Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1942 — Page 15
oclety—
Dr. and Mrs. Charles F. Voyles Entertain For Daughter and Fiance
DR. AND MRS. CHARLES FRANKLIN VOYLES will entertain at 7 o'clock this evening in the Propylaeum with a bridal dinner for their daughter, Mary Ellen, and her fiance, Harry Richard Blasingham. The wedding ceremony will be at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Voyles’ home. Appointments for the dinner tonight will be in the bridal colors of American Beauty and ash rose. Among the guests will be members of the bridal party: Miss Pris. cilla Ann Blasingham, the prospective bridegroom's sister, who will be Miss Voyles’ only attendant; Bowman Downey, who will serve as best man, and Frank P. Kwett, Canton, O,, and James W. Gibbs of Phila- , felphia, who will be ushers, Also attending the dinner will be Mrs. O. M. Sherman and Miss Louise Sherman, Kansas City, Mo, and Mrs, Henley Eversole, Newman, Ill, and the parents of the bridegroom-to-be, Mr. and Mrs Harry E. Blasingham, Brendonwood.
Series of Riding Tournaments Scheduled
THE FIRST of an annual series of five riding tournaments will be held at the Arlington Stables on Jan. 16, according to announcement by Mis Margaret M. Earhart, who will direct the tournaments. Robert Mannix will serve as judge for the first event, The tournaments following the first will be held on the third Fridays of February, March, April and May, ending before the annual Arlington Horse Show in June. Participants will be young riders from Indianapolis and other Indiana cities. The Junior and Senior Equestrian Clubs of Shortridge High School will have classes in the
tournaments and it is expected that a class will be scheduled for riders from Howe High School.
Dr. Coleman to Address D. A. R.
A TALK ON “ANCESTRAL PAPERS” by Dr. Christopher B. Colemean will be heard by members of the Gen. Arthur St. Clair Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, when they meet at 2:30 p.m. Monday with Mrs. Cleon A. Nafe,
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The Cornelia Cole Fairbanks Chapter of the D. A. R. will hold i its January meeting at 2:30 o'clock next Thursday afternoon at the . Propylaeum. J Mrs. P, A. Hildebrand will review “Hatching the American Eagle" (Barnhill). Hostesses for the afternoon will be Miss Marguerite li Dice, Mesdames Frank B. Stalnaker, Logan Hall, Paul White and " Russell Byers. » » ® » » A business meeting at 2 p. m. will precede the program presented A’ at 2:30 o'clock for the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, D. A. R, ¢ hext Thursday at the chapter house. % A quartet from Crispus Attucks High School, directed by Norman flarrifield, will sing, and S. J. Drayton will speak on “The F. B. L and National Defense.” A tea will follow the program.
The Club Calendar
“LITERATURE OF IMPERTINENCE" will be the subject of a paper read by Mrs. Walter 8. Greenough before the Fortnightly Literary Club meeting at 2:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the Propylaeum. " » ” os » »
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burns, Mrs. William C. Bobbs and Mrs. Martha M. Selfridge are members of the supper committee for The Portfolio Club’s meeting next Thursday night in the clubrooms at the Propylneum. The program feature will be a talk on “Norway and Sweden” by Charles Yeager, ” 4
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The next meeiing of the Civic Theater's Backstage Club will be on Jan, 25 at the theater and will be followed by a program of
or i planned by a committee headed by Miss Fanchon
A Group of Men's Ayreshire, Varsity Town and Kuppenheimer Suits reduced
from stock . i vine. 23.85 to 43.83
A Group of Men's Topcoats and Overcoats reduced from stock.... 23.85 to 69.85
—MEN’S CLOTHING, SECOND FLOOR
Knox and Ayreshire $5 Hats, Broken Sizes, rBOUESE $0 wiviiiicoiii 3.63
Men's Terry Cloth Mules, soft soles. Brown, white, blue, wine. Sizes 6 to 12.. Pr. 68¢
Men's $5 Burke Oxfords, discontinued styles, broken sizes, colors «..cvvivocese. 3.88
Men's $6.95 Super-Six Shoes, just 28 pairs. Broken sizes, discontinued styles... $.98
$6.95 Super-Six Corrective Type Shoes. Blazk kid and calf only. Sizes T40 1 in groupies isscesenssece 4.93
$8.95 Strate-Eight Shoes. Discontinued styles, broken sizes ..........00.s
—MEN'S HATS AND SHOES, SECOND FLOOR
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Young
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icy waves curl over their ankles.
