Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1947 — Page 11
000,000 buildfronted with In’ the local resent board.
us ly, a to-hell-nd with small now which is h lives better, The brutality aced by hotel ters. ago, 1 saw a the bulkhead aman, with a he mate who y on charges, ip if the comto sail,
feeling about t feeling was vy placed its nerchant seaj0se guns. It iddered at the hip with the ned merchant to join the the guns over
the working een corrected 1 as a former latest N. M. U,, lo our people.
st
ind the crews
that amazing 8-hour schedis one of his
Marshall who ton this time, 1 ulcers. Both e new task is t banker will
10 apparently controls that tion, “We have trols and how,
jet a big head
» to light, give determination ny Americans a, a few men their own sel-
1 Europe who shall not be we are realne fear of our ; “the suspicion oviet suspicion many. Truman and slightest sugs that would
tt will be 8
. It is a good ) label before
Msgr. Downey Hears: OWS This Morning . Miss Patricia Clark [ Is Wed at Church Repeating vows read by the RL. Rev, Msgr. J. M. Downey, Miss Patricia Clark and Richard McKeon
was at 9 a. m. in St. Catherine of Sienna Catholic church.
Clark home. The bride chose a gown of white lace over satin. ‘It was fashioned
Bride's Two Sisters
Among Attendants Miss Joan Clark was her sister's
Peggy, was the junior bridesmaid. The bridesmaids were Mrs, Danfel James, Mrs. Michael Kirk, Miss Mildred Mills and Miss Mary MeGinnis. ~ All the attendants wore bouffant frocks of pastel organdy. John McKeon, Elbridge, was best man for his brother, and ushers were Mr. James, Mr. Kirk, Harold and Donald Mills and Richard, Blanck. | Following a c<hort trip to .Chiago, the couple will be at home at 51 N. Bradley ave.
Hancock-Hill Ceremony
To Be Tonight
The Rev. A. C. Brooks will read the vows to unite Miss Gladys Joan Hill and Kenneth Harold Hancock at 7:30 o'clock tonight. The ceremony will be in the Third Christian church. The parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hill, Noblesville, and Mrs. Maurice Alexander, 714 W. 42d st.
THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1947
Rds ! .
A. A. U. W. OFFICERS—Among the recently elected officers of ‘the Indianapolis branch, American Association of University Women, are (left to right) Mrs. E. G. Hinshaw, treasurer, and Mrs. Russell Fanning and Mrs. Milo Z. Boles, directors. Others, not shown, are Mrs. Walter Leckrone, first vice president, and Mrs, William C. Brandt and Miss Belle Ramey, directors. Hold-ove r officers include Mrs. John Paul Lahr, president: Mrs. O. M. Helmer, second vice president, and Mrs. William Rasmussen, secretary.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
|Rev. Roy te || Will Read
Miss Esther Pollard To Be Bride Tonight
At 8:30 o'clock . tonight Miss Esther Pollard become bride of Richard J. Powers in Southeastern Union. church. The Rev. Roy V. Davis will officiate. Miss Eileen Pollard will be her sister's maid of honor. She will wear an aqua rmarquiset dress, Thie bridesmaids, Miss Shirley Ann Pollard and Miss Barbara Jean Swarm, will be dressed in pink marquiset frocks. The bride’s white marquiset gown is trimmed with lace and has a full skirt with a train. Her three quarter length veil will fall from a Mary Stuart cap of lace. She will carry a white Bible topped with a white orchid. James W. Kemper will be the best man, and the ushers will include Fred Matzke and Robert Reeves. Reception at Church To Follow Ceremony A recéption at the church will {follow the ceremony. The bride is attending the Indiana University groom is university. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar H. Pollard, + 15010 Southesstern ave, are the bride's parents, and Mr. and Mrs, E. J. Powers, Cumberland, are the bridegroom's parents. *
My Day— ‘Inferiority Ruins Meaning
Of Freedom’
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT. HYDE PARK, N., Y, July 3—In Washington the other day, as I sat on the platform during President Truman’s address to the convention
altending Purdue
Advancement of Colored People, I looked out over the sea of faces below us and thought how signifi-
coln memorial must be to most of the people there.
Lace will trim the bride's white sheer dress which is made with a train. - She will wear a fingertip length veil and carry Madonna V lilies. Miss, Norma Jean Hancock, the maid of honor, will wear a lilac « chiffon frock. The bridesmaid, Miss Willowdene Bennett, Noblesville, will be dressed in a yellow net frock.
Society—
Evaline Hitz Will Have Miss Littell As Maid of Honor for Wedding July 12
Dale Robert Mortz will be the best man. The reception will ‘be held in the church parlors after the ceremony. After a trip to Detroit, the couple will live at 2157 Park ave.
