Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 December 1948 — Page 11
y Freedom.
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decade, to inevitable nad. toward ichieve sta l, and in a ssipate the [ our econ-
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country in e. It is the ost of the
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THURSDAY, DEC. 30,
~ Local Town Ge Schedule
Full Calendar To Inaugurate
directors will be elected. Wilson Mothershead is chairman of the nominating committee.
The ‘Propylaeum will start the New Year with an open house from 4 to 6 p. m. Savurday for members and their families. There
will be a luncheon bridge Jan. 12..
Logan Hall is in charge of the bridges.
Propylacum day will be the
Voyles is chairman of the program. The Columbia Club will have buffet dinner dances Jan. 15 and Jan. 20. Mrs. is head of the ladiés luncheon bridge which will be at noon Jan. 19. The University Club which will end the old year with a buffet
Miss Freitag Weds at Post In San Antonio
es Special SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Dec. 30/A. E. Kornhauser,
—Miss Marzella Freitag and Wil-| liam H. Kintz were married at 8 o'slock last night in the Post!
_ Chapel, Fort Sam Houston, San|Adams. |
Antonio. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
M. Freitag of San Antonio, for-|
merly of Indianapolis, and the] niece of Mrs. Harry H. Schmidt, | 2035 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis. Mr. Kintz is the son of Col. and Mrs. Francis P. Kintz, Fort Sam Houston. Chaplin F. H. Wielage officiated. ..Miss Marlene Freitag, San Antonio, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Gloria Zamka, Milwaukee; Miss Ann Ford, Washington; Miss Joy Ann Popp, Fort Wayne, and Miss Elaine Corbman, Dallas. They wore harmonizing pastel satin dresses fashioned with off the. shoulder portrait necklines. They had bouffant hooped skirts. The maid of honor had a Juliet cap of Grecian rose satin and the bridesmaids wore caplets of imported illusion that matched their dresses.
Chantilly Lace Accents Gown The bridal gown of eggshell duchess satin was made with a portrait neckline outlined with a fold of satin trimmed with an upright ruffle of Chantilly lace. Her full gathered skirt fell into a cathedral length train. She
wore long ivory satin gauntlets
pointed, at the hand. Her imported ivory illusion finger-tip veil was over a silk heirloom mantilla and held by a silver coronet. She carried white orchids and pink carnations. Cadet James R. Kintz, United States Military Academy, West Point, N. Y,, was his brother's best man. Ushers were Edgar Thompson, Albert Benson, George Benson and C.
Robert Perry, all of San Anfonio.] ———— ms
For her wedding trip to the Gulf Coast the bride wire an emerald green gabardine suit. The bride attended San Antonio Junior College. Mr. Kintz was gradua from the Riverside Military Academy, Gainsville, Ga., and attended George. Washington University, Washington; ‘and Trinity University, San Antonio.
Few Activities Slated in Country Clubs; Woodstock to Elect Directors At Dinner There will be few activities in Indianapolis country i .elubs during the month of January while the town clubs will carry full calendars. The annual membership dinner ‘and meeting of the Woodstock Club will be Jan. 6. New
1048
of Events New Year
and a-dinner bridge Jan. 28. Mrs. afternoon of Jan. 19. Mrs. E. E.
Howard Williams
dinner New Years Eve will have a stag party for members during January. The date has not been set. The Indianapolis Athletic Club will have its regular Friday night buffet suppers starting Jan. 7. The list of private parties for| 3 this weekend is growing. Mr. and | Mrs, Frank 8. Crowder, 3815 N. Delaware St., will entertain for their house guests, Mr, and Mrs. Cincinnati, with a midn ignt buffet tomorrow. | {Guests include Messrs. and Mes-, {dames Barrett Woodsmall, Hugh IJ. Baker Jr. and Robert B.|
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Hanrahan, 4824 N. Illinois St., will |entertain informally from 2 to 6 ip. m. New Years Day. There are {no invitations.
