Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1943 — Page 14

"PACE M

Society—

Trevillian-Jefferson

Ceremony

Read at Christ Episcopal Church

THE MARRIAGE OF Miss Elizabeth Ann Jefferson to Pfc. Robert Page Trevillian, Camp Atterbury, is an‘nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elliott Jefferson. The bridegroom is “the son of Mr. and Mrs.

‘Walter Welford Trevillian of Baltimore.

The ceremony was read at 4:30 o’clock Saturday afternoon in - Christ ‘Episcopal church by the Rev. E. Ainger Powell, rector of the ‘church. Attendants were the bride's sister, Miss Nancy Jefferson, who came from Wittenberg college for the ceremony, and Sergt. Robert Connell, also of Camp Atterbury.

Sergt. Shaneberger Wed

ANNOUNCEMENT IS MADE of the marriage of Miss Thelma . Roller, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Roller of Columbus, Ind, to Tech. Sergt. Harry T. Shaneberger Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. HT Shaneberger of Indianapolis. The wedding was Monday, Feb. 15, in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Miles H. Cook, Vancouver, Wash. Sergt. Shaneberger is stationed at the quartermaster unit training center, Vancouver barracks, He attended Butler university.

On Dance Committees

TWO INDIANAPOLIS girls are serving on committees for the an- . nual freshman formal dance to be held Friday night in the Louis ‘XIV ballroom at St. Mary's college, Notre Dame. Miss Virginia Habig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Habig, is assisting on the decorations committee and Miss Eileen McGee, daughter of Maj. and Mrs. Donovan McGee of Ft, Benjamin Harrison, is assisting on a “clean up” committee.

In New York

MISS I. ‘HILDA STEWART, principal of Tudor Hall school, is in New York attending the annual meeting of the National Association of Principals of Schools for Girls, at the Biltmore hotel. '. She also will attend meetings of the organization’s school and college conference committee of which she is a member. She is expected to return late this week.

Leader Course To Be Opened By Girl Scouts

A training course for women interested in becoming leaders of Brownie Girl Scout groups will

open at 9:30 a, m. Monday in the

Girl Scout little house, according to Mrs. Robert H. White, chairman of the training committee of the Indianapolis and Marion County Girl Scout council. The course, which will be -held each Monday and Thursday, is directed to aid the volunteer Scout leaders in securing information, skills and viewpoints needed for Girl Scout work. Organization, objectives, scope and purpose of the

Girl Scout jobs will be covered and

methods of program work suggested.

Assisting in the course will be - Mrs. Lot Green, chairman of Brown_ie Scout organization; Mrs. Joseph

W. Walden, dramatic consultant;

Mrs. Lyle Besore, former Brownie Mrs. Charles Voyles, chairman of the Girl Scout little house committee; Mrs. Thomas J. Miss Zella Spence, member of the public

Scout leader;

Blackwell Jr., commissioner;

library staff, and Miss Lucile Can-

non, Girl Scout executive for the

city and county.

Persons interested: may register at the Girl Scout office, 519 Board

of Trade bldg.

The Broad Ripple unit of the American Legion auxiliary will present an American flag to troop 137 of the Fairview Presbyterian church at its meeting tomorrow afternoon. Mrs. Nellie -Teepell, Americanism chairman for the auxiliary, will be

in charge.

The mothers’ dommitive of the scout - group recently presented it with ‘a troop flag. Mrs. Louis Smith

is the leader.

Della Jean Branham, Helen Jean Cooperider, Jeanette Harcourt and Florence Waterman will be invested

at the meeting.

Present members are Addaline Black, Carol Lynn Blackburn, Helen Monica Anne Pritchard, Joanne Reardon, Barbara Sadlér, Sally and Susan Talbert, Betsey Todd, Carolyn Rose, Janet Stang and Eleanor

Iverson, Joanne Knepper, Lennox,

Yosha.

In New York— Margie Knapp Takes on Another Job.

By HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer

NEW YORK, Feb. 23.—Seven-

last week in the cotillion room of the Pierre, It's her first engagement in a New York hotel. Indiana remembers when she used to sing over station WGBF several years ago.

the Pierre. Between shows she taxis 20 blocks over to the Music Box theater for her role in “Star and Garter.” She doesn’t strip. She sings. “It’s a mad dash,” Lucille Knapp, Margie's mother, told me today. “Margie sings in the cotillion room at a quarter of nine, Forty-five minutes later she’s due on the Music Box stage.” For her Pierre debut Margie chose two bouffant gowns glittering | with sequins. One, a flesh pink chiffon, features the new bishop sleeves and a sweetheart neckline. Before the midnight show she slipped into a filmy black | lace. “Mother and I saw Nicholas Brazy, the Indianapolis fur merchant, when he was in town a week ago,” Margie told me. * “We had dinner with him at the Pierre. I didn’t realize that I'd, be singing there a week later.” ! 8 8 8» THE WAR HAS brought standing room only to most of the East Fifty night spots, but oddly enough you'll find very few uniforms in the crowd. Most servicemen stick closer to Broadway, - They ‘prefer the more publicized ‘night clubs that

they read about back home. There's a brand new recreation

of the Hoosier house committee. “We're. open every afternoon from 4 until 11,” she fold me today. “On Saturday nights we always give a party for about a hundred servicemen.” Carnegie hall tenants have fur-

furniture, rugs, lamps and books. On the walls hang pictures by artists 'who live in the building. Mrs. Adams is represented by her painting of red poppies, white daisies and. | blue cornfiowers in an oldfashioned early American vase. “The boys like Mr. Adams’ picture,” she said. “It shows a wirehaired terrier staring at a toy dog.” Mr, Adams, incidentally, spent last week-end in Hanover, N. H., visiting Wayman Jr., a Dartmouth freshman, » » = LAST WEEK THE Adamses attended the opening of the National Academy of Design. Along with 3000 others they rode busses to the academy, Fifth ave. and 89th st. Also | representing Indiana at the show were the Franklin Rand Magees and Frederick Detwiller, who came down from Bennington, Vt. where he and Mrs, Detwiller are wintering. As the, guests entered the main reception room they came upon a portrait entitled Uncle David: Mr. Adams painted it on a recent visit to North Carolina. Uncle David, an old Southern Negro, has. served in the governor's mansion for fifty years, “Wayman hfppened to see him at a reception given for us by Governor and Mrs. Broughton,” said Mrs. Adams. “He asked for permission to paint his portrait. Uncle David was so thrilled with the result that he inyited all his friends to the governor’'s mansion to see it.”

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Margie appears twice a night at |

center for servicemen in the Car-|@ negie hall studios, Seventh ave. and | {i 57th: st. Mrs, Wayman Adams, wife |§ artist, heads the|3

nished the large studio room with}

{Luncheon Threday

teen-year-old Margie Knapp opened | i§

This older bride chooses a

shoulder.

diamonds.

colored rayon jersey with a soutache braid midriff and new sleeves which are shirred from wrist to She wears one of the new flat berets in satin of matching hue, with a tulle veil worn as a drape over the brim and under the chin. Her jewelry adds sparkle—a brilliant-encrusted choker necklace and ear-clips and a ring of twin brilliant-cut

gown of honey-

floor.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

For the Junior and the Older Bride

This teen-age bride selects 4 gown of marquisette with wide bishop sleeves caught in at the wrist and a very new removable lace pinafore with a front peplum and a bow whose wide streamers reach the Her headdress is a matching marquisette. freesias atop her pompadour and her wrist bouquet also is of white freesias.. Her only jewelry is her marquise solitaire,

Minturn fd Here Saturday

(Winner Is Announced

Mayflower Soclety’ Is ‘Donor of Prize.

