Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1943 — Page 17

. ‘ess will be assisted by Mrs. William

ancer Army loses Drive r Members

> today’. and tomorrow by the|

Women’s Field Army for Cancer pntrol in Marion county. The

uble feature” ‘closes the county)

tion’s enlistment drive.

Mrs. Emory W. Cowley, Marion| |

id commander of the army, anced that more than 500. women participating in the final ind-up, supervising booths located

n banks, theaters, stores and places |

of ‘of business throughout the city. ~The money collected in the campaign will be used chiefly in an attempt to carry the message to all ple that cancer is curable if tment is sought early in its deYelopment. oo Supervisors Listed * Among the volunteers supervising the work this week-end ‘are Miss Mary Howard and Mesdames O. S. Flick, Mord Carter, Lucile Emmergon, B. L. Byrket, W. T. Nickel, ‘Thomas F. Cowley, Ray W. Retterer, Roy McCauley, Paul Gastineau and Ruth Fields. Groups supporting the event are the Butler university sororities, American Legion auxiliaries, P.-T. dA. groups, church societies and the Indianapolis Co-operative Theaters,

Phe headquarters ‘for the field | ry here is at 25 N, Pennsylvania oy ~

Clubs— 1. T-S.C. Unit To Install New Members

New members will be installed by one club group meeting next week. ‘ Miss Anna Meier will present the Program for the SATURDAY AFTERNOON LITERARY club meeting tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Earl Hicks, 355 S. Audubon rd. The host-

» Slate.

The Queen Elizabeth ehispler, INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY club, will install new members at its meeting Wednesday at the home ‘of Mrs. Hugh Sprague, 1249 W. 37th st. Mrs. Bert Combs will be the speaker for the meeting. Her subject will be “Bombs Over the Holy Land.”

The annual May morning breakfast of the NATURE STUDY club will be held at 7:30 o'clock Sunday at Woollen’s Gardens. Miss Clara Alma Moore will lead a hike following the breakfast.

A talk on “The Islands of Wake and Samoa” will be given Monday by "Mrs. Petrache Velesscu before the Adelia chapter, INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY club. The . meeting will be at 6:30 p. m. in the Colonial tearoom. = Hostesses will be Mesdames Ralph Johnson, Charles Nay, Hugh Williams and James Sawyers. ‘Officers elected recently by the group are Mrs. Charles Kelley, president; Mrs. Edward C. Grande and Mrs. Clara Aulbach, first and second vice presidents; Mrs. Floyd Farley and Mrs. Robert Parke, recording and corresponding secretaries; Miss Cecelia Conway, treasurer; Mrs. Wallace Schenck, auditor, and Mrs. Grande, federation delegate.

Shine ’Em Up ° Three-pairs-a-year shoe rationing is plenty tough on the children. We'd best teach them to give their - footwear the ol’ shine with a self- ~ shining wax-liquid to preserve and

{members

phonograph records.

A tea dance will be given Sunday from 2 to 5 p. m. at the Riviera club by the Horizon club, senior organization of the Camp Fire Girls. Proceeds will be contributed to the U. 8.0. for the purchase of classical Three of the chairmen arranging the event are (left to right) Miss Joanna Jennings, Washington high school, publicity chairman; Miss Connie Dorr, Shortridge high school, ticket chairman, and Miss Dorothy Sarber, Technical high school, hostess chairman.

Societ

yy

Jean Hackerd to Be Honored At Tea and Shower Sunday

THE HONOR GUEST

Schrader will be May 16. Schrader, South Bend. St. Rita Guild Card Party

"Tomorrow

Miss Catherine Fox is - general chairman for the St. Rita guild card party at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Ayres’ auditorium,

Serving with her will be Mrs. Da- £8 vid Connor, cochairman. The other committee include Misses Catherine O'Gara, Winifred & Fox, Katherine T. Arkins, Catherine && M. Fletcher, Gertrude McHugh, Mary Madden, Mary McConshey, = Miss Fox Mildred Hunt, Mary E. Molloy, Elsie Carter, Sarah Greelish, Margaret Daly, Margaret Graney, Gertrude Murphy, Nell McHugh, Tilley Craney, Josephine Riley and Jewel Lanahan,

+ Also on the committee are Mesdames Hilliard F. Kett, Hugh DeLaney, William Carson, M. F. Hanley, John Foreman, Anthony. Fritz, Charles B. Hegarty, J. H. Gallagher, Harold Prather, Eugene O’Sullivan, Margaret Egan, Rose N. Fritz, Lillian Koontz, Albert P. Weber and John McNeff.

