Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1942 — Page 15
Et or mata a tat a am
Skating Clubs
Prepare for ‘Opening
Of Ice Rink at Coliseum Next Month
—
KEEPING FIT BY HAVING FUN apparently will
be the watchwords of local ice-skating fans this winter. Skating seems to be one of the few activities which will
not be curtailed as a result of the war.
Already the
numerous-clubs which met last season at the Coliseum
¥ink are laying plans for this year. The Gay Blades, sponsored by the Vassar Alumnae club, heal
will meet on Thursdays from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. Two veteran or-
ganizations—the Winter club. and the “S” club—are negotiating for meeting times and hope to have active groups again this sea-
son, The Cheap Skaters, organized
~ last year by Miss Mary Sinclair
&nd John Gamble, are ‘counting noses” and making tentative plans to meet again this winter. The Figure Skating club is being roundel up” by Harry Gould this ear.
Other Clubs Formed.
THE DOCTORS’ CLUB again will take to the ice from 11 p. m. each Saturday until 1 a. m. on Sundays, The. Insuranee and Bankers’ club will meet on Wednesdays at 6 p. m,, starting Oct. 7. Co-chair-men for this group will be Misses Elsle Crawford, Sara Jordan and Nora . Schiltges, assisted by Gene Howard, Charles Herin, Misses Ruth Flaherty, Katherine Busen=bark, Ophelia Otto, Maryalice Hendricks, Dorothy Dowd and drene Mathews. Lilly groups will meet Saturday mornings and Monday nights. A Mallory club will skate Friday hights beginning at 11 p. m. Several other groups are being or-
ganized for the official opening of the rink Oct, 1.
Propylaeum Bridge Party i AMONG THOSE who made reservations for the monthly morning contract bridge Juncheon today at the Propylaeum were Mesdames J.’ Raymond Lynn, B. M. Angell, Ernest M. Sellers, Frank M. Fauvre and Heury McCoy. Bridge play at 20 o'clock was to be followed by @& noon luncheon. Mrs. W. B. Bur-
ford and Mrs. Paul Richey were co-chairmen for the event.
Ausiliory Unit To Install
Mrs. William R. Bolen will be in-
_|stalled ' as president of the Osric
Mills Watkins unit of the American
{Legion auxiliary at a meeting to
be held tomorrow.
Following an annual custom, Mrs. O. L. Watkins, 2415 N. Pennsylvania st., a gold star mother of the unit, will be hostess at the first fall meeting of the group. Assisting her at the covered dish luncheon will be Mrs. W. H. Hubbard and Mrs. Frederick Terry. Mrs. M. O. Fields, 11th district president, will be an honor guest and the installing officer. Other officers to be installed are Mrs. Harry F. Nolen, vice president; Mrs. Edward Harmening and Mrs. O. D. Waldon, secretary and corresponding secretary; Mrs. William P. McGuire, treasurer; Mrs. Watkins, chaplain; Mrs. Louis Grabhorn, sergeant at arms, and Mrs. Irwin McComb, historian. Miss Katherine Moore, the unit’s representative at the recent Girls’ State, will be a guest and is to speak on her week at the Girls’ State encampment.
Navy Club Meets
A special meeting has been planned by the U, 8. S. Sacramento club for 8 o'clock tonight at 143 E.
J Ohio st. The occasion is the pres-
entation of an American flag to the club by the ‘Hoosier post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. All
: “Honored at Shower
Wedding and engagement - an today’s bridal news.
Broadway, marriage of their daughter, Mar to Francis W. Israel. wedding was at 10 a. m. Thursday | in St. Joan of Arc church, with the|
. | Rev. Fr. Clement Bosler officiating.
A wedding breakfast at the In-
|aianapolis Athletic club for the im- | |mediate families followed the cere-| |mony. The couple will be at home
- |here after a wedding trip.
Church News—
Book reviews and card parties women.