Miss Esther Bejan. ‘ac senior at ‘Butler university, has been named winner of the Joseph Allen Minturn award given annually at

|The $25 prize is given for the best essay on the Plymouth colony. 2 She will receive the award and read her essay, “Our Pilgrim Heritage,” at the annual meeting of the society at 8:30 o'clock tonghit in the Hotel Lincoln. Miss Benjamin is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. A. P. Benjamin of Hamilton. She was graduated from the Ashley, Ind., high school and is majoring in religion and classical languages. She plans to teach after her graduation in June. = Contest Judges. She is president of Kappa Beta, national religious honorary society; a member of the Classical club, Y. W. C. A, Associated Women Students, the co-ed. representative body; Scarlet Quill, senior women’s honorary organigation; Philokurean, English honorary, and Trianon, social sorority. Judges for the contest included members of the university's English, history and journalism departments. Paul Buchanan is gover-| nor of the Mayflower society.-

Red Cross Speakers to

Mme. Silvercruys

Sculptor to Be Lecturer

At Town Hall

The 12th program of this season’s Town Hall series will be at 11 o'clock Saturday morning in the English theater with Mme. Suzanne Silvercruys as the speaker, During her lecture-demonstration |on “Life, Art and Sculpture,” she will model the portrait bust of a subject chosen from her audience. Mme. Silvercruys is the daughter of the late Baron Franz Silvercruys, president of the supreme court of Belgium, and sister of the present Baron Silvercruys, Belgian minister to Canada.

Yale Graduate

shoulder length snood of She places fresh white

man,

‘TUESDAY, FEB. "98, 1943

Sororities—

Zeta Beta Chis To Be Guests At Dinner

Plan Farewell Party For Mrs. Gene Adams,

A dinner party-and a social meete ing - Bppear among savory activie ties. - : The Indiana Alpha chapter. of ZETA BETA CHI will be enter= tained tonight by Mrs, Edward Keil3157 N. Delaware st. ‘at a “pay off” dinner party at 6:30 o'clock. Miss Helen Roell, treasurer, is general chairman and Mrs. Keil man, assisted by Miss Esther M. Schmitt and Mrs. Ella Mae Holt, is in charge of dinner arrangements. Entertainment is being planned by Miss Mary E. Coughlin, assisted by Mrs. Georgia -Hanshew, Mrs. Dixie I. Greene, Misses Bettie Wolfe, Honora McEvilly, Mabel Jones and Lenore Collins,

Mrs. Gene Adams will be ‘the honor guest at a farewell party give en at 8 p. m. tomorrow by Rho chap= ter, SIGMA BETA, at the hame of Mrs. William Pepe, 416 Berkley rd. Mrs. Pepe and Mrs. Hal Schultz will serve as hostesses. Mrs. Adams, the chapter presi= dent, with Mr. Adams and their son Gene Jr., will leave next week for Harrison, Ark., where they will make their home.

A patriotic theme was carried out in the social meeting of Gamma, chapter, EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA, last night in the clubrooms at the Rau huilding. Mrs. Eugene Welch,

See Film

She is -a graduate of the Yale school of fine arts and among her

Woman's Viewpoint— Pays Tribute To Courage Of Women

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Times Special Writer

“HOW'S JIM?” “What do you, write last?” You've only to go around asking such questions to be the most popular person in your set. For nowadays the surest way

bto a woman's favor is to shew in-

terest in her man. Maybe he’s a son; maybe he’s a husband .'in some faraway spot; maybe he’s only some girl's steady. = But he.is sure to : be the most fascinating topic to ther, so instead of talking about our own pet soldiers, do let's exercise enough thoughtfulness to inquire about the other person’s love. It: is heartbreaking to see the eagerness with which all details’ are repeated. = For those whose men are away the fragments of news received become monumentally important and they are related endlessly. We're bursting with such information. 8 ” » NO ONE CAN escape our overwhelming desire to tell somebody else about a new destination, a rveclassification, a promotion, a tidbit of gossip, or a change of plans affecting our own. So we pour it out to the grocer, the milkman, the chance bus acquaintance or any one else who will listen. We aren't choosy about the audience. What we can’t”do, if we are normal females, is to keep bottled up within us these life-bearing messages from training camps or foreign cities or ports of entry, Sometimes I think the courage of women is the only beautiful thing: about war. A starry look, a look of profoundest love, strangely akin to that which artists have given to the Virgin Mary, shines today upon the faces of many women, One can almost hear the echo of a voice saying, “This is niy beloved, in whom I am well pleased.”