P. E. O. Meeting

The P. E. O. Sisterhood : council will have a noon luncheon Monday

protect their leathers.

at the Central Y. W. C. A.

Enisoy THIS

RATION-WISE

MEAT BALLS “with TAYSTEE Toast!

Combine 12 Ibs. ground beef with 2 c. uncooked rice, salt, pepper, grated onion. Shape into small balls. Heat 3 cups cooked tomatoes. Drop in meat i] balls. Cover. Cook slowly “for 1 hour. Serve with vegetables and Taystes | Toast. six, .

" sure’te

TonviHTr/ EASY! THRIFTY!

Fun to make! Delicious to eat! + Uses available food. Just be -

Taystee Bread, for Taysiee makes the finest toast.

| “Viennese Dance 1”

moke the toast with

Stayton,

at a tea and crystal shower

to be given Sunday afternoon by Mrs. William L. Hart will be Miss Jean Hackerd whose marriage to Lt. Earl C.

The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hackerd and the prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred S.

Guests: at the tea Sunday will be Mesdames Hackerd, Walter Judd. Robert Collier and J. R. Morehouse, Mrs. Albert Hastings, Bedford; Misses Dana Hackerd, Betty Walsh, Harriet Rutledge, Madelyn Pugh, Virginia Burkholder, Mary Kershner, Patricia Sylvia Pittman, Charlotte Fleming, Jeanette Lichtenauer, Kathryn Weaver, Jean and Alberta Wells. The hostess will {be assisted by her mother, Mrs. Floyd C. Bell.

Couple Chooses Attendants

MISS NORMA OVERBAY has chosen her sister, Miss Joyce Overbay, as her only attendant for her wedding to Charles A. Tehan, Chicago. The. ceremony will be May 22 in McKee chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian church with Dr. Roy Ewing Vale officiating. Sir. Tehan's best man will be Howard Goodrich and the ushers

|will be Frank Williams, Arthur

Overbay Jr., the bride-to-be’s brother, Jon Hubertz and William Reiger. Miss Overbay is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Overbay. She is a graduate of Indiana university and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority.

Mrs. Reilly Hostess THE SOUTHERN CLUB auxiliary will have a luncheon meeting Wednesday at the hqme of Mrs. P. C. Reilly, 3134 N. Meridian st. The assistant hostesses will be Mesdames William M. Fleming, Jr., Leslie M. DeVoe and James W. Trotter. Mrs. Fleming will present sev=eral piano selections for the afternoon program. Included will be “Tango” (Albeniz- Godowsky), (FriedmanGartner) and ‘Pell Street” (Whit-

‘| horne).

Election Te Booked By Mothers’ Club

The Delta Tau Delta Mothers’ club of Butler university will meet Tuesday for a 1 o'clock luncheon with Mrs. Ross Richards, 4435 College ave. The business session will include an “eléction of officers. Mrs. D. S. Langell will preside. The assistant Hostesses will be Mesdames Myron Harding, R. L. Craig, W. D. Nyman and K. W. Jeffries. !

