Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 March 1943 — Page 14

KE. 12th st.

| Mrs: Russell Cox, 6101. Indianola : ° ave. wil entertain Rho: chapter,

2 Hancock, 101 West dr,

Place, at 8 o'clock tonight. . ‘Hancock and Mrs. L IL wn will give a report on a dele- < ite meeting held Monday evening, | ; the first’ drawing on the Quar-{ ~~ + - : plan will be ‘held. Mrs. Riley

Ayres will preside.

Beta Eta chapter, OMEGA PHI|TAU, will meet this evening with{

Mrs. Raymond Hudson, 401 S.

Winners to Be Chosen Friday

+ Winners will be chosen Friday

in the Indiana regional contest for the Scholastic magazine's mational

school wartime art exhibit. Their work will be displayed March 15 to March 27 at the William H. ‘Block Co., one of the co-sponsors of the national exhibit.

Regional judges here will be Walter McBride, superintendent of art in the Pt. Wayne schools; Griffin Stephenson, head of the art department at Muncie high school, "and Donald Mattison, head of John Herron ‘Art school. Miss Naomi Daugherty, assistant advertising manager at Block's, will judge the eostuie design entries, : |.

"Awards Committee

"Members of the regional advisory scholastic - awards committee who

selected the judges ; were Charles Yeager, Francis M. Howard, Paul ~ Wehr and Mrs. Bert C., McCamjy on; Miss Juliane Jensen, Loganort; Miss Pansy Mills, Richmond; ‘Miss Julia Duenweg, Terre Haute; Miss Wilma I. Balyeat, Anderson, and Miss Catherine Martin, Crawfordsville. : Regional winners will be presented certificates of merit and achievement keys. National winners whose work will be shown in the fine arts galleries of Carnegie institute, Pittsburgh, will be awarded scholarships, prizes or honorable mention. The Martin B. Leisser memorial prize of $30 also will be given in the national contest to the student

whose work “shows keenest observation of his environment, customs

“tom. chenille in. olive: green.

“Miss

ESocicty—

J

Dorothy Jeanne Spahr To Be Honored Guest at Shower,

army air forces. [ Guests at the shower will be Mrs. Ruth Spahr, mother of the bride-to-be; Mesdames T. J. Um=phrey, Ben J. Weaver, Mildred Wilmeth and ' W. S. McDaniel, Misses Barbara Jo Weaver, Frances Haight and Louise Drews.

Mary Louise Larabee Wed

CAPT. AND MRS. JOHN PAUL WHITEHEAD are at home at Camp White, Medford, Ore., following their wedding Friday .in

‘ithe home of the bride’s sister, Mrs.

8. W. McWilliams. Mrs. Whitehead was Miss Mary Louise Larabee, daughter of Mrs. Charles D. Larabee. Capt. White»|head’s parents are: Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Redhed, Champaign, Ill. Dr. Roy “Ewing Vale performed the ceremony and Miss Jean Larabee, another sister of the bride,

land Robert. C. McCord, U.S. N,

were the attendants. Both the bride and the bridegroom were graduated from the University of Illinoisywhere she was a member of Kdppa Kappa” Gamma, sorority and he of Delta Tau Delta fraternity.

Dr. Hall to Speak

address on “Beyond Victory” for the

D. A. R, in ‘the Propylacum at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Hostesses will be Mesdames Mansu B. Oakes, Arthur V. Brown, James W. Lilly, Frank F. Powell and Albert P. Smith. : ” s 8 Miss Lucy Taggart was to be hostess today at her home, 1331 N, Delaware st., for the monthly meeting of the executive board of the women’s committee of the Indiana State Symphony society.

SHOES, THIRD FLOOR.

MILLERS

WHS? ESTOP for Todays PIONEER WOMAN

Today's : hort woman doesg’t even have a covered wagon to ride in—

she walks

job :to release a man. knows that L Miller's "WhisHestop” gives her work-en-

orgy. und

and stands — doing a She

smart looks.

DR. LOGAN HALL will give an ‘| Cornelia Cole Fairbanks chapter,

.| piness makes beauty.

. } fatigue-banishing rou

MISS DOROTHY JEANNE SPAHR will be the honor guest tonight at a linen shower given by Mrs. Kenneth

{Kinnear and Mrs. E. N. Trago at Mrs, Kinnear’s home.

Miss ‘Spahr will become the bride of Lieut. Alfred Wayne Travis in a ceremony March 20, Lieut. Travis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Paul Travis, Dayton, Pa, is stationed. ph Warrensburg, Mo., with the

{Oppose Change

In Educational Standards

Opposition to attempts “to lower the standards of education by eliminating courses regarded as by educators” was voiced yesterday by the Indianapolis Council of

its monthly meeting in Ayres’ audi-

"| torium.

