Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1948 — Page 25
for
Pr
TO BE WED—Miss Dorothy will be married to Robert Byran 20.
THE BRIDAL SCEN
Miss Ann L. Winger and Mr. Tuttle To Be Honored at Bridal Dinner
A pre-nuptial dinner and six engagement announcements are included in today’s bridal scene. Miss Ann Lathrop Winger and Max Albert Tuttle Jr. will be honored at. a dinner tomorrow. They will be married at 11:30 a. m. Saturday in the Advent Episcopal Church. Mr. and Mrs. Tuttle, 543 E. 56th St., parents of the prospective «bridegroom,
— THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
photo. Maris Hilligoss Jolly on June
rr
Miss Irene Shan ceremony.
bridegroom is the son of Casper C. Bone, 3121 Boulevard Place. Mrs. Raymond Esselborn is to be the matron of honor and Miss Jean Elliott and Miss Noreen Hall will be bridesmaids. Donald L. Patrick will be the best man and John Benjiman and Charles Webster will be ushers. ” =
# Mr. and Mrs. Donald Charles
BRIDE-TO.BE—Robert M. Bone
Block's photo, will take ahan as his bride in an Apr. 17
CLUB ACTIVITIES— Card Party Is Set By Mothers Club
Indianapolis Woman's Club Will Meet Tomorrow Afternoon in Propylaeum MRS. FRANK J. KOCH and Mrs. Mark O'Hara are co-chairman for the benefit card party the Butler University Newman Mothers Club will sponsor at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday. The party will be in Ayres’ auditorium and open to the public. Mrs. William Holland, chairman of table prizes, is being assisted by Mesdames M. M. Curry, John Schwert and George Rice. The cindy committee is being directed by Mrs, Jasper Minis. Her assistants are Mesdames William Kimberlin, Lillian Koontz, Leo Meargarder and Leonard Beckerich. Mrs. Manson Phillips and Mrs. George Rider are chairmen of special committees, assisted by Mesdames M. J. Healey, Paul Carlos, Max Kreise, Connie Bachelor, Fred Linder, Maurice Raeder, Louis Loubard and John Ohleyer.
H =n = » = . The Indianapolis Woman's Club will hold its bi-monthly meeting at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow, afternoon in the Propylasum. “Some Early American Gardens” will be described by Mrs. Frank Hatch Streightoff, and Mrs. Donald M. Mattison will have “Some« thing More” as her topic.
= » » ” n n Mrs. C. F. Posson, 3545 Carrollton Ave. tomorrow will eritertain the Culture Club. Mrs. William Norton is in charge of the program, to be on “The History and Importance of Costume Throughout the Ages.” »
» 2 - ” = . The Navy Mothers Club will sponsor a pillow case card party at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Food Craft Shop.
» ” ” ” ” - Dr. Roy Geider will speak on “Modern Anesthesia” at the noon luncheon meeting the Florence Nightingale Club will hold
The engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Margaret Ann Hurley to John F. Reis is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Leo T. Hurley, 4421 N. Illinois St. Mr. Reis is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Reis, 21 Meridian Place. June 5 is the date chosen by Miss Hurley for her marriage. The vows will be read in St.
tomorrow in the Warren Hotel. Hostesses for the day will be Mesdames Kosta Maxime, L. P. McGhehey, Pearl McRoan, Ernest Millholland and Irvin R. Yeagy.
- BE » n o The North Side Study Club will mee‘ tomorrow in the home of Mrs. Roy Martin, 310 S. Emerson Ave. Mrs. J. D. Hendricks will talk on “New England in Letters,” and “Miriam” will be described by Mrs. W, T. Smith.
o = ” » » ~ Members of the Irvington Fortnightly Club will be entertained tomorrow by Mrs. Irwin A. Ward, 337 Layman Ave. Mrs. Gene DeTar will give a talk on world affairs, and Mrs. Everett C. Collings will review a piece of fiction.
” » n ” s ” The April meeting of Our Lady of Lourdes Mothers Club will be held at 8 p. m. tomorrow in Bernadette Hall. The second grade mothers will be hostesses, and Mrs, Willard Bates is in charge of arrangements.
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NURSERY TOURS ARRANGED—Typical of the work of the Day Nursery Auxils iary is the trip to the Children's Museum on which Mrs. John H. Evans and Mrs. Edwin
will be hosts in their home.
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The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. Bjorn Winger, 127 E, 50th St. The dinner will follow a wedding rehearsal.
The guests will be Mr, and Mrs. Mrs, Roy Dallas Smith, Marion. Chicago, ,will be the best .man,
Edward Fivecoate, St. Louis, Mo.; Miss Jean Morner, Springfield,
0.; Kenneth Elliott, Sheridan; ents.