Woman's Viewpoint— Women Win The Battle

On Slacks”

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Times Special Writer THE BATTLE OVER slacks on the home -front seems to be abating with the women victorious as usual. There has been a tremendous din about our right to wear pants—just as there was a din when Victorian ladies put bloomers and mounted bicycles, and when later 3 skirts were lifted 3 from ankle to# knee. There is always a din when women =

| change their ways,

even though men force them into situations where such change -is necessary—as is true of this war effort. However, I do not hold with the] contention that different costumes and work habits will not alter feminine nature. . have experienced the subtle inner transformation as they change from | skirts to trousers, or vice versa, know what I mean. Men, because

they've never worn feminine gar- | for vitamin discovery given by Dr

ments, won't know. Somehow there] is an alteration that takes place inside you. ” » GARMENTS that hide the body make you feel feminine and mysterious; those which expose it give you a sensation of aggressiveness, freedom and independence. Probably we shall never discard skirts altogether, for skirts, especially long ones, are flattering. But you can depend upon one thing, gentlemen, pants are on the feminine leg to stay. Just how this bifurcated mode of dress will influence our manners, morals and attitudes is a matter of conjecture. It seems reasonable to suppose, however, that girls who are doing men’s work, dressed in men’s clothes, and spending most of their time in an industrial world dominated by men’s thinking, will not emerge from this period with the same -ideas about social economy, or domestic routines, or sex relationships, that their mothers or their big sisters cherished. Every major change in feminine dress and habits has caused a vast unheaval in our society. Why suppose this one will not have the same results? Well, the men handed us the pants; we've put them on. Chances are we’ll be wearing them, with everything their wearing implies, from now on.

To Entertain Club The Olnosi Study club will have a 6:30 p. m. meeting Tuesday with Mrs. Zack Sullivan, 1429 E. Michigan st. A paper, “Panorama of South America” will be read by Mrs. Benjamin Bowles. Mrs. E. L. Baker

will give the federation report.

NEW — GERATOR

Here's a*new:type réirigoretor, made of non-critical

: materials, that is actually an improvement over pre-

war - ‘models. It i foe better protection . '

© and Usk LESS ICE!

| 2000 A NORTHWESTERN AVE.

s Polar’ new OLYMPIC!

ICE AND FUEL CO.

wy Sororities—

gt Panhellenic Officers to Be Installed

Sigma Delta Pi’s Will Meet Tomorrow

An installation of officers and a delegate assembly have been planned for sorority programs tomorrow and |. Monday. Mrs. J. V. Schilling, Sigma apps. will be installed Monday afternoon as president of the INDIANAPOLIS

PANHELLENIC association at its meeting in the Columbia club. Mrs. W. T. Gradison, retiring president, will preside. The other new officers will be Mrs. T. C. Davis, Alpha Omicron Pl, vice president; Mrs. George E. Langsdon, Pi Beta Phi, recording ‘secretary; Mrs. Edmund C. Horst, Alpha Chi Omega, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Hugh Stewart, Alpha Xi Delta, treasurer. Plans will be discussed for the annual mother-daughter tea to be given by the association May 22 in Block's auditorium. The tea is being held for all girls entering colleges this year where national Greek letter organizations are represented. Mrs. Schilling and Mrs. Gentry T. Haun are co-chairmen in charge with all the Panhellenic delegates serving as members of the committee.

A delegate assembly will be held tomorrow by SIGMA DELTA PI, ‘national teachers’ sorority, in the Claypool hotel. The meeting will replace the annual May convention. An all-day business session will begin at 9 a. m. with Mrs. Jobn H. Moffat, grand president, in charge. Alpha chapter members will be hostesses and Mrs. Marie C. Orr is in charge of arrangements. The representatives will be Miss Marie Sullivan, Alpha chapter; Miss Thelma Ramsey, Springfield, Ill, Delta; Miss Ina Hornish, Peru, Epsilon; Mrs. Keith Cox, Lebanon, Eta: Mrs. Dallice Darst, Tipton, Theta; Mrs. Ruth Skidmore, Rochester, Iota; Miss Ruth E. Anderson, Richmond, Kappa; Miss Vinnie Gray, Madison, Lambda; Miss Marcelline Meyers, Ft. Wayne, Mu, and Miss Winifred Todd, Elkhart, Nu.

Beta chapter, LAMBDA SIGMA SIGMA, will have a skating party tonight at the Riverside rink.

