Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1947 — Page 13
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tariff must be. esisted. ‘
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\ beef for Brite 00 tons, but as | sliding downe ’ mn, Britain has 00 tons ordered
\ independence, their own coal Shannon river | h Isles, already d-flowing Erne 00,000 tons and taken care of
works of James river and flows is worth about
Irish are send.
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| WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1941 yocletl!
1" Alamnas. of Alpha Xi Delta Sorority fx Will Meet Friday With Mrs. Witham
“
‘MRS. WALTER H. HAMLEY, flewly elected president of the Indianapolis Alumnae chapter, Alpha Xi Delta sorority, will preside at a meeting to be held at 7:30 o'clock Friday night. Mrs. H. B. Witham will entertain the chapter, with Mrs. C. K. Whistler as the assistant hostess. The meeting, whith will be the last until September, will include
plans for informal gatherings this
the national constitution also will be discussed. - Mrs. R. L. McKay has been appointed chapter delegate to the national convention to be held June 25 through July { in Quebec,
. Mrs. PF. M. Hadley will be hostess to the Indianapolis Wellesley An old-fashioned box lunch social {
club at 6:30 o'clock Friday night.
Miss Godfrey Announces
Attendants
Miss Betty Godfrey will be mald of honor when her sister, Jean, is married to Kevin C. Walsh June 21 in St. Philip Neri Catholic church.
* Miss Rosemary Walsh will be the
Mr. Walsh will be attended by Lawrence Turner, and Richard Morris and Raymond Walpole will be ushers. ‘The bride-to-be will be honored with a crystal shower Monday night in the home of Mrs. Mary C. Schumacher, 410 N, Oakland ave. Miss Betty Godfrey will assist. Other Showers Guests will include Mrs. John A. Godfrey and Mrs. Justin Walsh, mothers of the engaged couple: Mesdames Henry Burnell, Patrick] Shea, Hugh Drohan, Mary Noffkee, Henry Mackell, Hilda Carr, Hazel Kistner, Mary Murphy, Thomas O'Connor, Clint Shaw, Lee Tischnor, John Raney, Lawrence Woodrum, G.
-Bdwin Pfau, Andrew McHugh, Lee
Paradice, Norbert Webber, Rose Earle, Robert Godfrey, Louis Schumacher, Kenneth Cox, Herbert Altherr and Alice Gerdes, Misses Rosemary and Juanita Walsh, Anna Roach, Rita Schumacher and Mary Lenihan, a Misses Walsh will entertain for the future bride with a linen shower Tuesday night in their home, 406 N. Oakland ave. and Mrs. Webber will entertain June 14 with a kitchen shower in her home at 544 N. Eastern ave. The bride-to-be's parents live at 440 N. Oakland ave. Mr, Walsh's parents are of 604 N. Oakland ave.
Luncheon Held The St. Francis Hospital guild had an all-day meeting recently at the hospital. Mrs. George C.
Graber was officer of the day, and
Mrs. 1. G. Boyd was hostess for the luncheon. *
summer. Proposed amendments to
will be held. In charge of ar-: rangements for the meeting are Mrs. Walton M. Wheeler, Mrs. Karl Nessler and Miss Jacqueline Young.
Tea Tomorrow
MISS ANNA HASSELMAN, educational director of the Herron Art museum, will entertain members of her Thursday morning sketch class at a guest tea tomorrow afternoon in the museum print room. The class is made up of members of the Indianapolis Art ‘association. «Mrs. Bruce L. Kershner and Mrs. Robert Frost Daggett will assist the hostess at the tea table. A group of water colors, pastels and drawings done by class members during the past year will be ‘displayed through Sunday at the museum.
» ~ ® Miss Hyla J. Doyal will be graduated’ Sunday from Hiram college, Hiram, O. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Galen T. Doyal, and her sister, Alice, will attend the commencement.
Luncheon at Club
MR. AND MRS. HENRY P. SCHRICKER will be among the guests at an informal luncheon Monday following the commencement exercises of Indiana Central | college. The luncheon will be in the Columbia club. . Other guests will be Dr. I. Lynd Esch, president of the college, and Mrs. Esch; Bishop and Mrs. Fred L. Dennis, Dr. and Mrs. L. L. Huffman and Dr. and Mrs. Allen B. Kellogg. Bishep J. Palmer Shower, baccalaureate speaker, and Dr. John R. Emens, president
Purdue Women Get Fashion” Scholarships
Times State Service LAFAYETTE, Ind. June 4—Two
students in the Purdue university School of Home Economics are among four women awarded schol-
arships to the Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion careers, ‘New York, in the national competition this year. The Purdue winners are Miss Roberta J. Holbrook, South Bend, who will be graduated in’ mid-August, and ' Miss Martha McNaughton, Washington, who will be graduated June 15, They will go to New York Aug. 26. The course will last through next May, and will include work in department store operation, merchandising, historic costumes and sales experience, plus courses in proper grooming and other phases of retailing.