sible if they were swathed in the fur coats or ski suits such as Miss O'Reilly helped them into when they met in Central Park on bright days under a blistering midsummer sun. Ahead of Seasons It's all in the day's work. Miss OReilly is a commercial photographer, the youngest girl in the business. And she has to keep several jumps ahead of the seasons when she’s taking fashion photographs. The models are the girls whose pictures we see in the magazines, looking collegiate in a lighthearted way as they face the wind in tailored tweeds and furs. Of the thousands who see these pictures and yearn to be wearing the coats, only the girls themselves know how the sweat oozed all over them under soft pelts of beaver, lamb and oppossum while the August sun beat down. “Photography is fine work for a girl. I doesn't seem fair that men had a monopoly on it for so many
‘|years,” Madeleine O'Reilly said. “If
one has enthusiasm, likes to keep on the move, likes to follow the races and be ahead of the fashions, I can’t imagine a more delightful job. The only drawback is lugging heavy equipment around. I usually get along without much of that and when it must be used I have a boy
* |to carry it.” On the floor in her
Lexington Ave. studio was a kit she was packing for a trip to upstate New York. There's a white painted house with Colonial pillars up there that she considers ideal background for summer fashions. Models to Wear Linen “We hope it won't be awfully cold, for the girls will be outdoors in gingham and linen dresses, things that will be in the stores next spring,” she said. “All we have to worry about is to keep the faded grass and shrubbery out of the picture.”
Studied at Art School
At midsummer in Central Park she has to be equally careful to keep away from green grass and trees. Her favorite spot there is a rocky knoll on the Fifth Ave. side near 70th St. “Place a girl at the peak of that rock in ski boots, pants, sweater, jacket, cap, heavy mitts on her hands and skates slung over one arm, and for all the picture tells she might be in the wilds anywhere. The great sweep of sky background does the trick.” Miss O'Reilly prepared for her job by painting water colors and oils for two years in art school, then a year in photography school, getting ideas on composition into her head. “It isn’t enough to be uninhibited,” she said, “to make people do what you want them to do, so that you and not they will be controlling the picture. Or to slosh through mud and climb fences in a hurry at the
program for the Woman's Rotary Club dinner at 6:30 oa. Monday
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Photographer Outruns Seasons, Posing Models In Bathing Suits in Winter
By SALLY MACDOUGAL : Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Jan. 2.—Girls who go out for a day's work with Madeleine O'Reilly are sure to be pretty uncomfortable until the job is done. During these chilly days on the beaches they are lucky not to get pneumonia, for she makes them go barefooted in bathing suits, while
Madeleine O'Reilly
To outsiders who watch the performance, it would look more sen-
Jewish Women Plan Defense Program
“Buy a Bond Today” will be the title of a playlet to be presented by members of the Indianapolis Section of the National Council of Jewish Women at their meeting at the Kirshbaum Center Monday at 2 p. m, The theme of the meeting will be “Our National Defense.”
A representative from the Indianapolis Naval Armory will talk on “Know Your Navy.” The program has been planned by Mrs. George Frank and Mrs. Herbert Sudranski.
Mrs. Sultan Cohen will preside and Mrs, Charles Efroymson will have charge of the defense bond booth.
Taking part in the playlet will be Mesdames Louis Segar, Louis Markun, Jacob Weiss and Henry Silver. Following the program, tea will be served in the lounge.
