Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 January 1947 — Page 20
singin. many antrisa
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your there will be |
will be reserved for Téstive |
| a wider choice of ways to look than there has been for many yegrs. |.
o th |. 16 will be up to the woman to decide how she wants to appear. There
tan ir 1047: Will wear “more |. HEI Selle: Sanh, Solio Winner Uf the American Fashiok |" tho a] years. Hats will be smaller and Critics’ award: Though there is an evident change in the silhouette : The year will see a very st a “ot a ‘ + y Sn . — - —— — — ——— — : rr— ee \
Society—
+ Betrothal of Elizabeth Mayer h
ne .
Is Announced by Her Parents
Tudor Hall school and
erie r— rr— ‘THE ENGAGEMENT OF MISS ELIZABETH KIE- | FER MAYER to John Thomas Trixler is announced by ‘her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Kiefer Mayer. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. P. Gorman | Trixler of Huntington. © © Miss Mayer is a graduate of
1charge of the traditional tea that
- | Ropkey, James Rose, Jullan Bobb,
By D.
as do men. -
Gift Statistics
Women buy twice as many gifts
Election of delegates and alternates to the national congress and to the state convention will be held. The national’ congress will meet in Springfield, Ill, the week of April 12 and the state convention will be Daughters of the Union,|in Indianapolis beginning March 1:30 p. m. Monday | 29.
. CHRISTMAS LUNCHEON—These four young woren were among those attend: ing the Smith College club's ‘annual Christmas luncheon yesterday in the Propylasum.
Fo
J. Davin, James Stafford, Carl C © Bridal Gown Cramer and Vernon Root. Mrs. C heavy pearl white satin gown, W. Ostertag is in charge, of reser- Itashioned with s full skirt and long yations, train, will be worn by the bride, A “white elephant” : party 1s A pearl-embro tiars will hold planned for members at 1:30 p. m. her fingertip {illusion veil and she ' in -the Food Oraft shop will carry a Bible with a white Mrs. D. W, Cripe is chairman. oy orehid: - : The Fortnightly club will meet ‘WINTER WHITE—Mary Ann" | aise Dillahunt, Spring at 2 p. m, Monday in the home of| Leonard of Manual high school | field, o, of honor, wil wear & Mrs. H. C. Tope, 62381 Central ave.| wears a rayon gabardine dress rock Sh Shifive, i Aves A round-table discussion will . ‘ I ashe Karen Baker, wear conducted on “subjects of the day.”*| this sparkling tone. Fash- [long white sheer dress and will j ioned with a new high neckline a basket of rose pefals.
activities committee of the Art Association of Indianapolis, ‘was in
the association held this afternoon in the John Herron Art museum. At the tea table were Mesdames Robert Tyndall, G. H. A. Clowes,
Warrack Wallace, Wilbur D. Peat, Guy Wainwright, John Rauch, Donald Mattison and David K. Rubins,
Classmates Are Feted
Miss Patricia Kelly, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Patrick T. Kelly of 950 N. Rural st. and ‘a student at Marian college, recently enteriained with a holiday party for her Latin American classmates. Honor guests were Miss Magali Urreula and Miss Sarita Perera of
of Quito, Equador, Other guests were Miss Sydney
sota; Misses Mary Anne and Julia C. Garvey, Covington, Ky.;’ Miss
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Martha Garvey and Miss Betty Carter, New Castle; Misses Patty Carr, Loretta Spaulding, Margaret Brady, Lorraine Monnin, Mary Vollmer, Odétte Loubard, Constance Zeller, Pat Smuck and Anne Tobin, :
Hospital Guild Sets Meeting Monday The St. Francis Hospital guild will have its monthly meeting at a covered dish luncheon Monday at the hospital. Mrs. Frank Oberting, hostess, will be assisted by "Mrs. | Henry Wellinghoff and Mrs. W. J. Davidson. Mrs. Ada Roth will be officer of the day. New officers will be installed at
the meeting. They are Mrs. Edward |Trimpe, president; Mrs. George | Graber and Mrs. James P. Mugivan, (first and second vice presidents; | Mrs, Roy Nation and Mrs. Henry | Gardner, recording and financial secretaries, and Mrs. Bernard Welmer, treasurer,
Dolls to Dollars
Audry Dice and Bennett Rathbone, both of Philadelphia, are former WACs. They are studying he 1/at an educational institution under the G.I. bill of rights. They began to make yarn dolls to supplement the government subsidy, The idea clicked and the girls are now making 1000 dolls a week, "
emi —————— v ' 71, Mrs. Judge Girls are being trained as judges for courts in Russian occupied section of Germany, Five colleges for
Soviet zone. Most of the judges will be men, but a certain percentage will be females.
