Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1948 — Page 11
ye just have bread
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joted as saying he.
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ditions existing in °
country with high cation and public it. | Lewis said with a t have made up the wall and that menu the lowest living
ing on “grand jury aid on a gambling ne call to the boss a raid.”
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for what you have } Times for its re-
tel Lincoln: As a rn 33 cities and 24 hing more unjustifiJulietta. ndition is corrected , by those in direct
on : Jrged, t Far putting out a T%to get any place it say about it. Such
dvocate is Edward ink company presi
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and 1215-cent pieces
in was advanced to declared worth 2% minting new coins. increase their pure ~ this one through. nary. Every maker or a nickel, for inle cents, without ingars now selling for r a quarter.
lorrs, saw some of lican Sen. Kenneth Senate Small Busi‘reasury, Treasury e whole matter, untry more than it -cent pieces at varia fractional value, cash registers, for ' machines, vending uld also have fo be
rite their Congressn't always as simple cent nickels. Ordiym a constituent to h priority attention.
ie such a big and ing and cross-filing Befors the war, one nt over $100 to anf people who had to one recent case = cently asked House r Robert E. Lee to Mr. Lee picked one
ip agency, inclosing
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MONDAY, MAR. 15; 1048 Budgeting of Both Time and Energy are Necessary Holds an Outside Job, Psychologist Says
When Wife Doctor Follows Her Own ‘Presecription* By ELIZABETH STRAIN THE PROBLEM of choosing between marriage and a career was an easy one for Dr. Jesse B. Rhinehart—she simply combined
the Century building. “It's not a one-person decision, either,” declares Dr. Rhinehart—who is Mrs. Wrank W. Bainbridge and the mother of 6-year-old Keith in priva.e life. “A woman’s husband must be willing to accept the limitations of having a working
wife.” Rhinehart
Dr. She became interested in psychology while working for her Master’s Degree at the University of Pittsburgh, and she received her Ph. D. from chat university in 1935. - . . SHE CAME to the VA from the Psychology Clinic at .he Univeristy of Illinois, and she keeps her hand in teaching oy conducting a couple of classes at the Indiana University Extension division. Clinical psychology is a good field for women, Dr. Rinehart feels, because there's little or no. discrimination because of Bex. “However,” she explained, “I believe a lot of women’s freedom in the field is because clin{cal workers are so scarce.” Although she holds down a full-time office job and Mr. Bainbridge spends: five days a week at IU, where he is working on his Ph. D., Dr. Rhinehart believes that young Keith does not feel the lack of parental companionship.
o ” - “I THINK he really gets more of my undivided attention than do most children whose mothers have their hands full ‘managing a house,” she de-
My Day— Voters’ League Work Praised
By Columnist
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT NEW YORK, Mar. 15—Last Thursday I journeyed to Philadelphia. In the evening, Miss Anna Lord Strauss, head of the National League of Women Voters, and I received the M. Carey Thomas award at Bryn Mawr College. : It is significant, I think, tha the award committee picked out this particular organization this year. I believe that ever since Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt conceived the idea that women, having gained the vote, should educate themselves to use it intelligently, the league has been trying to improve the quality of our democratic citizenship, at least where women are concerned. s - .
NEVER before was good citizenship so important to our country and the world as it is today. The United States must really decide on her policies, domestic and foreign, and go
ner
through with them and, above all, make everyone, from the highest to the lowest, act with. integrity.
clared. She gives a full-time housekeeper much of the credit for enabling her to arrange a smooth home life. Dr. Rhinehart manages to belong to the PTA of School 786, where Keith is a pupil, and she plans activities that will include him. : “I try to make Keith realize that he is very important to me by shopping with him and supervising his daily bath. And every evening I read to him and we very carefully select his clothes for the following day. Each week-end we plan at least one activity as a family group. o . " “SINCE I tend to worry about details,” Dr. Rhinehart continued, “I think my outside work has saved Keith from being over-mothered and has tended to develop a sense of independence in him.” Dr. Rhinehardt’s “double life” does have its drawbacks, she admits. “At home it means we do little entertaining and havé less social life than we would otherse. And in my professional work, it means I have less time for research projects and fewer publications.” All in all, though, -Dr. Rhinehart feels that the combination of career and homemaking offers a lot of satisfactions that neither could provide alone. But if she HAD to choose. ..? “Well, I'd hate to be faced with the choice,” said Dr. Rhinehart, “but as a mother, I could make only one decision. When it’s put to a test, my family comes first.”
