Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1942 — Page 13

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Williams -Axtell

rr

Wedding Ceremony

- Will Be Read. Sept: 5 in. New Orleans

Vee Iss JANE ROYALL AXTELL has set Sept. 5 as J the date for her. marriage to Lieut. George Elliot

Williams Jr. of New Orleans.”

The wedding will be in

the Trinity’ Episcopal church there. Following the ceremony, a reception for the bridal party and immediate

families ‘will be held at the

home of Lieut. Williams’

parents, Mr. and Mrs. George E. Williams. The bride-to-be is the ‘daughter of Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Robert J. Axtell, formerly of Indianapolis and now of New Orleans, Lieut. Col. Axtell is stationed at Camp Shelby, Miss. -

We, the Women—

Bad Taste at Home Hurts U. S. Morale

By RUTH MILLETT PERHAPS there is nothing so hard on ‘the morale of the ordinary average people. who are working hard, making personal sacrifices, than ‘thé nauseating Bo Hao evidence of plain bad taste that hits them in the

fa ce almost|?

every day. The bad taste of © the movie star who lets her press agent tell how she is helping to win the war by rushing home from her studio © —where she is paid thousands a wee k—to work in her Buth Millers victory garden. The story, of course, is complete with pictures of the star wearing shorts. The bad taste of the 'society-| minded woman who uses volunteer organizations as a means of keeping her name and face constantly before the public. The bad taste of those who talk as though they are making grave sacrifices when all they have been asked to give up so far ‘are a few luxuries, while other women have given up their men and seen. their homes broken wp.

THE BAD TASTE of the patriotic organizations who sponsor picnics

- in the country to which their mem-

bers must drive their cars. .The bad taste of the young men whose pictures appear on the society pages of Sunday papers

as lounging around country club pools.

¥

£4

All those things are in bad taste

A Xand: do more to discourage the or-

. dinary guy and his wife and kids in their serious effort to do all that is asked of them than any amount

of axis propaganda that reaches . them, :

*

~ Parties Honor Helen Jones

‘Miss Helen Jones, whose mar-

riage to Russell Bass will be Sept. 5, will be shonof guest tonight at

a shower given by Miss Vera Morgan, 4451 College ave. On Sunday, a kitchen shower and tea will be given for the bride-to-be ‘by Mrs. John F. Manien, 5891 ‘N. New Jersey st. : Miss Bernice Wire was hostess

L recently at'a dinner and surprise

personal shower at the Riviera club.

Guests attending with Miss Jones were Mrs. Vivian - Ford, Misses Dorothea Bass, - Myra McDaniel, Kathryn Hodapp, Alice Cole, Mari-

,+ lyn Beimfort and Jessie Logan.

Miss Jones, of: Indianapolis, is

: the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wal- , ter Jones, Turon, Kas, and Mr. < Bass’ parents are the Rev. and Mrs.

Bernard W. Bass, 6537 Carrollton

‘Los Angeles and San Diego, Cal.-

‘ave.

“Return From West

Mrs. Leo Neargarder and her hter, Georgia Marie, 2711 N. ( drive, have just returned from a vacation in the west. They

yisited in Albuquerque, N. M., and

Return From Wedding

29 W. Hampton drive, have returned from Bronxville, N. Y, where they attended, the marriage, last Saturday, of their son, Howard Beekley Passel of New York, and Miss Anne Liddon Wonders. The candlelight ceremony was at 7 p. m. at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Wonders, 11 Birchbrook rd., Bronxville. . The Rev. Howard C. Shaffer, assistant pastor of the Reformed church in Bronxville, officiated. 2 t J s The bride’s sister, Mrs. J. Brooks Stewart of Bronxville, was matron of honor and Gene Fenn f New York was best man. The couple will be at home in New York, where Mr. Passel is a physicist with the navy department. He attended John Herron Art school and Purdue university and was: graduated from Butler uni- . versity. He is a member of the Clay club of New York. The. bride, a graduate of Mount Holyoke college, is a member of the Bronxville League for Service.