158 Descendants
Sullivan, Carleton college, Minne- |
judges have been established in the
When 102-year-old Annie Auston Mathews died here recently, she left 1168 direct descendants. They included six children, 40 grandohil-
Wardrobe Pet
§
14-18 By SUE BURNETT
The lumber jacket outfit has won a favored spot in every wardrobe this season. This youthful version has deep, comfortable armholes, igan front and snug belt, plus a gay pleated skirt- Try it in a brilliantly hued wool, gabardine or gray flannel, Pattern 8916 is designed for sizes 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 18. Size 12 requires 3 yards of 54-inch fabric, For this pattern, send 25 cents, in coins, your name, address, size desired, and the pattern number to Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st., Indiaanpolis 9. The fall and winter issue of Fashion is brim full of smart ideas for every woman who plies a needle. ' Easy-fo~-make styles . . . special designs by America's top flight designers . . , lots of ideas with accessories .": . free printed
> By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT HYDE PARK, Dec. 31.—I am writing this on New Year's eve and a few of us will gather together here in this little cottage at Hyde Park and on the stroke of midnight, as the new year comes in, we will follow ‘my husband’s custom of toasting first “The United States of ‘America.” ‘Then we shall toast the members of our family and our friends who live | {5 cast her first vote in a national with us in memory, even though they can never again be actually pres-| election, is Australia’s delegaté® to] Finally, the United Nations committee on FROM OUR citizenship in_the|g,cia} United States springs all that makes |w y .|life worth living to us as private] citizens. The freedom, the justice, and the opportunity that we have stem from the development of a country 4n which our forebearst
and better for mankind.
racy is a never-ending occupation,
tion of indifferent, selfish and nar-row-minded individuals, for inherent in democracy is a sense of
{to recognize, I think, that every
, [J most modern
{Clubs— _~ || Three Clubs |Schedule -* {|
Sheffield ave., will be hostess to the Happy Hour club at 8 p. m. Friday. There will be election of officers.
Young UN Delegate
~ Mrs. J. C. Moore, 21, who has yet
Mrs. Emest F. Taylor will be
; Meetings Li Trinkle will be united in The Newcomers club will meet BE a Be oan a at 11:45 a. m, next Wednesday in “fRev, O. A. Trinkle, father of the " Ithe Lincoln room of the Hotel bridegroom, will officiate. : | Lincoln, Mr. and Mrs, Oliver X. Spengler
and. tailored detail on the
if
Students and prospective students at the college were guests. The four SiacenTs}aiontin at 1 p. m. Tuesday in the| pockets, the dress is finished Roget Bras Bowe omnes shown here reported ‘on activities at Smith. They are (left to right) Misses Marjorie |chapter house. Dr. Allegra Stewart) with a red leather bet. (Was- |ushers are to be Jack Singers, EdTurk, Frances Pughe, Mary Bishop and Alice Berman. “ix dam ill opunk son's.) © |ear Ashcraft, William Dosch. and on lr vedi, Ga EL —— Art Group My Day— Le, Me er: | DrCWET- Adams [vie wn iw ons viding tcp and E ‘Building’ a Democracy Requires [3 mss. 1. tarin, ages ue-| (O | wn Holds Tea A S : Dowsl Lammers and Jasper Min- €r cmony rect: yf - | ense of Responsibility ~~ bon une may. WA CHIR Tend Whey of iS RMI GC This Carurel In Museum f Y ; Election Booked vows — Miss di % host, 4 - : atin: Fohie Dest salts of the For the Brotherhood of Man Miss Carrie Overpeck, 1027 S.|and Garnett Brewer Dec. 31 in the|D. A. R. Chapter Sets
Fountain Square Church of God.
Meeting Tomorrow
problems at Lake Success,
led to create something new
The fact that we drifk this toast every year has a significance, and one that I hope emery family in the country who drinks a similar toast bears in mind. That vital significance is that building a democ-
It can be harmed by one genera-
responsibility for the brotherhood of man. When this feeling is a motivating force in any generation, democracy forges ahead. We cannot really have a democracy without a sense of the responsibility that every citizen has for the well-being of his neighbor. De= mocracy is never real unless it gives every man a chance, first to develop his abilities and then to function according to those abilities. So, on this New Year's day, as we wish each other a Happy New Year, let us resolve to.perform. our duties ‘as citizens .with the thought of all ‘our fellow citizens constantly in mind. n EJ » THIS COUNTRY of ours must not: be a country where any group or any special individuals receive benefits to which they do not contribute. Modern society has come
citizen is entitled to an opportunity for growth, And when that growth and development is attained all citizens, male and female, have an obligation to make returns tp their society, not for their own good alone, but for the benefit of all those among whom they lve.
80 narrow that it embraces only one community ‘or one nation. We live in close proximity to the world as a whole, and therefore our ad-
the interest and the possible fellowship with the people of the world. May we, through our daily lives and our way of thinking, come to our next New Year's eve with a sense that we have omplished something for the world as a whole. A Happy New Year, dear readers, and may God bless us alll
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