Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1943 — Page 14
Studio Guild Artists,” each artist ; Sontributing three watercolors.
; for the evening. Miss Alice Camp-
#;
serve officers training school at
‘given for her Thursday night by
* seums last fall to be shown for a
Society=
Day Nursery
Invitations for
Auxiliary Tssues all on Feb. 20
INVITATIONS WERE ISSUED yesterday for the “Day Nursery Ball” to be given Saturday, Feb. 20, at the . Woodstock club by the Indianapolis Day Nursery Junior
auxiliary.
Serving on the invitations committee with Mrs. Addison A. Howe and Mrs. Richard T. Hill, co-chairmen, were Mesdames Fred Harmon Fulton, John A. Bruhn, Frederick W. Mitchell, Leroy G. Gordner, Bruce F.
Brown, Edwin Ransburg and
Myers Whitaker.
Guests attending the dance may make reservations at the club
for dinner which will be served until 10 p. m.
2
A called meeting of the auxiliary will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Marvin Lugar, 3520 Washington blvd.
Miss Smock to Be Guest
MISS DOROTHEA SMOCK will be the honor guest tonight at a miscellaneous shower. given . by Mrs. Frederick A. Kiser Jr, at her home, 5009 Boulevard pl. ‘Miss Smock, - daughter of - Maj. and Mrs, Arthur Allen Smock, will be married Sunday, Feb. 21, to John Frederick Bowers, son of Mrs. Carrie E. Bowers. The prospective. bridegroom will be graduated Feb. 17 from the naval re-
Coluthbia university. Guests tonight will be Mesdames Frederick Lorenz, Turpin Davis, Harold Kgst, Thomas Scanlan, #£arl Piel, Dick Robbins, Kenneth Speicher, Ralph Coble, Emsley Johnson, Harry Pock and Jack Carr. Others will be Misses Eleanor Pangborn, Cornelia Kingsbury and Mae Henri Lane.
Entertain Bride-to-Be
MRS. RICHARD POWELL will entertain tomorrow night at her home in Marcy Village for Miss Mary Lee Kixmiller whose marriage to John B, Strack will be Saturday in the Advent Episcopal church. Another party will be
NA
Mrs. Thomas N. Wynne Jr. Mr. and Mrs. E. PF, Kixmiller, parents of the bride-to-be, will entertain Friday night with a bridal unos honoring the couple. Mr, rack is the son of Mr. and Mrs, John A. Strack. Miss Kixmiller’s attendants for the eeremony will be her sister, Katherine, and Miss Shirley St. Pierre,
Sara Bard Exhibits Paintings
SARA BARD, Indianapolis artist, is holding an exhibition of recent watercolor paintings in the Studio Guild gallery in New York from next Monday through Feb. 27, Three of her paintings were sent on tour.of New York state mu-
year of exhibitions. The show was called “Trio Exhibitions by Five
Committees Listed for ° C.A.R. Party
The annual February party of the Old Glory society, Children of the American Revolution, will be a tea dance at the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter house Saturday from 4} to 7p. m. The dance will be the group’ s only party this year. The annual Christmas holiday dance was canceled and the group co-operated with the na-
‘| tional C. A. R. in sending an ambu-
lance to Europe. Committees for Saturday's event include: Invitations — Miss Constance Drake, chairman, and Richard Hill, Misses Virginia Brown,
Nancy Wilder, Mary Lou Jacobs,
Maryann Zinn and Doris Hosmer; nfusic—Victor Barry and Dave Simpson. Refreshments — Paul Wadleigh and Miss Joan Pile, co-chairmen, and William Kegley, Misses Rosemary Jones, Sally Peterson, Lois Ragan, Betsy Goodwin; Mary Frances Dittrich, Marie Bowers, Barbara Breining and Patricia Aspinall.
Senior Committee Decorations—Miss Carolyn Crom,
chairman, and Henry Taggart and
Miss Mary Harrell; reservations— Miss Evelyn Wood, chairman, and Misses Ora Elizabeth Coates, Marjorie Ann Dawson, Barbara Sterrett and Jean Redwine, \ Door—Knight Campbell, chairman; Joe Pattison, co-chairman, and Robert Alan Simpson and James F. Bash. Miss Pile is publicity chairman. Mrs. Gaylord Wood is the senior general chairman and Mrs. Roy J.
mittee includes Mesdames Ray T. Fatout, Jasper Scott, William Dobson, Herbert Hill, Odin F. Wadleigh, William FPF. Kegley, O. M. Jones, Dwight Peterson, Paul S. Ragan, J. A. Dawson, Thornton W. Sterrett, Rooe Simpson, Alvan Ditt-
9
Sororities—
rich and C. Alfred Campbell.
