Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1943 — Page 19
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// for two Parent-Teacher association|Z
| ¢y division of state parks, will show
| & Smith, historian, will present the
9
’ “Plan Skating Party
’
President
r ograms
Three Groups Will Install Officers
Pupils will present the programs|i ; next week. BE music festival will be presented : children of SCHOOL 10 for]: ‘association meeting there at {16 o'clock Thursday afternoon. ' New officers also will be installed: . They are Mrs. P. L, Sargent, presiats Mrs. Edgar Perkins and Mrs. WV. C. Kiesel, first and second vice| & presidents. J “Mrs. William Shirley will install . the new officers at the SCHOOL 33 * mssociation meeting at 1:45 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. The children will give the program.
‘An election of officers will follow the May Day program to be presented for the ‘association of s SCHOOL 81 at 1:45 p. m. Wednes-
Miss Edna L. Emme
Hairdressers Plan May Day Luncheon
Miss Edna I. Emme, St. Louis, president of the National Hair- =} dressers and Cosmetologists association, will be the guest of the Indianapolis chapter at a luncheon Sunday in the Hotel Lincoln. The luncheon is being held in hool will have an installation | connection with the local group's : ‘and a musical program at annual May day celebration, Edu- % glock Thursday afternoon, |cational demonstrations Sunday J) rs morning and afternoon will be fol7 lowed by a ‘dance and card party at 8 p. m, when Miss Eloise Coleman will be'crowned May queen,
Heads Council
Miss Emme, first woman president of the association, has been appointed: by the United States treasury department as chairman of the vo Beauty Industry council which pro- : The bi-monthly dance of the Cen-| motes sale of war bonds and stamps fral ¥. W. C. A. will be held from 9| through the country’s beauty shops. Pp. m. to midnight tomorrow in the| She also is co-chairman of the 5 gymnasium. The public is invited| Women’s division of the war save
d service men may attend free of |ings staff for metropolitan St. Louis and is a former president of the
Women’s Advertising club of St. Louis. The evening party will benefit the American Women’s Voluntary services. Miss Sally Butler, A. W. LV. S. president, will speak on the afternoon program.
Charles De Turk, director of the
colored slides of Indiana parks for the P.-T. A. of SCHOOL 77 at 1:30 m. Wednesday. Mrs. ' Charles
years’ activities and .the election of + Officers ‘will be held.
| The P. oT A. of BROAD RIPPLE
%
ih Other activities open to service “\ Men are open houses from 7 to 11 . m, each Tuesday and from 3 to 8 m. each Sunday. Supper is served at 6 o'clock on Sunday bythe NaI Women’s Service league. Mss | Dillin, U. S. O-Y. a pb Sha y events. Once each month the ¥. W. Cadettes have a formal dance for service men. , ‘Other coed : activities include a horseback riding class on Tuesday evenings from 6:45 to 7:45 o'clock, panish classes for beginners and ntermediate students on Monday and Tuesday evenings:and a lifeguard. swimming class, under the auspices of the Red Cross, on Thursday nights. Dances for high school bays and girls are held in the gym on alternate Saturdays and’ are sponsored by the Girl Reserve department, with Miss Malvin Morton, ‘ditector.
gn and’ 40 Salon To Meet Tuesday
Mrs. Hilda Miller, 960 Berwyn st., will be the hostess Thursday evening for a “hard-times” party of the dianapolis Salon 295, 8 and 40. )_ The business meeting will be at 9:30 p. m. when a report of the April Pouvoir will be made by the delegates. Mrs. Margaret Ray and Mrs. Gertrude Sponsel will talk on welfare and a recent luncheon. Mrs. Opal Drake will preside.
+ A skating party will be held next { Friday at Riverside rink by the freshman class of St. John’s academy. The four class officers in chaxge of the party are Miss PaMadden, président; Miss FlorHansing, vice president; Miss Hearne, secretary, and Miss | IEatifloen Mueller, treasurer.
FE
10-20
" Business Session
| The monthly ‘meeting of Delta] Pattern 8397 is in sizes 10, 12, chapter, Psi Tota Xi sorority,| 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 12 takes 3% will be held at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday | yards 35-inch material. at the Warren hotel. A social hour| . For this attractive pattern, send follow the business session.|16 cents in coins, with your name, es Ralph Johnson, Arthur|address, pattern number and size and Mildred Reed will be host-|to The Indianapolis Times Pattern
(War Jobs La
| the right thing when they come
Civic Theater to
|By C. Y. O. Group
Sees Women
Soldiers Will Reclaim Pre-War ‘Positions
By ROSELLEN CALLAHAN Times Special Writer = . ° “WHEN = JOHNNY COMES marching home again, the woman who took over his -job- while he was away fighting. for our. way “of life must be reatly to Tetire from it willingly,” Mrs. Alfred J. Mathebat, national president of the’ American Legion auxiliary, warns. the working: women of America,” “If “we had to have another war,” the slim, vital’ and -prematurely gray Californian observed, “it is fortunate that it came to the generation that remembers so well the aftermath of unemployment following the .last war, and is willing to do everything it can now to prevent such 'a catastrophe later.” - Emphasizing her point with an energetic thump of her clenched fist, she continued, “We are going" to ‘make certain that when the men have finished fighting over there, they won’t. have to eat humble - pie. back here because their jobs are gone, and no others in sight. We want no more apple-vending veterans.” ” » J
NEVER A “JOINER,” Ruth Mathebat made an exception 20 years ago when she became interested in the auxiliary’s excel= lent morale-building rehdbilita= tion program for disabled veterans. : “All these years our members— and they number 537,000 women whose menfolk are veterans of the last, war and have been honorably discharged from service in this war—have helped hospitalized veterans; by writing their letters, doing their shopping, supplying smokes and sweets, and most important of all, visiting their families to bring back firsthand reports on how they were getting along. “Our biggest job today is to convince . the government that they must muster men out of the service in fewer numbers than they did in 1918, so that industry can’ absorb them gradually. And to elicit promises from employers immediately to return them to the jobs they left. “And I'm sure,” she confidently concluded, “the women who are filling" their places now, will do
/ ’
home.”
