Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1948 — Page 18
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+ jan, and Carl Mornzel, son of Mr. « and Mrs. Jacob Monzel, 3515 E.|:
“ yead by Dr. Logan Hall, pastor of
* Church, last Friday in the Glatz . home.
. ton in honor of Miss Beatrice
_ tained Wednesday night. at the
© Doeppers
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Monzel-Glatz
Is Announced
Two Parties Honor Beatrice N. Houze
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Glatz, 2173 N. Drexel Ave. announce the marriage of their daughter, Mar-
10th St. The double-ring ceremony was
the Meridian Street Methodist
The bridegroom attended Rose Polytechnic Institute at Terre
Haute and the bride is a former } _ John Herron Art School student. The couple is at home at 3223 E.
10th St. 8.8 nN
This morning Miss Ulah Shull j
pro td Os 548084 4 PR or]
entertained with a bridesmaids’ A breakfast in the Hotel Washing-|
Nell Houze. Miss Houze will be
married to Clayton Shull Sunday) :
at 4:30 p. m. in the Central Chris- ' tian Church. Miss Shull, who is the sister of the prospective bridegroom, had ., 8 her guests the mother of the bride-to-be, Mrs. E. E, Houze; Mrs. Howard Bolen, LaPorte; Mrs. Wilfred Arthur, Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs, John Scott, Akron, O.: Mrs. Thomas A. Bunch and Mrs. George A. Purdy. Another party for Miss Houze was a luncheon today in the home . of Mrs. Edgar B. Randolph, 5532 Guilford Ave. Preceding the wedding rehearsal tomorrow, the parents of the bride-to-be will entertain with a bridal dinner in the Columbia Club. Members of the bridal party + will attend. # 5 5 Mr. and Mrs. John Rau enter-
Woodstock Club with a bridal dinner for Miss Nancy Clark who will be married to Robert James at 3:30 p. m. tomorrow in the McKee Chapel of the Tab- - ernacle Presbyterian Church. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sill, La Habra, Cal; Miss Betty Eggert, Mishawaka; Misses Nancy Tressler and Sue and Isabel Griffith. Also attending were .Alexander Taggart III, James ~Olark, James McNutt and william B, Clark. . : . = = Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Branstetter, Flora, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Bonnie, to Kenneth Smith, don of Mr, and Mrs. Hob Smith, Bloomington. The 4 will be at 3 p. m. July 17, in the home of ‘the bride-to-be. s Branstetter. is a Jtmber of Beta Alpha Chapter, Ps X{ Sorority, and the prospective ‘bridegroom is & student at Indiana University. oe
We, the Women— Poor Training Makes Kids
Unwelcome
the fact, the welcome mat just {sn’t out for today's children. For the most part, nobody but their parents and doting grandparents want them around.
most of the fault les with modern parents, Children might be more \7elcome if all parents would: See that their children don't annoy the neighbors by hanging Ruth Millett around at mealtime, going into their houses without knocking, meddling with their possessions, refusing to obey their requests, etc. See that their children are quiet and well-behaved in public places. s » #
SEE THAT when the children go visiting they don’t go «+ hog wild, racing around the house leaving destruction in their wake. See that the children show some respect for acults, since few grown-ups enjoy an encounter with a smart-alecky child. Know where their children are all of the time. The kids who are a nuisanc» are usually the ones whose parents never know and never care where they are and wha' they are doing just so they aren't underfoot. Make certain tha. any damage their children do té others’ property is taken care of. It is rather sad that today’s children are so often unwelcome, But they won't be welcome until their parents wake up to the fact that a poorly trained child is as much of an annoyance to others as a poorly trained pet.
Divorce Rate Down
last Friday through Monday.
long session will end tonight.
