Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1946 — Page 20

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Becomes Bride Of Local Man

Nancy Lee Shaffer Wed to J. I. Kautz Jr.

A bride from Birdham, near Chichester, England, was. married in Indianapolis Saturday in the West Washington Street Presbyterian) church. Another wedding also is in ‘the bridal scene today. Miss Molly Barbara Saunders, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George saunders of Birdham, was married to Ralph B. LeHew at 7 p. m. Saturday. The Rev. Charles M. Armentrout read the vows. Mr. and Mrs. Orley LeHew, 17 N. Traub ave, are parents of the bridegroom. Miss Ethel LeHew, sister of the bridegroom, was the

bride's only attendant and Sidney.

Le. , bi er of the bridegroom, LER ie man. Ushers were Lowell Lentz'and Andrew Smith. Following the ceremony the couple left on a wedding trip to Towa. The bride arrived in the United States aboard the Queen Elizabeth Nov. 11. o s . ” Miss Nancy Lee Shaffer became the bride of John Iden Kautz Jr. at 4:30 p. m. Saturday in Trinity chapel, Michigan City. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Shaffer of Long Beach, Ind, are parents of the bride and Mr. and Mrs. Kautz, 126 E. 44th st, are the bridegroom's parents. Miss Harriet Kullby was the maid of honor and the bridegroom's father was his best man. Ushers were John E. Glover of Huntington, W. Va., and Frederic R. Shaf- | fer, brother of the bride. Mrs. Kautz is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and attended Purdue university, The bridegroom is a member of Phi Kappa Psi and is attending Purdue.

| | | {

Woman's Viewpoint— ‘Should We Abolish Mothers?’

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer

DEBUNKING MOTHER has be-| come a favorite indoor sport. Mag- | azines bristle with titles like “What's |

the Matter With American Mothprs?” and “What Shall We Do With Mother?” | Current reading leads me to think’ that Mother has become a nuisance. | Nobody likes her any more. When she follows old patterns and acts with maternal solicitiude she is al sentimental fool; if she gets a baby- | sitter in twice a week and goes| dancing, she is criticized. When she indulges her children, she’s a social menace; if she disciplines them according to her own ideas, she will give them inhibitions. | 5 = ” SHOULD SHE show normal con- | cern over the life plans of her fam- | ily, she is possessive, and has a Silver Cord complex. She may dis- | play affection for her grandchil-| dren; that makes her a meddling mother-in-law. But unless she gives up her plans to sit with them at request, she becomes a selfish, grouchy old woman. Really, it's horrifying to hear how Mother has fallen from her once high estate, If she reads current publications, she can’t have enough self-esteem left to fill her own thimble. According to the writers she is the main promoter of juvenile delinquency, home-wrecker No. 1, and chief contributor to the moral collapse now threatening our ecivilization. For all we know, she may be to blame for the war, the cotton market slump and the Democratic de- | bacle. Perhaps we ‘can persuade the | Republicans . to . abolish - her alto. gether.

Needlework Guild Elects Officers

Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood was named honorary president of the Indianapolis branch of the Needle- | work Guild of America and Mrs. |

Fred Doeppers was elected presi- sorority, at 7 p. m. today with a

dent for 1947-48 at a recent meeting. |

Other officers are Mesdames R,| Miss Betty Ludwick, national re- day night. R. Scott, John R. Sentney, William | cording secretary of the sorority, R. Evans and H. H. Cavender, vice |

presidents; Mrs, Joseph C. Mathews and Mrs, Mark W. Pangborn, secretary and assistant secretary, and Mrs. Arthur A. Smock, treasurer.

On the Beautiful New 1946

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Hospital Guild Plans Its Annual Dinner-Dance

_. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __ [‘Cotton Maid’ ~

Members of St. Margaret's Fluspila quild are ‘busy these days planning the guild's annual dinner-

dance which will be held Saturday, are Mrs. Kenneth Adair (left), of the decorations committee; Mrs. ing on the ticket committee, and Mrs. Larry Willson of the reserva

ec. 7, in the Indianapolis Athletic club. The three shown here

Francis A. Sommer (center), servtions committee.