New Vitamin Is Found

All women who

In Cream

A SECOND NEW vitamin besides | folic acid is on the verge of disi covery, according to the criterion

Floyd S. Daft, of the U. S. National Institute of Health. The criterion is the isolation of the vitamin in pure form. So long as scientists have the vitamin only in concentrated, but not quite pure form, they cannot be sure whether its effects are due to one vitamin or to two which are closely associated in the concentrate. The second new, almost discovered, vitamin was obtained from cream. Scientists at Oregon State college started with 15 gallons of pale yellow cream and ended up with 1/10,000 of an ounce of a pale yellow oil, yet this oil has almost two-thirds of a certain activity which was in the original 15 gallons of cream. The Oregon researchers have not named their new vitamin yet. They call it just “a dietary factor essential for guinea pigs.” But the 1/10,000 of an ounce they got from 15 gallons of cream is powerful enough to cure the stiff legs of two million guinea pigs. Whether it will have any effect on human stiff legs or any other human ailment has not yet been determined. ss = = ‘ VERY OFTEN vitamins discovered through their effects on animals turn out to be needed by humans, but establishing that fact is often one of the last steps in vitamin research, even though it is one of the biggest reasons for the work. One’ of the important lessons for, humans learned from vitamin re-|

search is the necessity of eating a varied diet with not too many highly refined foods. If you put a rat or guinea pig or chicken on a purified diet, even with doses of all the

| Faccone-Beck

known vitamins in pure form, the animal generally gets sick. This is. because his diet is lacking some important still undiscovered food constituent. Humans who limit their diet to one or two favorite foods, even if they take vitamin pills, ‘are in danger of getting sick because they, too, may be missing some still undiscovered vitamins that are in the foods they don't eat. . Of course, it would be hard for humans to get as completely purified a diet as can be given laboratory rats, but the more varied the diet, the better the chances for not missing important, undiscovered food elements.

Wedding Today The wedding of Miss Becky Beck and Louis Facecone was to take place here today. Miss Beck is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Beck,

Beouties' Hints

How to Get Your Scent’s Worth

By ALICIA HART Times Special Writer THE WAY YOU apply your perfume is every bit as. important

88 knowing the right soent. fof

every occasion. : A careless dab on either lapel of your suit is never as effective as a subtle spraying of the hem of your skirt, insists designer Lilly Dache. “Perfume,” the attractive French milliner points out, “should be applied where the air can waft it around. Then, and then alone, does it do its lovely work to the full.” = " »

SHE PREFERS, for instance, to spray it on her veil or into her hair. This, she says, allows the maximum circulation of scent for the minimum amount of perfume used. If you prefer toilet water: for daytime, and apply perfume only for after-five occasions, don’t mix your scents—match them. You'll find, Mme, Dache points out, that just a drop or two of perfume will intensify the giragrance of the ‘toilet water you used earlier, and make both last much longer.

Lilly Dache: “Be subtle.”

Ft. Monmouth, yesterday.

Comedy Will Be Presented by Hadassahs

A musical comedy, “When Johnny Comes Marching Home,” will be presented at 8 p. m. Sunday by the Indianapolis chapter of Junior Hadassah and Hadassah Debs at: Kirshbaum cen-: ter, 2314 N. Me-

‘ridian st.

Miss Lillian Chernin is busi-: ness manager and co-chairman wit Miss Jeanette} Patnick for the production. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Levinson are the group’s advisers. Pvt. Norman Atkins of Billings General hospital has the leading role. Other principals in the cast will include Phil Levan, Joe Albert, Pvt. Julius Ansel of Camp Atterbury, «| Mickey Maurer, Misses Mollie { Cohen, Rosalie Elkin, Tillie Abravaya, Frances Sher, Millie Stein and Shirley Smith. Jack Berry and his orchestra will

Miss Chernin

show.

Janice Ann Renick Is Married To Maj. V. L. Friedrich In Rite at Ft. Monmouth

Times Special

RED BANK, N. J, April 30.—Maj. and Mrs. Victor Louis Priedrich are on a wedding trip ‘south following their marriage here in Chapel 2,

The bride was Miss Janice Ann Renick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Renick, 5703 E. Washington st., Indianapolis. Maj. Friedrich’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Henry Friedrich, Parkston, 8S. D.

