Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 August 1943 — Page 13

ER

hairman Fo or Ret Cross’ Recruit Drive

Recreation, Social = Workers Sought °

“Mrs. c. Dixon Eagle, formerly engaged in social work at the state Public welfare department, will be "chairman of a committee to direct the Marion county recruiting drive - for national Red Cross workers to serve in the United States and over-

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] Party Wil Be Given a i At Hotel Lincoln

| @ The tatanapots ens ae she | |association will - entertain with a | |party at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the ‘| Hotel Lincoln for young women who plan to enter Purdue and Indiana {universities-and Hanover college. _

Headed by Miss Elsie Shelley

re, oy

i

seas,

Other committee members .an-

4 nounced yesterday by W. I. Longs“worth, chairman of the Indiunapolis Red Cross, are Mrs. Louis H. Haerle, Mrs. Dorothy -Buschmann, Max Sappenfield, Murray Auerbach, Mrs. Austin Clifford and. Mrs. Eleanor Dunn Moore. Campaign Opens ~The recruiting campaign, which began last week, already has resulied in a number of applications for various = positions now available, Mrs. Eagle said.’ Women experien in various kinds of social Re and in recreational activities are especially needed, she explained. Explaining positions women may apply for, Mrs. Eagle said that

munity centers and camps and are familiar with organization work y be adapted to the work of :ustant club director,

Needed Overseas

Others familiar with ' planning, rganizing and directing recreation-

programs may be suited for posi- |:

tions in overseas Red Cross clubs, she pointed out. Social ‘workers are in demand to fill openings in military hospitals here and overseas. Information on the recruiting drive may be obtained from Mrs. Dorothy Burnside at the Indianapolis Red Cross office.

F rances Collins Will Be Guest . At Shower

- “Miss Laura Stadler and Mrs. David 8. Smith will entertain tomorrow night at the home of the former, 2937 Ruckle st., with a linen shower for Miss Frances Catherine ; Solis whose marriage to Robert . Rominger will be Aug. 28. The prospective bridegroom, son of ‘Mrs. Mary A. Rominger, 659 E. 24th st., is stationed at Lincoln, Neb., with the army air forces. Miss Collins is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randall’ D, Collins, 4430 \Rark ave. Guests at tomorrow's party will be Mesdames Collins, John H. Rusie, - George F. Stadler, Frank Harrison, Ralph J. Marsh, C, J. Wine, Donald ©. Alberty, ‘Harmy' iC. “Rominger; Charles R. Underwood and George . Weber. “Mrs. Shirley D. Atkins, Sumter, 8. C,, sister of the bride-to-be, and Misses Marian Collins, Patricia Phipps, Betty Scott and Mildred Crimans also will be guests. ‘The bridal ‘colors of blue and white will be used in decorations.

28 Enlisted By WAVES

With the drive to secure a separate WAVES contingent formed exclusively from Indianapolis-area young women winding up its first week’s efforts today, 28 applications have been accepted for the “Hoosier Patriettes” by the WAVES traveling enlistment board and the Indianapolis navy recruiters. Final plans are now being made by the navy representatives for. . mass-enlistment ceremonies soon, A Lt. W. A. Chapman Jr, | officer in charge of Indiana navy recruiting and induction, announc

. Applications for the WAVES may be made at the WAVE recruiting office on the Circle.

Meet Friday

The monthly meeting of the Animal Welfare league directors will be held at 11:30 a. m. Friday in Ayres’ committee room. Mrs, John Sloarie Kittle will preside.

Wy

X

Entertains Club

The monthly meeting of the La Phyllis club will be held tomorrow § = th Mrs. C. D. Vawter, 975 N. Gra3 ave. as hostess.

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The July weddings of Misses

of this city. July 27 was the date for the

Frieda : and - Mildred

been announced by their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alva H. dred (left) became the bride of Pvt. Russell W. oc in a an ceremony in the camp chapel at Camp Houze, Tex. } home in Ardemne, Tex. Pvt. Yerden is the son of Mrs. Mary Yerden

The couple

wedding, of Frieda (right) to Sgt.

Averell M. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Brown of Brownwood, Tex., where the couple is at home.

