Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1941 — Page 23
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FRIDAY, SEPT. 2, 1941 : 200 Women Judges and Lawyer. Will Attend Convention Here This Week-End
Lg ~ je expected to attend
Two hundred women judges and lawyers from all over the country
the annual convention of the National Association
- “Women Lawyers which opens here tonight. First event on the conation program, which continues through Monday afternoon, will be a
fet supper tonight at the Columbia Club.
«= Tomorrow the first general session d get under way at 10 a. m. ‘th Mayor Reginald ©. Sullivan gd Fred C. Gause, past president _# the Indianapolis Bar Association, naking the addresses of welcome. ‘Miss Helen M. Cirese, past president, will respond for the group. A business meeting will follow with reports from various officers of the executive committee, regional directors and vice presidents. At 4 p. m. busses will leave for Brown County State Park where * dinner will be served at the Abe | © Martin Lodge. Miss Sally Butler of -- Indianapolis is chairman and Miss Cirese will preside. Speakers will be Judge Florence Allen of the Ohio Circuit Court of Appeals; Hon. - Genevieve Cline of the U.S. Customs . Court; Judge Anna M. Kross, New York; Dean Grace Hays Riley and . Burnita Shelton Matthews of Washington. Sunday noon at a breakfast in the Columbia Club, Col. O. R. Mc- _ Quire, Washington, will speak. Judge Kross will preside.
Albert Stump to Speak
Albert Stump of the Indianapolis Bar Association will be the principal
speaker at the 7:30 o'clock banquet :
Sunday night. At noon tomorrow the Indiana Association of Women Lawyers will be hostess to all visiting lawyers at the ~ Columbia Club. A general session _ will follow from 2 to 4 p. m. Miss Laura Berrien, past president from . ‘Washington, will preside and reports - from the following committee chairmen will be heard: Adele Springer, New York, administrative law; * Mabel Whitesell, Balboa, Long Island, N. Y., American citizenship; Mabeth Paige, Minneapolis, constitution; Mary Bailey, Chicago, criminal law; Emilie .E. Bullowa, New - York, finance; Henriett A. Stone"street, Baltimore, international relations; Grace R. Lewis, Newark, juve- _ nile delinquency; Phoebe C. Munnecke, Detroit, jurisprudence; Judge Lillian M. Westropp, Cleveland, legal education; Felice Cohn, Reno, legisative; Blanéhe B. Bachtenkircher, Chicago, membership; Jean Evans Smith, Chicago, publication; Nell W. Hunt, McComb, Miss., scholarship; Lillian Rock, New York, unauthorized practice of law; Miss. Cirese, Chicago, : uniform laws; ‘Tillie Thompson Heilbron, Philadelphia, youth authority; Coula Psaras, Chicago, grievance committee, and Taura M. Berrien, ‘Washington, equal rights. An open forum will follow. i > A tea in honor of the newly elected officers will close the con- . vention Monday afternoon. Guests will be the house of delegates, officers of the American Bar Association and members of the National Association of Women Lawyers and
the Indiana Association of Women|
Lawyers. - Mrs, Florence Thacker is president of the National Association of Women Lawyers.
BEAUTY
2 8 tJ
Mrs. Irene Faust . . . convention chairman.
Butler Theta Sigs Pledge Six
Six | Butler University women journalists will be pledged formally to Theta Sigma Phi, national journalism organization for women, Monday, Miss Helen Ruegamer, president, has announced. Pledges include Miss Jane Lewis, El Paso, Tex.; Miss Wyoming Robinson, Bridgeport; Misses Virginia Crawford, Mildred Reimer and Elizabeth Meyer, Indianapolis, and Miss Orpha Mae McCue, Hammond. Following the pledge services, plans will be made for weekly apple sales and the organization’s razz banquet, all-coed dinner for outstanding Butler women. ) On Tuesday, 12 junior women will be initiated Into Chimes, junior women’s honorary organization. Miss Magnolia DeHart is chairman of the initiation services. The women to be honored include the Misses Jane Lewis, Betty Krueger, Phyllis Hadden, Jean Buschmann, Mary Janet Mummert, Kathyrn Parrish, Sally Steinbaugh, Suzanne Masters, Judy Westervelt, Kathleen Shockley, Norvella Judd and Martha Lou Sunderland. Following the ceremony, the new members will be guests at a dinner in the Glenn Martin restaurant.
Party Tonight Will Honor Janet Hill
Showers highlight today’s prenuptial news.
.
