Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1940 — Page 9

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PAGE 9 Miss Haramy to Talk

Miss Katrina Haramy will speak on “The Women of Palestine” at a dinner for Indianapolis church

clubs of business women given by the University Park Christian

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Clin Hg ALL ABOUT BABIES

| (Eighth of a Series) culosis. Coughing,

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1940 Luncheon and B. P. W. Guest

Initiation on

St. Mary’s Academy Prom at Antlers

The Junijor-Senior Prom of St. Mary's Academy will be held at Hotel Antlers from 9 p. m. to 12

Hospital Trend Outlined for

sneezing or spitting of such individuals in the

Lodge Calendar

0. E. S. Auxiliary to Meet on Friday.

A dinner, a card party, initiation and a luncheon fill the lodge calendar for the remainder of the week. GOLDEN RULE CHAPTER 413 ORDER OF THE EASTERN STAR, will hold initiation services Friday at 8 p. m. at the Masonic Temple, North and Illinois Sts. A social hour will follow. Mrs. Myrtle D. Irby, worthy matron, and Walter Dorsett, worthy patron, will preside.

Mrs. Zula Gaumer, 619 Orange St, will be hostess for a meeting of the AUXILIARY OF NAOMI| CHAPTER 131, O. E. S, at 2:20] DP. m, Friday. Mrs. Fannie sfein- | metz is president.

The PAST NOBLE GRANDS! AUXILIARY OF PROGRESS RE-| BEKAH LODGE will meet at 8

p. m. today at the home of Mrs | Hazel Gillis, 1301 N. Pershing Ave. |

The 1935 MATRONS MARION COUNTY, O. E. S, hold a formal dinner at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Canary Cottage. Special guests will be Mesdames Hazel Thompson Coats, Josephine | Brown, Mona Thomas and Miss Carrie Mae Huntington. |

will |

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A dinner and card party will be sponsored by the campaign and finance committees of POCAHONTAS COUNCIL 350 tonight at | the Red Men Hall, North St. and! Capitol Ave. | The card party will follow the! dinner served from 5 to 7:30 p. m. Co-chairmen for the event are Mrs. Mamie Echols and Mrs. Mamie Ray. Assisting them are Mesdames Gertrude Campbell, James Nichols, Bessie Voyles and Clara Duesing.

Mrs. Charles Hartzler, 823 N. Rosart Ave, will be hostess at a 12:30 p. m. luncheon Friday for the LADIES’ AUXILIARY OF THE ORDER OF RAILWAY CONDUCTORS 103.

The KITCHEN BAND OF THE WOMEN OF THE MOOSE will meet at 8 p. m. tonight in the Ladies’ Clubrooms at Moose Hall. Mrs. Kathryn Hansford, band leader, will be in charge. The Child Care and Training Committee will sponsor a card party at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in Moose Hall. Mrs. Hazel Postma is chairman The all chairmen ecard partv will be at 8 p. m. tomorrow in Moose Hall. Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, senior regent, is general chairman.

BRIGHTWOOD AUXILIARY ORDER OF THE EASTERN STAR. will have a covered dish luncheon and guest day meeting tomorrow noon at the Veritas Masonic Temple. 3350 Roosevelt Ave. Mrs. Ida Schaub will be hostess.

| files”

OF |

Church Guild |

Prizes Awarded White Cross Groups. |

Trends in hospitalization from ancient to modern times were outlined by Dr. Roy Ewing Vale, pas(tor of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, at the eighth annual lunch{eon of the Methodist White Cross {Guild yesterday at the Columbia | Club. “The base of the White Cross is public support,” said Dr. Vale. “The last is vour function and uo one | can deny that this hospital has a] firm and enduring base.” | Honors were awarded to eight {chapters of the Guild and to one| individual worker — Mrs. Gavin/ | Bruce, “Queen of Mending” —at the | luncheon, attended by 600 members. | Mrs. Carl A. Ploch was elected! president for the coming year.