Attend Kappa Alpha Theta Sessions Marriage aa Eel
—_
DELEGATES RETURN HOME — Returning this week from the Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority's convention at Mackinac Island, Mich., were (left to right) Miss Anne Holmes, Indianapolis Alumnae Chapter president; Mrs. George E. Gill, official delegate from the local chapter; Mrs. R. J. McCutchan of Lebanon, first vice president, and Mrs. Bogardus Mitchell, vice president of the Indianapolis chapter. The group, shown here at the Grand Hotel where the convention was held, attended sestions
National BPW Is Voting On Six Officers Today
By VIRGINIA DIXON, Times Special Writer FT. WORTH, Tex., July 9—Bailoting for new federation officers today provided the major business for delegates to the Busi-ness-and Professional Women’s Clubs convention here. The week-
One of two women will have been named president this evening when the 10 voting machines being used have tabulated their
Prye photo,
FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1048 |
Organizations— Garden Party Arranged By Sorority Group Will Attend
Convention in Ohio
Ten members of the Alpha Epsilon Chapter, Delta Theta Tau Sorority, will attend the sorerity’s 40th national convention Wednesday through July 17 at the Netherland Plaza Hotel in Cincinnati. They are Mesdames David Burton, E. A. Elliott, Harold Honderich, G. F., Jackson, J. Elwood | Jones, George L. King, 8. E. Rowe, K. O. Stokes and P. E. Stubbs, and Miss Pauline Muench. Mrs. Burton, president of the| local chapter, is the bfficial delegate to the convention, and Mrs. Jones is national editor of the sorority’s publication. Holliday Park will be the scene for. a garden party for Alpha Epsilon members at 6:30 p. m. Monday. Mrs. Rowe is party chairman. Alpha Chapter, Chi Omega Chi Sorority, will meet Wednesday in the home of Mrs. Richard Cox, 1523 N. Chester St,
Mrs. Mary Kaltwasser, 313 N. Tacoma Ave. was hostess this afternoon for the Irvington Willing Workers Needle Club.
YWCA Branch
Plans Program
The Phyllis Wheatley YWCA Branch will hold its annual Midsummer Soiree at 5:00 p. m. Sunday in the branch’s community center. Highlight of the event will be the crowning of the outstanding junior girl of the year.
“Miss Phyllis Wheatley” and will
results. These are Dr. K. Frances Scott, Northampton, Ma: and Mrs. Nina Horton Avery, Richmond, Va. Miss Sally Butler, Indianapolis lawyer, is the retiring president after serving ‘two years. She also ‘is president of the international federation. Other officers will be one of two in the following: Judge Sarah T. Hughes, Dallas, or Mrs. Katherine 8. Carpenter, Jersey Shore, Pa., first vice president; Miss Ethel Murray Johnstone, San Francisco, or Mrs. Arabelle P, Hanna, Superior, Neb., second vice president. . Miss Helen G. Irwin, Des Moines, Iowa, or Miss Florence V. Cartwright, Shawnee, Okla., third vice president; Miss Lula K. Baum, Leavenworth, Kas, or Miss Kathleen K. Miller, Albany, Ore. recording secreMiss Maude Doyle, Al-
> 5 ty ; » eo] F
treasurer. Elections were the chief topic of conversation, even as final business sessions got under way. Many state delegations
BRIDE-TO.BE—Miss Roberta Good, the daughtér of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Good, Greenfield, will be wed to Harrold | = R.:Chaney on Aug. |, her par- " ents have announced. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Chaney, Hartford City, are the prospective bridegroom's parents.
be presented an expense-free trip to Flat Rock River Camp. She
Aug. 5
committee for the event are Mrs. Roy Thompson and Mrs. Theodore Simpson. Mrs. Paul Johnson, program; Mrs. Floyd Covington, patrons, and Mrs. Bernice Walker, exhibits. The program for the evening will include an exhibition of paintings by local artists, a collection of antique glassware, a display of needlework, quilts and hats made by the members, and music fea-
The annual picnic of the Northeastern Homemakers will be held Wednesday in the home of Mrs. Everett Miller, 6765 E. 38th St. Mrs. Hervey Thomas will assist the hostess. Luncheon will be followed by bunco. Former members and friends will be guests.
Alpha Pi Omega Sorority will have a picnic at Forest Park in Noblesville at 1 p. m. Sunday. The committee in charge includes Mesdames Carl K. Klutey, Ed-
She will be given the title of{ward Ayres and Alvin C. Joslin
and Miss Moni Hagopian.
Mrs. Paul F. Grubbs, 925 N. Audubon Road, will be hostess
will leave with the YWCA groupie the meeting of the Indian-Co-chairmen of the planning Spully Chapter; Samm Pll porn
Activities of the group this year have included working with the
Other chairmen are, .... County Society for Crip-
pled Children on their new kinder-
the Girl Scout Camp Dellwood.