Mrs. Winger, Miss Florence Beck-
er, David Tuttle and Georgediana University and is now en-|St Vincent's Hospital School of
Sommer.
2 2.8 uate Mr, and Mrs. Meyer Saltz, New bridegroom attended Purdue Uni-|Notre Dame. York, announce the engagement versity. He is a student at I: U. CO a
of their daughter, Aida, to Stanley J. Larman, son of Mrs,
Charles Larman, 4349 Washing-|
ton Blvd. The bride-to-be is a graduate
of New York University and Mr.)
Larman attended Indiana University. s » »
The engagement and approach-| 73
ing marriage of Miss Dorothy Marie Hilligoss to Robert Bryan Jolly is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Erval D. Hilligoss, 1524 W, 234 Bt. June 20 is the date set for the wedding. The bridegroom-to-be
is the son of Samuel J. Jolly,|
929 Sanders St. * 2 =u =»
8t. Patrick's Catholic Church will be the scene of the marriage of Miss Irene Shanahan to Rob-| ert M. Bone on Apr. 17. The
Rev. Fr. officiate, Miss Shanahan is the daughter of Mrs, Nora Shanahan, 1440 Hoyt Ave. and the prospective
Ernest Strahl will
jounce the engagement and ap-|Mrs. John B. Davis will be the proaching marrijge of ' their matron of honor and Miss Joan daughter, Constance Mary, to Roy|Reis and Mrs. Robert Gavin will Thomas Smith, son of Mr. and be bridesmaids. Thomas K. Reis,
They will be married June 12 in|and William S. Nielson, Omaha, the home of the bride-to-be’s par-|Neb., and Mr. Davis will be ushers.
Miss Drake is a graduate of In-| Miss Hurley is a graduate of
rolled in the university's Grad- Nursing and Mr. Reis was gradSchool. The . prospective uated from the University of
% Boi Miss Annabell Ambler, daugh*er of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Ambler, Hazelhurst, Ga., will be married to William M. Blair, son of Mrs. Albert Kish, 407 N. Gladstone Ave, at 7:45 p. m. Saturday in the home of the prospective bridegroom’s mother. The Rev. N. H. Schultz of the Garfield Evangelical and Reformed Church will officiate. | The maid of honor is to be Miss |Veolada Ross and Charles Ratcliff is to be the best man. There will be a reception in the home after the ceremony. The couple will make their home at the Gladstone Ave. address after a trip to Georgia.
# PTA News— Co TI. Lecture Series mee aie eee 1s Planned
Stanley J. Larman is announced.
The Indianapolis Council of
Teen Topics—
April Fool's Day
. By JEAN THE ORIGIN of April Fool's Day is a mystery, No one knows just why or by whom the custom was started. But it began a ‘long time ago and fashions in April Fool jokes have changed with the years, Early in this century, when elaborate hoaxes were the thing, one hostess served a whole meal concocted of cot-ton-batting seasoned with red pepper. Shaped and cooked to resemble various foods, the bitey, stringy stuff plagued her guests through course after course, Fried in crumbs, it looked like cutlets. Fluffed and piled in a dish it masqueraded as potato. And 50 on, down to pastries _With cotton centers!
{PTA and the Extended School Services Department of the . School Offices will BO series of lectures to introduce the Is H ere Again public to the educational services MOST APRIL Fool jokes are [offered by Indianapolis ‘schools Just as harmless. But store |and libraries. this warning away for future The meetings will be held at reference, never play tricks {7:30 p. m. on Monday, Apr. 12, that will result in injury. it) and 26 in Schools 79, 35, 58 Beware of rowdy horse-play and 60. There will be a film and 'such antics as pulling [shown before each talk. The chairs out or tripping folks up. {speakers will be Mrs. Grace And don't fool around with fire ‘Granger, Mrs. Louis Bruck, or firearms. It won't be funny. [Misses Jeanette Riker, Doris #2 8 =» {Holmes and Bertha Leming, C. R.| SECONDLY, watch your step Farrington, Emil Schaad, Paul I.| with younger children. Pepper |Mijller, W. H. Harshman, H. candy and exploding matches Dwight Peterson, Virgil Stinemay panic your own pals, but |paugh, J. Fred Murphy and H. they'll reduce baby sister to |Nathan Swaim. tears or screams. Topics to be discussed include Quiet-type family jokes are |«The School City,” “The Learners fun. This, for instance—save program,” “Special Services” and today’s newspaper and next «poking Ahead.” There will be year secretly substitute it for |qiestion and answer periods after the Apr. 1, 1940 issue. Then leach lecture. The chairmen are watch Pop's face as he reads ars Walter Caley, Mrs. Henry the year-old headlines! Miles and William A. Evans.