For Their Daug

Col. and Mrs. H.

Society—

those who have operated large com- |.

V. Brown to Enfartaid hter and Her Fiance

Harrison will entertain at 7

also of the fort. The dinner

post chapel.

Liggett will be his brother's best ma

Ushers for the ceremony who will be at the dinner are Capt. Ralph E. Spaugh, Capt. James Harris, Capt. R. D. Swick and Lt."* P. A. Rudwolis. Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Swick also will be guests.

To Give Buffet Supper

ANOTHER PRE-NUPTIAL party set for Saturday night is the buffet supper which Mr: and Mrs. Evan T. Williams will give at their home for their daughter, Irma, and Lt. Robert S. Gettinger, U.S.M.C. Their wedding will be Sunday. , Attending the party, which is to follow the wedding rehearsal, will be Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Gettinger, Lt. Gettinger’s parents, and Miss Marilyn Strock, bridesmaid; Saul Creason, best man, and Phillip Strock, ring bearer, all of Anderson; Miss Mary Janet Ferguson, maid: of honor; Miss Rose Ellen Gray, bridesmaid; Miss" Cozette Jones, Lorraine and Peggy Loser, Messrs. and -Mesdames Julius Heiden, Harvey Pier and Gordon Williams. Peggy is to be flower girl for the ceremony.

In a Personal Vein... MRS. WILLIAM H. KREIG returned this morning from a trip to Washington. . , . Mrs. William H. Sharkey of Wilmington, Del., has arrived for a week's visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn B. Heard. For the past week Mrs. Sharkey has been visting her sister, Miss Charlene Heard, in Dear=born, Mich. Mrs. W. E, wilson and her son, Tony, are here from Muncie visiting Mrs. Wilson’s mother and sisfer, Mrs. J. J. Marshall and Mrs. H. M. Trusler. They will be here for another week while Ensign Wilson is in naval training school at Hollywood Beach hotel, Hollywood, Fla. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Ward Grantham, 1501 E. Maple rd., will move sometime next month into their new home at 33 E. 55th st.

Get Those ‘Empties’ Back to Store

It takes machinery, fuel and manpower to make beverage bot« tles, and .all three of those things could be put to better use in producing essential - war materials. That's why households are being urged to seek out all the “empties” lurking about the home and return them to local stores. - It's estimated that millions of empty beverage bottles are just sitting around ‘the country’s homes. Since the average life of a returnable bottle is about 30 round trips, each bottle not in use represents 30 new ones which will have to be

made if the empty isn’t returned.

ICE AND FUEL C0.

COL. AND MR3. H. V. BROWN of Ft. Benjamin

o'clock Saturday night in

their quarters at the fort with a bridal dinner for their daughtér, Mary Ann, and her fiance, Capt. Lee G. Liggett,

will precede the rehearsal

for the wedding which is to be at 8 p. m. Sunday in the

The prospective bridegroom's father, George Liggett, and his brother, Ted, will be here from Utica, Neb., for .the. dinner.

Ted n.

Other guests will be Miss Barbara Heer, Columbus, 'O., who will be a bridesmaid at the ceremony, and Miss Marguerite Brown who will be her sister's maid ‘of - honor.’

Propaganda Can Be a Boomerang

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Times Special Writer

I'VE OFTEN WONDERED

whether hate propaganda is not a boomerang which returns to pierce the hearts of our own. A convinc-

ing affirmative comes to me from a New Jersey woman who writes: “I have a cousin who is as dear fo me as a brother and is at present a prisoner in a German prison camp. He was a tail gtnner on an American Fly-

ing Fortress and was missing on June 22. Thank God for His goodness to us; through short wave we heard him over the radio last week and yesterday had official word from the war department of his safety.

“I feel I can express the feelings

of persons whose loved ones. are prisoners. Germans are not the savages they are pictured in so many things we

We want to believe the

read. If we thought they were,

how could we go on living?