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This caricature of Dr. Caroll Leja Nichols was made by William Auverbach-Levy, -vhose cartoons appear as illustrations of “Proin the New Yorker. Dr. Nichols, psychiatrist of New York, will speak tomorrow night at the Gets Trophy Permanently

annual guest day meeting of the | ‘The gold cup, first prize for serv-| Business and Professional Wom- |ice, went to Tabernacle Presbyterian | en's Club at the World War Garden Guild for the third succes-| Memorial. |sive year, giving this chapter per-| {manent possession of the trophy.! |Mrs. O. I. Kranz, president, accept-| ed the cup from Dr. John G. Ben-| son, hospital superintendent. | Riverside Park chapter, with Mrs. | William Laufer as president, re-

Democrat Club To Hold Party ‘ceived the silver cup, second award. x St. Paul Methodist Church chap- |

A card party will be sponsored by ter, of which Mrs. Charles S. Stew-! ard is retiring president, also re-| ceived a silver cup as a reward for| having the largest reenta of | Ward Women's Democratic Club 84 nrembership et or lr

8 p. m tomorrow in the Zephyr meeting days. Alpha Omicron Ai-| Room of the Hoosier Athletic Club. |, i Mrs. ia Nicholson as | Mesdames Rosemary Smith, Rose- | resident, won a cup for largest inmary Brown, Charles Morrison and crease in membership. PATTERN 128 William Voris compose the commit-|

tee in charge. They will be as- | Complete Most Sewing GAY KIDDIE STYLE sisted by the Soudretng Som New Jersey Street chapter, wit IN TWO VERSION ps TO xe upd Wi Mes. Anna F. Pawling as president, | ® ES, ; © won recognition for completing the] ; liam Ward, Leland Arnold and jargest quantity of sewing. This] Pasion. enters through the nursAnna Heck, euchre; Mrs. Eunice chapter has won honors. for the erV door in this piquant style that Garvin and = Mrs. 3dna Allen, nest sewing every year since the makes either a dainty frock or a WT NS er] Datel bi Ns oie Vi gv {merry sun-dress. Claire Tilden has arie Se, Tou, S. ainfie and Capitol Avenue!geci ; oR i George Rooker and Mrs. Rollie chapters tied for second place } [Senigned Be in panelled, Woolery, prizes. amount of sewing and the Mother | ong lihes—s0 oming to small TD | Guild was in third place. Tabernacle busy-bodies; so easy for , : Garden Guild made the most sur- mothers to stich up. Let the Sew- , » y y Guild to Hear Review cai dressings, Brondways chapter ing Guide show just what to do, and N A A AYA was second an race ethodist| you ean make both styles in no time At C hut ch 1 OMOrTrowW church chapter was third. {at alll The top is cut in decorative “Homeland Harvest” (Limouze) will be reviewed bv Mrs. Leonard

Mrs. Bruce, mending queen, topped | points, front and back, and a belt all contenders with a record of may come from each side-front to Pearson before the Women's Guild of the First Evangelical and Re-

formed Church tomorrow at 1:30 at the church, E. 10th St. and Oakland Ave, The all-dav meeting of the Guild

the wavs and means and entertainment committees of the Second

en, putting in 594 hours of service with its sleeves and all and earning 35 Tiny Tim beds. reward was a sewing kit filled with cut in one piece, eliminating extra candy. seaming. You may use either spir[ited contrast or matching fabric,

but be sure to have dainty lace edg-

vokes

mending 9117 pieces of surgery lin-!tie in a perky bow behind. Just see!

Her how simply the frock is designed, |

will open at 10 a. m. with a business session followed by a covered dish luncheon at noon. New officers of the group are Mrs. Charles Young, president; Mrs. C. J. Russom, vice president; Mrs. R. R. Cook, secretary; Mrs. James A. Johnson, financial secretary, and Mrs. Avon Foster, treasurer.