Sue Manning Is Bride

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD A. WILKINS will live in New York and Rome City, N. Y., following their marriage 'in the former city Aug. 11. Mrs. Wilkins was Miss Sue Manning, daughter of Mrs. Rollo G. Manning, 37 E. Maple rd., and the bridegroom’s mother is Mrs. Josephine Wilkins of Rome City. The bride was graduated from the University of Wisconsin and received her A. M. degree from the University of Pittsburgh. = Mr. Wilkins is a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a former member of the faculty there. He is a member of the American Institute of Mining and Metal-

Institute of Metals and is a fellow in the American Institute of Chemists.

Propylaeum Party

AMONG THOSE making reservations for the monthly evening bridge party at the Propylacum this evening are Mrs. James H. Genung and Miss Anna Spann. Mrs. Almius G. Ruddell also will entertain. - The chairman for the event this month is Mrs. J. Raymond Lynn, 8 ® 2 Miss I. Hilda Stewart, principal of Tudor Hall school, returned today from her home in Keene, N. H., where she has spent the summer. Classes will begin at Tudor Hall on Wednesday, Sept. 16.

Miss Betsy Maynard Is Visitor. Here

Miss Margaret Curle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin E. Curle, has as her house guest Miss Betsy Maynard of New Haven, Conn. The girls are roommates at Skidmore college. . : On Sunday afternoon Miss Curle will entertain with an open house for her guest from 3 to 5 o'clock. There are no invitations. Miss Maynard is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Maynard, formerly of Indianapolis.

‘Pitch-in’ Supper At: 6:30 o'clock this evening, the Ladies’ auxiliary to the. Order of Railway .Conductors .103 will hold a “pitch-in” supper. The hostess will be Mrs. Fred Beem, 5847

All the N ewest

Rockville rd.

MR. AND MRS. H. F. PASSEL,

lurgy Engineers and the British .

Gretty Sielken Gets Red Cross Assignment

Times Special ALEXANDRIA, signment of Miss Gretty Lou Sielken, 340 E. Westfield blvd., Indianapolis, as a Red Cross social’ worker at Ft. Jackson, S. C., has been announced by Frank H. Grayson, eastern director for the Red Cross. Miss Sielken, who recently was appointed to the Red Cross staff, has just completed a special training course given at national headquarters in Washington. Red Cross social workers are sta-

tary camp and naval station at home and abroad. Their duties are to assist service men with welfare problems and help arrange any special aid required by the men themselves or their families at home. Before receiving her appointment,

Miss Sielken was for seven years in

the social service department of the Indianapolis City hospital. She received her A. B. degree from Butler university and attended .psychiatry classes at the Indiana university School. of Medicine.

Beauty—

Older Women’s Makeup Needs To Be Subtle

By ALICIA HART Times Special Writer IN THIS WEATHER every woman should apply makeup sparingly and carefully color-selected, and the older woman should be doubly sure about that color. Her makeup should be much more subtle than her daughter’s. Unless she has naturally brilliant coloring, which is very unusual, she will avoid the brilliant hard reds, the exotic brown overtones that the young woman finds so flattering. She will go in for light, softer tints. Some of the new, fashionable light makeups with bluish tones might be the best choice, particularly for the woman with white or bluish gray hair. She might choose powder which does not match her complexion exactly, but has rosy undertones to compensate her loss of natural rosiness. : Naturally, the older woman must avoid fiery rouged cheeks and lips lavishly coated with- lipstick. Her cheeks and lips should be tinted— not painted. Blotting the lips with tissue after putting on the lipstick is a must. She must cultivate that “not a hair out of place” look. 2 -8 2 A WISP of hair straggling over the forehead can be very fetching in a young girl with an upturned nose. But it will make an older woman look .pldin dowdy, and, worse yet, terribly weary and worn. The mature person’s attractiveness is in direct proportion to her neatness and careful grooming. These say, and emphatically, that her years rest lightly on her physique ‘and that her spirit is just as much alive as her mind—which is very likely to be more alert, acute; active

her lifetime. She should not belie it by careless, too-tired-to-bother habits of dress and grooming.

Va., Aug. 28—As-|

tioned at every United States mili--

and competent than ever before in|"

Mr. and Mrs. Pete Petran, before.

of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. F.