Society—

Families of Faculty to Attend Dinner At Butler University Tomorrow Night

MRS. PAUL D. HINKLE will be the hostess for Butler university's faculty dinner to be held at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow in the university cafeteria. Frank N. Wallace will speak on ‘Beauty Spots in Indiana,” and Dr. John E. Potzger, of the botany depart-

ment at Butler, will lead community singing. Mrs. Virginia Lutz Beal, general chairman of the Faculty club, announces that all members. of the faculty and their wives and

Teen Talk— ‘Listen a Spell Program On the Air

By BOBBIE SCHAEFFER HIGH SCHOOL spelling experts will meet tonight on radio station WISH for the “Listen a Spell” program sponsored by the Indianapolis public schools. Three boys and three girls from | Broad Ripple high school willl {meet a team from Technical for

husbands have been invited to the dinner. «the battle of letters and syllables.

Assisting Mrs. Hinkle will be Mesdames Ray C. Friesner, Guy H. Shadinger, M. G. Bridenstine, L. Gray Burdin and A. Dale Beeler and Miss Nancy Moore.

Pi Beta Phi Meeting THE INDIANA Gamma Alumnde club of Pi Beta Phi sorority will meet tonight at the home of Mrs. Frank Jones. Following the business meeting the members will play bridge. . Mrs. Dorothy Holderman wa appointed rush chairman and Mrs. John McKinstray was made membership chairman at the last meeting.

Gay Plaid

” n n The Alpha Beta Latreian club will sponsor a card party at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Food Craft shop for the benefit of the Bridgeport Nutrition camp. Mrs. Eugene Beasley is chairman. assisted by Mesdames George Walker, Noble Hilgenberg and Paul Hancock.

Four Are Pledged FOUR GIRLS from Indianapolis have been pledged to social sororities at Stephens college following a month of rushing activities on the campus in Columbia, Mo. The girls and their sororities are Miss Patricia Louise Crewes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Crewes, Zeta Phi Delta; Miss Marilyn V. Rock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Rock, Zeta Mu Alpha; Miss Beverly Grace Dickerson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse E, Dickerson, Eta Epsilon Gamma, and Miss Jean Anne Fleenor, daughter of Dr. and Mrs, J. W. Fleenor, Beta Phi Gamma. The . informal pledging was held by 16 sororities and formal services were held Sunday for 500 girls. A Panhellenic ball will be

There must be an extra speheld at the college on Nov. 30. | cial club meeting for Janice pe ‘Miles, a freshman at Howe high school, who steps out in this plaid dress. The casual sleeves

Zeta Beta Chi id do. 1 ee: . ' and leather belt are touches o Dinner Tonight! feshion's latest. (Straus)

Hadassah Group

The annual “national night” will

be observed by the Indiana Alpha Arranges Party a Chi i 1 ee : chapter of Zeta Bet Chi, nations | A skating’ party ‘will be held at business and professional women's pglierland by the business and professional group of Hadassah ThursMiss Sophia Passo is will speak. Miss Roberta Bland, chairman. harpist, will present musical num-| Assisting Miss ar-

dinner at Holly Hock Hill

will serve as toastmaster. MissesClara Sherman, Rose = Vigodner, Lillyan Gross, Goldie Lenowitz, Be s sie Draizer and Lillian Landy, party will be used for charity.

Miss Passo

‘Hadden Family Plans Thanksgiving Trip Dr. and Mrs. Claude Eugene Hadden, 1801 N, Pennsylvania st., and their family, Claudette, Carroll and Sgt. Claude E. Hadden Jr, will |spend Thanksgiving with relatives in Baltimore, Sgt. Hadden just arrived from Korea. i While in Baltimore they will visit Miss Violet Marie Hadden, another

university in Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Panden will go east

return Dec. 2.

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Skating Party

Members of Beta Eta chapter

a skating party Thursday night Rollerland.

ICE AND

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with the Haddens. They expect to

Leading the Ripple-ites will be Bill Frazer, freshman, who as a pupil of John Strange school went to Washington as the city’s representative in the Scripps-Howard nation-wide spelling contest. Others on the team are Jerry Mitchell, Patricia Hoback, Edward Newburg, John Rudy and Rosemary Christ. From Tech will come Janet Octavine, John Newman, Doris Townsend, Betty Jean Buses, Harold Wyman, Charles Van Buskirk. Al J. Kettler is the master of ceremonies on the program. He is a public relations man for the schools. Assisting him on the weekly programs at 7:30 p. m.! Tuesdays are H. H. Anderson, prin- | cipal of Tech; K. V. Ammerman, Broad Ripple principal; Miss Margaret Burnside and Mrs. Ruth Herin, English heads of Tech and