Mr. and Mrs. Wheat
To Have Open House Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Wheat, 958 N. Parker Ave. will enter{tain with an open house tomorrow night for their daughter : and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. | Phillip Pennington who will leave Saturday to reside in Los Angeles. "No ifivitations have been sent. : Mr. and Mrs. Earl H. Kyle,
THE INDIANAPOLIS we
[Atkletic And Columbia Clubs Hold Holiday Balls For Jun
emN——"
air
Cadet James F. Frenzel ¥ and Miss Barbara Ann Hobbs ooo at the traditional holiday event for the younger set last night in the Indianapolis Athletic Club.
John Sommer ad Miss Susan Talbert . at the Junior Columbian dance last night in the Columbia Club.
1016 E. Palmer St., have as their guest, Mrs, Frank Runge, Chicago. Mrs. Kyle entertained for Mrs. Runge last night. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schultz, N. Illinois St., entertained with a cocktail party recently for Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Spickelmier and their son and daughter-in-law, -Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spickelmier. The Spikelmiers left this week for two months in Miami, ¥la. Guests at the party were the members of the supervision division of Spickelmier Industries Inc.
NEW _ YORK, Dec. 30—An She is Grandma Moses; full son Moses of Eagle Bridge, N. Y. magazine today as one of its 10 Presented annually to—10 achievements in their fields, the | 1948 awards were announced by Betsy Talbot Blackwell, Mademoiselle editor-in-chief, in | a ceremony at Hampshire | House. Winners received ster- | ling silver medallions engraved | with the words, “Mademoiselle | Merit Award, for Signal Achievement.” Grandma Moses was cited by Mrs. Blackwell “for her flour- | ishing young career and the youth of her spirit.” i'The 88-year-old grandmother switched from embroidery to painting at the age of 76 “because moths don’t get at oils.” Her “American primitives” have won the widespread acclaim of art critics, museums and the “biying public. Reflecting the importance of New York City for young women; in all fields, five| of this. year’s winners work in| the nation’s larg-| est metropolis. |
Sunnyside Guild Plans Luncheon
The Sunnyside Guild will meet for luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Mon-| day in the Indianapolis Athletic| Club. Mrs. Myron J.-Austin is| chairman of hostesses. Assisting her will be Mesdames G. J. Bookwalter, Edward Boyer, {A B. Chapman, Corwin Carter, Edward Dunnington, Rodney E. |Curry, Harry Hammel, G. B. Johnson and Frank Jennings. A business meeting will follow the luricheon.
Plan Dance The Syrian-So-Fra Club will hold its annual New Year's Eve dance at 10 p. m. tomorrow in the clubhouse, 2245 E. Riverside Dr. Phil Ajamie is chairman and Mrs. Adele Leeds, co-chair-man, for the event. There will be special entertainment and a social hour at 1:30 a. m.
© lawyer, dancer, interior archi-| tect, educator
have to be for Taft ing, educa~ *
. The €10 get farm. represented
40. per cent | larger pro. | The CIO
their case - , He made ° ity elected * the Demo- © to observe
on a pro- |
ind out of ;
faith, But * dership to ptic to the
o sit down - ces—Ilegis-
Y, could be
In it Mr,
overnment teel, which . d jurisdic.
ints in his The word in”
“nature, - nistratione, iness.
ye
these rings comes of Trau leadership in the crafting
Rings, \ncluding tax.
~
“Her New Year's Dream
AN ORANGE BLOSSOM DIAMOND The beauty, craftsmanship and assured fneneiof :
know and want the best. Orange Blossom prices begin af $10.00 for Wedding Rings, $55.00 for Engagement
Deferred Payments Easily Arranged! Registered Jeweler—American Gem Society
ne
and fashion de-|
signer.
the working girl, accordingto their representa-
Mrs. Moses, tion here, are San Francisco,
Philadelphia © and Georgia. These cities contributed, |
Organizations—
{Sandburg Book ToBe Reviewed &
‘Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review “Remembrance Rock” (Sandburg) at 1:30 p. m, , Tuesday in Block's Auditorium... The review will be sponsored
rhe Monday-Clab-will-meet-2 p.m TAY in the Meridian Room of the Colonial Furniture Co. Mrs. Maxwell will preside at the business session. : Mrs. Marie M. McNett, Wil17 OIVI7 4 liamstown, Mass., formerly of Inpicting, the early life lof Lincoln in Indiana. The name of the play is “Cradle of Glory.”