Cross, also of New Castle. 3. Before her marriage July 26,

Mrs. J. Louis Wolfe. 6. Mrs. Forrest D. Carroll was

1. Mrs. Marvin A. James was Miss Katherine Petran, daughter of

her marriage July 10 in the Mars

Hill Baptist church. The bridegroom, son of Mrs. Nellie James, is in the naval service at Treasure island, San Francisco. (Porter photo.) 2. A July 3 wedding ceremony united Miss Martha L. Lewis and E. F. Cross. They are at home in the Ambassador apartments. Parents G. Lewis, New Castle, and Howard (Ramos-Porter photo.)

Mrs. James Asman was Miss Helen

C. Kafoure, daughter of Mrs. Julia S. Kafoure and Philip Kafoure. The at home address is 713 E. 23d st. 4. Mrs. Lloyd Conway was Miss Marcella Mock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Mock of Danville, Ind, before her wedding April 8. Mr. Conway is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Durward C. Conway. 5. Mr. and Mrs. John Sampson, Gilman, Iowa, have announced the marriage, on July 25 in St. Louis, of their daughter, Clare, to Pvt. Malcolm Eberhart, son of Clark Ennjs Eberhart of Indianapoils. bridegroom is stationed at Scott field, Ill, and Mrs, Eberhart is at home Here temporarily with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and (Photoreflex photo.)

(Dexheimer-Carlon photo.)

The

Miss Leona Kozakiewicz before her

marriage on July 9 at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kozakiewicz. The couple is at home on N, Irwin st. Mr. Carroll's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lyeurgus. Carroll. (Photoreflex photo.)

Or oan tions

business session.

luncheon Tuesday.

Pennsylvania st. Edward S. Ludlum are in charge of luncheon arrangements. Honor guests at the meeting will be Miss Elizabeth C. Wivel, new superintendent of. nurses at the hospital; Miss Francis Ott of

ate nurse; Mrs. Hezzie B. Pike, president of the W. D. C.; Mrs. George E. Maxwell, chairman of the community welfare department, and Mrs. Charles Meyers. The first regular meeting of the auxiliary has been scheduled for the first Tuesday in October,

Henry F. Ostrom and Mrs. Agnes Todd will be speakers at the monthly meeting of the SEVENTH WARD WOMEN’S: REPUBLICAN club Tuesday. Members will meet at the home of Mrs. Jack Crossman, 2442 N. Pennsylvania st. ; Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames Frank E. Gaines, Gladys Chapman, Hazel Short and Miss Frances Fads. =

The “annual picnic of the LADIES auxiliary to the INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MACHINISTS will be held Sunday at the summer home of Mrs. Alice Simon, 75th st. and Keystone ave. Dinner at 1 p. 'm. will be followed by games and a

card party.

‘Made in America’. The world’s’ largest producer of Parmesan cheese, originally an Italian type, is Jocated in Wiscon-

sin.

] CLEAN WASHED AR ) RETURNS .

preventing the exchange of

x» ICE CONDITIONING | CHAMBER

WASHED AIR

The film of water which forms oh melting ICE gives the : ‘moisture that is necessary for the preservation of per- _ ishable foods. This same film of water coming in con“act with the warm air that rises from the food com- © parement . .. WASHES it clean of food ‘odors, thus 3

food flavors.

Franklin, the hospital’s first gradu-|

[next

| Would you {to do?

: Ee . i Fol fithout aavice: ina Te

City Hospital Auxiliary to Lunch Tuesday and Plan Year's Work; Henry Ostrom Will Address Club

Among events planned by organizations are a luncheon, picnic and| -

Plans for the year’s work of the CITY :HOSPITAL auxiliary to the COMMUNITY WELFARE DEPARTMENT of the Woman's Department club will be made by the organization following ‘a noon

Mrs. E. A. Carson will entertain the group at her home, 5456 N. Mesdames Merritt E. Woolf, John F. Engleke and

girl 16 years old. I have been going with a boy of 18. Although he told me he didn’t want to go steady with any girl we dated two nights a week. On other nights I would see him with other girls, some who didn’t have very good names. ! I canceled our last date for a very good reason and he hasn't asked me for another. I have gone out with other boys but find that I do not care as much for them as I do for him. I love him or at least I think I do. If I don’t love him why would I think of him at all? I go around with his sister a lot. Please tell me should I go with him again? If I should how can I get him back? Should I continue to visit his sister as usual? CONSTANT READER.

Answer—There is no reason for you to give up your friendship with a boy’s sister because you have stopped going together. The fact that you still think of him is not

| necessarily indicative of love.