{dianapolis

Open House Tonight Local 1070 Auxiliary of the InRailways will hold an open house for members and famalies at 8 o'clock tonight at Castle Hall. The committee includes Mrs. Thelma Graham, president; Mrs. Julia Hutchinson and Mrs. Lora Tillery.

ing. The sun style, erisp and freshlooking with ruffled trim, omits the yokes and sleeves and uses straps instead. How about selecting cool (dotted swiss, batiste or voile for the frock, and a colorful chambray or gingham for the play-dress? Pattern 128 is cut in children's sizes 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10. Size 6, party-

By RICHARD ARTHUR BOLT, | M. D. DR. P. H. | Secretary, Maternal and Child | Health Section of American | Public Health Association. UBERCULOSIS is a communicable disease to w! ‘ch chil dren are very susceptible, but children do not inherit tuberculosis. A | very few babies have been born with | tuberculosis acquired from the mother during pregnancy, but this lis not heriditary in the strict sense lof the term. Tuberculosis is usuallly acquired by children after birth | by contact, direct or indirect, with those who have the disease. It may |also be acquired by the drinking of {milk from tuberculous cows and from other infected foods. The | tasting of food before giving it to children, using the same spoon, is especially to be condemned. The source of infection may be {difficult to determine. Sometimes |a nursemaid or a relative with unsuspected tuberculosis coming into

| close contact with the haby gives it! Remember that per-|

| the disease. sons with chronic tuberculosis may | have tubercle bacilli in the sputum |and not show any of the usual signs {of the disease. Those persons may | be dangerous carriers and infect the | baby. { .

» ”

LD people with so-called “chronic bronchitis” or “asthma” may actually have tuber-

presence of children may be the source of infection. The bad habit of allowing fond relatives and friends to fondle and kiss the baby has undoubtedly resulted in many cases of infection. One of the most frequent causes of bone, joint and gland tuberculosis in the 18th Century was the drinking of tuberculous milk. Before the days of efficient pasteurization this form of tuberculosis was widespread. The ony safe milk to give to babies and young children is milk that has been properly pasteurized or boiled. os ® »

Y childhood tuberculosis we now mean the first or initial infection with tubercle bacilli. This usually takes place in some of the lymph glands. If the child's resistance is high and no other in-

fectious disease or malnutrition comes in to break down this resistance the tuberculous infection will remain as the childhood type. Resistance may break down, how- | ever, at any time from added infection or from other causes and { the tuberculosis take on the adult or | secondary form in the bones, joints, [lungs and elsewhere. It is important to make an early | diagnosis of tuberculosis in child- | hood.

NEXT—Bright day dawns in |

| battle against deadly pneumonia,

Garden Color Club's Topic | “Color and Design in Gardens,”

| will be the subject of Carl Bolander, | Columbus, O., before the Garden

Department of the Woman's De-|

partment Club at its final meeting of the year at 2 p. m. Friday in the clubhouse. { Mr. Bolander, president of the National Art Hobby Guild, is an | artist, craftsman, teacher, writer, art { lecturer and museum director. | talk will be illustrated with co | slides showing methods of home

| beautifying. Kodachrome slides of!

|the azalea gardens in Charleston, S.

busy C. and the Middleton gardens will]

| be shown. | Mrs. Merritt E. Woolf, chairman {of the Department, will preside. | Hostesses for the tea following the

Thurman A. Gott- | schalk, William I. Hoag, Ira Holmes, E. H. Katterhenry, Stanfield Keeney, Robert Lambert, Edwin L. Lennox. Walter R. Mayer, Robert T. Ramsey, William A. Smith, Boyd W. Templeton, Charles F. Thompson, Jerome H. Trunkey, L. G. Underwood, J. B. Vandaworker, Harry E. Watson, Harris P. Wetsell, and Miss Dorothy Phillips. Mrs. Willis K, Miller and Mrs. Robert M. Bryce will pour.

{by Mesdames

‘Second Ward G. O. P. Tea Scheduled

A Republican candidates tea will | be given by Mrs. Richard B. Hill, !

second ward vice chairman, at 2

p. m. Friday at the Odd Fellow

Hall, Rural and E. 10th Sts. Special guests will include Mrs.