SUNSGLNGL NSIS 1S).
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BOTS UBUBUSUSONON JHC
- Wedding Stationery
8 Of prime importance in matrimonial plans —a paper RK) frousseau by Crane. To be considered well in advance of R| your wedding date in order to have fine stationery
|| Miss Doris Lynn is in charge of the films.
School PTA Units To Meet Wednesday
Several other PTA units will meet Wednesday. Miss Leone {Collier will talk on “Robert Burns” at 1:45 p. m. in School 8. The members of the School 33 group will hear Roscoe C. Clark discuss “What Industry Expects From the Student,” at a 7:30 p. m. meeting. The children of School 51 will present a Spring program at 1:30 p. m., and the mothers of School 76 will give a skit, “Board Meet-
be
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woman of 1948 as a citizen.
Report her to Mrs, Harold Stone, of Women Voters. This is Mrs. Stone's description of today’s average frau in her new role: “She is of heroic proportions with a clear eye and a trim figure. On one arm she carries her market basket and over the other shoulder swings a smartly-tailored bag. After she got out of high school or college she worked four or ive years, “She knows how to organize her work and spare time most efficiently. Breakfast is on the table when her husband and children come down to eat it. She doesn’t wear a kimona. der day is planned down to the last quarter-hour. “She drives a car as if she were born in it. She types 70 words a minute and takes shorthand. She uses the telephone for one message at a time and doesn't make conversational meanders. She's ‘strictly business but she can still tell a funny story about what the stuffy councilman said at the meeting last night.” » s o
“SHE SEES the market basket as the axis of the world. She knows what the letters FAO and ERP mean. (For the men who might be reading this, they mean Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, and European Recovery Program.) She knows all about domestic supply and demand. She doesn’t just scan the headlines. She reads the paper expertly to be” informed on national and local affairs. “She writes her Congressman frequently. And she is a registered voter.” Mrs. Stone drew her picture at the celebration sponsored by the Women’s Bureau of the U. 8. Labor Department for the 100th anniversary of the battle for women’s rights. A ringleader of the conclave at Seneca Falls, N. Y. which launched the battle a century ago was Susan B. Anthony. There was a Susan B. Anthony on hand for the anniversary session, too, but she had to take a back seat. ® a » THE Women’s Bureau wouldn't grant official recognition to Susan B. Anthony II, grandniece of the famous suffraget. She attended as an observer, and wasn’t given a card for Mrs. Truman’s reception at the White House. Other delegates wouldn't say whether it was because Miss Anthony failed to measure up to Mrs. Stone's bright pjcture of American women or because,
4 President of the United States,
Drake, 39 Meridian Place, an-|Thomas Aquinas Catholic Chureh./ The Women Take Over—
As a Citizen, the 1948 Woman Is ‘Strictly Business’
. By DOUGLAS LARSEN, NEA Sfaff Writer WASHINGTON, Apr. 1—Today we unveil the American
And if your wife doesn’t measure up, brother, don’t blame us.
first vice president of the League
an organization a little too left wing for the Women’s Bureau tastes. A more tempered account of what U. 8. women have done with their political freedom comes from C. Mildred Thompson, dean of Vassar College: “With all the progress of greater freedom for women, they have not yet risen to distinction equal to that of men in public service, There are notable women in high public office. But on important public commissions there is generally one woman, not five or six, among a dozen members. It is a source of disappointment that in the 30 years since women attained the franchise, so few hold public office or have even stood for election.” ” ® .» AS A further damper, somebody at the celebration pointed out that most women have gone into public offices by outliving their husbands and taking over the jobs. * There seems to be general agreement among the celebrants that more American women haven't gone into politics to date because they just don’t understand the technique of breaking into politics in the first place. The feminine léaders think there's plenty of ability among American women to handle any political job including that of
but don’t seem to have any possible candidates for the job. ” » » A SUGGESTION which caused loud applause from the assembly was that all past presidents of women’s clubs should be encouraged to get into politics instead of sitting in a group at the rear of the clubroom during meetings and criticizing what was going on. But there was only lukewarm support from the 200 prominent ladies to the suggestion that women use their greatest asset —charming femininity—in getting ahead in politics. The idea that American oolitics could use a lot of beautiful women may have sounded too much like a counter-attack by the men.