Social Club Hears Mrs. Karstadt

Mrs. Hans Karstadt was to be hostess today for the Independent Social club meeting at the home of Mrs. John W. Taggart, 2021 N. Delaware st. The dessert lunch on was to be at 12:30 p. m. Following a business sess.on, piano numbers were to be presented by Mrs. Chester Bittner and Mrs. Karstadt was to give an illustrated talk on her travels in India and China. Mrs. Grace Kefcham was to be the assisting hostess.

Robison Juniors Present Flag

The Bruce P. Robinson unit 133, American Legion auxiliary, met yesterday at the Riley hospital to sew.

service chairman, was in charge.

presented an American flag to the English Avenue Boys’ club last night. Joseph E. Rabinovich, national supervisor of the Sons of the; Legion, was the speaker.

Card Party Booked: Catholic church will give a public card party at 2 p. m. tomorrow in

the parish hall, All games will be played.

The Marguerite Fisher club, for-

| imerly the 1937 Matrons’ ¢lub, will

meet Thursday for a 1

3 o.m

hear from Pete?” “Wher did Bob!

Mrs. Ida Mae Shulse, community!

The junior group of the auxiliary]

The February circle of Holy Cross} &

|Clubs—

| Mrs. Odin F. Wadleigh to Speak Before Home Economics Club; Inter Nos Meets Tomorrow

A number of talks will be made at clubwomen’s meetings tomorrow. ; Mrs. Odin F. Wadleigh will speak on “A New Nutritional Discovery— the Soy Bean” at a meeting of the Home Economics club at 2 p. m. {tomorrow at her home, 3030 N. Delaware st. Mrs. J. Allen Dawson will be the hostess, assisted by Mrs. H. B. Ashley and Mrs. Frank Nesbit.

“The Problems of Lasting Pedce” (Hoover) will be Mrs. Ernest B. Foster's subject when she speaks tomorrow at a meeting of the

the noon dessert luncheon will be Mrs. E. L. Carr, 1202 N.. Oakland ave.

The WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON club will be entertained tomorrow by Mrs. E. BE. Padgett and Mrs. Elizabeth’ Bradford, Bible study and music will be presented by Mrs,

Davidson. Mrs. Roger Lawton is to speak on “United States, 1876 to 1926. ”»

Mrs. A. : C. Caldwell," 312 N: Wallace st., will be the hostess tomorrow for the ZETATHEA club, Two travel talks, “Colorful Hawaii” and “Puerto Rico’s Mellow Charm,” will be given by Mrs. Mary O. Weatherbee and Mrs, Charles E. Schwab.

The Erin Isle chapter of the INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY club will meet at 8 p. m. Friday at the home of Mrs. A. W. Richter, 3602 Forest Manor ave. Dr. Rebecca Parrish will be the speaker. Mrs. Donald Stroud and Mrs. Charles Lindner will assist the hostess. :

George Saas To Speak

“If the War Should End One Hour From Now” will be George Saas’ subject when he speaks tomorrow night: before the American Women’s Voluntary. Services group. The speaker is director of the payroll savings plan for the state. The A. W. V. S. meeting will be at 7:30 o'clock in the Columbia club. The bond-selling group of the organization has sold more than $78,000 worth of ‘bonds and stamps since its organization six months ago. At the meeting final plans will be made and a ticket census taken for the first of a series of book reviews by Mrs. Olive Enslen Tinder which the A. W. V. 8. is sponsoring. Lloyd C. Douglas’ “The Robe” will be Mrs. Tinder’s topic at the review Friday night in the world war memorial building.

Director

~—Dexheimer-Carlon photo.

