Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1942 — Page 11
Mrs. Robert
H. Rkodeamel. % Be 3 ]
Honored at Shower Given’ Tonight =
MRS. ROBERT H. RHODEHAMEL will" be Honor t tonight at a miscellaneous shower given by: Mrs.n Smith Lowe and Miss Marguerite Ellis at. the
s~home, 3208 Ruckle st.
Before her Aug. 8-mar-
to Ensign Rhodehamel, the bride was Miss Emma daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Horace H. Clark. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harley W. Rhode-
nel,
Guests tonight with Mrs. Rhodehamel will be Mesdames Charles
Roland Vornehm, Erwin
Scott, Erle Kightlinger, Keith
and Walter Stone Jr., Misses Mary and Dorothy Black, Mary
ger and Florence Schulz. ® » =
2 8 =
Miss Martha Jo Cantwell will leave Sept. 9 for Hollins college, - f&., to begin her senior year Sept. 17 at the school. En route she Il stop in Atlantic City to visit her father, Capt. James F. Cantwell,
is now stationed there.
Miss Jane Denham left Indianapolis this week-end for Glen I, % Sit her cousin, Miss Georgia Leahy, daughter of Mr.
INDIANAPOLIS ENTRIES in the Ft. Wayne charity horse show this week-end came home with a goodly collection of ribbons. place in the hunt team class went to Mrs. John B. Stokely’s
‘le Sou, Miss Lucy Kaufman’s Demopolis and Miss Mary Ellen Sunset Road. Best le Sou also placed second in the model eight hunter and, paired with Dr. P. O. Bonham’s Sunset 8, placed third in the pairs of hunters class.
Sally SE won second Discs
in the hunter pair class, with
, the Corinthian and, with Alador, the pairs of er classes. | seconds also went to Miss Kaufman’s mount—model middlehunter, handy hunter and hunter stake. Sunset Road was in the green hunter class in which Alador placed third. Third Corinthian class also went to Alador.
itional Ribbon Takers Listed
THREE of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hastings Fiske’s horses received : Kalarama Rita, placing third in the 5-gaited mare class and in the 5-gaited stake; Patience Rewarded, which placed third the 3-gaited saddle under 15.2 and fourth in the ladies’ 3-gaited, ‘Wee Willie which was first in the 3-gaited pair with My Beau, owned by Sue Reeder. My Beau also placed second in the boys and 15 to 18 years and second in the ladies’ 3-gaited classes. ‘Mrs. W. HL. Wemmer’s horses also took several ribbons. With
"Gal, she placed fourth in
the model lightweight hunter;
th Devil's Own, she took second in the hunters under saddle, and h Mr. Somebody, placed second in the Corinthian and fifth in
2 hunter stake.
White Oak, owned by George Sadlier, was third in the handy
, second in the open jump and third in the jumper stake. ‘Dolores Covert was first in the -class- for boys and girls of 12
years. Another Indianapolis winper was Mrs. Alex Metzger
Kirawan Personality was fourth in the junior fine harness Mrs. George M. Bailey, Cincinnati, formerly of Indianapolis, Judged equitation classes for the show.
‘Certainly I own a revolver,” she said, “abut I didn't bring it to New
° The WAACS aren't taught how to shoot, though, and they don’t _|civilian defense will sponsor Friday
‘might tote some sort of deive weapon if they had to walk The English girls carry
Here from Washington for a brief up on recruiting, Director y and her husband, William P. y, former governor of Texe been stopping at the Savoywith their 10-year-old son, i Jessica, who is five, was deft in Washington. Medium-sized, with friendly gray 3 and brownish hair touched by gy, she sat in the rose-filled liv-
and sensible, medium-
well, but a masculine rer at my side mumbled that it
‘no sex appeal. He said no uni-
JRE WAS some confusion “addressing Oveta Hobby. A n called her “Mrs.” Hobby. else referred to her as
r to anything,” she said,
. “It may sound arrogant, . WAACs have more than to my hopes. y love the military routine.
“But I don’t believe that just zg a uniform on a woman change her character,” she
bly the greatest thing they out of all this is learning t time. WAACs will all he value of working on
men for them to dance
or Hobby leaves for Des this week to see 440 WAACs Two hundred have al- ; men at the local active service on different
Honored at Party
Mrs. Lida J. Stackhouse, Wilmington, Del, formerly of Indianapolis, was the "honor guest. recently at a party given by Mrs. Louis Shelton and Mrs. A. W. Brayton Jr. in the club rooms of the Indianapolis Society for the Hard of Hearing. Other guests were Mesdames James Lynn, Ida S. Hamilton, Hannah L. Weller, 'Selda M. Russell, Rose Moran, Anna Conroy, Derreld M. Pierce, Jessie E. Folger and Lillian Robards. oll Also attending were Mesdames Ralph Eggelhof, Harle Duncan, Fred Knodle, J. H. Tyrrell and Telford Wright, Misses Eva B. Heizer, Gertrude Douglass, Esther Miller, Elsa Backemeyer, Katherine Neff and .| Bertha Hawkins.
