Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1947 — Page 16
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home of Miss Lovells aunt, Mrs. Marion K. Thomas, 1138 N. Tacoma ave, in honor of Miss Anne Farrell. The sh will be at 8 o'clock tomorrow night. Miss Farrell, the daughter of Mr. ,- 124
Joseph L. Huser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph N. Huser, 1214 N. Wallace st, on May 3. The ceremony will be in the Little Flower Catholic church at 9 a. m. The hostesses, who will be bridesmaids at Miss Farrell's wedding, have invited 23 guests.
A.A. U.W. Sets Last Meeting Of Season
. : Send Sa bi
«
Ayres photo. BRIDE-TO.BE — Miss Margaret Ann Flaherty will be married to Merlin E. Jackson, 1253 S: Pershing ave., on April 25 in Holy Cross Catholic church. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Frank F. Flaherty, 49 N. Jefferson st.
P. H. Ho photo ENGAGED-—Mr. and Mrs. Tudie Miceli, 523 E. Merrill st. announce ‘the engagement of “| their daughter, Marie, and Paul | | Piazza. He is the son of Mr. | and Mrs. Pete Piazza of Terre | Haute. No date has been set | for the wedding.
he. Indianapolis branch, Ameri- | Association of University | will hold its last general g of the season at 6:30 p. m
hr, branch fa ®sident, will § = on “Highs of the Na- * al Conven- * She is now Sending the mvention in fas, Tex.
: univergraduate and a member of] ha Cmma, sorority. She for- |
officers of the local A. A branch are Mrs, Walter me, first vice president; Mrs. . Hinshaw, treasurer, and Mrs. Brandt and Miss Belle ney, directors.
ub Plans Meeting
embers of the North End Garclub will meet at Woollen's | 0 Friday for a box lunch. meeting will be held in the W% Study club’ cabin. Mrs. ge B. Elliott, president, will be arge of the program. Mrs. Bert . Johnson will speak on “Insur: @e for Our Future,” and Mrs. J.
Spalding’s subject will be “Wild
Miss Montgomery Chooses Sister, * Mrs Milam, to Be Matron of Honor
MISS BARBARA JEAN MONTGOMERY has chosen . her-sister, Mrs.-John-C.-Milam,-tobe-matron-of honor when she is married to Carl Braden Jr. of Ft. Wayne. The wedding will be at 4:80 o'clock Sunday afternoon, May 25, at the Irvington Methodist church. The bridesmaids will be Misses Jeanne Gaston, Betty Ferguson, Marjorie Garrett and Helen Thompson. The
bridegroom will be attended by Dr. Richard M. Craig, hokey Ee and ‘ the ushers will include Walter L. Manifold, Mooreland; James E Bond Jr, Pt. Wayne; Zane E. Powell and Mr.
Milan.
Miss Patti Donnelly will honor Miss Montgomery at a crystal shower Sunday in her home. The guests will include Mrs. James A. Montgomery, mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Milam, Mrs. Keith Ferguson, Garrett, Betty Jo Morrison,
Jackson, Misses Gaston, Patricia Sloo, Barbara Patterson, Janet Bartle, Patricia Kirkpatrick, Virginia Johnson, Phyllis Hollar, Elizabeth Ott and Mary McCleaster.
On Sunday, May 4, Miss Ferguson will entertain with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Montgomery at the Delta Delta Delta sorority house at Butler university. Mrs. Ray Ferguson will assist her daughter. Attending the shower will be Mesdames Montgomery, Milam, H. D. Kaiser and Helen P. Fitagerald, Misses Gaston, Donnelly, Kirkpatrick, Bartle, Jeannette Cassady, Marjorie Cooper, Dorilee Koch, Patsy Huber, Jeanne Petterson, Evelyn Hackett, Betty Hearne, Mary Grace French, Norma Brown, Patricia Kutter and Harriett Lewis.
Alumnae #6 Meet ™
THE GAMMA ALUMNAE chapter, Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, will have a covered dish supper Friday night at the Butler. university chapter house. Hostesses will be Mesdames Ralph Brafford, Kenneth Speicher, Robert Neale and Charles Cruse. ' “Medical Quackery” will be discussed by L. P. Nicholas of the Better Business bureau. Officers will be -elected, and Mrs. Kenneth Galm will give a financial report of the ways and means committee.
_|Clyde Weber.
arles Mayer L & Company
it. CASTLETON'S od
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Mrs. Kreig Hostess MRS. WILLIAM KREIG will
| vieve Bicknell and James How-
Heard photo. RECENT BRIDE—Miss Gene-
ard. Cheatham were married March I. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bicknell of Linton, and his parents are Mr. and Mrs. William Cheatham, 823 Chase st.
ENGAGED—Mr. Walter O. Lewis, Brownsburg, announce the 3phineciing mar-
and Mrs.
riage of their daughter, Mary Elinor, and Robert H. Branson. He is the son of Mrs. Ruth A. Branson, New Castle. The wedding will be June 8 at Sweeney chapel, Butler university.
HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
x A - J ae ve
Convention To Open Here Tomorrow Tomogrow Tri Kappa Sorority Lists Activities pa sorority’s 27th biennial convention will be the presentation of
highlights from the 1047 Jordan River revue of Indiana university.
: Mhe convention will open tomorrow at the Hotel Lincoln with a buffet | | supper at 6 p. m. A meeting of the \associate chapter's delegates will
be held ‘at 8 o'clock. ; A business session will begin at 10 a. m. Friday, followed by a luncheon and a fashion show directed by Mrs. Elizabeth’ Patrick of Ayres’. The 3 p. m. business session will include installation of the~ Bloomington Beta Associate chapter. A banquet is scvheduled for 6:30 o'clock that “night in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel. Chuck Smith and his orchestra will play for the dance following.
Council Officers
The 10 a. m. business session Saturday will be at the Lincoln,
{and the Jordan River revue will be
presented following the luncheon at the Claypool. The business sessions will include reports and discussion of organiza-
_{tion activities. including art, schol.
arship, symphony and expansion. The eight province officers will report.
include Mrs. Lester Murphy, Hammond, president; Miss Elisabeth Osborne, Mitchell, vice president; Mrs. J. EP. Holland, Bloomington, founder; Miss Helen Haubold, Decatur, secretary; Mrs. H. Ansel Wallace, Danville, treasurer, and Miss Helen Whitcomb, Shelbyville, ad-
My Day— "Today’s World
| be hostess for the 12:30 p. m. luncheon meeting Monday of the - Auxiliary to the Childven’s bu- | reau of the Indianapolis Orphan home. Officers wil] be elected. Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames August Hook, Robert McMurray, A. T. Stone and Henry Gibson
‘Newcomers
'Plan Tea
The Newcomers club will meet for tea at 1 p. m. Friday at the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. Manuel Benson will be hostess assisted by Mesdames E. W. Kiffmeyer, C. R. Putnam and
Mem and their guests will meet at 1:30 p. m. next Wednesday in the social room of the 38th st. branch of the Merchants National bank. There will be a demonstration of flower arrangements. Tea will be served by Mesdames Paul Pilkenton, W. Ellsworth Bur(rus, Clair L. Martin, Lillian Fields, Arthur K. Schifflin, Ralph H. Goodwin and R. H. Peterson.
Fashions—
By LOUISE FLETCHER { Times Woman's Editor | TWO representatives of the B. H. Wragge Co. will be in the Wragge {shop on Ayres’ third floor tomor- | row through Saturday morning to | present the new season’s styles. The two are Polly Moore and Martha Porter. The Wragge line of clothes “grew up” from the men’s shirt business. Back in the éarly Thirties, Sydney Wragge was in the men’s shirt busi ness, But the women fixed that.
= =” 8 FIRST THEY began snitching their husbands’ Wragge shirts for wear with slacks. Then they began asking for skirts or slacks or jackets.
Things wound. up with Mr. Wragge's becoming a designer of
{to do a co-ordinated line (both as to colors and fabrics) that would see women all the way through city,
In the current collection, about which Misses Moore and Porter will talk, .the theme is a spring-like blossom wint presented in two color series. vz, In the first, the tones shade from pink to a soft lilac—and in the second the colors are chartreuse and | gray. Featured fabrics are crepes | and linen-weave Weave Spun rayons,
1, T.-§ 8 C. C. Group To Meet Tonight’
Victory chapter of the International Travel-S8tudy club will meet’ tonight in the home of Mrs John FP. Allen, 4522 Evanston ave
New officers of the .chapter are Mrs. Kenneth Harris, president; Mrs. Allen and Mrs. Viola Honan first and second vice presidents: Mrs. Scott Hosier and Mrs. Mae Burnett, recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. Bennie Lynch, treasurer; Mrs, Mary Barker, auditor, and Mrs. Elizabeth Atterbury, delegate to the federation.-
Mrs. Kenneth Horan To Be Speaker
Times State Service BLOOMINGTON, Ind. April 18.— |Theta Sigma Phi journalistic soe rority will present Mrs. Kenneth | Horan, author of “Remember the Day” and “Papa Went to Congress,” ‘as the speaker for Matrix table, J Marl 1, at Indiana university. : banquet is sponsored annu-
"market, But they both recovered
"| Sigma Phi. ‘|annually by chapters of the honor-
» | Tuesday.
Up and Down
Do Stocks and Hemlines Climb and Descend In Rhythm?
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, April 16—The gentlemen of Wall st. looked at | the legs of their "pretty stenographers today and sighed double —no knees, no prosperity. Ever since women’s skirts rose off the floor in the first place, the financial gentlemen remembered, the stock market has been going. up and down with them. And the stenographers are letting out the hems again. The attractions of the canyon below Trinity church are being obscured. The handwriting on the hemline really started wih world war IL
HEMS gor eight aches off the floor then and went right up to the knee by 1919. The Wall st. men were happy. In 1921 skirts came down a little. So did the
fast. The sun shone in Wall st.; the sparrows twittered in the churchyard; the pigeons cooed on the eaves, and the stenographers’ legs were more apparent every day. Right up to the knee, and when they crossed their legs under their notebooks—Well! The financiers were happy. The market soared— right -up td 1929. By 1930, ‘money alley couldn't afford so many stenographers. The ones on the meager payrolls modestly covered their legs to 10 inches off the floor. It was gloomy. And it stayed that way.
