Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 January 1943 — Page 21

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State Assembly Woman's Clb

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OFFICERS OF THE State ‘Assembly Woman’ s club

~ will be honored at a tea in the governor's mansion next

Thursday. Mrs. Henry F. Schricker will be assisted by Mrs. Charles J. Buchanan, president emeritus of the club,

and Mrs, Charles M. Dawson, wife of

ernor.

the lieutenant gov-

+ In the receiving. line will be Mrs. Curtis G. Shake, chairman; and Mesdames Oscar Ahlgren, Ward G. Biddle, Emmett F. Branch, O. G. Couch, E. Millard Dill, Luke W. Duffey, William P. Evans,

James M. Givens, Richard T. James, John

Harry G. Leslie, Glenn A. Markland,

dall, John E. King,

A. Leroy Portteus, Leo X. Smith,

William Storen, John W. VanNess, Albert F. Walsman and A. J.

Wedeking.

The new officers are Mrs. George ‘W. Henley, Bloomington, presi-

dent; Mrs. Frank Finney, Martinsville, first

C. Wakelam, second vice president; ton, corresponding secretary; Mrs.

vice president; Mrs. E. Mrs. M. W. Thompson, CovingThurman Gottschalk, recording

secretary; Mrs. Frank Richman, Columbus, treasurer, and Mrs. Archie

"N. Bobbitt, director at large.

A meeting of the club which was to have been held Tuesday at the G. Barret Moxley home has been postponed until after Feb. i5.

The new meeting date will be anounced later. To Entertain Before Players’ Party

MR. AND MRS. F. NOBLE ROPKEY will entertain with a dinner at their home preceding The Players club party tomorrow night at the Woodstock club. The invited guests are Messrs. and Mesdames John Collett, John B. Stokely and Alexander L. Taggart Jr. Capt. and Mrs. Walter C. Hiser of Memphis, Tenn, formerly of In-

dianapalis, ‘and Mrs, Austin Clifford.

» » 2

Mrs. T. M. Rybolt will be hostess tonight at a “family night” party for the Culture club. Dr. F, Marion Smith, pastor of the

Central Avenue Methodist church, will be the speaker,

; #8 #2 2 An exhibit of Brown county

” ” » water color landscapes by W.

Howard Ober, Indianapolis artist, has opened in Rauh Memorial

- Included are several paintings

* library where it will remain until Feb. 4.

which were shown recently in

Detroit. Another exhibit of Mr. Ober’s paintings is being shown this month in the St; Augustine Art club gallery, at: St. Augustine,

Fla.

Mr. Ober is a member of the club.

Betrothed Couple to Be Honored

MISS MARGARET LOUISE KAYSER and her fiance, Sergt. Richard B. Buschmann, will be honored af an informal buffet supper given tomorrow night by Sergt. Buschmann’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otto L. Buschmann, and his sister, Miss Marianne Buschmann, at their home. Miss Kayser’s marriage to Sergt. Buschmann will be

Feb. 14.

> Decorations for the supper will be in the bridal colors of blue

and white. Eighteen relatives and

close friends will be guests.

- Several showers are to be given for Miss Kayser before her

marriage. next Friday.

Miss Eleanor Semans will be hostess at a crystal shower Mrs. Elmer Funkhouser, Mrs. William Kroeplin of Chi-

cago and Misses Doris and Louise Bicknell will give a personal shower Feb. 9 and on Feb, 12 Mrs, William Wooley will entertain

for the bride-to-be.

The bridal dinner will be given by Mrs. Karl H. Kayser, the bride’s mother, following the wedding rehearsal Feb, 13.

Helen Buenaman to Be Married

To Ensign John

C. Hickey;

Reception to Follow Ceremony

Miss Helen Buenaman, daughter of¢Mr. and Mrs. Walter Buenaman,

846 N. Tuxedo st., will become the bride of Ensign John Charles Hickey,

‘son lof Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hickey, 1510 N. Olney st., in a 7:30 o’clock ‘ceremony tonight at the Central Christian church. . Dr. W. A. Shullenberger will read the service before an altar banked with palms, ferns and a vase of White flowers. ;