Alpha Oniicron Pi Aline Group
- Schedules Annual Election; Alpha Beta Chi Sets Rush Party |
One sorority group meeting this week will choose officers for the year.
The Indianapolis Alumnae association of ALPHA OMICRON PI|§
will hold its annual election meeting
at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the home of
Mrs. Frank H. Cox, 4205 N. Illinois st. Mrs, Ted Marbaugh, nominating committee chairman, will present the slate of officers.
The home nursing class of the
bell, R. N., the class instructor, will talk on “Home Nursing.” Assistant hostesses will be MesParker Jordan, Lester A. Smith and Adrian Wilhoite. Th {
Indiana Alphd chapter of ZETA BETA CHI will hold a business and educational meeting at
9:45 p. m. today in the Hotel Lincoln. Rushees will be special guests and Lucille Larimore, vice
Br, WH peslae
Valentine rush party will be ot t 8 p. m. tomorrow by ALPHA BET CHI at the home of Mrs. e Patridge, 4322 Guilford ave. Patridge, chairman for the party, will be assisted by Mrs. Gilbert Thomas, Mrs. Joseph Hook, Miss le Patridge and Miss Pauline
Members of Beta chapter, BETA CHI THETA, their husbands and guests will attend a dance at the
alumnae will present the program
Miss Betty Newby recently was installed as president of TAU PHI LAMBDA sorority. Others taking office were Mrs. Lillian Sandafer, vice president; Mrs. Gladys Heck, secretary; Mrs. Jean Allumn, warden; Miss Evalean Layton, historian, and Miss Leora Duvall, chaplain. .. Evelyn Joyce and Mrs. Stella ttinghill are sponsor and cosponsor. Guests were Mesdames Margariete Decker, Lela May Van Brunt, Myrtle Lurkin and Alvin Duvall, Misses Kitty and Marjorie White, Doris Macklen and Evelyn Cardell.
The Verae Sorores chapter of VERUS CORDIS recently held a guest party at the home of Mrs. Donald Woodard, 234 N. Oakland ave. Guests were Mrs. Robert Scudder, Misses Norma Jones, Dorothy Bundy and Delores Welsh.
SIGMA PHI GAMMA’S Upsilon chapter will meet at 8 p. m, today
Indiana roof ballroom tomorrow nigh ;
at the Hotel Lincoln.
317 W. 16TH ST.
WRK ER as a lazy man’s dream”
attention! Siont clean vee and needs
he 24 hours! WARN | ER at Pelee today.
Dream” Says TIME
A recent article in TIME
Magazine describes the MORNING HEAT-
because it requires so ditto Is. quish, “offic refueled only once 2 See the MORNING HEAT- ;
| i
ICE AND FUELCO.
200 NORTHWESTERN / 1902
Pile is assistant. The senior com- /
1. The mattis of Miss Ellen Maxene Cherry, daughter of Mrs. Lawrence Cherry, to Pvt. Ralph J. Hooper, Ft. Blanding, Fla., was Nov. 22. The bridegroom is the fon of Mrs. Grace Allen.
"2. Mrs. Francis P. Sheehan was Miss Mary Gootee before her: marriage Dec. 26. She is the daughter of Mrs. Mary A. Gootee and Mr. Sheehan is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Sheehan, The at-home address is 2133 Central ave. (Dexheimer-Carlon photo,)
3. Miss Wilma Gottschalk’s engagement to Capt. Floyd L. Hoffman, Princeton university, Prince-’ ton, N. J, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ora Gottschalk, Logansport. No date has been set for the wedding. (Photoreflex photo.)
‘din Brazil”; Mrs. Effie .C. Hill,
Lady of Lourdes
Church Scene
Of Martine-Moore Wedding; Reception at I A. C. Follows
Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic
Reginald Martine Jr., U. S. N. R. Parents of the couple are Mr. 36 Johnson ave. and Mr. and Mrs.