» » » Miss Jane Williams, daughter of Russel S. Williams, 4747 N, Meridian st., Indianapolis, was graduated last
of Ball State Teachers college and commencement speaker, also will be guests at the luncheon. | » » » The Indianapolis Junior league | will hold a picnic luncheon Fri- | day, June 13, at Foster Hall. It will be the first meeting attended by the recently announced provisional members.
| Mexico now has two women mayors. | | They {Ramirez and Aurora Fernandez of
Wednesday from the fashion school.
Feminine Mayors For the first time since the Aztec queens wielded plumed scepters,
are Senoritas Guadalupe
Xochimilco and Milpa Alta.
Gift Towel Set and Cool Summer Frock
By MRS. ANNE CABOT
These tea towels depicting the
life of Tommy, the Cowboy Cat, in bright embroideries, will elicit amusement and admiration when
* you unwrap them at a shower for
# summer bride. Each little figure is 6% inches and is to be embroidered in cross-stitch and outline stitch in reds, yellow, blues, greens and browns. Fun to make —certain to please! To obtain seven transfers, color chart for working the cowboy cat designs (Pattern 5492) send 16 cents in coin, your name, address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot (The Indianapolis Times, 530 8. Wells st., Chicago 7.
"Luncheon Saturday
! The Indianapolis Alumnae asso- | ciation of Alpha Sigma Alpha soirority, will honor its Mothers club lat a 1 p. am. luncheon Saturday. Mrs. William V. Kingdon, 910 E. {Kessler blvd., will be the hostess. Mrs, William F. Noblitt is chairman of arrangements.
Leaves for Meeting ~ Mrs. W. W. Reedy, 3663 N. Penn-
sylvania st., left today to attend the world and national W. C. T. U. It will be held tomorrow through June
convention in Asbury Park, N. J.
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By SUE BURNETT Wide stripes going up and down and around make as attractive a summer date frock as you'll see— - one that’s: sure to capture every glance. The keyhole neck gives a youthful air, and note the bow that ties softly in front. Pattern 8161 is for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14, '; yard of 35 or 39-inch for contrasting front waist; »2% yards for side waist ° and back skirt, For this pattern, send 25 cents, in coin, your name, address, size desired, and the pattern pumber to Sue Burnett, The Indianapoiis “Times. Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st., Indianapoli§ 9. Ready now—the new summer Fashion. Fifty-two pages of style® | color, fashion news ‘for every woman who sews. for your copy today,
Mrs. Victor A. Selby, Fairmount, treasurer; Mrs. Cogle president, and Mrs. Oscar Brizius, Newburgh, trustee. T
+with the profit motive, youth con- | servation becomes a subject for
£1 Is Youth's Day” and Mrs. Lim will
Send 25 cents |
. » »
Failure in Child
+By LOUISE FLETCHER, Women’s organizations can be i servation, Randel Shake told the afternoon.
«LF. C. OFFICERS NOMINATED — Candidates for offices in the Indiana Federation of Clibs were nominated this morning at the |. F. C. convention in the Claypool hotel. They are (left to right, front row) Mrs. R. Earl Peters, Ft. Wayne, recording secretary: Mrs. Arnold Ulbrich, East Chicago, second vice president; Mrs. George C. Baum, Rochester; first vice president; Mrs. James R. Riggs, Sullivan, corresponding secretary, and (left to right, rear row) Y Cole, Vevay, president;"Mrs. E.'S. Dolzall, third vice e election will be tomorrow. .
Conservation
Shows Social, Economic Lag, | Club Women Are Told
Times Woman's Editor mvaluable in promoting child conIndiana Federation of Clubs this
Mr, Shake, assistant national child welfare director for the American Legion, delivered his talk, “Youth Conservation Through Legislation,” at the Claypool hotel where the I. F. C.’s 57th annual convention
is being held. Sessions, opening, yesterday, will continue through, tomorrow. | “I believe,” “such organizations as yours have! a resposibility to tell and retell the story of youth conservation , . . until laws are passed to assist in conserving our greatest natural resource. ; “When ‘parents refuse or become unable to discharge the responsibil ity of youth conservation, then the community and state must become the parent, through legislation. “Why is such legislation needed? Aren't our people willing for children to have a fair start in life? + «+ The discrediting answer is ‘no.’ “I suggest to you that when youth conservation comes info conflict
lip service only.” Social, Economic Lag Mr. Shake added, “The vast number of sick, dependent, neglected, malnourished and maladjusted children throughout the United States is an index of our social and economic lag. - “As a nation we spend more for education than any other nation’ —yet our illiteracy rate compares |
{ unfavorably with many European | countries,” he asserted. “In the field
of child labor we have retrogressed | to a point as bad as we were a cen-' tury ago. : i “In the field of linquency, we can predict more; than one and a half million serious | major crimes will be committed | this vear. . . . In the field of child health we have allowed our social thinking to lag so far behind our | scientific and medical knowledge that it is indescribable.” . Forum Held A forum on character education, | directed by Mrs. Frederick G. Balz, | followed Mr. Shake's talk. Tonight | the delegates will attend a youth | conservation dinner. The event, in the hotel's Riley room at 6:30 o'clock, will honor juhior federation members. The dinner speakers will be Col. | Charles Brandon Booth, central | area executive, Volunteers of America, and Mrs. Pilar Lim, past president of the Philippine Federation of Women's Clubs. Col. Booth's topic will be “Today
discuss “Education for Nationhood.” Candidates Listed At this morning's session, the candidates who will be voted upon tomorrow were presented. Senator Owen Brewster (R. Me.), was the speaker at last night's banquet. : America’s Example Talking on “Our Foreign Relations,” Senator Brewster emphasized the importance of America’s role in achieving world -peace. “Our country,” he said, “must | accept its responsibility in making | freedom and production work as| an example for the world.” Our productive skill, he declared, | can maintain strength against ag-| gression, while our strength as a| good neighbor can unite democra-, cies in leading the way to peace. Sharing of industrial and agri-| cultural knowledge, Senator Brew- | | ster pointed out, will be a factor | [in attaining peace and will serve las an example to Russia which! | he described as “an absolute oli- | garchy.” : Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren, Whiting, recording secretary of the General
pon
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Federation of Women’s Clubs, also {spoke at the dinner, ‘Mr. Shake sd} 4, magic way to peace,” she said.
