Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1949 — Page 16

PAGE 16

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Organizations— a Association of Women Lawyers

Will Hear Talk by Senator

At Dinner Meeting Tomorrow

Lawmaker to Speak on Legislature, Bills in Which Group Was Interested

Sen. Mary A. Garrett will report at the6 p. m. dinner meeting of the Indiana Association of Women Lawyers to-

morrow in the Canary Cottage. Program chairman of the group, Sen. Garrett will talk on the past legislative session and on .bills in which the association was interested.

Mesdames W.' D. Currie, Gordon Sheerer and W. H. Traylor

are In charge of dinner arrangements, Miss Dorothy Tucker will preside,

Indiana Alpha Chapter of Zeta Beta Chi, national business woman’'s sorority, will hold a St, Patrick's Day party at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in the YWCA, A program and social hour in keeping with the party theme

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_—

has been planned by the committee in charge. They are Miss Alma

Morrison, chairman; Mesdames Paul Faulk, Ray Dorr, Glen Craw-

ford, Louise Ramsey, Frank Eng. Film Players sion: Let Designers

Misses Honora McEvilly, Ann

Robinson and Bertha Wéindel, By PATRICIA CLARY

United Press Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, Mar, 22 — Instead of going to a psychologist, it's fashionable in the movie colony now to trot to a “psychologi-

. 8ix new members will be ini[tiated into Gamma Delta Chapter, Kappa Delta Phi Sorority, {ner in Rocco's Restaurant. They include Mesdames George J. McAvin, William Rogers, Gerald 8. Johnson and Mary Dale, Miss Sylvia Rowbottom and Miss Helen Umbright. Mrs. Robert Feid and Mrs. Robert Irwin are iin charge of the initlatory work. |_Blue-and gold.-the sorority col-

cal” ) eMl interior SeooIBLi TW roe ors, will be used in table decoraS'8ns Jou {tions. Mrs. Marion Hurst and neyrosia |Mirs. Jean Watson are arrange-

Ernst Meer started business as _ A a designer in a small way after ents Chairmes, the war. Now he has more than (Legion Auxiliary he can handle creating furniture to flatten frustrations, lounges to| 10 Meet Monday lick loneliness and cozy chairs to calm complexes. Robert Ryan, 6 feet 3 and healthy as a horse, always felt awkward in a living room. “He was Inhibited by twice as big as anything pianos,” Mr. Meer diagnosed, {will be Mesdames Clarence U SwrRishig Ne Sun ih oversized Knipp, Homer Asher ang Mildred

| Anderson. it so much he even has dinner; ap. giusanne Sertell, 3834 Win-

there.” throp Ave., will be hostess for the ieorge Raft, who met Mr. Meer ;,,,,ior members of the unit Satoverseas when the ex-GI was de- ay. signing sets for soldier shows, in-| A rehearsal of carols for parvited him to decorate his desert|;i:ipation in the Easter Sunrise

{ican Legion Auxiliary, will meet lat 10 a. m. Monday in Riley Hospital to make dressings, wrap bandages and scw. -

be in Assisting

service chairman, will charge of the meeting.

resort. {Service on Monument Circle will Most resorts just carry over ju held. Plans will be made for the hectic, frantic climate of ;naking Easter favors for Cold

Hollywood,” Mr. Meer sniffed. He| Spring Road Hospital patients. did Raft's in quiet greens and - soothing russets. | Mrs. Frank Miller will serve as The place is so relaxing that hostess for the dinner of the clients how collapse ‘after five Past Presidents Purley, Wayne minutes in it. They only revive | Unit, American Legion Auxiliary. when they get the bills. Even |1t Will be at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow Mr. Meer's nirvana designs don't in the post home. There will bé soothe ther ther. |a business meeting. Mel Torme, after years of sing-| The Rockford College Alumnae «Ing and song writing in smoky, Club will meet at 5 p. m. Thursw'noisy bistros, bought a home with ddy in the honfe of Mrs. Howard «a special music room to work Henderson, 3618 N.. Oxford St. Sin. (Mrs. Bailey Colvin will be assist- : “When 1 try to work there,” ant hostess, he told Meer, “nothing happens.” | Meer took the nice, clean, big! room and did it over like a tiny ,, recond-rate night club. “I suggested a wind machine, - to waft in fumes of tobacco and Palitinc q liquor,” he added, “but Mr. Torme I olitics Interest said no.” ‘Women in Germany Mr. Meer also solved the prob-| BERLIN —According to Mrs. lem of a young actress who strug- Elizabeth Ley, a member of the gled for stardom for years but Parliament of Bremen, women in who couldn't stop fighting when Germany are fast becoming inshe came home from work. terested in politics. “Her furniture was all modern| Bhe says, ‘After the war all with a million angles,” he said. women worked hard and had no “That's okay for some people, but time for politics, but now that not for this gal. I threw ft all {things have cased off, they have

A 6:30 p. m. meeting is planned r tomorrow:-by the Thrift Club. rs. Marie Eidsmoe, 1426 E. Market St., will be hostess.