Recent Bride
Dexheimer-Carlon photo.
For Wartime Is
By LOUISE
Speaker at ; Patriotic Rally
Lady Dill, wife of Sir John Dill, »| British field marshal, will be a speaker. at the pre-campaign patriotic rally. which the Indianapolis chapter of the American Red Cross and the Marion county office of
night at the Murat theater. The rally is being planned to give impetus to a county-wide drive sponsored by the two organizations for the purpose of recruiting 1500 volunteers for nurses’ aid training and of registering potential blood donors for the plasma center. The campaign will open Sept. 7 and continue until Sept. 14. Lady Dill, a nationally recognized authority on public health, is a member of the British motor transport corps and a former nurses’ aid in the Foikestone hospital.
Served in France
She served as an ambulance driver in France during the German invasion of that country and returned to England with the remnants of the British expeditionary force after the burning of Dunkirk. She accompanied her husband to America when he came here recently in the interest of lease-lend pro-
"| duction.
Dr. Albert McCown, director of medical and health service for the national Red Cross, also will speak at the rally. He received his medical degree from Johns Hopkins university while serving with a base hospital in France during world war I. He has been director of the child health division in Washington and deputy health commissioner in Michigan. Staff assistants, volunteer Red Cross workers under Mrs. Royer K. Brown, chairman, will serve as ushers at the rally. Red Cross and OCD representatives will staff a downtown headquarters, 120 Monument circle, each day during the campaign and will distribute literature on. the blood plasma center and nurses’ aid work. ® 8 8 Appointment of three vice chairmen to have charge of particular activities of the Red Cross staff assistance corps has been announced by Mrs. Royer K. Brown, volunteer chairman of staff assistants. Mrs. J. W. Carr was appointed vice chairman in charge of special services; Miss Gertrude Brown, vice chairman in charge of night classes and services, and Mrs. Arthur Fenton, vice chairman in charge of day schedules. :
Classes to Start A call for additional volunteers to
| serve with the corps has been is-
sued by Mrs. Brown. Women who are teaching or employed during the day, but who will be available for night duty this winter, are particularly asked to consider volunteering.
A new night staff assistance
day and Friday from 7 to 9 o'clock. Mrs. Brown has’ asked women to
tion desk, second floor of the Cham-
A ‘Super Market’ of Fall Styles
Block's ‘Pop-in-and-Shop’ Show
Women in defense work—and who isn’t nowadays—previewed their fall and winter appearance last night at theWm. H. Block Co.'s “woman power” style show in the store’s auditorium. Staged as a “pop-in-and-shop” super market, the show presented a ist of fashions grouped into serve-yourself-grocery-store classifications. Programs took the form of dodgers advertising the market specials—
|Lady Dill to Be
register at the volunteer registra-|
3 i Assist. at |Tea F riday
Event to Highlight Freshman Week Twelve Butler university coeds
| will assist the hostesses at the lea
which the Butler Mothers’ council| is to give from 3 to 5 p m. Friday| for first year students and their| | mothers.
The ‘\nformal event, ‘scheduled ta be held in the recreation room of Jordan hall, has been planned to
| acquaint both new students and
is the gabardine suit. It may be Hawaiian beige as at left, or of soft. pastels. Its frequent companion is the equally classic fleece topcoat.
Presented at
FLETCHER
staples, vitamins, high caloric foods, utilities, daily diet requirements, essential foods, sugar and spice, snacks and epicurean treats, each category represented by its equivalent in clothes. The highlighted style trends were a “dressier” look and a spirit-lift-ing use of color. As Block’s point out, “the women who serve the men who serve the world” are still dressing to please those men. And that means “pretty” styles— lots of trimming, bright colors framing the face, beading and nailheads for glitter, myriad jewel-like buttons. Even wool frocks accent the dressy trend.
Wardrobe Staples
those styles that form the backbone of the wardrobe—suits, topcoats, matchmaker jackets and skirts, reversible toppers, daytime frocks and wardrobe suits. : Almost a “must” in the career
In the “staple” grouping were |
their mothers with members of the the school.