William H. Keller, cousin of the bride, will sing “I Love You Truly” and “Because.” Mrs. Fred Jefry, organist, will play bridal airs. : Given in marriage by her father, the bride will wear ivory satin in princess style. The romance peckline is accented with seed pearl bows and the long fitted sleeves taper into points over the hands. The gored fullness of the skirt extends into a train. Her two-tiered fingertip veil of bridal illusion is outlined with Chantilly lace and. has a halo of Chantilly lace ruffles. She will .carry white roses with a lavender “orchid center.

| Attendants’ Gowns The maid of honor, Miss Margaret

_Collman, is to wear a frock of cos-

mos. blue fashioned with satin romance neckline, short -puffed sleeves and a bouffant net skirt. will She ‘will -nese M of Hic weal

complete her costume.

iris. Olivene Buenaman, sister e bride, and Miss Norma ey, sister of the bridegroom, will gowns of wild rose pink fashd like that of the maid of r. Cosmos blue headdresses will lete their costumes. _ Their

‘A wild rose pink pompadour, +headdress of ostrich tips and maline

carry Talisman roses and Japa ’

Following the ceremony a reception is te ‘be held at the bride's parents’ home. Assistants will be

Mrs. Carl Burnett, Misses Sallie|

Vaught, Marjorie Rafnel, Sally Connor, Esther Mattingly, Mary Vollmer, Jeanne Parrish and Barbara Tracy. Ensign Hickey is a graduate of Butler university and received his commission at the U. S. naval training school at Notre Dame,

Mrs. Mozingo To Be Hostess

A joint session .of the Kappa and Indianapolis alumnae chapters of Mu Phi Epsilon, ‘national music honor society, will be held at 8 p. m. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Berniece Fée Mozingo, 5716 Lowell ave. A musical program, arranged by Miss Helen Louise Quig of the alumnae group and Miss Berenice

Reagan of Kappa chapter, will have a patriotic theme. Miss Quig will speak on patriotic music from 1776 to 1943. ro “America, the Beautiful” will be sung by Miss Alvina Palmquist, and a “Victory Chorus” by Mrs. Asel

¢| Spellman Stitt. Accompanists will

be Miss Freda M. Hart and Mrs. Agnes Warriner Helgesson. Assistant hostesses for the social hour will be Mrs. Lorenzo B. Jones and Mrs. Alfred Brandt of the alumnae and Mrs. Alberta Gaunt and Miss Charlotte Moore of Bape chapter.

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~ By 1} fARGUERITE YOUNG : | Times Special Writer : NEW| YORE, Jan. 29.—Anna ‘Marie Rosenberg—hs director of war ms apower in all New York

toughes trickiest of wartime jobs, d she does it with such flair that political insiders watch .and wonder where is Annie head‘ed for owe the president’s cabinet? | But Annie says the gne personal goal she ever set herself was one she never made. As a child in Hungary she wanted to be a scientific gardener, and that is all, Which shows how far a woman can get by taking life as it comes and having what it takes and being ambitious for nothing—nothing in particular, that is. With her own staff of several score experts and with direct supervision over and responsibility for. the 2800-person state manpower and employment setup, Annie makes the rules and makes ‘them stick: who shall fight and who work, and why, where and’ for how much? How many women shall be trained for farm and factories . . , how many unskilled Negroes and others who never had a chance at: good jobs before?

” 8 »

In acute labor shortages, who'll get the better-paid new jobs and

“ state—does one of the biggest, |

Busy, dynamic Anna ‘Rosenberg; manpower director of the vital New York region, keeps things buzzing in her office, She’s pictured (left) working

who'll stay where they are? What will cut down unemployment, absenteeism on the job and, above all, what will make everybody like it and give all they've got to win the war? “I'm not running manpower— manpower is running me,” Annie said to a friend the other day, holding the telephone with her shoulder while. she used : both

job.

hands to jot down official decisions on papers handed to her by two waiting secretaries, and at the same time went right on with this interview, saying, in an “aside” from the telephone conversation: “There’s nothing that doesn’t touch this manpower business, and it keeps you in constant conflict with your convictions. Things you thought were important fade

nation, ai the tenth that sails the ships, runs the trains, fills the tills. and turns the wheels of the most important banking, merchandising, commerce and consumers’ goods manufacturing center in the land , . . the tenth which makes and mans the military works in one of the key spots on the U, S. home front war map.