Churchwomen
Will Hear Talk On Alaska
Mrs. Holden M. LeRoy, who for several years was a teacher in the Sheldon Jackson Presbyterian School at Sitka, Alaska, will speak on her experiences at the school Wednesday at the 2:30 o'clock meeting of the Woman’s Missionary Society of the Second Presbyterian Church. She also will speak in connection with the missionary study book, “Land of Challenge.” Mrs. Fermor S. Cannon, 4235 N. Pennsylvania St, will be hostess, aassisted by the Mesdames Myron Harding, J. E. Seybert, C. M. Brosey and Paul W. Huddleston. Miss Kathryn McPherson will lead the devotions and Mrs. H. E. Barnard will preside.
G. O. P. Group To Install
The Seventh Ward Woman's Republican Club will install officers Tuesday following a 12:30 o'clock birthday luncheon at the home of Mrs. Clarence R. Martin, 2027 N. Délaware St. Miss Elizabeth Waddle will install Mrs. Ethel R. Dennis, president; Miss Hattie Benefiel, vice president; Mrs. Frank E. Gaines, secretary, and Mrs.J. W, Crossman, treasurer. The new executive board includes the Mesdames H. Dale Brown, Jessie Boyer, Bernice Culley, Minnie Byers and Hezzie B. Pike.
for the meeting, include Mesdames
James F. Bailey, Boyer, Pike, Lyman Thompson and Miss Waddle.
Dorothy Ellis Will
| Teach at Marott
The Marott Hotel announces that Mrs. Dorothy Ellis, who has been director of the Block's Bridge Forum for the past five years, will conduct bridge activities in the Marott’s clubrooms beginning Monday, Beginners classes will be held
.|Monday afternoons and duplicate ‘|games on Tuesday evenings and
Wednesday afternoons. The advanced classes will meet on Friday afternoons. - Defense stamps will be awarded as prizes.
Storage Bins
The Navy dusts its
vegetable bins placed Shao to. Keep] brown
Ruth Jones to
Be Wed in Ft. Wayne
Reception Will Be at Wayne Hotel
in dusty rose. She will colonifll bouquet. The bridesmaids will wear go
colonial bouquets. They will be Miss Doris Cline who will wear yellow, and Miss Jeanette Leeper, who will be in blue. > The small flower girls, nieces of the bride, will be Ann Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Jones, Indianapolis, and Phyllis Franklin, daughter of, the matron of honor. They will wear blue taffeta dresses made like those of the other attendants.
Brother Best Man
The bridegroom's brother, Ralph Brighten, Buffalo, will be his best man. Ushers will be brothers of the bride, Marvin Jones and Ralph Jones. At the reception Mrs. John Brooks, Vincennes, and Mrs, Iliff Jones, an aunt of the bride, will pour. - When Mr. and Mrs. Brighten leave for San Diego, where they will make their home, the bride will travel in a beige suit with contrasting accessories. The bride attended Hanover College and Mr, Brighten was graduated from the Indiana Technical School in Ft. Wayne.
We, the Women Sure Ways Not To Get That - New Job
By RUTH MILLETT NO MATTER what kind of job you are trying to get, there is one rule to remember. If you want the job, ACT like you want it. That rule sounds almost too obvious to mention, yet it isn't gt all
unusual for a girl who really wants a certain job to give the impression of not caring S whether she gets it or not. She does so by making one of the following mise takes : Saying to a prospective em - ployer over the telephone, when he names 10 Miss Millett ©'clock as atime for an interview, “Couldn’t T come at such-and-such a time instead; I had planned to do so-and-so at 10.” Then she names some personal errand that sounds trivial to the employer. Arriving late for the interview or for the first day’s work. Showing considerably less interest in the job than in trying to find out just how hard the job is going to be. Taking a “What have you got to offer me?” attitude instead of a “This is what I can offer you” approach. \ Bragging of a job offer she recently turned down because the prospective employer expected entirely too much work for what he was willing to pay. That is bound to irritate another employer, who naturally sees the situation from an employer's point of view. Saying, “I guess I could” instead of “Yes, I could” to the question, “Could you start to work next Monday?” 8 # Md ATTEMPTING to end the interview, instead of waiting for the employer to give the signal that it is over. Asking what time it is when the
interview is finished, thereby giving
other things more important in her life than landing a job. Forgetting to thank the employer for granting her an interview. Any one of those mistakes is enough to make an employer think, “I guess she doesn’t want this job very badly, And there are several other girls who do.”