Recruitment Of Women
Is Urged
WASHINGTON, July 3 (U. P).— The nation’s. military high command today urged legislation to recruit women in the armed forces because if there is another war everybody in “critical” places in the United States will have to take . part just “as if they were 50 miles from the battle line.” : They also told a senate. armed services subcommittee that the army's - volunteer enlistment program is not doing so well. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, army chief of staff, and Adm, Chester W. Nimitz, chief of naval operations, appeared personally before the committee. Gen, Carl Spaatsz, chief of the army air forces, and Gen. Jacob L. Devers, chief of the army’s ground forces, submitted statements endorsing recruitment of women on a peactime basis. Subcommittee Chairman Edward V. Robertson (R. Wyo.) asked Eisenhower if it were not true that the United States would be a battleground in any future war and that everybody would be affected directly.
Womenpower Is Seen ‘Mandatory’ in War
“The more we do progress toward this so-called push-button war,” Gen. Eisenhower said, “the more . everybody in critical places in the United States is going to par ticipate as if they were 50 miles from the battle line.” ~ Adin. Niniitz* said _womenpower was one of the resources that “it will be mandatory to have at our command” in any future war. Both agreed that if the country waits until the next war to recruit women “we won't have any nucleus ‘and again we will be wasting an asset right at our fingertips.” The present program for WACS and WAVES is scheduled to end six months after the official termination of the war.
Beth,
Mrs.
For
made
Perry
The
honor.
MISS EVALINE HITZ
TODAY ANNOUNCED at-
tendants for her wedding to Harley Rhodehamel Jr. The couple will be married at 4:80 o'clock Saturday afternoon, July 12, in the First Presbyterian church.
Miss Suzanne Littell, New York, is to be the maid of
Bridesmaids will be Miss Heberton Weiss and Miss Agnes Alig. Carol Rhodehamel and Lucy Welliver will be the flower girls. / Robert Rhodehamel, brother of the prospective bridegroom, will be the best man. Ushers are to be Russell Ryan Jr., George W. Mahoney Jr., Ralph M. Reahard Jr., Walter Kuhn Jr, Appel and Benjamin D. Hitz Jr., brother of the bride-to-be, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz will honor their daughter and Mr. Rap with a bridal dinner be
Ward Hackleman, Alan
Friday, July 11. The dinner will
at the University club. It is to follow the wedding rehearsal.
aunt of the future bride,
will arrive from Springfield, Vt.
Others are to be Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Patterson and Mr. and
Daniel C. Bryant, all of
Evanston, Ill; Mr. and Mrs. Noble Burford Jr., Bowling Green, Ky.; and Mrs. Harold H. Mitchell and daughters, Evaline and Nancy, all of New York.
Parties Are Planned
"I Trovatore'
Several parties of Indianapolis persons will go to the Cincinnati summer night” Saturday. They will leave on a special train at 5 p. m. “Il Trovatore” will be given. Party reservations have been
opera’s “Indianapolis
by Mr. and Mrs. Jack A.
Goodman, Mrs. K. T. Nessler, Mr and Mrs. J. C. Dawson, Miss Joan Dicher and Miss Alma bers of Shelbyville. Others planning to attend are Messrs. and Mesdames William Macgregor Morris, George Gerth, Lawrence Shaw, Frank L. Binford and W. R. VanVactor, Mesdames Josephine Latham, F. M. Oliver, J. .F. Rahier, Bertha Hertz, Mary C. Meyer, R. A. Bridges and Edna Freeman. Also in the group will be Harry L. Bobinmeyer,
J. Cham-
F. A. Flaherty,
Miller, 'Misses Rebecca
Friedman, Josephine Schuster and Polly Sharp. .
Ww. C. T. U. Group Plans Picnic :
Deborah unit, W. ©, T. U,
New WAC Head
, WASHINGYON — The new head of the WAC is Col. Mary A. Hal-
will have a picnic supper at 5 p. m. Wednesday. Mrs. Margie Fletcher, Beech Grove, will be the hostess.
Mrs. Linnie Burns, county record-
laren, Lowell, Mass.
Pe
) 9 )
HOLIDAY
PIV
BBE EE . $3 «
TRL
day Friday and Saturday, . July 4th and 5th. , 4
SUMMER STORE HOURS © i + OPEN 9:30 fo 5:00 DAILY ty i " SATURDAY, 9:30 fo 100 9. M. *
ing secretary, will be the speaker, >
CLOSING
“This store will be closed all
17 NE Mh }
‘A number of out-of-town guests are expected to to arrive next week for the wedding. Mrs. Lucia Mc- ————
Scouts Hear
Of War Aid
HUNTINGTON, Pa, July 3- (U.