DIAN HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN
Hildebrand. Mrs. Sidney Blair Harry, wife of the church pastor, and Mrs. John F. Vehling, a founder of the society, will be honor guests. Mrs. Paul Hurt, arrangements chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Robert Gage, Rae Cawdell, Frank A. White, John A. Cejnar and Marcy Warner. Mrs. Charles Perdew is ticket chairman.
The monthly meeting of the women’s guild of the FIRST CHURCH, EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED, will be held tomorrow at the churéh, E. 10th st. and Oakland ave. Mrs. Lawrence Dunnewold and
members are invited to attend.
her committee will serve a noon
REGISTER. NOW before registrations are closd as we have ali a limited number of printed lessons. pe
Or you may register by mail.
Mrs. Stella Bess, former instructor in vocational sewing, who conducts Ayres’ Sewing School
of the Air.
= Do You Want
to Learn to Sew?
Register Now for Ayres'
SEWING SCHOOL of the Air beginning “Tuesday, September 22
Station WIRE $:30 to 9:00 A. M.
Conducted - Mrs. Stella Bess
}
Here Is How the School Is Conducted:
I. Registrants are mailed each week a printed ‘lesson, prepared by the National Needlecraft Bureau of New York, which gives simple instruction, graphically illustrated on the basic steps in home sewing.
2. Each Tuesday from 8:30 to 9:00 A. M. over WIRE Mrs. Bess discusses the printed lesson you have received.
3. Mrs. Bess also selects a simple dress pattern ord falsric and . gives specific instruction, broken down into weekly steps, on the making of a "first dress. You learn by doing.
4. Weekly: lessons are graphically d'splayed in Ayres Fabric : Dopark: x ments, Fourth Floor and Downstairs Store.
5. Mrs. Bess Is available to registrants for consultation. four days » week in Ayres Fabric Departments.
Here Is How to Register for the Sewing School:
You may register in person at the Pattern Desk ih Ayres Fabric Department, Fourth Floor, or in the Downstairs Store Fabric Department, Simply address a postcard to Mrs, Stella Bess, Ayres Fabric Department, Fourth Floor, or to Ayres Fabric Department, Downstairs Store, L. S. Ayres & Company.
Hn 4 IS NO CHARGE FOR THIS SERVICE
’
Meridian Heights Church Group To Hear Book Review at Tea; Little Flower Club to Entertain
The book review group of section 2 of the Worsbr's soclety, MERI -
tea at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the church. Rachel Field’s “And Now Tomorrow” will be reviewed by Mrs. Phillip
| be sponsored by the September com-
|along with their other figure prob-
| The truth is,
| she really is.
appear on the calendars of church
church, will open its season with a
\ luncheon following an executive board meeting at 10:30. o'clock. A business meeting at 1 p. m. will be conducted by Mrs. George Gebhardt, president. ; Mrs. Albert Huesing is in charge of the program fo: follow. “Christian Citizenship” will be the subject of a talk by Mrs. Walter Baxter. Mrs. Henry Unger and her son, Jack, and Mrs. Robert Drake and Mrs. Oscar Voegtle also will appear on the program.
A dessert bridge to be held next Tuesday afternoon at 1 o'clock will
mittee of the LITTLE FLOWER Social club. The party will be in the Little Flower auditorium, 14th st. and Bosart ave. Tickets may be obtained from Mrs. Robert Korves, chairman, or Mesdames Richard Weimer, George Green, Charles Richter, Herschel Kennard, John O’Brien, Harry Lamb and Larry Verbarg.
Two card parties were to be sponsored by the ST. PHILIP NERI Altar society today. Mrs. Emma Vaughn was to be in charge of ar-
5
and card party at the Food Craft shop. ) The second party will be at 8 p. m. in the parish auditorium, 535 Eastern ave, with Mrs. Albert Blondin and a committee of assist-| VV. ants in charge. '-
' Mrs. William Carson is chairman for a supper and card party which the ST. RITA guild will give at 16:30 p. m, today in the Food Craft shop.