Matching Colors
When planning a monochromatic color scheme, you use the different tints and tones of the same color to achieve harmony. If blues are your choice, don’t mix the redblues with the yellow-blues. The same holds true when different
light and dark mahogany are to be together you would use
woods are used. For example, when|
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William Woods Students to Be Entertained
Miss Peggy Blakeslee, daughter of Dr, and Mrs. C. B. Blakeslee, will entertain students of William Woods College, Fulton, Mo., who are home for the holidays, at a luncheon party tomorrow. The guests will include Miss Florence Emmelman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Emmelman; Miss Bette Helen Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W, L. Jones: Miss Mary Crooks, daughter of Mr. and) Mrs. William D. Crooks, and Miss Mary Virginia Gammon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Gammon.
Plan Defense Classes at
Y. W.C. A.
The Y. W. C. A. will co-operate with the Marion County Civilian Defense Committee in setting up emergency groups and classes for women, Some of the activities already scheduled include a new Red Cross
Home Nursing Class which will meet on Tuesdays at 2:30 p. m. A Red Cross First Aid class will start meeting every Monday from 10 to 12 a. m. A knitting instruction group will meet every Tuesday at 1p m : These classes will be started the first week in February. Those ins terested in joining may enroll now. A new series on Consumer Problems will start Feb. 5. It will be held on Thursdays at 10:30 a. m. and continue for six weeks. Some of the topics to be discussed will be “What's Happened to Prices and Why?”; “Shopping Hints as to Quality, Weights and Measures”; “Substitutes in Food, Clothing, and Household Supplies”; “Planning Meals for Health”; “Conservation” and “What Can Consumers Do?” The program schedule also will include recreation and relaxation activities.
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High School Group To Dance at Y. W.
The High School Co-Ed Committee of the Y, W. C. A. has issued invitations to a “Winter Wonderland” semi-formal dance for high school students next Friday in the Y, W. gymnasium. Albert Wisecoff’s orchestra will play for dancing from 9 p. m. to midnight. Don Barker of Howe High School heads the committee, assisted by Miss Martha Miller, Howe; Don Wiltsee, Miss LaVonne Innis, Miss Rae Bolen, Pat Jones and Bob Garner, Tech; Miss Pauline Bonnell, Shortridge; Miss Mary Burks, Manual Training; Miss Rose Lushoff, Miss Louise Smith and Bill Smock, Washington, and Miss Alberta Hensley and Miss Myrtle Eibling, Beech Grove.
Storing Vegetables
The Navy's vegetable bins have doors near the bottom so that the
Mrs. Merritt E. Woolf heads the
Founders and charter and life members will be honored at a luncheon on Jan. 30. 'Phi Beta music fraternity will present “The Flying Dutchman” (Richard Wagner) with Mrs. Hal Purdy as commentator. Mrs. Ralph I. Thompson will be chairman with Mrs. Purdy as vice chairman, The Applied Education Section of the American Home Department will hear a talk by Dr. Albert Mock of Butler University at its meeting on Jan. 13 with Mrs. W. C. Bartholomew. Dr. Mock will discuss “The Education of Women in Indiana.” The Department plans a musical program featuring Miss Ruth Edwards, violinist, at its meeting on Jan, 28. Neal Ireland, business secretary of the Y. M. C. A, will dis5M Fine Art of Living with Folks.”