ford. Donald Mattison, Wilbur Peat and L. G. Gordner compose the Judges Committee. The Decorations Committee is headed by Mr. and Mrs. J. James Woods and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hilligoss. They are assisted by Messrs. and Mesdames Harold Honderich, Earl Githens, Robert J. McNeely,. James Sutherland, Fred Kelly, and Newton Buser, Dr. and Mrs. William "H. Cook, Miss Phyllis Keyser, Frack Holt, Don Swinney, Earl Townsend, Bruce Pierson, John Williams, Bill Scott, Edward Gaumer and Eugene K. Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. David Morton
It's so easy to build a lovely pearl necklace by adding a lustrous Oriental pearl now and then—for birthdays, anniversaries and other special gift occasions. Start her necklace of pearls this Easter —the grandest gift you can give.
Pearls Priced from $2.00 up Including Tax
Registered Jeweler—American Gem Society
rsd
04 and
COMPANY
CAREERIST — Dr. Jesse B. Rhinehart administers the Rorschach "ink blot" test to a veteran in her office at the Mental Hygiene Clinic of the Veterans Administration here.
HOMEMAKING IS IMPORTANT—Despite her full-time job, Dr. Rhinehart doesn't neglect her 6-year-old son, Keith. a nightly story-book session in which Fluff, the family dog, also
joins.
Committees for Its ‘Storybook Ball’ Are Announced by the Civic ‘Theater
Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Buell are chairmen of the Exécutive Committee arranging the Civic Theater's “Storybook Ball” to_be held Apr. 10'in the Athenaeum. The ball is open to the public, and the theater box office is accepting reservations. ; Assisting the Buells are E. Edward Green, Messrs. and Mesdames Kurt F. Pantzer, Harry T. Latham Jr. and Paul T. Roch-
. of Mr. and Mrs. | Bailey and Mr. and Mrs. Har-
29 WEST WASHINGTON ST.
head the Arrangements Committee. Their aids are Messrs. and Mesdames Harold H. Arnholter, E, J. Elliott, Don Addicott, Alton Gollins and Lowell 8. Fisher, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Barber, Miss Emily McNab, Miss Hyla Doyal, Bernard Bloom and Percy Weer.
Fifteen Women Serve On Ticket Committee
Messrs. and Mesdames Jack Harding, Perry Meek, Russell B. Moore and Herbert E. Wilson are assisting Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pritchard, chairmen of the Promotion Committee. The Ticket Committee is headed by Mrs. Frank Ferry, and members are Mesdames Paul Lee Hargitt, Evelyn E. Wright, Scot B. Clifford, Marvin L. Lugar, M. L. Martin, Emerson Thompson, Damon N. Goode, Preston Woolf, L. H. Earle, Robert Imes, Howard B. Pelham, R. C. Dorr, J. J. Cole and Stanley Sheerd. Chairman of the Office Committee is Mrs. Gordon Bryan. The commjttee members are Mesdames B. Edward Luglan, Wilfred E. Smith, M. L. Martin and John Reilly. Invitations are in the charge Lindon A.
old R. Victor. Their assistants are Messrs. and Mesdames Thomas L. Neal, Ronald M. Hazen, H. E. Curry, Charles Efroymson, A. K. Scheidenhelm, James Ruddell, Allan W. Boyd, Hubert Hickam, Jack Goodman, John R. Brayton and Jack C. Fetters, Dr. and Mrs. C. B. Bohner and Mrs. Irving Fauvre. Mrs. George T. Parry is in charge of the Prizes Committee which includes Mesdames Raymond Mead, Rosamond Van
They have
Camp Hill and Anna Marie
»
PAGE
Nuptial Vows Are Read
In Louisiana
Virginia Schakel Wed To Capt. Stuyvesant
Times Special SHREVEPORT, La., Mar. 15 A double-ring ceremony read here this morning at Barksdale Field united Miss ia Rose Schakel of Indianapolis and Capt. Ernest D. Stuyvesant, MiddleThe bridegroom is stationed at the Barksdale Air
Force base. Mrs. t is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond A. Schakel, 4544 Guilford Ave. Inis. Chaplin Fulkerson, USA, read the 10 o'clock rite. The bride, given in marriage by her father, and the bridegroom exchanged vows before a chapel altar decorated with white flowand candles.