church was to be the scene, af 11} o'clock this morning, of the wedding of Miss Ruth Moore to Ensign
and Mrs. Clarence Kenneth Moore, Reginald Martine of Upper Mont-
clair, N. J. The Rev. Fr. James Moore was to read the single ring
A Letter for The Youthful
Service Man
. By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Times Special Wrifer , HERE IS A letter for an 18-year-old draftee: “Until this! moment I have thought of you as a scatterbrained kid. Now, dressed in your country’s uniform, you have become a man. As I watched your. crowd boarding the train yesterday, I thought. suddenly of ‘the children’s crusade,” for so ‘many of you had the look of children—the smooth E cheeks, the unfurt rowed brows, the clear eyes looking i at visions the & middle-aged and the old no longer see. ; “Somehow : that look in your eyes gave me confidence. Destiny has summoned you to a strange rendezvous. This journey ‘you have begun is ‘pregnant with good and evil possibilities. Many of the young men riding with you will be sent to schools; others will see foreign service soon. Perhaps your feet will tread on alien ground. - Perhaps fate has arranged for you a most amazing interlude— & recess from the commonplace. “Whatever the future holds, lad, remember that you are always bigger than anything life can do to you. Leaving school does not mean your education has ended. It may
you, if you refuse to have it so. These grave and mighty changes must be viewed as a part of your life’s educational process.”8 8 8
“WITH OPEN, receptive minds, men learn wherever they are. And the best education is ‘that which comes to the. -self-taught. Only those who are ‘eager for knowledge can be educated. “Hold fast to your dreams—they are. the things we live: by and die for. ‘And it may be that’ the length of our life, or the manner of Ms ending, signify nothing. What counts i the way we conduct ourselves in “I hope you will. ‘never subscribe to the doctrine that. fear is reason for. shame. From it springs the highest form of courage. ‘Fearless people have no imagination, and often fail in the crisis. The immortal deeds of men have been done by those who were most aware of Jenger but: refused to falter before
“You will be changed when next I see you. That may grieve me, but it. should not worry either of us. The
for millions of others, but not for!"
~ |towm, N. ¥ |eroom. iL The sougie val se + bent ig
ceremony before an altar banked with palms and ferns and holding gold vases of white snapdragons and carnations. Mrs. Claude Sifferlin, organist, was to play a program of bridal airs including Schubert's “Ave Maria” and the Lohengrin and Mendelssohn wedding marches. Entering “with her father, the bride was fo wear candlelight chiffon velvet made with a draped bodice, a sweetheart neckline, bracelet length sleeves and a bouffant skirt of matching tulle. Her fingertip length veil of tulle was to fall from a heart -shaped tiara and she. was to wear pearls and carry &. prayerbook with White orchids. gr Attendants’ Frocks ‘Miss Blanche “Virginia, Kernel, maid of honor, and Mrs. Richard E. Woodard, bridesmaid, \ were to wear identical dresses of confetti color fashioned like that of the bride. Their headdresses were to be of matching feathers and tulle and they were to carry bouquets of Johanna Hill roses and gladioli. The bridegroom’s gttendants were to be his father as best man and Dr. Leonard Kernel as the usher. * Mrs. Moore, the bride’s mother, was to be in navy blue crepe and taffeta worn with matching accessories and a shoulder corsage of white camellias. The bridegroom’s mother was: to wear bottle green lace with a matching hat and a ‘corsage of bronze orchids.
Out-of-Town Guests .
‘A reception was to be held at 2 o'clock this afternoon at the Indianapolis Athletic club before the couple left for a wedding trip. For traveling, the bride will wear a bolero jacket suit of iris wool with cornflower blue accessories, an iris topcoat with white fox collar, and @ corsage of white orchids. The bride is a graduate of Purdue university and a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority and the bridegroom was graduated from the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. He is a Delta Sigma Pi fraternity member. t-of-town : guests, in addition to the bridegroom’s parents, were to include Dr. and Mrs. Phillip C. Lowenstein, Upper Montclair! Mrs. George H. Krause, Jersey i J.; Mrs. Walter Moore and Mrs. Lee Cogswell, Richmond; Ind., and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Barklow Martine, South 3end.
Announces Wedding Of J erry James ~—Jpl., her daughter, Jerry, to Floyd A.
formed church of Caldwell Town. ~The attendants were Mrs. Fran-
topher Preziosi, Pine camp, Water- + brother of the bride-
| Montclair, N. J. :
x
Mrs. Myriam James, 35 Hendricks | announces the marriage of!
Preziosi, son of H. H. Prezios],
ship, N. J., by the Rev. A.B. Keitner.|
cis G. Daugherty, Petersburg, Va. | |the bride’s sister, and Col. S. Chris-|
will Elect Officers.
‘ling at 1 p. m. in Catherine’s restaurant. Hostesses will be Mesdames {Ada O. Lamkin, Mack Burns and
: will have a South American theme. _ | The speakers and their subjects will
{Benjamin Harrison Memorial dur-
"Thomas,
Guest Night Booked By Wednesday Club
An’ election of officers appears on the club calendar for tomorrow.