Miss Bernice Van Sickle is directing the Phi Beta Follies, a

1 variety show to be presented for

the soldiers at Billings General hospital at 7:30 p. m. today. The

program is shousored by Pi Zeta 1apter

INTER NOS club. The hostess for

George A. Frantz and Mrs. R. L.j

pest known works are the portrait

bureau of the Marion county office; bust of Herbert Hoover, now in the of civilian defense, the Red Cross| Louvain library; the Zonta -club speakers’ bureau and the Victory | aviation trophy presented to Amespeakers representing local organ-| lia, Earhart; the Cyrus H. K. Curtis {zations will be held at 4:15 p. m. {memorial plaque and the Queen tomorrow in the east room of the Astrid memorial group. ; world war memorial building. Portrait busts of the Dionne quinThe program will include an eight-| tuplets are among her commissions minute film, “Since Pearl Harbor,” »;and she is the only artist to have which shows Red Cross activities. had the quintuplets as living modBert C. McCammon, chairman, will | S. speak on the Red Cross war fund Author of Book fampaign, ODEning ness momih, Fordham university recently sponThose attending will receive in- gored a showing of her ecclesiastical formation Kits on Red Cross work. sculpture. Belgium has conferred its The speakers are available for ap- jjjghest honor on her, the knightpearances at Red Cross meetings. 'hooq in the Order of Leopold;

: France has made her an officer W. S. C. S. Meeting

d’Academie, and the British have To Be Tomorrow

given her their coronation medal. In the United States she has won Miss Gertrude Taggart will talk | tomorrow on “South America” at

a number of important prizes and competitions. Her head of the late a meeting of the Woman's Society of Christian Service at the Merid-

Lord Tweedsmuir has been bought {ian Street Methodist church. The

by the Metropolitan. museum of luncheon meeting will be at 12:30

art. Mme. Silvercruys is the author of Pp. m. in the church parlors. ‘Mrs. J. F. Rainier will lead de-

“A Primer of Culture,” an introduction. to the art and mechanics of votions and Mrs. Fred E. Gifford will conduct a business session.

sculpture, Mrs. Henry Lee Drake will introMrs. Joseph B. Daugherty and Mrs. James C. Carter are co-chairmen for the luncheon.

Greencastle Club Books Meeting

Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind. Feb, 23.—

A joint meeting of the speakers’|

Health— Early Diagnosis Of Rabies Is Important

By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Writer MANY PEOPLE have the mistaken notion that rabies, or hydrophobia, is a summertime disease. Actually, it may occur at any season. . A severe epidemic has just been reported from Rockland county, N. Y., and according to’ public health authorities, the time when rabies is most prevalent is in the

luncheon at the Columbia club in her honor following the lecture.

Visits New York Times Special NEW YORK, Feb. 23.—Mrs. Walter M. Winkler of Lebanon, Ind., was a recent guest in New York while here

duce the speaker and preside at a

spring. Rabies is caused by a virus which is in the saliva of the rabid, or “mad,” dog. When the dog bites a human or another dog, the saliva plus the rabies virus gets into the wound. The: virus travels along to the spinal cord and brain and back along other nerves to the sali-

saliva, and is ready to attack an-

vary glands, where it gets into thej

meet here tomorrow with Mrs. Blanche Monnett and Mrs. W. E. Tipton as hostesses. Miss Lenore Alspaugh will speak on “Men of Note” and Mrs. John Tennant's subject will be “A Poem.”

The Twentieth Century club will!

to participate in the bond drive held

Mrs. Winkler is president general of {the Daughters of the Union 1861-65, and reports that pledges totaling more than $15,000 in bonds were secured.

on President Lincoln's birthday.}:

president; Miss Doris Allen and Miss Helen Winebrenner were in charge.