The Altar society of ASSUMPTION CATHOLIC church will receive the proceeds of a party to be given at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow by Mrs. Fred Higbee and Mrs. Cora Vestal at the latter's home, 1143 Reisner st.
Sorority to Install Members of Delta chapter, Phi Delta Pi sorority, will meet at 6:30 p. m. today at Liggett’s before going to Oaklandon to attend an in-
rangements for a noon luncheon}. :
stallation of officers.
Million-Dollar
Bond Luncheon
Set by Women
Mrs. Henry J. Morgenthau Jr. of Washington, wife of the secretary of the treasury, will be guest of honor and speaker at a million-dol-lar war bond luncheon for women of the state of Indiana Oct. 7 in the Marott hotel. The luncheon is being sponsored by the women’s division of the Indiana state war savings staff under the direction of Mrs. H. H. Amholter, director of women’s activities. George J. Marott, owner of the Marott hotel, is giving the luncheon to the state committee. “If men of the state can raise $2,000,000 at a party, women of the state can raise half that amount at party of their own,” Mrs. Arnholter said yesterday,
To Issue Invitations
Invitations are being prepared to be sent to 500 women, each of whom will be expected to buy $500 of war savings bonds or more. Mrs. Earl B. Barnes will be chairman for Indianapolis, Mrs. Dailey Powell of Columbus will be chairman for the southern part of the state, and Mrs. Mark Honeywell of Wabash, for the northern section. Detailed plans for the luncheon will be completed in a few days, according to Mrs. Arnholter. She and Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren, chairman of the women's division, have just returned from Washington where they obtained Mrs. Morgenthau as speaker,
Tennis Stars to Play At Woodstock Club Exhibition tennis matches at the Woodstock club tomorrow affernoon benefit the army and navy relief fund. Following the matches, which will begin at 3 o'clock, the club will entertain with a buffet
supper honoring ' the . participants. The players, coming from the
championship matches at Forest
Hills, L. I, will be Ted Schroeder of Glendale, Cal, the new national amateur tennis champion; Billy Talbert of Cincinnati, who won the national doubles championship with Lieut. Gardner Mulloy of Jacksonville, Fla.; Alejo Russell of Argentina and Francisco Segura of Ecuador. Singles matches will be played by Mr. Russell and Mr. Talbert and by Mr. Schroeder and Mr. Segura. Mr. Schroeder and Mr. Talbert will team up to play doubles with Mr. Russell and Mr. Segura.
Of all the figure problems on the silhouette . chart (and there are
cerning the roll of excess flesh or the “spare tire” at the waistline.
and it is not, factually speaking, a figure problem at all. No woman has a spare tire at the waist when her corset is off; any woman including the slimmest, ‘can have one when her corset is om! The figure itself has nothing to do with it; the corset has everything. One of the main reasons why this problem is so prevalent is that ‘many slim women, unused to fighting any figure problems, have a “spare tire” but can't understand why they have it and don’t know what to do about it. On the other hand, larger women, aware that they ‘have definite figure problems, give thought to the foundation they wear and nine times out of ten solve the “spare tire” problem
lems.
a slim woman should give just as much thought to her foundation as a larger
wear a girdle in preference to an la woman slimmer, in reality, than her down, in the right places. And
| the right places are always. the] | hi] and
pline line. Now, the oe fits snugly + at the fips as it shoud; ‘but often stops
"Spare Tire" at Waistline Is Most Common of All Figure Problems
literally dozens of them) the most|: common one of all is the one con-|::
‘It is more common than practical}: ly all other problems put together]:
woman, but she doesn’t. She knows] she’s slim; she doesn’t think she|o; needs much = control. Another} thing, most slim-to-average figures]
in-one. Now, no foundation makes, It merely Tlattens| we
The. ait that]
" Margaret MacPherson’s book, ‘| Heard the Anzacs Singing,” and an
8 2 ” Miss Margaret Manning, 2074
Ci go {Paris ave., was hostess last night at Typical of the first group of V-9 applicants for the WAVES are (left to right) Altce Violette Martens, 22, of Lafayette, Ind.; Jean Elizabeth Powers, 23, of Hempstead, L. IL; Betty Dirks St. Clair, 23, of College Park, Mo., and Mae Dorothy Arata, 28, of Brooklyn, N. Y.