That's what Annie means when i

she brushes off any question about the cabinet with, “Look, dear, 1 don’t want to go to Washington; I want to stay right here where I am, in the middle of everything.” Which is nothing new for her. For years, little known to the

general public outside New York,

with two secretaries, Veronica Hall (center) and Ruth Kopacs. She has a big, tough, tricky wartime

before the more important question: victory. You who have stood for the rights of the individual find yourself infringing on them, taking drastic action, playing God. And I never liked to play God.” *

‘she has been America’s No. 1 Lit-

tle Mrs. Fixit—so known to industrialists, politicians and labor leaders “that when they get in trouble, especially trouble among themselves, they call Annie, automatically, Once, she earned $36,000 a year by telling employers how to handle their labor and public relations. Her outstanding talent is knowing how to get tough and tyran= nical with a negotiator who's

She wields immense power— + twice her size and is looking for

this pretty, plump, little brunet who never skips a wisecrack— over more than twelve million Americans. They're a tenth of the

Two Musicale

Sections Plan

Joint Recital

The Camille Fleig Junior and Student sections of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale will appear in an ensemble program tomorrow night at the Wilking studio, 120 E. Ohio st. The program has been arranged by Mrs. Leah Marks and Miss Sarah Elizabeth Marks. Appearing on the program will be Dorothy “Orner, Delores Brooks, Linda and David Lukenbill, Ramona Eaton, Margaret Leighty, Patty Bradway, Carol Stocking, Eunice Cochran, = Patty Meek, Barbara Clark, Shirley McMillen, Violet Marie Hadden and Rita Fox. Others will be Janet Lewis, James Montgomery, Peggy Rose, Martha Payne, Virginia Reese, Lillian Bluestein, Margaret Sigler, Dorothy June Kuester and Evelyn Fleming Hatt and the Shortridge vocal ensemble, directed by Mrs. Laura Moag. Miss Marti Knauer and Miss Joan Richey, junior and student presidents, will preside at a short business session. Miss Mary Spalding, student chairman, and Mrs, Helen Thomas Martin, junior chairman,

| will assist. Mrs. Albert Reep is ad-

viser. *

Mexican Art To Be Theme Of Program

Three units of the Woman’s Department club have announced meeting dates for next month.

Mrs. H. E. Blasingham will open the monthly meeting of the art department with a 1:30 p. m. business session Monday. A group of Mexican songs by Mrs. C. A. McPheeters will be on the program for the afternoon. An American Federation ,of - Arts il-

{lustrated lecture will be given by

Mrs. Hezzie B. Pike. Its subject is “Mexican Art and Its Background,” by Count Rene De Harnocourt. Mrs. George W. Bowman and Mrs. W. Presley Morton will have charge of the social hour. They will be assisted by their committee. The 10 o'clock group will meet Feb. 17 with Mrs. Morton, 4012 Central ave. The discussion topic will be “Contemporary Art.” Mrs. A. FP. Wicks and Mrs. George A. VanDyke will lead discussions on architecture and painting.

Auxiliary to Meet

The. monthly luncheon of the City hospital auxiliary of the community welfare department will be at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday at the nurses’ home. Mrs. Frank 'S. O'Neil, luncheon chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Howard D. Spurgeon, Charles H. Smith, Ralph I. Thompson, S. Harry Clendenin and A. J. Hueber. Miss Elizabeth Wivel, superintendent of nurses, will discuss plans which the members will carry out for the nurses, and arrangements for the spring planting in Gerrin court at the hospital. Miss Carrie M. Hoag, finance chairman, will report on a recent book review given for the scholarship fund. Mrs. Hueber will preside.

I. F. C. Board Names

|Fund Chairman

The chairman of the Indiana Pederation of Clubs’ nursing scholarship fund was named this week at

| the closing session of a three-day meeting of the federation’s board of |

directors at the Claypool hotel. She

lis Mrs. Bruce O. Lane.

Other members of the committee ae Mrs. George C. Baum, Akron; Mrs. Cogley G. Cole, Vevay, and

| Mrs. J. R. Riggs, Sullivan. “The committee will have charge

of candidates for the $250 gift the federation will make to a young woman for- nurse’s training. The hospital into which the nurse will

.| go for her training is also to be se-

lected by the committee.

Returns From Visit

Clayton will assist.

‘|seminary in Webster Groves, Mo.