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Monday evening following a din-|

Robison-Ragsdale Unit, Amer-

Mrs. Don H. Sn:ith, community §

CTothes

Clay

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A es Staf! Photographer.

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1 t y Ruth y Hamilton ‘London Bridge Is Falling Dow

Teen Problems—

Mom May Know Best on Clothes

By JEAN and sweaters and frocks you ARE YOU simply dying for already own? a slinkly, black formal, Honey? rel ed onl A slinkly, black formal. Hone; DO YOU INSIST on your Do you crave a coat with . “To co , dressy date dress because you huge, blinding-bright checks? . ) . : ; avd oe think it's appropriate for the Will yeu be utterly sunk if you ir v : occasion? Or simply to show

can't'wear your new tissue taf- . C. ; J off your new finery, to compete

feta when you speak'at Fri- . . a with the other gals? day Morning Assembly? And a B ro = There's nothing wrong in 1¢ Mom object to absolutely , , k . : wanting to look a bit older or all of the above

in following becoming fads or

Admittedly, your clothes are ip dressing for others—provided |

your own personal problem. you keep within the bounds of | But maybe Mom isn't wrong good taste. So don’t brush off after all. Ask yourself why? Mom's objections too precipiWhy does she object? And more ately. Take advantage of her important: Why do you want experience and know-how. them? If, however, you feel she is a Do you hanker for that black little too officious about dictatdress because you think it's ing her standards, try a spot of sophisticated? Or because it is diplomacy. Fall in with her genuinely becoming to ‘you? suggestions amiably. She'll beDo vou want the checked coat gin to trust your taste and

he or

colors,

use it is flashy and faddy? hecause {ts colors are your

tying in with the skirts

sense of style and values. Then eventually she'll let you off leading strings.

Nancy Lockwood Sets Date

Miss Nancy Bingham Lockwood, the bride-to-be of John McLouth. Spalding, has selected June 25 as the date for her mar:

wood, 34604 Spring Hollow Road and MrsaC. Walter Bpalding, 1 E. 36th and the Mr, Spalding. -

. St, late -) ringe. It will be read in St. Paul's Episcopal Church at 8:30 p. m. The parents are Mr. and Ralph Greene Lock

Starch Adds Life to Clothes

Keeps clothes to 10 laundering tot

» Mr. and Mrs. Eugene C 1357 N.

nounce -the engagement of

5 5 Barth

St,

couple's Mrs. Pennsylvania antheir daughter, Shirley Ann, to George Scott Jr, Mrs

George Lvnn Scott, Chicago.

Lynn son of stuThe member of Pi ind Mr. Scott Alpha FraterThe wedding will

The engaged couple are ents at

d future bride Beta Phi Sorority

DePauw University starch that risp through eight and al

ar tongs

1s a

( 0 makes the i154 lite 'sim- pity

be

WOT oe Lambda. Chi

¢ to make

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linus ini

devi I * the It will starehi won of dre clothes, shééts and tablecloths

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nie er, memaker, ite the - weekly for the average well as double the life and blou children’s shirts, curtains,

The milk

in August ! ”

o » Mr. and Mrs. Lucius V. Hamilton, - Brendonwood,. announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda, to Horace Mann Powell requires no heating Jr son of Dr. and Mrs. Powell, One cup of the liquid 965 Washington Bivd. The wedthree cups of cool 4INE will be in June.

The future bride is a graduate

ng chore as Ses eS,

mens

like or cooking is diluted with tap water. Clothes are dipped in

wrung out thoroughly and hung of Tudor Hall School and Goucher _ ” . i. eh ROUSE alleen Rha a aban oe po SPonding” and membership secre- no " te hair to dry. They can be froned only Collegs She is a me mber of Pi ries and Mrs. John K. Guthrie, N. Meridian St., efliciency chair ily damp, thus greatly re- Beta Phi Sorority and president Areasurer . man. . ng ironing time, of the Goucher Indianapolis asurer, Phi Mu—Virginia Emrith, 1444 The material is said to leave Alumnae Club, Mr. Powell at- Holdover directors are Mrs. N. Pershing Ave., pledge.trainer. no reaks or blotches on black tended Indiana University where Emory W, Cowley and Mrs. Mer- tp ee fabrics he was a Sigma Nu Fraternity lin D. Mullane. . YOUR MANNERS mn member. He is now attending The work of the vouth can1 5 University ' ‘hich Situation: You receive a Punctual Teacher Johns Hopkins University. teens through which today's al telephone call dur- . > . or = younger generation is meeting person P JEFFERSON, Mo.—Miss Susan gq, \ younger genera f 5 ing office hours and your Downey. a school teacher near WoO0dstock Club its problem was emphasized in jr take on and on. You Plattsburg: Mo., has not missed Pl , P: ti . a forum. Mrs. H. H. Arnholter ...iize you shouldn't be holda day in her oue-room rural ans rartuies was in charge. Participating were, jo" a" business telephone for