Girl Scouts helped keep the Danish people united during the period of Nazi occupation, a Danish delegate told members of the Girl Scouts 35th anniversary international en-
campment being held here. Bodil Schroder told how the Danish Girl Scouts helped care for Norwegian and French children who were sent to .Denmark after the war to rebuild their shattered health. The Danish delegate’s talk highlighted a world picture of teen-age interest and activities of the Girl Scouts contribution to the war effort. Jacqueline Sugere, French delegate, told of the hazardous circumstances under which Girl Guides worked during the Nazi occupation of her country. In the Dutch West Indies, Girl Guides hold annual memorial services for Americans killed during
reported. Jackie Geisen, a delegate from Luxemburg, said the major activity of her local Scout group was catching up with their education which was interrupted by the war.
20th on the 20th
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, (U. P.). -—Mrs. Gerrit Kooinga, 39, mother
June 20 to her 20th child—a sevenpound girl.. The others range in age from two to 20 years.
bere reir
5 WEDDING. NEARA wed.
: Foerderer and ‘Wal
Miss McMath Will Be Wed At Home
An informal ceremony at 5:30 p. m. today will unite Miss Barbara
McMath and Thomas Klinger. The Rev. Peter Vroom, pastor of
Lincoln said that there should be no more slaves in our country, but he did not want to give people a freedom that meant nothing or that carried with" it the bitterness of inferiority, . NOW, sot eighty years later, we were gathered here to try really to achieve the ends which he envisioned but could not fully accomplish. President Truman spoke words for
Wedding Vows|
~tSchool -of Nursing and the bride-| |
of the National Association for the|
cant this meeting before the Lin-|
P.).—Secret messages passed by
the war, a -delegate -from Curacao
of five sets of twins, gave birth],
the Emerson Avenue Baptist church, will read the vows in the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Russell McMath, 152 8. Bancroft ave. Miss McMath will wear a teal blue crepe suit with black accessories. She will carry a colonial bouquet of sweetheart roses. Mrs. Donald David, Sheridan, will be the bride’s only attendant. She will wear a beige crepe dress. Leo Klinger will be his cousin's best man. J After a reception at the McMath home, the couple will leave on a short trip. They will be at home at 520 N. Emerson ave. # The bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Klinger, 517 N. Emerson ave, :
‘You're as Young’ KOBE, Japan—The oldest American woman in the Far East is Mrs. Laura Joan Alexander, who is living here, Despite her age of 84, she has done "some mountain climbing in She vicinity of her home.
D. A. R. Carillon
WASHINGTON.—A national carillon, comprising 49 bells, has been erected at Valley Forge National park in Pennsylvania by funds raised by Daughters of the American Revolution.
{the U. 8. bureau of entomology. The
the government, in the presence of his chief justice. and his attorney general, which should give hope that tangible strides toward the fulfill. ment of Lincoln's vision can now be taken. . » " SENATOR Wayne Morse of Oregon, who spoke first, also gave listeners a feeling of dedication to the new and better world of tomorrow which we may build if we are not too small, too mean and selfish, or too lacking in vision. There is no need to fight a military war with any nation on earth
spiritial, economic levels for the ultimace good mankind.
Mrs. Dragoo Sr. To Entertain
Mrs, Harry W. Dragoo Sr. 4520 N. Pennsylvania st., will have open house from 3 to 6 p. m. tomorrow in honor of Mr. ahd Mrs. E Allan Sherwood, New York. Mrs. Sherwood, the former Miss Jean Van Voorhees Rider, is Mrs. Dragoo’s niece. ‘Mrs, Odin F. Wadleigh, another aunt, will entertain with a family buffet supper tonight at her home, 4220 Roland rd. . and Mrs, Sherwood also will visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth N. Rider, Franklin,
Cedar Has Limits As Protection * WASHINGTON. Cedar-lined
and cedar-scented containers offer little protection from moths, says
only safe way is either to store your woolens and furs in a cleaner’s
them away in a solid cedar chest which can be tightly closed. In either case, garments should be dry cleaned first to kill any adhering moth larvae or eggs. Estimates of annual moth damage in the U. 8, have run from $20 million to $120 million,
One Per Person LONDON-Divorced persons are now precluded by the canon law of
alr conditioned vaults or to lay|
Miss -‘Horman
At Church
- PAGE 1
To Be Married
Reception Planned = - To Follow Wedding . St. Matthew's Lutheran churely will be the setting for the marriage of Miss Dorothea Marie Horman and James H. Williamson, Greens; field, at 8:30 o'clock tonight. The Rev. O. N. Busse will read the VOWS.