{Bernice Jones. Three weeks ago Shortridge defeated Manual in a sifnilar match, 57 to 55. » » ” ENTHUSIASTIC “BOOK - WORMS” at Broad Ripple high! school are members of the recently innovated Teen-Age Bopk club, sponsored by Pocket Books, Inc. About 90 students have. subscribed to the club and were introduced to! the organization through their English classes. Miss Jane Colsher, librarian, is head of the group, and handles the TAB news, which is published monthly, and the orders for books from the students. Mysteries sell wonderfully, Miss Colsher explains, but, surprisingly enough, many of the other selections have been equally popular. Because the English V class is studying poetry now, the book of Robert Frost's poems was found timely. {Other books that the students | wanted were “Shakespeare's Mas- | terpieces,” “Junior Miss,” “To Have and To Hold” and “Pastoral.” {They are ‘offered a variety of sub|Ject matter each month and with |every four books they buy they receive a free dividend. Broad Ripple has encouraged the students to build up their own libraries, Miss Colsher says, and she feels their reception to this club has developed from that emphasis,

State D. A. R. To Broadcast

A Thanksgiving day program will be presented at 6:30 p. m Sunday over radio station WIBC by the Indiana D. A. R A dramatic skit on “Naturalization” has been prepared by Miss Helen Clever, state vice chairman for radio and member.of the Caro\line Scott Harrison chapter; Mrs |Naomi Stewart, teacher of extended

Proceeds from the services of the public schools, and

| Miss Georgia Ryan, also a member

lof the Caroline Scott Harrison

ID. A. R. chapter, °

Six immigrants will appear on {the program with one student from the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music and Mrs. Stewart.

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Will Tour 35 Cities

Top-Flight Designers Will Make Wardrobe

Times Special MEMPHIS, Tenn. Nov, 19.=The “cotton wardrobe of the year,” styled by leading designers, will be presented to the public by the 1047 Maid of Cotton, whose selection will be made in January. Although practical attire in cottons will not be forgotten, high style will be the keynote, with the latest word in design and the finest in cotton fabrics, in the 1947 show-

Ww

gs. Clothes by Top Designers

Each garment worn by the Maid will bear a label stamping the creation as the handiwork of an artist. Twenty-five designers considered top-flight throughout the fashion world have been invited to devote their talents to the production of a wardrobe that will intrigue the Imagination of American women, the National Cotton council said. Included in the designers’ group

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are Joseph Halpert, Rose Barrack, Tina Leser, Emily Wilkens, Verg| Maxwell, Helen Morgan, Mme.| Eta, Carolyn Schnurer, Adele Simp-| son, Mollie Parnis, Ceil Chapman, | Claire McCardell, Dorothy Cox,| Marjorie Montgomery, Dorris Varnum, Morgan Fauth, Madalyn Miller, Toni Owen, Joset Walker, Joseph Whitehead, Herbert Sondheim, Bobbie Yeoman, Frances Sider, Louella Ballerino and Joan Norton Irwin,

To Be Chosen Jan, 13

The Maid of Cotton will tour approximately 35 cities. She will be selected in Memphis the night of Jan. 13 and will leave immediately for New York where, for three weeks, she will undergo fittings and | take intensive model training. From there she will go to Miami, where she will open her tour on Feb. 17 in Burdine's. Her shows| throughout the country will be arranged by a store in each city—in Indianapolis, by L. S. Ayres & Co. In each city she will model her wardrobe of designer clothes, from beachwear to evening frocks, and other models will be presented in fashions by the same designers, chosen from the store's salons.

Rush Party Planned By Mu Phi Epsilon

A fall rush party and musicale is being planned by Kappa chapter of ! Mu Phi Epsilon, national music | sorority. Mrs. Norman Schneider, 225 Middle dr., Woodruff Place, will} be hostess at 8 p. m. tomorrow. On the arrangements committee are Misses Esther Garretson, Mary Jane Kent, Melva Shull and Joanne Viellieu. Miss Edith Spencer is in charge of the program.

._____ TUESDAY, NOV. 19, 1946

Dec. 22 Set for Wedding

Photo Refle rhince Miss Jeannette VanOsdol Dr. and Mrs. Wesley. L. VanOsdol, 1220 N. Gale st., announce the engagement of their daughter, Jeannette, to John W. Mihelich, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mihelich, Colorado Springs, Colo. The wedding will be at 3:30 p. m,, Dec. 22, in the Wallace Street Presbyterian church. Miss VanOsdol is a graduate of Hanover college and has taken post-graduate work at the University of Illinois. She is a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. After granduation from Colorado. college, Mr. Mihelich spent three years in the army and is now working for a doctor of philosephy degree in physics at the University of Illinois. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa fraternity and the American Physical society. S

SORORITIES

| Alpha Kappa chap. Delta Sigma|Chap. V, P. E. O. 2 p. m. Wed.