Mrs. John Cavosie, 3220 Central ||
Ave., will entertain this evening with a personal shower for her sister, Miss Janet Hill, whose mar-
riage to John Fletcher Ball will be|
Oct. 5 in McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lew Hill and Mr. Ball’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wellington Ball. Mrs. Hill will assist her daughter. Guests will include the bride-groom-to-be’s mother, Mesdames Frank William Ball, George Vickery, Guy Y. Miller, Wallace DeHart, Warren P. Hesler, George Stark,
Ray Sears, Robert Hutton and Don |i§ Underwood and Miss Marjorie:
Pyke. 8 8 8
A miscellaneous shower was given
recently by Mrs. I. A. Moats, 920 ||8 N. Keystone Ave. in honor of Mrs. |ig
Lester Brown Moats, who before her
marriage was Miss Jean Sims,
daughter of Mrs. B. F. Leonard of Monticello. Mrs. Moats was assisted by het daughter, Mrs. Harold A. Haas.
"Guests included -Mesdames Fred | Steward, B. J. Shelton, Raymond | Bea |/&
P. Moats, Wilbur Padgett, Bauser, James Leavitt, Paul Waggoner, George Morton, James Miller and Miss Nancy Haas.
82 8 8
Miss Lois Ruth Liljeblad entertained recently with a surprise miscellaneous shower for Miss Elizabeth Ann Sullivan, whose marriage to Charles Thoren will take place Oct. 3. Guests included Mrs. William Sullivan, mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs. J. A. Thoren, mother of the bridegroom-to-be, and the Mesdames Harold Roberts, Charles Deer and Walles Scott Jr. and the Misses Alma Childers, Garnett Hanna, Hermine Waltz, Betty Riehl, Janet Bledelman, Mary Schmidt, Irene Rinnings, Lucile Chapman, Emily Engelau, Betty Kelly, Mary McIvain, Barbara Moore, Rosalie Snider, Betty Rochford, Patricia Welsh, Betty Carr, Mary Lou Stadler, . Winifred Ubelhack, Dorothy Newkirk and Betty Vermilya. Miss Liljeblad was assisted by her mother, Mrs. E. M. Liljeblad, and her sister, Miss Edna Doris Liljeblad. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Sullivan and Mr. Thoren is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Thoren.
Mrs. Kerr Hostess
Members of Beta Chapter, Alpha Kappa Gamma Sorority, will be guests of Mrs. George Kerr, 1550 Leonard St., at 8 p. m. today.
Taste Better Than Homemade Or ~— Your Money Back Doubled!
By ALICIA HART Times Special Writer
THE MOTHER who wants her daughter to grow up to be a happy woman never tells her that she’s no beauty. Maybe she WILL be one ' later. And if she isn’t, she can be a charmer anyway—if you love her and if you teach her by example as well as by word. ‘After all, it’s belief in oneself that lies underneath all the rules “nr developing poise. And your ry will develop that belief al- + rough “she’s a clumsy little girl now, if you have faith in her. Never say her hair is unruly— : fix it! Do not laugh with em- ' barrassment every time ‘she stumbles in the presence of your guests—forget it until you are alone, then tell Mary how divine‘ly tall she’ll be when she’s nineteen. Or if her awkwardness is marked, just look at her when she enters the room—Ilook at her warmly BEFORE she stumbles.
s » o AFTER ALL, the grace that puts . others at their ease and wins gen- ! uine admiration is largely a matter . of self-confidence. And you can teach Mary manners, posture and
all the other learned graces. 1
You can teach her how to stand straight. with her shoulders flat and chest high, and you can show her the importance of good health, perfect cleanliness, and consideration for cthers. Naturally, she will need critizism too—the child who * does not get it misses it. But criti- - + cism also should be pointed toward her virtues instead of her faults. You flourish on praise, don’t you? So will your daughter. Then, too, remember that chil-
dren often have a strictly practi- |B
cal attitude; they believe what . they see, And if you do one thing and say another—such as letting YOUR hair straggle after ye
. may become painfully shy. Of course, the very worst thing you can do is to allow her older sister
brother to tease her about any
or . physical characteristic:
Church Unit to Hear Mrs. Walter Gingery
i Mrs. Walter Gingery, district sec- . - retary of local church activities and social relations, will be the guest aker at an all day meeting next Thursday in the church parlors of the . Capitol Avenue Methodist Church when the Woman's Society of Christian Service meets.
At 10 a. m. Mrs. Herman Mec-}|
Comb, district officer, will conduct a mission study program. Mrs. Joe Perry, president, will preside
Hostess juncheon will be Mrs. Nell ; Program chairman is Mrs. Charles Pierson. Mrs. R. E. Langston will . | Jead devotions and Miss Patti Cain, f ' harpist, will present a program. : Sunnyside Guild Will Sew Monday ~The Sunnyside Guild Auxiliary the Red Cross will meet from 10 m. Jot BL m. Monday Sib dar
to
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APPLES (Jonathans 7 ... 25¢) JUICY
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