palms orl Takes Trip
To New Orleans The gown of candlelight satin
=
worn by the bride was fashfoned with a full skirt forming
{llusion veil was held by clusters
ried white camellias surrounding an orchid center. Her attendant, Miss Ann MecGinnis, Indianapolis, wore a floor-length pale blue lace gown and carried pink camellias and ivy. Capt. Stuyvesant's attendants were Lt. Warren Blessing, Wright Field, Dayton, O., best man, and
William H. Roberts, Barksdale Field, ushers. After a reception in the Barksdale Field Officers Club, couple left for New Orleans. Their at-home address, after Saturday, will be 630 Joannes St., Shreveport. Mrs. Stuyvesant attended Purdue University where she was a Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority member. The bridegroom was a student at Ohio State University.
The Bridal Scene— Morgan-Hoke
Engagement ~ Is Announced
Engagement announcement and a bridal dinner are features of pre-nuptial notes. Miss: Marilyn Lois Morgan's engagement to Charles William Hoke of Bloomington is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Morgan, 76 Whittier Place. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hoke, Bloomington. The marriage vows will be read at 6:30 p. m., Thursday, Mar. 25, in the Morgan home. Dr. John B. Ferguson of the Irvington Presbyterian Church will officiate. After a reception in the home, the couple will leave for a wedding trip south. They will live in Bloomington.
School of Business. Miss Morgan attended the university. ” » ”
Sayles.
Mrs. W. G. Sparks Heads
Entertainment Group The Reception Committee is headed by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hatfield. They will be assisted by Messrs. and Mesdames Gordner, John D. Welch, Harry V. Wade, Robert Sweeney Jr., John Gordon Kinghan, Horace Roberts, Latham, Rochford, William Dyer, Myron J. McKee, Wallace O. Lee, Fred Luker, Volney Brown, Walter Houppert, James Gloin, Buell, Xenneth E. Lemons, Virgil Martin and Pantzer, Dr. and Mrs. Louis Segar, Miss Sarah Lauter, Miss Helen G. Coffey, C. Norman Green, E, Edward Green and Lawrence Epps Hill. Mr. and Mrs, Walter Russell are in charge of the Costume Committee, and their helpers are Messrs. and Mesdames T. R. Lyda, Paul McNamara, Van B. Hostetler and Charles W. Rawlings, Mrs. Ruth Black, Mrs, Frances L. Blair, Misses Rae Cawdell, Ruth O'Mahoney and Florence Muir. Mrs. William G. Sparks is chairman of the Entertainment Committee.
Lutheran Council Meeting Booked
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Simmons, 321 N. Drexel Ave., will entertain Saturday night with a bridal dinner honoring their daughter, Carol Joanne, and her fiance, Robert E. McMullen. The couple will be married Sunday in the Linwood Christian Church. The dinner, at Buckley's in Cumberland, will follow the wedding rehearsal. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. McMullen, 319 N. Gladstone Ave. parents of the bridegroom-to-be, will be among the dinner guests. Others will be Mr. and Mrs. Rista Velich, the Rev. and Mrs. R. L. S8ecrist, Mrs. Fred Crosstreet, Misses Carolyn Bell, Barbara Myers, Carol Arnholter, Marilyn . Dougherty, Margaret and Rhoda Lou Simmons; Jack E. Simmons, David Phelps and William Watson.
~ o » Mr. and Mrs. Leslie E. Ford, 475% N. Concord St. announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Edith, to Paul G. Nichols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sim Nichols, Westfield. No date has been set for the marriage ceremony.
Spring Vacation Miss Dodo Haymann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Haymann, 5751 Washington Blvd. will arrive tomorrow from Goucher Col-
The Lutheran Women's Mis-
a, m. tomorrow in the Emmaus Lutheran Church parish hall, 8. Laurel and E. Orange Sts. |
cated here. A short business meeting will be held at noon with] Mrs.” Helen Scheperle in charge. Mrs. Walter Maas is the Cheer Committee chairman.