Maude Smith, County vice chair- |

(man, and Mrs. Charles Mann, 11th |district vice chairman. Mrs, M~*y | Schillinger and Mrs. Carl Lich will | pour. Assisting Mrs. Hill will be

His Mesdames Ethel Reinhardt, Mabel | lored Jacobs,

Hazel Knerr and Mary

Roush.

‘Mothers’ Council 'To Elect Friday

| New officers of the

ing at 10 o'clock in the recreation

room of Arthur Jordan Memorial (Hall. Mrs. Robert L. St. Pierre, retiring president, will preside. Mrs. E. C. Rumpler will speak on “Uncle Sam and 1.” Music will be provided by Miss Mary Bell Masterson. Plans for the annual Open House to be sponsored by the | Mother's Council, May 4, will be discussed at Friday's meeting.

p. m. tonight. Denny Dutton's orchestra will play for dancing.” Miss Mary Margaret Aust is general chairman for the event. As-

sisting her are Miss Ruth Ann Alandt, decorations chairman, and Miss Eileen Higgens and Miss Martha Kirkhoff, publicity co-chair men,

| Church Guild at 6:30 p. at the church, 29th St. wood Ave.

Fish Supper Saturday A fish supper will be given by the Men's Bible Class of the Cum-=-berland Methodist Church from 5 to 8 p. m. Saturday in the dining room of the church.

Butle r {program will be Mrs. Bert S. Gadd | Mother's Council will be elected at {and Mrs. Ora Maude Hardy. assisted the monthly meeting, Friday morn- |

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ANOTHER NEW

KROGER SUPER | MARKET

1605 PROSPECT ST.

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SUPER

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dress, requires 1% yards 35 inch fabric and 17% yerds edging; sun(dress, 1% yards 35 inch fabric. | Send orders to Pattern Depart‘ment, Indianapolis Times, 214 W. | Maryland St. Send fifteen cents (15¢) In coins for this pattern. Write clearly size, name, address and style number.

This time get the refrigerator that's

ALWAYS SILENT

SN 4 #5

‘Romance of Glass’ [s Club Subject

Mrs. Frank J. Richmann will speak on “The Romance of old | Glass” at a guest meeting of the, Monday Afternoon Reading Club Monday at the Banner-Whitehill! auditorium. Miss Suron Osler will sing, accompaniect by Mrs. Dorothy Munger, pianist. Mrs. John Hobbs will review the history of the club, of which she is founder. Hostesses will he Mesdames R. Bertram Stokes, John Maltby and | John C. Siegesmund. Mrs. Eli E. Thompson will preside. |

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Lead these letters fom families who

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These are honest, simple, straightforward. They tell why more people every year are changing to the Gas Refrigerator... the only automatic that freezes silently with NO MOVING PARTSI

Mrs. Richardt On Tri Chi Program Mrs. Louise Travis Richardt of the Tourneur Makeup Salon at the Wm. H. Block Co, will speak before members and rushees of Tri Chi Sorority tonight at the home of Miss Betty Dahlstrom, 30 N.| Sheridan Ave. | Mrs. Richardt will talk on “Makeup As an Accent on You,” demon- | strating steps in the application of | cosmetics to a personal advantage.

Hold Card Party Mrs. Carl Moxley and Mrs. Mary | | Baird were co-chairman for a card | party and luncheon held at 12:15! p. m. today by the Christian Moth- | |ers’ Society of the Sacred Heart Church at the Sacred Heart Hall, (1500 S. Meridian St. Assisting with | plans were Mesdames Chris Kunkel. |Fred Sauer, Leo Goebes, Frank Felske and John Moriarity.

3 "Only a few cents a day . . . that’s all it costs to run our refrigerator,” reveals a proud wife, “and this cost doesn’t increase. Another thing . . . we don’t have

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7

ZONE washing . . .

New 1940 Turbelater Model Shown ...

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