” » - THE VIEWABLE portion of leg was reduced to six inches. Skirts didn’t- move up again until 1939= The financiers were older and wiser.” Their happiness was tempered with wisdom. But they smiled again. Skirts were tempered a bit, too. They never did hit the 1929 heights, but they did all right at that. The financial bigwigs said today. it was all just a “superstition. They had the old “chicken or the egg” question to back them up. And the ‘fashion creators laughed to think they had anything to do with the stock market. “It's a perfectly natural thing,” sald one of them. “It goes up, and then it goes down.” The, hemline, that is.
Matrix Dinner At Franklin
Times State Service FRANKLIN, Ind. April 16.—~In-
first annual Matrix table of the Franklin = college’ chapter, Theta The dinner,. sponsored
ary professional fraternity for women in journalism, will be next
Mrs. Jeanette Covert Nolan, Indianapolis, author, will be the speaker. George Hamill, baritorie, and Miss Barbara Easterday, accordionist, . 1, play for the event. Mrs. Margaret 8. Moore, head of the department of journalism at Frankiin, is adviser to the chapter,
Hillerest Names Golf Chairman named golf chairman for the ‘1047 season at Hillcrest Country club.
The’ teason opened’ yesterday. : Other chairmen ‘named are Mrs.
man; Mrs, Fritz Morris, rules com-
ay rr or Sp women ; sa ; and towns-
vitations have been issued to the?
Mrs,’ Robert Darnably has been |.
Ralph Schneider, handicap chair] mittee; Mrs. 8. Bossy 5 Hepaerin, ;
Seems One Of Conflict’
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT NEW YORK, April 16. — The front-page stories in one metropolitan newspaper the other day showed what a world of conflict we now live in. In Moscow, Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov had refused to consider an agreement on the Saar until his proposal on four-power rule for the Ruhr was settled. In another column was an account of a speech made in London by Henry Wallace, in which he voiced his apprehension over the policy of lending money to antiSoviet states just because they are anti-Soviet states rather than because they need money for rehabilitation. Right next to that article was an accusation by a Democratic senator that Mr. Wallace, by voieing these sentiments abroad, was hurting his country’s prestige. . » » * AT HOME, the phone strike continued, the coal mines were slowly beginning to reopen, and the wisdom of certain government loans to the Baltimore & Ohio mailroad was being questioned By the Republicans in a senate committee. This alj looks like a good deal of dissension and more dissension, and yet it is part of the freedom “under which we in the United States think the world should operate. To me, though, some:of us seem to De losing sight of “certain vital
A feature of Kappa Kappa Kap-|
Council officers who will preside] ~~
“EVENTS
Aftermath. ug p. m. Thurs, sth st. branch, Merchants National bank, Luncheon. Mrs. Clayton Ridge, speaker. American History Literary. 8 n m. Thurs, Mrs. Merton Good, 2429 Station, hostess. Business meeting: “Wilderness” (Kent), Mrs. Herbert Harris. J Crooked Oreek Garden. 1:30 p. m. Thurs. Mrs. M. E. Clark, 1427 W, 53d, hostess. “Wild Flowers,” Mrs. J. R, Spalding: Ladies Federal. Thurs. Mrs. William B. Norris, 1416 W. 34th, hostess. Warren Twp. Woman's Republican. Today, Mrs. Nellie Richardson, 2108 Kessler blvd., hostess.
dpe tr
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Sizes 12 to 20.
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MISCELLANEOUS = Altar soc, St. Ann's: Catholic church. Thurs, Card party at
church, Lhe Ce Past Presidents of P.-T. A. 1:30 p. m. Thurs. War Memorial bldg. Election; “The Walls of Jericho,” Mrs, Clayton H. Ridge. ~SOROITIES Gamma Beta Chi. 7:30 p. m. today. Chinese room, Hotel Washington. Beta chap, Omega Phi Tau, 8 p. m. today, Mrs. Donald Bauermeister, 127 N. Gladstone, hostess. Chap. AJ,P.E. O, Miller, 5156 W.
W. Lodwick.
.| committee president,
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1947
D.A.R. Group
To Have Tea
The Wheel and Distafl committee of the Caroline Scott Hawison chapter, D. A. R,, will have a tea 8t 2 p. m. Friday at the home of Mrs. Wiliam PF. Sandmann, 4701 Graceland ave. After the business meeting, Frank N. Wallace will speak on “Wild Flowers and State Parks.” A tea will follow his talk. Assisting the hostess will be Mes«
| dames Wilbur E. Smith, ©. E. Moon, ./John H. Jefferson and Benton’ S,
Lowe. Mrs, Wiliam O. Weber, and Mrs,
Charles N. Voyles, committee spone
_ | sor, will pour,
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things. Wasson’s Robes, It is tim¢ we learned at home ; and abroad to think about agree- Third Floor men} and to stop so much dissension. Z Dy. : I ( SL 5 Fy de NN om
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