Entering on the arm of Capt. Robert W. Ferree, West Hartford Conn., the bride wore an embossed organza gown styled with a romance neckline, long sleeves tapering into points over the hands, and a gathered skirt extending into a train. She wore a single strand of pearls, a gift of the bridegroom. Her fingertip veil was attached to a cluster of orange blossoms and her flowers were white tulips.

Dinner Follows

Her only attendant, Mrs. I. Nelson Saxe, formerly Miss Betsy Big-

gert of Indianapolis, was in a gown of aqua marine organza styled with three-quarter length sleeves and a pinafore trimmed with pleated ruching. Her flowers were varicolored tulips. Raymond L. Gilbarte was Maj. Friedrich’s best man. Immediately following the wedding a dinner was served in the Ft. Monmouth country. club. After their wedding trip the couple will be at home at 323 MecKinley pl, Avon-by-the-Sea, N. J. The bride traveled in a beige suit with - navy accessories and an orchid corsage. Mrs. Friedrich attended Butler and Purdue universities where she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. The bridegroom was graduated from South Dakota State college and is stationed now

play for the dance following the|at Camp Evans Signal Laboratory, quilts,

Belmar, N. J.’

Hospital Guild Will Elect

3 Directors

+. Mrs. H. A. Belton Lists Candidates

“Three directors will be elected

‘Monday by the St. Vincent's hospi~ tal gui meeting at 10 a. m. in the nurses’ home of the hospital.

Candidates announced by Mrs.

, | Harvey A. Belton, nominating com-= mittee chairman, Irwin Covert, Thomas Courtney, E. Marion Ensley, C. N. Reifsteck; H. F. Reinke and Charles E. Wagner. The directorships are for three-year terms.

are Mesdames

Mrs. Russell L. White will be the

officer of the day Monday. She will be assisted by Mrs. Charles A, Hock~ ensmith and Mrs, Wagner.

Luncheon Committee The chairman of hostesses for a

12:30 p. m. luncheon will be Mrs. A. H. Huber.

On her committee are Mrs. Jesse P. McMurtry, Mrs.

William Ittenbach and Miss Bless

ing Fischer. Mrs. George A. Smith,

president, will be in charge of the 2:30 p. m. business meeting.

Mrs. Emil C. Rassman, supervisor

of the Red Cross stitched bandage

committee, has reported that nearly one-half of the group's quota of 1400 has been reached. Ten new workers have joined the group in the past few weeks, making a committee of approximately 75 working each Friday from 9:30 a. m. to 3:30 p. m.

Lanny Ross To Sing Here

On May 23

Lanny Ross, radio, concert -and stage star, will be sponsored in a recital here the afternoon of May 23 by the Patroness club of the Indianapolis Zeta chapter, Sigma Alpha Iota, professional musical fraternity. A memorial service was held recently by the club at, the Arthur Jordan conservatory for Mesdames Nancy Martens, Illa Friermood, Louise Schellschmidt Koehne and Clara Anderson. Mrs. Arthur H. Taylor, president, presented bound opera scores to Miss Ada Bicking, director of the conservatory and a member of the club. The officers of the club serving with Mrs. Taylor are Mrs. H, B. McNeeley, vice president; Mrs, F. L. Warner and Mrs. Fred McCain, recording and corresponding secretaries; Miss Gladys Alwes, treasurer, and Mesdames Frederick C. Schmidt, Louis Traugott and Delamar McWorkman, executive board. The committee chairmen sre Miss Alwes, finance; Mrs. G. W. Rubush, social, Mrs. John Kilmer, telephone, and Mrs. Carl H. Irrgang, publicity.

Cattail ‘Upholstery’ Cattails do their part for the war. Substituting for once imported Java kapok, cattail heads are now beaten into fluff for life preservers, pillows, sleeping bags and insulation material.

into-Summer styles.

Shoes—Second Floor

Warm weather sometimes makes walking a hot and weary business, especially for the feet. But not with Gold Cross shoes. They fit so easily, and yet so surely, that they air-cushion every busy step you take; make your feet feel fit no matter what the weather. In a variety of new and pleasing Spring-