a crystal shower for Miss Rosalea {Schey, whose marriage to William H. Plymate will be Sunday. Guests with the bride-to-be included her mother, Mrs. Carl B.
|Schey, and Mesdames J. Warren ‘|Coyle, John F. Manning, Howard
Watson, L. F. Sweeney, Clifford Olcott, Murray Owens, Harry Stockman, Gerald Bennett and Katherine Holsapple, Misses Jean Beale, Rosemary Murphy, Elizabeth Williamson, Waunita Badger and Mary
! "8 8 A single-ring ceremony read at 7:30 p. m. Friday in the home of Dr. E. T. Gaddy, 5624 Washington blvd, united Miss Jean MacDonnell and Dr. Gaddy’s nephew, Harold Bell. : The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. C. R. MacDonnell, Marshfield, Mo., and Mr. Bell is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Basil Bell of Connersville. : 2 8 = Mrs. Ella Castner, 540 N. LaSalle st., announces the engagement ot her daughter, Ruth, to C. Alvin Leslie, 647 E. 32d st. The wedding will be Friday. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. P. O. Leslie, Evansville, f 4 8 » \ / ; Miss Margaret Morley of New York, formerly of Manchester, England, and Pvt. Robert Swanson were married Thursday afternoon in the rectory of St. John’s Catholic church. The bridegroom will return to Scott field, Ill, and Mrs. Swanson will be at home in New York.
Narrators to Open Season Tonight
The Narrators club will hold its first fall meeting tonight at 8 o'clock at .the home of Mrs. Kennegth Dotterer, 4151 Park ave. rs. F. E. Spindell will review oT
original work will be read by Mrs. Paul Duckwall,
Mrs. DeWar Hostess
A business meeting of Beta chapter, Omega Kappa sorority, will be held tonight at the. home of Mrs. Rosemary DeWar, 602 Eastern ave.
nouncements claim the spotlight in|
‘Dr. and Mrs. Carl Habich, 4335] have announced the
“Thel|
: Mrs. John A. Bennett. The groom is the son of Mrs. Th Frances Hart of Muncie. The bride attended the En Willard school at Troy, N. ¥., was graduated from Mt. Holy Lieut. Hart was graduated frem ft ‘University of Notre Dame and the Harvard University School . . Business.
Ramos-Porter photo.
Miss Lois Anne Clawson will be married to Milo D. Watkins Jr, U. 8. N. R. air force, in a 12:30 p. m. ceremony Sunday in Madonna chapel of the Third Christian church.
L. S. AYRES & CO.
FUN FOR SMALL FRY—
Name Pencil Sets
Watch your young ones puff up with pride when they can display pencils atl inscribed with their
names in gold. Cases in red, green, brown, blue.
A. Dozen pencils with nance, boxed...... sai envasy
59¢ B. Leather case with six pencils, accessories
(sketched vei 598
C. Leather case with side pocket, six pencils, ; . accessories ............. tereesnrnan Sraavarens 7%
Ayres’ Stationery, Street Floor
™ L. 8. Ayres and Co., Indianapolis, Ind. l Please send me the following name pencil sets:
Name to be imprinted | Style |
| esse Nse 08s escro en
Color | Price
seessliassonsalsssnnnsenresfrase
‘ eesssssesesessseanesne ceavensn]rnsaesnneesi]einecniceis
| : eliaicin evan]
| Name cE ener ier sd Address cooeeesciees
cesses
(Above) Myneuie
Mynette Hall- Sizes
With a New Fall Look
| uf 5 na eros wi 0 dill with fit and flattery in every line, with a nice adaptability to allfall, all-winter wearing.
Right? Mynette with tucked shoul1 derss. rayon taffeta scallops in front. -