Mr. and Mrs. Granville Vest, Cumberland, are the bride's pare ents. i Mrs. Ernest Horman, the matron of honor, will bé'.dressed in an
€
P. H, Ho photo
WEDDING TOMORROW-—Miss Joy Thompson will be mar ried to Jack Myers tomorrow in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Berlin Thompson, W. 60th st, and Mrs. Charles Myers, New Augusta.
Mr. Myers is the son of ‘Mr.
| feta. Donald Klinger, Portland,
ibe the best man, and the ushers
WHY IS IT THAT SO MANY
building.
to make a list of do's and don'ts, you would like, and then try and get as many as possible of things you would like placed in the “home. ’ Pirst, the plan of a house should be arranged so that the daily living routine functions perfectly, The plan should be arranged so that all of the comforts and conveniences are included, with practical arrangement, ease and “economy of operation, » a ” THERE should be good construction, cross ventilation and plenty of daylight in every room. Location of the garage is important. It should be placed where it will be the least noticeable and yet with ease of access to the house. The kitchen laydlit 1s vital also. Have plenty of working counters and adequate cupboards. The living quarters—that is the living room, dining room and kitchen—are better when well
if we are prepared to fight on the|fi educational, political and|™
How to Build Your H ouse Make a List of Do’s and Don'ts Before You Start Plans For That New Home E
‘By PAUL T. HAAGEN, Noted Architect
: No. } :
small houses just miss being ade-
quate and comfortable? ‘Common mistakes are found in numbers of houses that might have been avoided by careful consideration before
One of the first things to do when you think of a new house is
things you need and the luxuries
separated from the bedrooms, The rooms should be laid out so that there is ample wall space against which the furniture may be placed. Provide plenty of base plugs and switches for lighting the home. ” » » FROM A questionnaire recently sent to hundreds of home owners, the following items were listed as being lacking or needed in their homes: There were not enough closets. Two baths were needed or at least a shower and toilet on the first floor in addition to the second floor complete bath, - Inadequate heating equipment; drafty houses, probably due to bad or no insulation. Dark halls, wet basements, inconvenient kitchens, not enough electric light outlets, not enough pbrch space, and too
many steps for the housewife 'ifi |
carrying on, the daily routine of housekeeping.
=lock y # a
‘WILL BE
(losed All Day Friday and Saturday
July 4th and July 5th
tomorrow. will unite Miss | wh
known,
0
tor “Coser, Parents et
FROM CALIFORNIA — The - subtle charm of this frock lies in its carefree nonchalance, a characteristic ‘that has ‘made ' De De Johnson's designs well
With tailore easy raglan sleeves, invisible roomy pockets, voluminous free- | swinging skirt, it's a dress that can do double duty. : Anyone | knows her fashion’ arith. tic Agia ; : an jewelry to ‘up’ or "down." Rayon
the Church of England from marrying again,
1
collar,
P.M. Ho photo BRIDE-TOBE — Min Kathryn Ho Waiensch and William A, “Michaelis will be married tomorrow. Their
Lor subfract
oe SUMMER STORE HOURS * . Starting Next Week
Monday through’ Friday: 9:30 to 5:00
Saturday, 9:30 to 1:00
orchid taffeta frock. The brides maids, Miss Monica Springer, { Greenfield, and Miss Evelyn Engle{bright, will wear pink and green {taffeta frocks. All the attendants will wear matching veils. : Martha Ann Laufer, the flower girl, will be dressed in yellow tafe
Ind. will be the ring bearer. Gown of White Satin
Is Chosen by Bride A white satin gown with a long ' 3 will be worn by the bride, Her long veil will be Jwo-tiered, She will carry white “carnations ‘and stephanotis. ‘ Max Copeland, Greenfield, will
will be Ernest Horman and Paul Klingel, Portland. A reception at the Vest home. will follow the ceremony. After a wedding trip west, the couple will be at home at 845 N. Drexel ave, Both the bride and bridegroom ate tended Indiana university.
Betty Koebeler,
Roger Knight To Be Wed
A double-ring ceremony will unite Miss Betty Koebeler ‘and. Roger Knight at 7:30 p m. today, The vows will be read in the St John Evangelical and Reformed . church by the Rev. Ernst A. Peps enbrok, . A frock of pink taffeta and net" will be worn by Mrs. Dick Yager, the matron of honor, and the bride's only attendant, Raymond ° Staton will be the best man, The bride will wear a and satin gown which falls into a long train, It has a ruffled bertha of lace. A ruffled crown accented with clusters of orange blossoms Ld will hold the bride's fingertip illu. ny sion veil. She will carry white ¥ roses. After the ceremony a reception will be held at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Koebeler, 1611 Harlan st. Mr. and Mrs, Virgil A. Knight, ' 1725 Miller st., are the bridegroom's ' parents, , es The couple will go to Wisconsin... for a trip. The bridegroom is ate yending Purdue univérsity extene on,
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