesday in the World War Memorial. There will be a demonstration of carving meats. An open forum will follow. Among those invited are meat

dietitians in city hospitals, high schools and public institutions, domestic science teachers, stewards in hotels, restaurants and cafes in industrial plants.

Orator Given Diamond Key

Times Special FRANKLIN, Ind. Jan. 11—A .diamond studded Phi Kappa Delta Fraternity key has been presented to Arthur Turner, Franklin College senior elass president, for

outstanding work in oratory and debate. Mr. Turner is president of the local chapter of Phi Kappa Delta and Blue Key, national honor society, and is a member of Alpha Phi Gamma, national - honorary journalistic fraternity. He is a columnist on The Franklin, college newspaper.

Horace ID. Crawford, director of Franklin College’s. journalism department and executive secretary of the Indiana High School Press Association, is author of “Should Canada Join Pan America,” an

CITY RESUMES

EFFORT TO GUT GASOLINE COST

May Substitute Chicago Tank-Car Quotations

% In Specifications.

City officials today studied the possibility of cutting gasoline costs for the second time in three months by revising specifications for bids. The ‘joint purchasing committee of officials yesterday ordered Pur-

chashing Agent Albert H. Losche to determine whether the City could save money by substituting Chicago tank-car quotations for consumers’ tank-wagon prices as the basis for gasoline bid specifications. The possibility of changing the specifications, which the City has used for years, followed the adoption of the joint purchdsing plan which has made possible a $3000 saving in gasoline costs alone this yaer.

Associated Is Low Bidder

The question of using the Chicago quotation arose yesterday when the committee met to decide a low bidder on a four months’ supply of regular gasoline for City departments. The choice of a low bidder was necessitated by the withdrawal of the Indian Refining Co. ‘the original low bidder, On the basis of comparative bid prices, the next lowest bidder to the Indian Refining Co. was the Guayantee Oil Co. Indianapolis, at 11,58 cents a gallon—3 mills above the Indian price. The committee decided, however, to disqualify. the Guarantee concern because its bid was not based on City specifications. The committee then de-. cided that the Associated Service Co.,' Indianapolis, was low bidder .at 11.64 cents a gallon. - The Guarantee Co. had based its bid on Chicago tank-car prices instead of consumer’s tank-wagon Prices as required by City specificaons

Held to Be ‘Truer’ Basis

At the same time, the committee decided to investigate the possibility of using the Chicago figure as a new basis for specifications when the City again advertises for Jom gasoline bids May 1. Leon Desautels of the Guarantee Co. told the committee the tankcar price was a “truer” basis for | bidding than the tank-wagon figure. The Chicago figure is fixed by a highly competitive market, he said, while the tank-wagon price in Indiana is set by the Standard Oil Co. of Indiana, the price leader in this state. Leo F. Welch, Works Board member, affirmed Mr. Desautels’ contention and added that the City should not use the technicality to exclude a low bidder.

Fluctuates Differently

Mr. Desautels also asserted that the Chicage tank-car price, which is listed daily in the Chicago Jour= nal of Commerce, fluctuates in quarters of a cent, whereas con= sumer’s tank-wagon_ prices fluctu= ate in halves of a cent. Schuyler C. Mowrer, attorney for the Associated Co., said that tankwagon prices do not fluctuate as frequently as icago tank-car prices and are comparatively stable, By basing specifications on the Chicago price, he warned, the City would never know from day to day what it would have to pay for gasoline. The consumer’s tankwagon price, he said, has not fluctuated materially for two years. The committee’s decision to disqualify the Guarantee concern was made when Mr. Losche and Albert Walsman, City Hospital business

require all bidders to adhere to its specifications in order to assure

article in the North American Review, a _view, a quarterly magazine.

the gasoline concerns of its good faith. :

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