Close Season
“The Walrus and the Carpenter” (Noel Langley) will be the Civic theater’s final production this seaon,
May 14 to 19. The new board members for the Civic are Mortimer Furscott, Toner M. Overley, Miss Helen Coffey, Mrs. Bertrand Hawkins, Mrs. R. Kirby Whyte, William Macgregor Morris, Homer E. Capehart, Herbert E. Wil-
son and L. G. Gordner. They will serve for two years.
Dance to Be Given
The Senior Catholic Youths’ organization will have a dance tonight at Holy Cross hall, 1431 E. Washingington st.,. from 9 p. m. to midnight. Miss Nora Flaherty is chairman. On the arrangements committee are “Misses Ann Gillespie, Ruth Goettling, Therese Reilly, Frances Russell, Agnes Gillespie and Mary Flaherty. Proceeds will be used for service men’s activities.
Change in Packages
Sugar is being sold again in fivepound cartons for two reasons. Less manpower will be required to package and handle the larger ‘amounts, and there won’t be the waste that occurred when it was
Service, 214 W. Maryland st.
necessary to repack into small sizes.
frame window treatments and gay scalloped wall plaques are signs of spring. So are wall papers and chintzes patterned to match; big plaster seashells in lieu of curtain rods; wall baskets and bird cages spilling over with garden bou-" quets.
here recently as “some fresh ideas in drapes” ‘grew ‘into a display of all sorts of vernal inspirations. I thought the picture-frame treatment at a pair of sizable windows was as practical as it is pretty. It will let in more sunshine than ‘ : the conventional ‘drapes usually permit, and that’s something we can do with more of!
The comedy is to be. presented]
By MARY. WELLS RIDLEY Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, April 30.—Picture“because these
shisred vulies: are sass ‘enough the - plants
What was given advance billing A DOUBLE: VALANCE =~ brief
beautifier for the short window.
Deep windows: take elegantly to the combination of plaid and pat-
bordered across the bottom with a wide stripe of yellow roses on
: Whaie 20
one at the top, deep one at the bottom reaching to the floor—is a
gray. The stripe Is used asa valance, its ‘outlines following: the curving sweep of the floral design.
A RATHER SWEET conceit for
young rooms is a pastel Calendar
of ‘Flowers print in both chints “and wallpaper. Each month. is rep
resented by its flower, trailing a ribbon bearing the name of the month. accent there also is a ‘Birth Bouquet pattern of all the flowers combined in one large bouquet. Bedspread or drapes of this harmonizes, but gives interesting variation - to the smaller print. ; 3 " New trend in shadow: boxes is really quite a simple affair to make and gives you a fine excuse to use at least a little of the beau-
New | Draperies Are Harbingers of S pring
Striped chinta shirred on thres. rods makes the frame. The idea is ‘doubly satisfactory if inside win-. dow boxes are a part of your dec-- - scheme,
tiful wallpaper around. You simply paste the paper over a scallopedged board, then nail a pair of little white wooden picture frames in the center, place a miniature potted plant, real or otherwise, on the ledge of each frame, and you have a wall treatment that literally looks pretty as a picture.
Children Shoulder New Responsibility
Children are shouldering many responsibilities to help mothers who are busy at war work. Once they realize the importance of running errands, attending' to the baby, washing dishes, and keeping their
rooms in order, they do these jobs willingly and efficiently.
May Breakfast ; To Be Given
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Robbins, 1721 Milburn st.,, will give their annual May breakfast for their family tomorrow. The guests will be Messrs. and Mesdames Garland Robbins, Warren Brinkley, Leslie Brandt, Lynn ‘Robbins, Harry Robbins, Lester Cruse, Roy Robbins and Glenn Robbins, Mesdames Herbert Robbins, Walter! "Robbins and Dora Kriner, Misses Alice Robbins, Irma and Barbara Kriner, Harriet Cruse and Shirley Mae Robbins, Leroy Kriner, Leslie Brandt Jr, Richard and Lynn Warren Robbins and Ruhl Robbins. A Herbert and Walter Robbins and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Robbins’ youngs
est son, Willlam, are in the navy,
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