Kappa. Today. Mrs. Russell May-| Mrs. Arthur L. Strauss, 2120 N.

hew, 3922 Carrollton, hostess. Meridian, hostess. Guest, ¥irs. Vera Milmot, nation- | Sigma Delta Tau. Wed. night. al officer. Holly Hock Hill. Founders’ day Theta chap, Delta Sigma Kappa.| dinner. Mrs. Herbert Brown, 7:30 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Mary| chairman. :

Brumfield, 3524 N. Illinois, host- Beta chap. Theta Nu Chi. ess. ! Chap. F.. P..E. O. 1 p. m. Wed. | Alabama, hostess. Mrs. A. Hugh Johnson, 3138 N.| phant” party. New Jersey, hostess. “Mayer Indianapolis Alumnae, House,” William Boyd.

Delta chap, Phi Delta Pi. 8 p. m. Wed. ¥Y. W. OC A Business | tional convention, Nov. 29 and

meeting. 30, at Hotel Lincoln, to be made.

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EVENTS

CLUBS

| Ephamar, 12:30 p. m. Wed. Hotel

Lincoln. “Peeping Into the Future,” Mrs. Effie C. Hill; “Study of an Opera,” Mrs. Edward ©. Wische meier; “Mr. Atomic,” Mrs. William .H. Simons, and “Current Events,” Miss Betty J. White sell, Mrs. George B. Loveless. Forty-Two Bridge, 8 p. m. Wed. Hotel Antlers, Monthly meeting. Heyl Study. Wed. Clubrooms, Rauh Memorial library. “The Era of Development,” Mrs. James H. Brayton; review, “Black Daniel” Mrs. A. W. Antrim, Indianapolis Readers. Wed. Mrs, J. Blaine Hoffman, 5240 Broadway, hostess. Review, “The Autobi« ography of Willlam Allen White," Miss Ella E, Frietzsche. Colonial Boston chap. I. T.-8. 0, 10 a. m. Wed, - Columbia club, Mrs, C. J. Ancker, speaker. Victory chap, I. T.-8. C. 6:30 p m| Wed. Thanksgiving dinner, Mrs, Louis Loscent, 453 N. Alton, hostess. Mrs. Jules Zinter, speaker, Will Rogers chap., I. T.-S8. C. 8 p. m. today. Mrs. Henry Bongfeldt, 5127 Ralston, hostess. Ranendra Das, speaker, Irvington Catholic Woman's Study, 1p. m. Wed. Mrs. Roy Babcock, 5012 University, hostess. “The Mystical Body of Christ,” the Rev. Fr. Joseph V. Beechem.

j Irvington Homemakers, 1:30 p. m,

Wed. Mrs. Oliver Bailey, 926 N, Bancroft, hostess. Election of ofe ficers. Irvington Mother Study. Wed. Mrs, Harry Pirtle, 330 N. Bolton, hoste

Hasbrook. New Century. 12:30 p. m. Wed. Mrs, Burton A. Knight, 27 N. Shef« field, hostess. Mrs. Meade Powell. Story-A-Month. 7:30 p. m. Wed, Rauh Memorial library. “What's the Matter With My Story?” Mrs, Ida Vandiver. Tuxedo Park Kindergarten Mothe ers. 12:30 p. m. Wed. Kindergare ten. Covered-dish luncheon; ine stallation; discussion on “Desire able Behavior.”

MISCELLANEOUS

Robert E. Kennington unit, Amerie ican Legion aux. 12:30 p. m. Wed, Post home. Mrs. J. M. Keating, chairman. Display of Service Sales articles, Mrs. Lewis Beebe; plans for Christmas party. Meme bers will bring bars of .soap for Ft. Harrison Veterans’ hospital. Maywood school, P.-T. A. 7:30 p. m, Wed. Open house. “Education for the Atomic Age,” Emmett A, Rice.

8pm Wed. Mrs. Lois Hooker, 1508 N.

Mothers Plan Trip

The Indianapolis Mothers club of

“White ele- [Alpha Xi chapter, Zeta Tau Alpha {sorority, will go to Bloomington Trianon. | Friday for a meeting of all Alpha Wed. Miss Alice Barkes, 3322 Xi mothers. There will be a lunch« Kenwood, hostess. Plans for na- [eon at 12:30 p. m. in the chapter

| house, followed by a business meet= ing and social hour.

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