EPHAMAR LITERARY club meet-
Arthur S. Brown. The program for the afternoon
be Mrs. Matt Harris, “Brazil”; Mrs. Hugh J. Scudder, “Rubber Industry
“Bolivia,” and Mrs. R. C. Miller, “Spanish Music.” A guest night meeting and dinner will be held at 6:30 p, m. tomorrow in the Broadway Methodist church by the WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON club. Hostesses will be Mesdames William Burcham, Homer Britan, R. L. Guedel, P. C. Nicoles, Roger Lawton, Cook, Robert E. Campbell and R. 0. Minnick.
The MINERVA club will visit the
ing its meeting tomorrow.
. C. J. Ancker will be the speaker tomorrow aft a 10:30 a. m. meeting of the RIO DE JANEIRO chapter, INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY club. Mrs. Nettie Gluesenkamp, 5210 Singleton st., will be hostess, assisted by Mrs. Howard Walters and Mrs. Walter Rieman.’
The MANDALAY chapter, INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL - STUDY club, will meet tomorrow at 12:30 p. m.. with Mrs. William H. Snyder, 44. W. 33d st. Dr. Rebecca Parrish, a former missionary in the, Philippines, will
Boles will sing, accompanied by Mrs. M. B. McDonald. The assisting hostesses will be Mesdames Arthur Wilson, S. L. C. J. Sherman, Frank White and Ethel Degischer.
. DEAR JANE JORDAN — I will
soon be 25 and I have been in the army for two years. There is a girl who lives near me and when I left for the army she was only about 15 and her parents wouldn't let her have dates at that time. Two years passed and I finally|’ got a furlough to come home for|, 30 days. I am stationed overseas.
While I was gone another boy started to go with this girl and now she is engaged fo him which makes me very unhappy. He is in the army now and overseas also. He left his car home for her to drive; Since I arrived here I have h veral dates with her and we are “very happy together. She sometimes leaves the impression that she wishes I were the one she was engaged to instead of the other fellow. I' certainly wish I She told me I should: have come back a long. time ago but it was impossible for me to do so. She has a fine family and they think a lot of the boy she is engaged to but they seem to like me a lot also. I wouldn’t want to make her parents mad but I would do most anything to win the girl. 1 always have said that I could leave any girl no matter how much I thought of her and get another one, but she is the only one I ever saw whom I really and truly love. If I had the chance I would marry her today but here I am left out Because she is engaged to another oY. > I guess I just stayed away too long and let some one else get her first. I look forward to getting your answer and will appreciate it very, very much, CHICK,
ann you can do is tell the’
girl how you feel and let her decide the issue. This you have every right to do regardless of what her parents think about it. After all, you weren't on the spol to press your suit at the psychological moment and this was no fault of yours. If the decision goes against you, you may find that there is more fact in your former conviction that you could leave any girl and get another than you are willing fo admit at the moment. Many a man who has been refused by one girl has lived to make a happy marriage with another. Such readjustments are not easy, but -they -can be made. It is his
N.|method of meeting them which is
important. The courageous find Sompensations. The cowards quit. : JANE JORDAN.
Air Hostess
To Tntertain P.T. a
Mrs. W. J. Cath
Churchwomen Urged to Back Religion Bill
Mrs. Ralph Hudelson asked support of house bill 195 at a board meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Church Women yesterday in the Y. W. C. A, The bill would provide release time for religious education of public school pupils. A report of the nominating committee was made by Mrs, William C. Hartinger. Candidates .to be elected at the May meeting are Mrs. Virgil Sly, president; Mrs. H. C. Gemmer, ‘first vice president; Mrs. R. L. Brokenburr, second vice president; Mrs. Don Roberts, third vice president; Mrs, J. A. Schumacher, recording secretary. Mrs. Lionel Artis, assistant recording secretary; Mrs, Ralph Holland, corresponding secretary; Mrs: Royer Kniode Brown, treasurer; Mrs, F.. Marion Smith, historian; Mrs. C. A. Childers, auditor, and Mrs. Jasper P. Scott, parliamentarian. Announcement also was made of the election of Mrs, Asa Hoy to the presidency of: the Marion County Council of Christian Edu-
The election will be held by the |
Williard Peek, Andrew |
be , the speaker and Mrs. Frank)
Albert P.: Stewart, director of music at Purdue university, will be the principal speaker tonight at the first of eight training sessions planned by the Central Y. W. C. A. for persons interested in industrial recreation.