Mrs. Andrew Petak,’ the former : Miss Charlotte Gibson, niece of |: Charles Becket, has returned to her

At First Baptist

~The candlelight ceremony will be performed before an altar banked with ‘greenery interspersed with branched candelabra and cathedral candles. Mrs, William Herbert Gibbs will play Schubert's “Ave Maria,” the hymns, “O Jesus, I Have Promised,” and “Beneath the Cross of Jesus” before the ceremony and “The Rosary” during the ceremony. The Rev. Norman H. Schultz, pastor of the Garfield Park Evangelical and Reformed church, will sing “I Love You Truly” and “The Sweetest Story Ever Told.”

"To Wear Satin

Miss Kimbrel, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear a gown of traditional bridal

satin fashioned on princess lines, the full skirt falling into a train. Her two-tiered fingertip veil of illusion will be held by a tiara” of pleated illusion’ and seed pearls. She will carry a Bible with white orchids and a shower of white pbons. Mrs. Ralph Neumeister, matron of honor, will wear a blue taffeta gown fashioned on the same lines as the bride’s. Miss Betty Corrigan, bridesmaid and cousin of the bridegroom, will wear rose taffeta, and Opal Moran, junior bridesmaid, will wear peach taffeta. They will wear matching velvet ribbon bows in their hair and rhinestone bracelets, gifts of the bride. They will carry French bouquets . of spring flowers with garlands of smilax.

Bridegroom’s Attendants

The Rev. Elwood Caldwell, pastor of the Evangelical and Reformed church of Rising Sun, will be the best man, and the ushers will be Clarence Schnicke, Herbert Hinton Jr., Dr. Sheldon Hall and Peter Macko. : Mrs. Kimbrel, mother of the bride, will wear a fuchsia gown with silver accessories and a corsage of gardenias. Mrs. Scholey, the bridegroom’s mother, has chosen an aqua gown with gold accessories and a corsage of gardenias. A reception at the church will follow the ceremony. Misses Alice Hinton, Eiline Walesby and Miriam

The couple will leave for a short wedding trip, the bride traveling in a& navy blue ensemble with valor red -accessbries and a gray kidskin coat. She will wear a corsage of orchids. They will be at home after Feb. 6 at 1020 Central ave. The bride and bridegroom are graduates of Butler university. He kas attended Eden Theological

and is now enrolled in the Graduate School of Religion at Butler.

Service Star Meeting

The Hamilton Berry chapter of the Service Star legion will hold its monthly meeting Tuesday at 2 p- m. in Ayres’ auditorium. Mrs. Charles K. MacDowell will preside,

Wed Recently

Dr. Carleton Atwater to Read Scholey-Kimbrel Ceremony

Church

The marriage of Miss Dorothy Margaret’ Kimbrel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Kimbrel, 929 Park ave., to Clifford G. Scholey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford F. Scholey, 1210 N. Denny st., will be this evening at 8 o'clock in. the First Baptist church. Dr. Carleton W, Atwater will officiate and the Rev. Frederick R. Daries, pastor of the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church, will assist.

Announce List Of Hostesses For Reception Hostesses for the reception to be held this evening at 6:30 o’clock in the Propylaeum in honor of Miss

Oranda C. Bangsberg will be Mes-

dames Richard Clark, M. R. Granger, Ross Halgren, D. J. Hendrickson and Everett Cathcart, Misses Martha Scott, Kathleen Klaiber, Marie Zook, Patricia McGuire and Mable Clift. Miss Bangsberg is the newly appointed -executive secretary of the Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls. In the receiving line with her will be Messrs. and Mesdames Paul O. Ferrel, Robert Burnett, A. E. Baker and Jesse Barker, Mrs. Orien Fifer Jr. and Miss Gertrude Thuemler. On Program Approximately 100 guests will attend. Mr. Ferrel, president of the Camp Fire board of directors, will be master of ceremonies. The Madrigal singers of Technical high school, directed by J. Russell Paxton, will sing. Miss Ruthann Perry, accompanied by Miss Betty Jean Barker, will sing the “Camp Fire Prayer” among other numbers. Others on the program will be Miss‘ Bangsberg; Miss Peggy MecIntyre, president of the all-city

| Horizon club; Mrs. Barker, chair-

man of the guardians’ association; Mrs. Clark, past chairman, and Gilbert Forbes. Mrs. Oramel Skinner, & member of the board of directors, is general chairman for the reception.