Runs for Sheriff COLUMBUS, O.—Mrs. Frances H. Dwire, a_grandmother of Willoughby, Ohio, {8 a candidate for
sheriff on the anti-gambling platform.
sionary Council will meet at 9
The women will make Easter/ter of England contains gifts and favors for residents of/names of more than 5000 women county and state institutions lo- doctors.
lege, Baltimore, for spring vaca{tion.
English Register LONDON—The Medical Registhe
a chapel ‘train. , Her fingertip|
of orange blossoms and she car-|
the |
Mr. Hoke will be graduated in June from the Indiana University held in Washington.
= P. H WED LAST MONTH-—Before her marriage Feb.
| William M. Lowden was Miss | couple are Mr. and Mrs. Lawre
. Ho photo. 21, Mrs.
Tea Will Honor
entertained at 2:30 p. m. in Jor-_
Prospective
Teachers wr
Delta Ka Will Be
50 senior high
school students representing
schools in Marion County, will be dan Hall of Butler University. © Brief talks on “The Joys Teaching From My Viewpoint” will be made by Miss Betty Jean Miller, Mrs. Paul W. Elliott, Mrs. Clifford H. Taylor and Miss Jean - Wells. » Jack Gilfoy, Indiana State Teachers College, will have as his topic “Various Fields Open to Persons Who Become Teachers.” Speakers will be introduced by - Mrs. William C. Loew,
Committee Members
Planning the Event Members of the Selective Recruitment of Teachers Committees from the sponsoring chapters are Mrs. Loew, chairman; Miss Josephine Boyd, Mrs. Martha A. - Turpin and Mrs. Hubert T. Vita. On the Social Committee arranging the event are Mrs. Paul G. Iske and Miss Wretha Lindley, chairmen: Mesdames Ray Friesner, Dumont Caldwell, Ada
Freda Barrett. Parents of the nce Caldwell, 3915 E. 12th St.
Lt. Robert Greene and Capt. and Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Lowden, Marcy Village.
Warren Austin Will Speak
Before Action Committee
Times NEW YORK, Mar. 15—"“Will Action Committee for Lasting
Thursday, Apr. 8, in the Mayflower Hotel, it was announced yesterday by Mrs. Norman deR. Whitehouse, national president. Other speakers, to be announced later, will include experts (from in and outside the government) on peace, international relations and the ERP, The program for the convention includes visits of state delegations to their Congréssmen and Senators to discuss measures supported by the committee. The delegations will go to the Capitol on Thursday morning under the leadership of Mrs. Laura Puffer Morgan and Mrs. Philip Werner Amram of Washington. This is tho “action” part of the program and represents the type of action indicated by the committee's name. Mrs. Edgar Ansel Mowrer, chairman of the Washington Committee, will preside at the
We Pay the Price of Peace?” is
to be the theme of the fifth annual convention of the Women’s Peace. Sessions will be held in Washington Apr. 7, 8 and 9 in the Shoreham Hotel. Warren R. Austin, head of the U. 8. Delegation to the United Nations, will give the dinner speech on the convention theme on
Dana Converse Backus of New York will preside at a forum on “Measures We Are Supporting.” In the evening Mrs. Arthur Paul of New York will conduct a program of films.
On Thursday afternoon the topic will be “Reaching All Women" through press, radio and public meetings. Mrs. George Fielding Eliot, New York, will preside. “How We Can Strengthen Our Work” is the subject for discussion on Friday morning, led by Mrs. Howard G. Hymer of New Jersey. The forum will be
Fannie Hurst, noted author, will be one of the speakers.
Harkness of Washington.
opening meeting of the convention when the committee chairmen and consultants will make their reports. \ This is the second annual convention of the committee to be It will emphasize individual participation of members in forums and discussion sessions. On Wednesday, Apr. 7, Mrs.