OMEGA NU TAU'S Alpha chapter will meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Hotel Lincoln,

Workshop Class to Be Tomorrow

“The Psychological Approach” or “Tailoring the Radio to Fit Society” will be the subject for discussion at the second meeting of the 1943 Theta Sigma Phi workshop series. The program will be given at 7 p. m. tomorrow in the large studio of station WIRE. It will be under the direction of C. S. Stewart and Lotys Benning Stewart. y Hostesses for the meeting will t Mesdames June Moll Wilcox, W. R Richardson, Hugh: Stewart, Heber Williams, B. F. Hoke and Jack Reddick, ‘Misses Harriet Scantland, ‘Elizabeth Frink and Helen Ruegamer. :

Clones-Ogden Rite

Is Announced

The marriagé, on Feb. 13, of Miss Helen Ogden to Joseph Clones is announced by her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Dawson B. Ogden, Odon, The bridegroom is the son of Mrs, Helen Marshall, 641 N. Oakland ave, The ceremony took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Mon‘day, 1116 River ave., with Mr. and Mrs. Monday as attendants. The couple is at home in the Carter apartments. :

{comes in his way, his appearance

to other dogs or people.

TAnnounced at I. U.

other victim. By the time a dog with rabies has reachied the stage where he is frothing at the mouth, running crazily about, snapping aimlessly yet viciously at anyone and anything that

Crown Hill Belongs to You

and actions will rouse thé cry of “Mad Dog,” and warn most people away. £8 x =» MEANWHILE, however, before these clear symptoms of rabies have appeared, he may have bitten other dogs and people and. given them his frightful sickness, It is vitally important, therefore, that rabies in a dog he recognized at the earliest possible moment. The first sign of rabies in a dog is a change in his disposition. He may have a troubled, distracted look in his eyes. He seems to lose his normal desire to recognize and be friendly with other dogs or with people. Dogs which have previously been somewhat aloof may, on the other hand, become unusually friendly, affectionate and gentle. If you own a dog or if you have made friends with dogs in your neighborhood or along your way to work or school, you should know these early symptoms of rabies, both for your own protection and so that you can make sure your dog pet or friend does not become responsible for giving this horrible disease

you—no matter who or where you are.

lature, to serve the public without profit.

care for our grounds.

® Crown Hill in actuality- belongs to those who

can be one of them.

Scholastic Standings |

so in advance of the troubled day of actual need.

Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 23.—Forest hall, Indiana university co-ed dormitory, topped the list of all I. U. organizations in scholarship during the last semester, with the Phi Mu sorority running second and Delta Delta Delta sorority third. Although seventh on the 'complete - list, Lincoln House ranked first for men’s organizations. Riley manor was second and Phi Kappa Psi fraternity third among men’s} groups. Unorganized women ranked higher scholastically than did the sorority co-eds and unorganized men outranked those belonging to fraternities. ; Grades of students in the graduate divisions, law school, medical and dental schools, as well those

® Incorporated asa non-profit organization for public ser‘vice, 79 years ago.

® Managed by Indianapolis citizens serving without pay.

® Perpetual care assured by income from a cumulating fund, now. $1,400,000; “the

piincipal being held inviplate,

HERZ RESTS | JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY AT THE GROWN OF CROWN, BILL

for pl

Cove HILL belongs to the public —to each and every one of @ It is an Indiana institution, created by an act of our State Legis-

® No one has ever received one cent of income from its operations, except the staff of employees who handle the daily affairs and

® The over-all management is, and always has been, vested in a group of 30 Indianapolis citizens who serve without pay in any form.

lot in these beautiful, well-cared-for, wooded acres. They are the real owners and the only real beneficiaries. You, whoever you are,

® We invite you to talk with us, It is always advantageous to do

"CrowN HiLL CEMETERY

AN INDIANA INSTITUTION ESTABLISHED IN 1863

Owned Always by the People It Serves:

INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT CROWN mL

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ADMINISTRATION BUILDING

buy .and own a

® Locsted on Hah ground within the city limits and” served by. two stieet-car lines.

* Lots for as little as #85 on most: reasonable: terms.

° Consultation jivited at our Administration Building or

Talbot 0357.