Copies of the resolution will be sent to the President, to ‘Senators Raymond E. Willis and Frederick VanNuys and to Rep. Louis -Ludlow. The resolution, according to Mrs. Donovan A. Turk, council president,

is the organization’s answer to a

recent magazine article by Harry Hopkins in which she said “Mr. Hopkins attacked the principles of fundamental education as taught in our high schools and institutions of higher learning.”

Dr. Jellema Speaks

“The council,” Mrs. Turk said, “is determined to take some. action to help check radical educational ideas that have sprouted in the United States in recent months.” Speakers at yesterday's meeting were Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city health board secretary; Dr. Guy O. Carpenter, district superintendent of the Methodist chuch, and Dr. Harry Jellema, head of the philosophy department o Indiana university. Three ersanisaoli presented for

‘membership in the council were Mu

chapter, Alpha Omicron Alpha sorority; - the Fidelis elub of North Park O. E. 8S, and the ParliaHenan Practice club.

Beauty— The Steambath In Beautifying. THE TELEGRAM sinounding his furlough evokes beauty, for hapBut there's nothing like a becoming hairdo and a fresh skin to spotlight that happy I nce, So an outstanding cosmetician

introduces a “furlough treatment” designed specifically for ‘the wife

arrives.

And the expert who provides this for her smart clients kindly points out that parts of it can be done at home, self-service style. First," and: perhaps most important in the facial treatment, comes a steambath. In the salon ‘this is

2 s = 8

with a turkish towel over your head

"land the bowl, tent fashion. Add

steam up. This opens face pores will.

Women in a resolution adopted at}

and sweetheart who wants to look as bright as she feels when he|Sigma Beta sorority’s Lambda Mu

Pickled pine furniture against olive green walls is a handsome basis for this living room with its soft coral eocktail pillows ‘stacked two Seep and ‘ts Chinese flora). linen upholstery, The rug is of cot-

Womai’s Viewpoint— Mrs. EF. Tires Of the Scare

Technique -

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON . "Times Special Writer ALTHOUGH Washington is already cluttered with too many people, I'd ‘like to see a first-class

psychologist moved into the propa-

ganda department. For even a half-baked. ‘payehologiss knows you can’t scare people into. being good. Yet scaring seems to be the popular method. A new bogeyman is popped out at us every few days. McNutt, Nelson, Wickard, Hopkins, ‘Hershey, et cetera, must lie : awake nights thinking up fresh horrors; there

seems to be a sort of sadistic de-

light in spreading threats—which strikes me as a poor way of fighting a war... - +|ike ~ We must be prepared—someone is forever shouting—for awful sacrifices. terrible hardships, mounting casualties, an entire change in our way of life, a sharp decline in standards” of living, or doing without everything but the barest ne-es-sities, and so on and on and on. # ” #

NOW PEOPLE who are capable of thinking about the world in which we live know the immediate future will bring more rationing, greater sacrifices, and many new hardships, - and because they are

able to think for themselves they| {realize the necessity for such

changes. They do’ not need the “bedtime” scare stories. On the other hand, people who think only of today are panicked by the dinning radio voices telling them to prepare for

the worst.

As it is, everyone outside of Washington exists in a state of apprehension. We don’t fear the enemy, but our nerves are shaken by the horror tales our own leaders cook up for us. .Let’s go easy on the Poe technique. Dish up the bad news as shoe rationing was handled, by giving it to us straight when the time comes. Healthy people have been put to bed by being constantly told they looked sick, and by the same power of suggestion brave people can be scared into a blue funk by never-

"| ending ‘warnings of coming disaster.

First Aid Teams To Meet Friday

. “yictims” will be prepared Friday by Curt Weaver of the ¥Y. M. C. A., to receive first aid from members of district 47s five casualty post teams. The district meeting will be at 7:30 p. m. in the Brookside community house. Walden F. Ambroz, county chairman of the organization, will be the speaker. C. Walter Harris, accompanied by Miss Edith. Westerman, will direct the singing of patriotic songs.

Business Session The monthly business meeting of

chapter will be held at 8 p. m. to

ay at the home of Mrs, Teo Stella, 2520 Park ave.