Jean Buschmann, Betty Cramer, Marion Sturm, Joan Cross, Patri-
cia McGuire, Betty Schorn, Ann Loser, Martha Sturm, Mary Janet Mummert, Dana Hackerd, Eileen Robinson and Lois Helen Licht-
sinn. . Mrs. Paul Ulrich, tea chairman
land social committee head, an-
nounces that 33 faculty freshman advisers will be present to answer questions and solve problems of entering students. The tea will highlight the dpening day of Freshman Week, Sept. 4 to 9, which precedes registration for the fall semester, Sept. 8 and 9.
faculty and the mothers’ clubs at}
‘Coeds assisting will include Misses
pi AtY.W.C.A.
The Central Y. W. C. A’s Tuesday night opén house program is to be continued through the fall and winter season, it has been announced. Beginning tonight, the open houses will be held each week} from 7:30 to 11 p. ms: More than 400 persons have attended these during July and Au-
|gust. The program will continue
with young women, service men and
| |defense workers meeting weekly for
The engagement of Miss Betty Lou Hayden to Robert A. Gaston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Gaston of Indianapolis, has been .an- + nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester M. Hayden, Park Ridge, Chicago. No date has béen set for the wedding.
At Home After Trip ‘Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Henry Greenburg, 2515 Park ave., have returned from a visit with their son,
Lieut. Samuel Henry Greenburg Jr., at Geiger fleld, Spokane, Wash. They also stopped at Sun Valley, Ida.
|informal evenings of garfes, danc-
ing and occasional special parties. | A new winter committee has been formed and is working on plans for the program. Miss Mary Alice Evans is chairman of the committee, which includes Misses Emily and Marjory Smith, Janet Flaws and Teanyo Besent, Miss Lucy Schulte, business and industrial secretary for the Y. W. C. A, is staff adviser.
Initiation Scheduled By Alpha Zeta Beta Formal initiation ceremonies will be held by Alpha Tau chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, tomorrow evening at the home of Mrs. C. C. Cohee, 4712 E. Michigan st. Those to be initiated are Mrs. James Hearn, Misses Dorothy Rub-
bart, Betty Gean Thurston, Emma Jean Davis, Juanita Moore, Dorothy
Spacke and Marilyn Sewell.
will attend the interna.
tional student assembly in Washing.
ton as the official delegate of Indiana university. Both President and’ Mrs. Roosevelt will appear on the assembly program which begins to morrow ang « continues through Sat
‘Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wyman Lehman, 420 ‘E. North st., have ag their gueést their niece, Mrs, E. H. Wood ‘of: ‘Hannibal, Mo, Mrs. Wood has ‘been’ in Washington visiting her son, Ellsworth Wood, yeoman 3d class,
Me. and Mrs. A B. Carlin, 3777 N. Meridian st, and Mr. and Mrs, Ernest K. Fisher, 4020 N. Meridian | st., are stopping in New York after visiting in Boston. Before returning home next week, they will go to Washington,
x AYRES
Back on the Alr . . . Each Week Day... “Ayres’ Shopping School of the Air”, ,, 8:30 to 9:00 A. M., Station WIRE. ?
woman’s wardrobe is the classic gabardine suit which teams beautifully with the equally classic Stroock topcoat. Another suit shown combined brown and marine in its tweed fabric, accented by self fringe at the jacket front and d a lapped pleat:at the skirt t. Blended plaids, velveteens, vid iwoolens, Scotch plaids, stri worsteds also appeared in the picture, as did knits, always a | wartime fashion bet. : The “vitamins” that add verve to the wardrobe were represented by. skirt-and-sweater and skirt-and-shirt duets. The skirts were dustytoned or checked flannels, gored jersey, bright corduroy, quilted cot+ ton dirndls. The shirts appeared in soft-toned crepe and flannel, either oXieely “pretty” or extremely tailored
Color Is Highlight
Color reached its zenith in the “high caloric” grouping, deep cherry plum, Chinese ming (a ‘pale, pale coral) with Australian green, Spitfire red, Flying Tiger gold. Costumes for special wartime jobs were included in the “utilities” section of the super market—trim nurses’ uniforms and tailored blue denim for war plant workers. “Daily diet requirements” were the indispensable casual dresses and coats, the basic frocks, the little suits that are equally at home in office or at the theater. The basic dress shown was a trim black crepe, perfect background for the greenjeweled gold buttons that come with it, or for any accessory changes the wearer chooses. The “essential foods” shown were a trio of foundation garments.
+ After 5 o’Clock
t
accented by bugle . beads, in black with breathless pink, Magenta, grapetone, flight blue, elderberry and gold were some of the colors
Since even ‘the most ardent war
and design, all
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