After all, your pride is. involved

land pride is a powerful thing. Don’t

try to get him back. Let him do the

| trying, if any. And give yourself

time with the other boys. Someone exciting may show up. sed ss = 8 DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am 17 and like a boy of 19. He joined the and has to go for examination week. I know I'll miss him very much. I think he likes me as

much as I like him, although he ‘| has never kissed me. He has. held {my hand and put his arm around {me but that is all

pos. ey Tun Spon Sostin s by flirting openly, but I am

| chairman for the Hanover chapter.

‘| night; business, marital and other

Thealth inventory should . include

4 vhat bashful myself. If hei < goes away I'll only have his letters ‘| and that isn’t much when you're in|: love. I don’t want to appear too ; | forward or I might. lose his respect.| 33d please advise me what EF

Alpha Delta Pi Rush Luncheon

Is Tomorrow

~ Rushees of the Hanover college and Indiana university chapters of Alpha Delta Pi sorority will be guests at a luncheon tomorrow noon in the Louis XIV room of the Claypool hotel. Mrs. Max Foster, chairman ‘for the event, will be assisted by Mrs Paul Edwards, Mrs. Joseph P. Cummings, ‘Miss Edith Seitz and Miss Dorothy Woods. Music will be provided by Mrs. A. R. Madison, vocalist, and Mrs. F. F. Mills, violinist. Favors engraved with the Greek letters, Alpha Delta Pi, will be presented to the guests. Among those attending will be Indianapolis alumnae and active members of the sorority, Miss Vickie Stevens, rush chairman for the Indiana chapter, and Miss Mary Bunting ‘of Philadelphia, rush

Miss Stevens has just returned from northern Indiana where she attended several rush parties held in Gary and Hammond. Miss Bunting will be the guest of Miss Doris Mulford, Hanover chapter president.

Health— Health ‘Audits’ Help Build a Sound Old Age

By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Writer START AN ANNUAL. health audit at 40, if you want to be healthy at 80. Health audits alone, of course, cannot insure that you will live to be 80 years old or that you will be ‘healthy in your old age. But they are the keystone of the arch if you are building for a healthy old age, says Dr. Edward G. Stieglitz, consultant on gerontology in the national institute of health, U. S. public health service.

No one would try to run a business for 80 years without annual or semi-annual audits and inventories. It is only good sense to follow this practice in trying to run successfully the most important business of your life and health, If you have ever made an inven-| tory or helped with one in your office or factory or store or even in your own home, you know that it is a time-consuming process. Similarily, a health inventéry may consume sonie time. It is not just a matter of dropping into the doctor’s office at noon and having him take your blood pressure and listen to your heart. To make a useful .inventory, the doctor needs time for a thorough physical examination. : 2 8.2 EQUALLY as important as the physical examination is an inventory of your living habits. This includes discussing how much and what you eat, how much water you drink, how rhuch sleep you get each

domestic problems. Health implies not only freedom from disease but reserve capacities for additional strain. The way an automobile motor idles at the curb does not tell much about how it will perform on a steep grade. The same is true of your heart. How it behaves after climbing stairs is as important as how it behaves when you are lying oa the doctor's examining table. So part of your

stress procedures to determine your reserve capacities. On the basis of the health inventory, you and your doctor can ‘make intelligent plans for your business of living for the next year.

Berry-Beggs Rite Read Wednesday

The marriage of Miss Barbara Beggs to Lieut. Robert Keith Berry

| Latin-Amefican |

F ellowships

: Winners to Study at: Indiana University

Times Special fs BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Aug, 28.

1 Miss Olga. Cervantes de. Maria. of 1 Mexico City and Miss Elza Marques ‘1 |of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, ‘will ‘re- | ceive the two Latin-American fel-

lowships maintained at Indiana university by the Indiana Federa-

| tion of Clubs. Miss Marques held a

similar fellowship at the university last year and has been reappointed for the coming year, Each of the fellowships has a value of $600, according to Prof. Mabel M. Harlan, chairman of the joint federation - university committee on awards. They were established last year by the I. F.C. to further friendly relations with Latin America.