Bride

given you in comfort, and the steam |g wafts you a refreshing fragrance of | |camomile, the now-rare highland, 8 "| flower of central Europe: ;

Tes HOWEVER, what counts is the| . . |steam, and it can be duplicated at ‘| home: Just take two quarts of boil-| ~~ |ing water in a bowl, hold your face "land throat over it for five minutes,

hot water once or twice to keep the| for cleaning as Tew other. things | : ‘Next, a soap cream ombsinizel

| powdered pumice is ud bo San : rly where

Wedding 0. (March 27

Margaret L. Trager To Bs Shower. Guest

mother and Mrs. Emma Brumit, 1803 Miller st, is Mr. Brumit’s mother. © sz = = marriage of Miss Caroline Gordon to Howard E. Lee has been announced by her mother, Mrs. Donald Monroe Gordon, 3139 Central ave. Mr. Lee is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Alfred E. Lee of Rapid

Sunday. # tJ 2 A linen shower will be. given tonight for Miss Margaret Louise Trager by Miss Rosalind Wise, assisted by her mother, Mrs. Gilbert Wise, 55 N. Warman ave. Miss Trager’s wedding to Lieut. Samuel D. Sampsell Jr. will be Saturday at Camp Livingston, La. Guests tonight will be Mrs. J. Thomas Sparks of Marion, sister of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Samuel D. Sampsell, mother of the bridegroom-to-be; Mesdames John Lones, James Lones, Lawrence Carl, Howard Trager, William : Trager, Coleman Cohee, - Morris McDonough, Fred Prasse, Ruth York, Ward Sparks, Edward Sparks, Donald H. MecNaughton, Harry Craig, Mae Medcalfe and Joseph A. Litel. Others will be Mesdames Leo Jupperschmidt, Anna Burke, Lewis Davis, Martha Leathers, Robert Doerr, Ralph Weir, Norbert Brinkman, Joseph- O'Mara and Floyd Bickerton, Misses Dorothy Thomas, Mary Cunningham, Mary MecCracken, Pauline Clark, Phyllis En~ yert, Margaret Hanley, Mary Glaska and Phyllis Jean Lones. SL i al Miss. Chadwena Swayne honored last night at a given by Mrs. Arthur B. agnon and her daughter, Mrs. Hg B. Pock Jr., 3716 N. Meridian &t. They were assisted by Miss Alice Wagnon. Dr, and Mrs. Jap F. Swayne, 5425 Pleasant Run blvd., are parents of the bride-to-be. Her marriage to Pvt. Edward B., Wagnon will be March 13 in Little Rock, Ark. Pvt. Wagnon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Wagnon, is stationed at Camp Robinson, Ark. ; Guests at the party included Mesdames Arthur C. Lantz, Harley Griggs, Frederick A. Kiser Jr.,

was ower

Shores and Harry B. Pock Sr. Misses - Myrna LaTourette, Ruth Elizabeth: Taylor and Mary Evalyn Alerding.

Announce Jury For Poster Contest -

Elmer Taflinger, artist, Carl R. Switzer of the Caldwell-Baker Advertising agency, and Dr. Charles Jeffrey, optometrist, will be judges in the “Save Your Vision Week” poster contest for Indianapolis high school students. . Posters, on the subject of “Guard Your Eyes,” will be judged Friday at the public library where they are being received. Prizes of $10 and $5 in war stamps will be given, and the winners will be entered in the state contest, with a $25 war bond as top prize. Winning posters and those receiving honorable mention will be displayed next week in a window of the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. The women’s auxiliary of the Indiana Association of Optometrists is sponsor for the local and state con-

day, March 11,

D. U. Session March 27

The annual convention of the Indiana unit of the national society, Daughters of the Union 1861-1865, Inc, will be March 27. The meeting

room of the: Hotel Lincoln and ‘luncheon will be served at 12:30

o'clock. i : ‘Governor Henry F. Schricker and Mrs, Walter N, Winkler, nationalf = . |president general, of Lebanon, will]

be honor guests at the luncheon. Committee chairmen will include

: | Mrs. ‘Karl Kayser, luncheon; Mrs.

Besse E. Herrmann, general con-

ding of Miss Charlotte Swain and}

Mrs. Wiliam Swain, 5230 E| Washington st., is the bride-to-be’s

The engagement and approaching]

City, S. D. The. wedding will be

Fred Rosebrock,; Swayne, Myrtle.

tests. The latter will end on Thurs- |

‘The state board meeting of the | society has been called tor Saturday : 8 101s or hak wil ten,

cardigan suit at left navy checks.: With the red sailor

you have a perfect casual costume.

Clybs— :

China and Colombia.

Mrs. Ann Repass, 4150 Boulevard

pl, will be hostess for a THURS-

DAY LYCEUM club meeting tomorrow. Mrs. W. W. Cross will speak on “China.”