1 Mrs. George Hershman, 942 N.
Anglo-India Chapter, ITSC, at, 8 1 p. m. luncheon on Jan. 8, | ‘The speaker will be Mrs. Ada | Lory. | The Indianapolis Chapter, Na(tional Home-for Jewish Children, will have a luncheon and card party at 1 p. m. Tuesday in the Chamber Range Co. 2464 N. Meridian St. 1 Mrs. S8amuel Davis is Presiden of the chapter.
DR. ANSWERS—
Question: Will a cream hair remover cause a blood clot or variccse veins? Answer: I do not know of any reason why a cream hair remover could cause either varicose veins or a blood clot,
b's ‘years of acknowledged of fine rings for those who
ane
COMPANY
Question: Can a person take too much parathyroid medicine? "Answer: Yes. Too ‘much parathyroid can cause muscular contractions or twitchings which are known as parathyroid tetany.
9 W. WASHINGTON STREET ¢ INDIANAPOLIS su
o -
They - include a i
DE o_good_tols
Carrollton, i
dianapolis, will present a play de-|
Denny St., will be hostess to the
Grandma Moses, 88, Wins Magazine Award
Times Special
88-year-old grandmother today
finds herself a Young Woman of the Year.
name, Mrs. Anna’ ‘Mary Robe! She was named by er 1948 Merit Award winners, young women for ting]
lin the same order, a craftswoman, er, Saginaw, Mich., announce the
Quaker social worker and golf! champion. Great Britain is rep-| {resented by one winner, an econo-| | mist. : Here are the young women of the year, in addition to “Grandma Moses" PHOEBE M. BAILEY of Philadelphia, Quaker social worker, re-
{sponsible for all Quaker work in {mental hospitals as director of {the American Friends Service|
Committey’s Institutional Service Units. VALERIE BETTIS of New York, modern dancer, choreographer, ' teacher, concert star at present appearing off the concert stage for the first time in Inside U8 AT FLORENCE KELLEY of New| > | York, lawyer, first woman attor-ney-in-charge of the Criminal Court's branch of New Yorkt , City’s Legal Ald ! ? Society, ex - as- . gistant district attorney—and only woman to address the second conference of the Interna-| tional Bar Association on legal aid last sum-
erick
NOYES of New York, interior architect and designer, who iopened New Design, a shop to stimulate and display the work of- contemporary designers; —=——- Jouisn SUGGS of Carrollton, , winner of more golfing champlonships. than any other weman,. fhe North and South Women's Championships (for the third time), the British Ladies’ Championship; ~and the UU. -8:7Golf. Association Amateur title—all .won during the past two ‘years.
Miss Kelley
DORRIS York, fashion designer, for her young, graceful and easy-to-wear fashions. BARBARA WARD of Gréft Britain, economist, author of “The West at Bay,” who at 26 became assistant editor foreign affairs for the British magazine, The Economist. HORTEN S E WILLIAMS of New York, educator, former, assistant to the dean at Fisk Col-|
{lege, former ‘adviser to women
at Delaware| State College, who is bringing a new approach tp social work as’ Progrgm As- + sistant in Group : Work at the
he League. JADE
Francisco, potMiss tery craftswomWilliams an, who as fifth oldest daughter (she is 26) has followed the traditions of her tightly knit Chinese home while running a successful pottery business, whose ceramics have won museum exhibition and whose| autobiography, the first written) by a Chinese-American woman, will soon be published by Harper. In making the awards, Mrs. Blackwell pointed out that this
as a “man’s world,”
_VARNEM of New!
in charge of 3
year's winners have been tearing Woman's , down barriers and setting prec-|State Symphony Society, edents in many fields previously meet at 10:30 a. m. Wednesday |
Michigan - Betrothed to John Geupel
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold T. Schirm-| substantial step
engagement of their daughter, Miss Suzanne Babcock Schirmer, to John Carl Geupel, son of Mr. and ‘Mrs. Carl Martin Geupel,| 8100 Sycamore Road, Williams Creek. No date has been set for the wedding. The bride-to-be a graduate of Kinswood Scheol, Bloomfield Hills, Mich., and attended Colorado College. She is now a student at the Katharine Gibbs School in Boston. She is a member of Delta Gamma Sorority. Mr. ‘Geupel attended Park School and is a graduate of Taft School, Watertown, Conn. He will be graduated from the Yale
My Day—
CAA Racial
At Capital Airport - By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT HYDE PARK, Dec. 30--It is Civil Aeronautics Administration has had the courage to ban racial Washington National Airport. This is a very forward in the fight that must be waged to bring [our national capital into line with what must be government policy |and what is now international policy.