Art Department Schedule
A. Reid Winsey of DePauw University’s art department will discuss “Modern Art” before the Art Department Monday. The Ten O'Clock will hear a talk on “Brilliant Birds—Pablo Picasso and and Henri Matisse” by Mrs. Helen Talge Brown on Wednesday in the home of Mrs. Hugh J. Baker. Mrs. Charles T. Hanna will talk on “We of Today’—Pierre Bonnard, Eduard Vouillard, Maurice Utrillo and Marie Laurencin at the Jan. 21 meeting in Mrs. Baker's home. The Community Welfare Department will be hostess to the general membership on Jan, 21, A panel discussion of “Know Your City” will be lead by Mrs. Maurice B, Eppert. Mrs. R. A. Miller will be reservations chairman. The Monday Guild will hear a talk by Mrs. Blackmore Adams on “Baffinland” Jan. 26. Mrs. Baker and Mrs. Harry J. Baker will be hostesses for the social hour to follow.
Talks on Recreation
R. M. Kriebel of the U., 8. Department of Agriculture will discuss “Recreational Values of Our Landscape” Jan. 23 for the Garden Department. Mrs. W. D. Keenan will review “Windswept” (Mary Ellen Chase) Wednesday at the Book | Hour of the Literature and Drama Department. Mrs. Fred L. Pettijohn, drama chairman of the Indiana Federation of Clubs, will be the honor guest at the meeting to follow. Mrs. Leo K. Fesler will present Mrs. Athelia Sutcliffe Makeson in an interpretive reading of “Romance” (Sheldon). The musical program will feature music from the opera “Mignon.” A dessert luncheon and bridge will be given at the clubhouse next Friday. Mrs. Bartholomew and Mrs. Louise B. Pohlman are reservations chairmen. The art department is sponsoring the event. Mrs. Hezzie B. Pike is the Department chairman. Members of the club will participate in the 18th annual Hoosier Salon, Jan. 17 through 31, in Block’s auditorium.
Mothers’ Club Will Hear Book Reviews
Mss, F. M. Partlowe will review “My Mother Is a Violent Woman” and “My Father Is a Quiet Man” Tuesday following a‘ buffet luncheon of the Delta Tau Delta Mothers’ Club in the fraternity’s chapter house, 423 W. 46th St. Tommy Wadleton, author of the books, will be an honor guest and will answer questions about the books at the discussion to follow. Mrs, Robert H. White will be the luncheon chairman, assisted by Mesdames Myron Harding, Silas Carr, R. E. Langston, Hérman Taylor and Clair Curry.
Propylaeum Supper
The monthly buffet supper of the Propylaecum Club Sunday evening at the Propylaeum will be followed
oldest vegetables can be used first.
Judge Curtis G. Shake.
\
by a talk on “New Harmony” by
January Will Be Busy Month For Woman's Department Club; Dr. Mock to Speak Jan. 13
NN Members of the Woman's Department Club will have a busy month, . | judging from the organization's January calendar, The board of direc . |tors will meet on Jan. 12 and on Jan. 14 members will hear a talk on “Preparing for Tomorrow” by Dr. O. P, Kretzman,
committee for the social hour pro-
gram and tea scheduled for Jan. 16. Mrs, John M. Williams and Mrs. Carl J. Weinhardt will be co-chairmen.
Phi Mu Group Meets Monday
A “Games and Fun” Party will be held by the Indianapolis Phi Mu Alumnae Association at 7:30 p. m, Monday in the home of Mrs. B. W. Whaley, 916 Campbell Ave, Mrs. Lawrence IL, Clark, presi dent, will conduct a short business meeting preceding the party. Assisting Mrs. Whaley will be the Mesdames Raymond Toler, Charles O. Peake, H, W, Olcott and Miss Dorothy Forsyth.
Soup Kettle
Soup is poured from a spigot near the bottom of the Navy’s mammoth soup kettles to avoid surface grease.
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