Return From South
turing the songs of other countries.
from a vacation in Savannah Beach, Ga.
garten class project and sending a Girl Scout on a week's outing to
Dr. and Mrs. Wade H. Jordan, 5919 Primrose Ave., have returned
By SUZ BURNETT Slanted lines finished in soft
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scallops give a dressed-up look |
Dean Resigns
Times DANVILLE, Tod. Rosemary Frazier, assistant pry, fessor of physical education ang dean of women at Canterbury College here, has resigned to aq. Phys ical edy.
cept a position as instructor
At Charles Ma yer and Company young couples are able to find the best in quality at prices to suit their
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held caucuses last night. Final report of the credentials chairman, Miss Bess Wieman, Cleveland, was received
Writing in Reverse LILLY, Pa.—Antonette Nodol-
b d
Vv
y the convention. ' Registered elegates totaled 1155, and al-
ternates 322. There were 940
isitors registered for a grand
ski, 7-year-old Lilly school pupil, is learning to write the hard way. She writes left-handed backwards, and it may take two years for her teacher to correct the
total of 2417. A post-convention meeting was scheduled this evening by the national board of directors. Selection of the 1950 convention city will be made tonight. It is expected to be either
abnormality.
Women at Work
of women workers in the United States rose more than 66 per cent
WASHINGTON — The number
Washington, Boston or San [in the six-year period preceding Francisco, 1046, estimates show. The Doctor Says— }
Old-Age Diseases Predominate As Life Expectancy Rises
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. THE RISK OF DYING of many formerly common diseases has decreased greatly in the last 35 years. According to the figures of a large life insurance company nearly 23 of every 100,000 living in 1911 died of typhoid fever; in 1947 there were fewer than two of every million who died of this disease. Likewise the chances of dying of the communicable diseases of
childhood such as whooping cough, measles, scarlet fever and diphtheria have declined enormously. In 1911 about 59 in each 100,000 died each year of diseases of this kind, whereas in 1947 only about one in every 100,000 died of this group of conditions.
IN MENTIONING the improvement, tuberculosis should not be forgotten. Some 224 in every 100,000 died of tuberculosis| of all kinds in 1911; in 1947 about 34 died in every 100,000. Everyone must die sometime of something. The result has been abofit as expected: There has been an increase in the number of deaths of the so-called degenerative diseases which include many diseases of the heart and blood vessels and cancer which attack older people. - o .
ALSO, THERE has been an increcse in deaths of accidents,
WASHINGTON — The United last year dropped 26.6 per cent in compariThere were 450,000 divorces in this country
States divorce rate son to 1946 divorces.
in 1947.
particularly automobile acci-
of life has also led to a relative increase in the frequency of mental disease.
During these 30 to 50 years the
average length of: life has in-
dents. The increase in the length]
Hillerest Club Dance
creased by more than 16 years. As further progress is made in reducing preventable disease among older people, the average
length of life may be extended from the somewhat more than 60 years of today to 75 or more. Indeed one recent authority who discussed this subject says that there is every reason to believe that the next 50 years will be at least as successful in the medical sciences as the last 50.
DR. ANSWERS—
Question: Is there any danger in using the beauty creams containing estrogenic hormones now on the market? Answer: Several years ago, there was fear that these might be harmful, but the weight of medical opinion now is that they do not have any dangerous effects.
Guild Meetings Set
The following units of the Methodist Hospital White Cross Guild will meet next week in the Guild Service Center: Monday— Third Christian, Broadway Bap-
Will Be July 17
a
Binder, J. A. Bange, Robert Pot-| jter. H. H. Tudor and Ed Kerl. {| Also on the reservation list are
O'Hara, Frank Schmedel, L.-T. Evans, Robert Darnaby, Al Wahl,
H. Calkins and Joseph Frazee.
Reservations are now being|,qist Cal B Ti made for the mid-summer terrace aire; Wetnesaay aptist and pe
{dance July 17 at the Hillcrest] | {Methodist, Perry T shi |Country Club. Among those plan-iqQuaker; Thu NY i hb i a ning to attend are Messrs. and Bethel and Library, and Friday—
tist and Psychic Science; at night, First Baptist, Donati and Blue and Gold; Tuesday—Grace Meth-
Er OPS UUUNUUPS URI
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Too Many Women
|Messrs., and Mesdames Tom| WASHINGTON-—By 1850 it is estimated that women
{Mesdames Lee Arnold, Willlam| giyerside and Prentice.
in the
United States will outnumber men by nearly 350,000. :
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