segregation at the
I have always felt that there
would come a time in this coun-|jn
try when we would realize that all citizens must be treated alike, have complete equality before the law, equal and unsegregated opportunities for education, for training of any kind and for jobs at the end of that training. Also, it seems to me entirely fair that in such things as are available B citizens generally, there should no discrimination or segregabe i It is obvious that this has nothing to do with what you or 1 may choose to do in our own
Photos by Bob Wallace, Tw Staft Photographer,
Name Guests For 2 Parties At Clubs
indeed a relief to find that the
Bai Lifted
Additional reservations for the New Year's Eve parties in the Woodstock Club and the Merids fan Hills Country Club have been made. Planning to have break< fast Jan. 1 in the Woodstock are Messrs. and Mesdames John Fletcher, Herbert Todd, John H. Rau Jr., Donald Mattison, Smiley Chambers, Hubert Hickam, L. L, Dunbar and Thomas E. Free.
homes. That remains the domain which an individual retains personal ~ control. Also, laws against intermarriage seem to be an ‘invasion "of personal liberty, just as it seems impossible to legislate on what an individual should or should not do in his own home. Where the public is generally admitted, there everyone should have equal rights, but one’s home remains, according to the old English tradition, a man’s castle. One must also control one's own decisions as to personal conduct and association. “
bairn. Dancing in ‘Meridian Hills will be Messrs. and Mesdames Wil lam G. Davis, Gharles H. Bink« ley, John Fuller, George Kingsbury, Emery Baxter and Floyd Burns dnd Miss Susanne Pear
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Are at Home Now Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marshall are at home new in their new house on 8. High School Road following their marriage Dec. 11 in the home. The bride is the former Miss Ester Kremer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lon Kremer,
Schaal of Engineering in Febru- | us
57 'N.}
ws r
Pershing Ave. Mr. and Mrs. {Fred Marshall, Indianapolis, are] the pare of the bridegroom.
Mrs,
reception in the home and a short wedding trip followed the ceremony.
Install Head
installed as president of the| Lambda Mu Chapter, Sigma Beta
formal Founder's | Day dinner
liam- Butler was the matron of honor and Marvin |
“Sullivan was the best man. Al
Sorority to |
Mrs. Walter A. Jones will be|
Sorority, at 6:30. p.-m Wednes-| day, preceding af
in|
) } | I
| |
+
MORE THAN
I
ington: ’ Other officers who will be installed also clude Mrs.
MTs. Bradley,
tréas-
Mrs. Jones
don Cox, record. ling secretary and parliamen{tarian; Mrs. Herschel King, cor{responding secretary, and Mrs. | |Edna Burns, social chairman,
Plan Family Fete .
Following Ceremony
Mr. and Mrs.. George 8. Dailey, 5303 N. Pennsylvania St, will,
Brooklyn Urban entertain ‘with a family dinner |
New Year's Day following the |
SNOow | swearing in ceremqgny for Mr. | WONG of San|Dailey at 11 a, m: in,the Court
House for the office of Marion | County Prosecutor. Guests will include Mr. Dailey's brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Field Dailey and daughter, Mary, Franklin; Mr. and Mrs. Len Field, (B Bloomington; “Mrs. Blanche Ab|bott, Fort Wayne; Miss - Jane
(Abbott, New York; Mr. and Mrs. |
|Charles Dalley, Frank C. Dalley jana William C. Harrison.
Symphony Meeting The executive board of the Committee, Indiana will
in the World War Memorial.
—the- Hotel Wash=§-—
in-| Ben-| net Bellville, “ice president; Claude
urer; Mrs. Shel-j}.
i
»
3 4
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