Guild Names Dance Aids
Committee chairmen and members have been announced for the St. Vincent Hospita® Guild's “Blossom Time” Ball, to be given Apr. 3. The event will be a supper dance in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. John R. Kelley and Mrs. Frank Lobraico are co-chairmen. Mrs. Thomas O’Brien is chairman of the decorating commit. tee, and Mrs. Walton Cash is cochairman. Committee members are Mesdames L. J. Blackmore, M. J. Riordan, kichard A. Maxwell, Kenneth M. Schafer, Arthur E. Maha, Walter E. Joyce, Robert J. Boyle, Gus Shumaker, Francis Baur, Frank E. McKinney, Alexander Ross, John M. Meyer and George L. Hart. Mrs. Howard Henderson, ticket committee head, is assisted by Mesdames Schumaker, William F. Koss, Thomas M. Fitzgerald Jr,, Clifford C. Taylor, Robert Imes, W. L. McFerran, Hugh V. Brady, Glenn C. Lord, U. V. Pflum, Frank Giorgianni and Ray Thorpe. Mrs. Paul 8. McNamara, chairman of the donations committee, has Mrs. Larry Zapp as co-chair- | man. Committee members are {Mesdames Chester T. Spriggs, W. {B. Habing, V. R. Rupp and W. C. | Kennedy.
Q
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Meridian East to Sherman.
-
a. C.
oe
GOOD CLOTHES DESERVE GOOD CARE
Our Assignment Is : to Make Nice Things NICER
New Southside Routes:
Just Started—Serving Washington South to Troy—
Also All of Beech Grove.
ert Low Bacon, Wallace Streeter
rett, J. Parker
Philip Fischer, Miss Charlotte Ray, Conn, Smith, Arlington, Va.
EASTER
BR. 2401 |
emaree
blue and white Easter Parade in a soft little
Tinkle-Bunny!
{Misses Mary Marshall, (Wright, {guerite Hilbert and Ida Lobraico.
followed by a luncheon at which
A business meeting will be held in the afternoon, followed by a closing address by Mrs. Richard
Clark De Veta Van Dervort, Jdlean Laura Holden, MarHostesses will be ‘Mrs. Rex Hall, Mrs. Vitz and Miss Boyd. Mrs. Emil Applegate and Mrs. - Turpin were in charge of invitations. Miss Cecelia Galvin and Mrs. C. H. Lloyd, past chapter presidents, will pour, ar Miss Ruth Gorman, Beta president, will preside. ®
Evelyn Phillips Is Bride of Edgar Rafnel
Tims State Service BROWNSBURG, Ind., Mar. 15 ~—Miss Evelyn Phillips and Edgar D. Rafnel were married at 2:30 - p. m. yesterday in the Brownsburg Christian Church. Dr. A. C. Brooks of the Third Christian Church in Indianapolis officiated. ,, The bride is the daughter of Mrs. E. 8. Alexander, Lizton, and * the bridegroom's parents gre Mr. and Mrs. Doyl Rafnel, 3113 N. New Jersey St. Indianapolis. Miss Jean Ross was the maid of honor and Miss Martha Rafnel the bridesmaid. The attendants wore green and yellow dotted swiss frocks. Lee was the best man, while Richard Gruber and Harold- Horton were ushers.
T= lock: €
He Sings to You!
5.98 |
Downy and adorable, this pink and white or
love to cuddle him close. Just imagine your youngster's eyes when he hears and sees
A white satin gown, made with
Convention plans in Washing-|& fitted bodice and a full skirt ; ton are being handled by a com-|extending into a cathedral train, mittee including Mesdames Rob-|was worn by the bride,
of Nursing. -
t
BUNNY . [|
Bunny sings the Easter tinkle that makes you
Her ,|fingertip veil of net fell from a = Daniel Borden, Henry T. Par- net bonnet, and she carried white Van Zandt, roses. : Raphael Tourover, A. N. Warner/| The couple left for a trip to" and Thomas F. Law and Miss Chicago after a reception in the ° Harriet M. Howey, Washington; /church. They will be at home - Mrs. George E. Pariseau and Mrs. /at 4036 E. 34th St. Indiana Bethesda, Md,;/after Mar. 28. Westport,)/ The bride is a student in the and Mrs. Utha Gray Methodist Hospital School
polis,
4 i i J i k '
BLOCK'S Toys, in the Annex
CLEANERS or