*"
“There is no
Peace has to be built into the lives
and minds of the peoples of th world. i
“If we fail to make a renewed ef-
fort to live our democracy the American way, we cannot expect the rest of the world to believe that our way is best.” '
Mrs. J. F. Griffin To Visit Here
Mrs. J. F. Griffin, Tampa, Fla. formerly of Indianapolis, will arrive here tomorrow to visit her brother and his family, Mr. and Mrs, J. G. Batman, 1411 N. Euclid ave. Whilé in the city she will attend the Shortridge alumni meeting. President of the Florida Congress Parents-Teacher Associations, Mrs. Griffin is attending the P.-T. A. conventidn in Chicago. She will return to Tampa next week.
Portia Hurd Wins Annual . Scholarship
The annual scholarship of the Indianapolis Wellesley club has been awarded to Miss Portia Hurd, who will be graduated this week from Shortridge high school. Miss Hurd is the niece of Mr. and Mrs. Robert McMurray, 725 E. 57th st. She was chosen by the scholarship committee at Wellesley college.
9 a m. Tuesday in St. Joan
‘taker will be married to James J.
Arc Catholic church, her parents,
Norwaldo ave.
is the soli of Mr. oodbury Glidden, White-
Mr. GI and po H. Mrs. John Jessup will be the ma-
» . » : Mrs. Anne Baker will entertain with a luncheon and miscellaneous shower Saturday at the Hotel Washington to honor her niece, Miss Elizabeth Schumaker. Miss Schu-
Edwards June 15. Guests at the party will include Mrs. George W. Schumaker, the bride-to-be’s mother; Mesdames Orville Brown, Oscar Riggle, David M. Miller, Wayne Maple, Franklin E.. Stewart, Ralph Newman and Scott Edwards, Miss Augusta O'Neal, Miami, Fla.; Miss Ruth Mullins, Rushville, and Miss Mabel Ridenour. - » - ” The marriage of Miss Nell Anderson and M. Jack Clouse was read at 11 a. m. Thursday in the rectory of SS, Peter and Paul cathedral
PX Miss Marjorie Glass, 5748 E. Stephens College Alumnae club at 8 p. m. tomorrow. The meeting will be the last of the current season. Mrs. C. R. Greene Jr. will be co-hostess.
Open House Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Abe Steinkeller will receive informally at their home, 363 E. Westfield blvd, from 5 to
Michigan st, will entertain the|
Msgr. R. R. Noll officiated. | Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Anderson, 1434 Deloss st, are the parents of the bride, and Mrs, Willa Clouse, 3817 Hoyt ave., is the mother of the bridegroom. Miss Lois Wulfenning was the bride’s only attendant, and Ray Kennedy was the best man. A wedding breakfast was held at LaRue’s restaurant, After a short wedding trip, the couple will live at 1502 Lexington ave.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Skowronex, 4449} have - announced.| | \ |The Rev. Fr, Edwin Sahm willl officiate. ERY Hl
liam Atkinson the First Pres Peoria, lil, 1 mencement speal Hall graduation F the First Presbyterian
here. a
Meeting Held The East Edgewood Homemaker's club met recently at the home cf Mrs. Lola Lewellen, 4031 Mathews ave. i
9 p. m. Sunday in honor of their daughter, Lillian, who is being graduated from Jordan conservatory and Butler university. There are no invitations.
Mrs. DeW: Is Hostess HL
club for the last 13 years, a hand-lettered scroll tion of his services.
Masquers Club To Have Di nner
vo
Hutchman, treasurer. ‘Miss Nell McMillan Frazier is the’ sponsor of the club. A
Woman Governor Nellie Taylor Ross was the first woman to become a governor of one of the states of the union. She
became chief executive of Wyoming in 1924. :
Graduation Set The Wonderland kindergarten, 2532 N. Rural st, will hold its spring graduation at 8 p. m. Priday in the Northeast community
center.~
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