To Study Science:

versity to study biological science, Miss. Harlan said. She plans to specialize in bacteriology and take some jwork in nutrition. She has done work at the National Polytechnic Institute of Mexico and has had practical laboratory experience. Miss Marques, a pianist, ‘completed work for her master’s: degree in the’ I.U. School of Music last year and will continue graduate work in the music school this year. Under the program last year, Miss Katherine Lenore Morgan of Bloomington, a graduate of the university, studied the Spanish language and culture in Mexico and Miss Marques came’ to the University.

® » 8 The war service department of

‘| the Indiana Federation of Clubs

went “all out” yesterday in reorganizing its various committees to eliminate duplication of effort and to increase efficiency. Committee chairmen met in conference:at the Columbia club. Mrs. George Jaqua, department chairman, pointed out that many women were confused by: their instructions because there seemed to be an overlapping of effort. : She told the group that accomplishing war work should be the job of every federated clubwoman in the state and that organization lines should be forgotten in getting this work accomplished. As an oufcome of the meeting, Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren of Whiting, president of the I. F. C., will receive a recommendation that. presidents of county federations take on the job of war service chairmen in their respective localities. The chairmen themselves were asked to urge women in their respective communities to aid with civilian defense in any. way possible

{and to participate in American Red

Cross courses. Shirley Anne Smith Visits Aunt Here

Miss Shirley Anne Smith of Grand Rapids, Mich., was to arrive in Indianapolis today to be the guest of her aunt, Mrs. -C. C. Trueblood, 836 Berk-' ley rd. She will be: a bridesmaid Sunday at the wedof her cousin, Miss Anne Elizabeth Smith, to Maurice Kirkwood in Tipton. Other attendants at the wed- Shirley Smith

ding will be Miss. Ellen Hull of Tip-

ton, maid of honor, and Miss Eliza-

beth Ann Schmidt of Indianapolis, bridesmaid. :

Shower Will Honor Mrs. Hemphel

A personal shower given-Monday night by Mrs. Paul Gentry will honor her sister, Mrs. Lillian Hemphel, whose marriage to Dr. Raymond E. Mitchell will be Sept. 19. The ceremony will be at 10 a. m.

at the home of the bride-to-be’s|

mother, Mrs. Mortimer * Schussler, Southport.

— i

Miss Cervantes will entér the uni-|’

Mrs. Ollie Soles . . . five 5 sons are not enough.

NEW YORK, Aug. 28—Most mothers who had given five of their. six sons to the army coast guard would feel they had done enough for their country,

days a week at war work for Pane

Mrs. Soles, a widow. is: one 110 overall-clad women who wor! at the clipper base. ‘She's in char, of linen supplies on the gian planes that. fiy .to Europe and Africa. Pictures of her five soldier

sorts laundry and counts. blankets and pillows. © ; - Her duties are. housekeeping” ‘on’ a big scale, Mrs.’ Soles says, | ‘but they're necessary to keep the clippers : :

flying. a “And,” she adds, “I've .nevee | elt so worthwhile in my job as I | 90 today? Lt |

F lorists; Make ‘Dish Gardens’

Demands . tor. “dish gardens” for home and school room use ha started :earlier this year, according to members of the Allied Florists association of Indianapolis. A num ber of highly decorative plants are available for ig unique Pottery} containers, They include philodendron, varle ous kinds of ivy, Chinese evergreen, nephytis, plain- green or variega peperomia, watermelon bego: sanseveria, jade plant, various c: and ferns and several kinds small crassulas.’ Some of these grow either in soil or water, Florists will give advice on ape propriate . plants or arrangemen

‘Amateur gardeners are cautioned

over watering is a. more prevalent error than. under-watering, but they, say that ivy requires more water than the others. .

Tri Kappes. § Fi irst Meeting

Indianapolis chapter of Tri Kappa sorority at the group’s first meete ing Tuesday--a luncheon at us home of Mrs. J. Tracy Davis, 1 Blue Ridge rd. The speaker for the meeting will be Miss Jean. Howie of the ls School for Crippled Children. T Kappas moving to the city recen are invited to attend. The assisting hostesses will ‘be Mesdames W. ii Dudley Smith and Mabells. e

The new: officers: are Mrs. Alvis C. Johnson, president; Mrs. J. Kurt

Auxiliary to Lunch

A luncheon bridge will be givem at 12:30.p. m. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Harry Crawford, 232 Berkley

L. S. AYRES & CO.