Units Will Meet
The following units of the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild will meet at the hospital to sew next week: Monday — Riley Cheer Guild; Tuesday — “Thanksgiving”; Wednesday — “Treasure of the Wise Man”; Thursday — “The Jolly Miller” and “A Windy Day,” and Friday—‘“Folks of Lonesome-
ing,” at 1:15 p. m. “Decorating! {the Home for Family Living” is| {to be the topic of the School 77! {meeting at 1:30 p. m, Mrs. Robert Cook will speak to the PTA of! School 86 at 1:30 p. m. Her topic will be “Arts by and About i
m > ;
dren.”
RAR RAN SRA SB ARAEA OS A NO SRS
Election Set |
B
2 ensembled to match. : S By Council | R( : . pe 1 2) . = pe ba The Indianapolis Council of K —Wedding Invitations— i || Women will elect five board mem- | X B||bers whem it meets Tuesday in| % Wedding Announcements—Informals— Kl||Ayres’ Auditorium. The session Nl 59) will begin at 9:45 a. m., and the § Calling Cards for the Bride— B| election is scheduled for 1 o'clock. | 1K Mr. and Mrs. Cards— dil The morning meeting will in-! 5 ; d/clude a talk by W. R. Allen, | 5 + Thank You Notes and Envelopes— 5 | Whose topic will be “A Point of | SS ; 2 FI He will be introduced by | ® . awn. 0 rs. Rose Marie Cruzan, chair- | 5 We Invite You to Visit Our | man of the Consumers Education | 3 ationery Department Soon #l| Committee. Reports will be made If 2 : | by the Riley Hospital Cheer| > 4 || Guild, Fortnightly Study Club, || 5 1 % Briday Afternoon Reading Club | ? : Bilan eridian Heights Inter-Se 1 Charles Mayer and Lmfany Ba, ecidian, Holg | 4 : Re Lend I 3 29 west wa ling rom STREET. INDIANAPOLIS 9, INDIANA 3 ie A rmoon and will incluge| | ae : : oo - Mdlla talk on “Our Occupancy of | S88 Ta Vii 7a [7A 178i 7a) 174 Yi TaVi78\ 1 78V | 785 18) T8Yi 78 8\I 8\i ei 8) Te) a J
as. some hinted, she represented.
All of Our
GOLD SEAL
Cleans 30 Kinds of.
® 42d and College
® E. 10th at LaSalle ® Fountain Square, 1116 ® 2125 'W. Washington
Japan” by Marshall D, Abrams, {U=
* 120 E Washington St. ® 38th and Illinois Streets
® Broad Ripple, 802 E. 63d ® Irvington, 5609 E. Washington
ville,”
P. McCarty (left and right) recently tock a group of the they left the nursery at 542 Lockery parks and business places to acquaint the children with p the city. The auxiliary will celebrate its !0the anniversary in the Woodstock Club, and proceeds will be used to furt Mrs. Evans is co-chairman for publicity for the event.
Additional reservations have Messrs. and Mesdames John B. been made for the St. Vincent's| Welch, Lawrence W. Welch and Hospital Guild's “Blossom Time" Donald Petray, Dance to be held Saturday in Mr., Mrs. Fitzgerald - the Indianapolis Athletic Club. | Will Entertain Group Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bauer| Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Fitzwill have as their guests Dr. and gerald Jr. will entertain Dr. and Mrs, Alexander T. Roff, Dr. and|Mrs. Joseph Spalding, Misses Mrs. Paul Merrell, Dr. and Mrs.|Mary Jane and Frances Kruse, Frank O. Goode, Mr. and Mrs.|James Callahan and Dr. Keith Richard A. Maxwell and Mr. and/R. Ruddell. Meksrs. and MesMrs, Stedman Pearce. dames Willlam A. Green, Edwin A party has been planned by|/McClure and Nate Chapman will Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hendricks|attend with Mr. and Mrs. Howard for Mr. ahd Mrs. Braxton C. Jeff-| Henderson.
youngsters, shown here as
ie St. Similar trips have been taken to various
laces of interest throughout with a ball Saturday night her. the work for the nursery.
Reservations Announced for Dance Saturday
and Mesdames Cecil G. Bevis, A. K. Cordes and William B. Clirt, and Dr. and Mrs. Albert M. Donato will entertain Dr. and Mrs, Donald Brodie, Dr. and Mrs, Thomas Cortese, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Pandolfo, ‘Mr. and Mrs, William H, Faust and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Zapp. i Mr, and Mrs. John R. Kelley will have a party at home for Mr, and Mrs. Colin Kemper. and Mr. and Mrs, Harry Thomas, all of Richmond; Messrs. and Mesdames J. Lloyd Allen, Joseph
Donald. Mr. and Mrs.
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STORE HOURS: Monday through Saturday, 9:30 to 5:00
we