“I've talked to men who were

overseas with the army of occupa-

tion after the last war and they say the German people are kind. This will make us happy for a while, and then will come along another awful tale and our courage again deserts us.” » » ”

“IT SEEMS TO ME it would be so much kinder to cease publication of these stories which, even if true, only harrow the souls of many Americans whose loved ones have been taken by the enemy, “I know a mother whose boy died

in a Jap prison camp, and after reading Gwen Dew’s book, which is

said to be a description of the

terrors of such places, she went all to pieces and had to-be taken to a hospital.”

.Since we believe ourselves to be more civilized than the Japs and Germans, it ‘would seem we could dispense with an overdose of hate propaganda. Happily there is not so much of it as we were fed in the last war, but there is still enough to keep our citizens in the jitters. Hate is the beastliest emotion. Civilized nations can fight without it; -if not, they become uncivilized. In the words of the wise Epictetus, “To become like your enémy is to be conquered by him.”

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{Five to Attend

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.|and _ child care centers with the '| funds thus made available. Regional

chairman, the rush committee: in

~ |charge of the program nctudes Mrs |] FP. 8. Kurdys, Mrs. William L. Dunn,

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for Rho chapter at Hanover college, | and Miss George-anna Leist of Columbus, Delta Alpha chapter rush chairman at Indiana university, will be present. ; .' Make Reservations _ : Actives from the three chapters who will attend are Misses Jody McGee, Doris Franz, Hazel Alfke, Jean Shelburne, Rosemary Keil, Louanna Stevens, ‘Margery Hungate, Jean Pazy, Billie Pollock, Ruth Copeland, Betty Plough and Adrienne Robinson. Alumnae members of Phi Mu sorority who have made reservations are Mesdames William H. Zaiser Jr., C..H. Glascock, William B. Wilcox, Walter D. Alfke, €. E. Carbon, L L, Clark, Stanley P. Hayes, W. C. Shannon, Glenn Conway, John E. Mitchell and Miss Margaret Scott.

Beauticians’ Conference

Five Indianapolis women will attend the national wartime conference of the Indiana‘ Hairdressers and Cosmetologists association in Chicago Sunday through Tuesday. They are Miss Irma Zook, president of the state association; Mrs. Mildred Rottler, state secretary; Mrs. Murt Craig, president of the Indianapolis chapter, and Mrs. Jewel Edwards and Miss Betty Wheeler, members of the Indianapolis chapter.

Others Attending

- Other Indiana representatives will. be Mrs. Tillie Fox, Evansville, state first vice president; Mrs. Adeline Henley, Richmond, state treasurer; Mrs. Mary Achor, Anderson, state financial secretary; Mrs. Bertha Fee and Mrs. Lorraine Hawkins of Richmond and V. C. Hilligoss, Anderson, all members of various state chapters. Wartime government regulations, availability of materials. and the status .of beauticians as essential civillan workers are the main topics for discussion at the 23d annval convention.

For Christmas

They Want

WASHINGTON, Aug. 18 (U.P) — A marine corps survey revealed today that wrist watches, or watches of any type, are the Christmas gift most desired by marines serving overseas in the Pacific. The survey, suggested by marine corps commandant Lt. Gen. Thomas Holcomb, was made by commanding generals of forces in the Pacific. ; With watches leading, here are the other articles preferred in order of priority: Pen anll pencil sets, toilet kits or sets, hunting knives, pocket size books, candy or cakes in metal containers, radios, bill folds, wallets, cigaret lighters, stationery, sun-glasses, house and bath slippers, photographs, identification bracelets, rings, pipes, sewing kits, playing cards, cribbage, money belts, cigarets, cigars, pipe tobacco in large containers and handkerchiefs. Sept. 15 to Nov. 1 has been designated as the period for mailing Christmas gifts to naval and ‘marine personnel overseas.

Child Care Program To Be Expanded

Although congress recessed without house action on the Thomas bill providing federal funds for the establishment of child care centers for children of war . workers, the federal works agency will continue to enlarge the program it has been carrying on for the past year, according to Maj. .Gen. Philip B. Fleming, administrator. "A new 50 million dollar appropri-

been signed. by President Roosevelt and it is planned to ‘establish hundreds of additional war nurseries

directors and supervisors of the federal - works agency will receive

of 180,000 children of wae king parents. 4

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