Auxiliary Corps Red Cross Mrs. Ralph E. Hueber and Mrs. E. Kirk McKinney will hedd a newly-formed organization, the Red Cross auxiliary corps, which will assist in the Red Cross war fund drive next month and will continue as a permanent activity in the wartime program. * The organization will include several thousand women who will conduct a house-to-house canvass in the campaign for $715,000. Mrs. Hueber was appointed as chairman for the drive. At the-conclusion of the campaign, she and Mrs.-Mc-ey will serve as co-chairmen in subsequent. Red Cross. projects. Work is in progress in organizing the city on a ward and precinct basis, according to W. I. Longsworth, Red Cross chapter chairman. : # 2 = : Additional volunteers are needed at the North side surgical dressings workshop of the Red Cross production department, Mrs. Frank Hoke, chairman, said in announcing the workshop’s new location. It has been moved trom school 70 to the Shortridge high school basement. Women who can give one three-hour period a week to making
surgical dressings for the armed forces are asked to assist.
Margaret Hayes Becomes Bride
The marriage of Miss Margaret Helen Hayes of Los ‘Angeles, formerly of Indianapolis, “to Pvt. C. Edward Holmes, San Diego, Cal, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mts. H. J. Hayes, 5806 N. Oxford st. The wedding was Saturday in St. Louis, cs Mr. and Mrs. ;Hayes will hold open house at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in honor of the couple. Pvt. and Mrs. Holmes will be at home after next Monday at 710 W. 31st st, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Election Booked" Officers of Kappa Delta Phi sorority will be elected at a com-
: women’s activities.
| Entertain at | East Park
Presbyterian Group To Have Luncheon
A musical program, a card party’ and the appearance of a speaker are included in news of churchs A family musical program and a Lincoln’s birthday party will be
|siven at 7:30 p. m. Friday by circle
1 of the Woman's Society of Chris» {ian Service, EAST PARK METH. ODIST church. AOS ' Appearing on the. program are ranged by Mrs. Ray Brown and Mrs. Reginald Moir will be Michael May, Margie Sullivan; Sandra Howenstine, Edward Lowry, Geraldine Hitch, Omar Brown, Judy Varner, Joanne DeMoss, Carol Moir and Jackie Wilson. : The refreshment committee includes Mesdames Howard McDonald, Roy McAuley, Laurel Miles, Guy DeMoss and George Eichholtz.
The book review group of section 2, Women’s society, MERIDIAN HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN church, will be entertained Thursday at the home of Mrs. H. S. Gudgel, 118 E. 48th st. The dessert( luncheon will be at 1 p. m. Mrs. E. C. Rumpler will speak on. “Wartime Living.” = Mrs. John FP. Vehling, the assistant hostess, is accepting reservations.
The February band of the Altar society of ST. CATHERINE'S CATHOLIC church will sponsor a¥ luncheon and card party in the school hall, Shelby and Tabor sts., at 12:15 p. m. Wednesday. Mrs. Anthony Lee is hostess chairman and will pe assisted by Mesdames. Thomas Mattingly, George Burns, Edward Rraesds and Arthur Steeb.
“Mrs. H. L. V. Shinn will be the guest speaker at a meeting of the Women’s. guild of the IMMANUEL EVANGELICAL: AND REFORMED church at 1:30 p. m. Thursday. She will speak on “The Church Faces the World Today.”
Poetry Groups Meets Sunday At Y. W.C. A.
“patterns of Poetiy” will be’ the subject of a talk: by Mrs. Lillian Beck, Terre Haute, when she speaks Sunday afternoon at the Poets’ Rendezvous in the Central Y. C. A. Following her talk, she will conduct a short forum session. .. Dr, John S. Harrison of Butler university will discuss the sonnet; Mrs. Gladys Webster, Martinsville, will read a group of her poems, and Mrs. Florence Macdonald will be in charge of a musical program. Hostesses will be Mrs, Charles Hougham, Whiting; Mrs, Jane Schmutte and Mrs. Mary McHuron. 2 x 8 At the request of Miss Olive Inez
’| Downing, publicity chairman for
the Poetry Federation, a resolution urging adoption of the third Friday of: April as a day honoring Indiana . poets ‘recently was introduced before ‘the Indiana house of repre-
bined business and social meeting
cation.
tonight at the Hotel Lincoln.
sentatives by Walter 8. Baker, Bourbon. Fk
"GOVERNMENT RATION ORDER
“The government has given us notice, that all shoes that are in our Layaway ~ Department must be taken up by February [ith by the purchasing customers. We are publishing this for your information in protection of your layaway purchases. We have approximately 1,000 pairs of shoes “in our Layaway Depariment, and if they are not taken out by the purchasing customers by February Ith it will be necessary for each customer to fmiish h Soon No. 17 for - i