Poetry Society Will Meet

The Indiana Poetry society will meet at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in Cropsey auditorium of the Central library. Mrs. Iva B. Linebarger, who recently published a group of poems for service men, will lead a discussion of war poems, the February study topic. Original poems will be read by members. Mrs. M. D. Didway will play for community singing and Mrs. Florence Free MacDonald will sing a group of sacred songs. Mrs. Laurence Hayes will play a *Victory March” which she composed. Hostesses will be Mrs. Oliver 'S. Guio and Mrs. Paul T. Hurt. Mrs. Josephine Duke Motley, president, has asked members entering the hymn contest sponsored by the Indiana Federation of Clubs, to bring their entries to the meeting.

Colonial Program To Be Presented

A colonial program and a musical feature, “The Road Beautiful,” will

| be presented by Mrs. Carolyn Ayres

Turner and Miss Sylvia Partlowe at a meeting of the Alpha Chi Omega: Mothers’ club Monday at the Butler university chapter house. Both Mrs. Turner and Miss Partlowe are of the White Cross Music guild. -Hostesses for a 12:30 p. m. lunch“eon will be Mrs. O. S. Hixon, chair-

man, and Mesdames W. E. Mohler, |

A. T. Coyle, W. V. Bishop, Leo Dorn

and Glenn Hovermail.

Guild to Meet

An all-day meeting will be held by the St. Francis Hospital ‘guild at the hospital Tuesday. There will be sewing in the ‘morning under the supervision of Mrs. W. J. Davidson, a covered dish luncheon at

Inoon and the monthly business

Eigen wf ii m. Mrs. Edward Piney pigside

{Plan Meetings

I. T.-S. C. Units

The “Philippine. Islands” will be

“| the topic of a talk- by Mrs. C. J.

Ancker before the Adelia chapter,

International Travel-Study . club, Monday evening at a 6:30 o’clock

| dinner in the Colonial tearoom.

A pictorial lecture also will be given on “Homes and Flowers” by Taylor Land, a representative of the Coca Cola Bottling Co. Hostesses for the evening include Mesdames Robert ' Parke, ' Nelson Payne, Robert Ramsay and James Nelson, chairman. £ #8 8

Dr. Rebecca Parrish also will speak on the “Philippine Islands” at the monthly meeting of the Al-

a fight; but preferring and usually managing, to win her point by the sheer persuasivgpness of her ‘theatrical personali her wit,

wisdom and superb “wo savvy about people, “I work mainly by instinet what I've picked up,” Annie

® = ” A natural-born conciliator,

nie at’ 17 stopped a strike in: ' high school against world war

She practically grew up in' poll tics, and plays it like Paderewsk played the piano. She can cut through a pile red tape with a realistic, no hard-feelings wisecrack, like “You want to know what reall goes on in hiring at shipyards? this into the telephone “Well, Toots, you'll have to get early and go out and see for your self.” And, aside, smilingly, * the old story: Do you believe y eyes or do you believe Honey?” And again into the phone ¢ necting another war agency hun ing specialist personnel: “Ng . look, if you get what you wan .you'll have the four Marx broth ers, You want somebody with bor background, and nutri and housing . . . don’t you ki that if a guy’s had a square me: he knows something about nutri tion?”, And about a previous callers. “That was a crusader. She wants to reform the world overnight * You know I want to take at le 48 hours.”

exandria chapter, I. T.-S. C. Wednesday at 1:30 p. m. in the home of Mrs. A. G. Bassett, 1243 W. 33d st. Mrs. Blanche Spahr will assist Mrs.

"| Bassett.

Mrs. H. A. Ward will give a monolog following Dr. Parrish’s talk,

Dr. Roy E. Vale To Be Speaker

“Our Constitution” will be Dr. Roy Ewing Vale's subject when he speaks at the February luncheon meeting of the Woman’s society of Tabernacle Presbyterian church. at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday. Mrs. H. E. Stone of circle L and Mrs. G. L. Gueutal of circle M are co-chairmen for the luncheon. Mrs. Edgar J. Ellsworth will be in charge of the devotional service. The executive board of the society will meet

Luncheon to Be Held Tuesday

The Sigma Chi Mothers’ club have a luncheon meeting Tue at the fraternity’s chapter h 442 W. 46th st., A speaker from Indiana League of Women Voti will talk. Hostesses for the meeting will’ Mrs. Frank L. Riessner, chai and Mesdames Paul Scherneks Bonnie Kline, James B. Carr, Gent C. Stricker, Maude Duvall and Lis cille Hallam. Mrs. Gene Sturman will preside,

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