“Colombia” will be the subject of Mrs. Lawrence C. Miller's lecture for the NORTH SIDE STUDY club tomorrow. The group will hold its meeting and will elect officers for the year at the home of Mrs. Roy Martin, 1433 N. Pennsylvania st.

Mrs. A. W. Bowen will give a hook

CIRCLE meeting with Mrs, Howard Maxwell, Marott hofel. Mrs. A. A, Zinn will be assistant hostess.

The. 1908 club will have Dr. C. T. Malan, state superintendent of public instruction, as its speaker tomorrow, Mrs. Oscar Lee, 4302 College ave., will be hostess.

"New officers for the year will be elected by the BETA DELPHIAN club meeting tomorrow in the direc-

bank. A new study subject also will be chosen at the meeting.

Parliamentary Club Meets Tomorrow

and amendments will bg held by the Parliamentary Practice club meeting tomorrow morning in the direcfors’ room of the Indiana National bank: ’ :

A question period ducted by Mrs. W. H Vinzant. A business meeting at 10:30 o'clock will precede the prograin. Mrs. Carl E. Pluess, first vice president, will preside.

enth district, Indiana J'ederation of Clubs, report and committee reports will be given.

*

will begin at 10 a. m. in the Lincoln | -

review tomorrow for the REVIEW

tors’ room of the Indinna National |.

A discussion of practice motions

will be con-

Mrs. Vinzant is to present a sev- 4

A suit’s a versatile thing—and happily so these days.’ The two radically different outfits here have one basis—the four-pocketed It’s of knitted wool fabric in red, white and

hat and red knitted topcoat, it’s a

fine all-purpose epsemble. Add the white knitted, navy-piped jacket, white beret and red sweater with necklace of savy wowden heads and

Address on Jasnncse Leaders To Be Given for Pierian Club; Two Groups to Hold Elections

Speakers for club groups meeting. tomorrow wil talk on Japan,

The PIERIAN STUDY club will hear, Mrs. Fred Pollock talk on “Modern Leaders of Japan” tomorrow et a meeting with Mrs. . O. D. Pritchard, 260 Buckingham dr. Also on the program will be Mrs. James Peeling and Mrs. W. P., Cecil who will discuss “Conservation: Clothing.”

Give Card Party

A card party was to be sponsored by the Altar society of St. Philip Neri Catholic church at 2 o’clock this afternoon in the auditorium. Mrs. BE. M. Crawford was to be chairman.

general leaders’ committees tea and Cooley will on “Plant Hybridizing® .On March 14, members: anda

will meet from 3 to 5 p.m.

Children’s museum to hear E A. Rice of Shoriridge high sch

side Still Waters.” be Misses Emily Booth and Bain and Pauline Phillips. W. P. Holaday of Butler univers sity ‘and Shortridge, will be the speaker at a guest meeting March 20 at 8 p. m. ir Cropsey hall. A round table discussion will be held March 21 at‘l p. m. in the Prather Masonic lodge social room, 2 st, and College ave, :

Bird Hike Planned .

A 6:30 p. m, bird study group meeting will be March 25 at. Bn home of Miss Clara Alma ‘Moore, 3510 W. Michigan st. Members will meet ‘with the ¢ tral district Indiana Audubon ciety, Inc., March 26 to hear H. Hadley presant an illust program, ‘Experiences of a Watcher in Florida.” The me will be in the World War N

_|rial buflding at v.45 p. m.

Meeting in the state library 2:30 p. m. March 27, the club will see a folio of engraved and . colored plates of the “Birds America” by John James A ) The folio is the only one in In An all-day bird hike March 28 &t 9:30 a. m. will complete the March events for the club. Members will meet at the Fall Creek bridge near the City hospital and will hike to the ovens north of 22d st. After dinner they wil follow the JXiver past 30th st. to Sullivan lake. i

Little Flower Group Plans Card Parties

‘A card party will be: ‘sponsored at 8 p. m, Sunday in the Little Flower auditorium by the March and April committee of the Little Flower So= cial club.

at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the audi= toriuni. All games will be played. Mrs. Arthur Gurley is chairman,

-

weather.

seasoned hardwood—cut in

POLA

317 W. 16TH ST.

=

FIREPLACE Woop

: Depend on. your fireplace to see you ihroush the cold We have a limited quantity: of properly |

18-inch lengths to fit your

fireplace. Order today fro Polar—WA bash 4573.

ICE AND FUEL CO.

2000 NORTHWESTERN AVE. 1902 S. EAST ST.

The committes also will have & be dessert and pillowcase card party