schoolhouse in 35 years of serv- The Woodstock Club is planwe, Her school has an average ning a series of duplicate bridge enrollment of 16 pupils. parties. The first party for women Se pS 4 Will be held Apr. 6 and others Serious Generation will be held on the first and third EDINBURGH, Princess Eliza- Wednesday afternoon of each beth, receiving an honorary Dog- month. : torate of Law from Edinburgh, Mixed parties are being planned University, complinientéd her gen- for the second and fourth Thurscration today more serious in purpose than will follow

Charles hu

|some’ of its predecessors, pers;

____THE INDIANAPOLIS

Supper Dance Set

on being rather day nights of each month, They the club's weekly sup-

Jo

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TIMES

4

pe

One and Two and S-T-R-E-T-C-H

By JEAN TABBERT THE YWCA goes the baby-sitter one better. Its new program, “Ladies’ Day Out,” amuses young mothers and cares for their offspring at the same time. . The project is aimed principally.at new homemakers recently moved to the city and young women who otherwise would have little free time for recreation during the day. Just now there is an even balance of 35 women and 35 children | enrolled in the project. But some of the tots, mostly in the three to six-year-old age group, belong to the “Y” volunteers, who con-. duct the classes. (Though the classes are open to more enrollees, they could be expanded even more if additional volunteers were obtained).

Classes are held each Tuesday morning in the Central YWCA. |

Some mothers, like Mesdames W. E. McConnaha, Edwin Meith and Robert Campbell, select the gym exercises, conducted by Miss Mary E. De Vore, who, along with Mrs. Richard Smith of the “Y” Health Education Department, conduct the program. Mrs. Meith is a British war bride and these muscle-stretching sessions are particularly fascinating for her. | Swimming also is on the agenda of the “Ladies’ Day Out” {| project as well as craft clasSes and textile painting. Mrs. George Sears heads the craft volunteers. . Very often the children trot over from the playroom to visit their mothers during the day. Jock Allerdice feels better in the | comforting arm of ‘mamma,’ Mrs. John Allerdice. She and Mrs. Roger Chester enjoy the relaxation from housewifely chores painting trays and tiles gives them. . The play school where the children ‘are “parked” is on the same floor as the craft classes. That means even the newest child feels secure.’ The room is equipped with the latest fun paraphernalia from clay modeling tables to toys for every type of active mind. Volunteer directors here are Mrs. Kenneth Smith and Mrs. Robert Windhorst. Occasionally mothers peep in to see if their children are behaving, such as Mrs. Leon Shiman's visit to the clay modeling table. But, as a general rule, they're content to relax, play and enjoy a diverting “Ladies’ Day Out” once a week.

Honor Local

IU Students

Times State Service

> y » By Junior Assembly The Junior Assembly will hold a supper dance from 8:30 to 11 p. m, Friday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club.

Members of the managing com-| Rr, O00OMINGTON, Mar. 22—8ixniittee include Stephen Colwell,

Thomas Kahn, Stephen Garstang, teen Indiana U niversity students Jim Gibson, John Peterson, Bill from Indianapolis have been elecShardelow, Lynn Adams, Joann ted to offices by five social sorori- . elant Barbara Ann Hobbs, ties on the IU campus. Marigo cele, ynn eterson and Barbara Smith. Mrs. Wil- J They anes Dette [St liam Byram Gates is sponsor, Joan Meininger, 2 ku th ot, ' : aa eon president; Janet Trickey, 33 E.

Co . {Westfield Blvd., assistant treasAll Officers

.

urer; Jerra Jean Wacker, 5110 Madison Ave. assistant social chairman, and Josephine Justice,

731 N. Audubon Rd. song di-Re-elected recto. . Delta Gamma-—Elizabeth Richman. 524 E. 53d St.. treasurer,

Officers of the Auxiliary to the

Marion County Ju. eniie Center. Nancy Dearmin, 5147 N. Delaware St., recording secretary; Inc., were re-elected at yester- Sally Peterson, 4200 N. Pennsylday's luncheon meeting in the vania St. social chairman, and Hotel Washington. Mrs. C. B. Eileen Sidman, 3911 Broadway, ~a ca AR ART song director. i Casselman was named to the Kappa Alpha Theta—Joan Wy-1 board of directors to take .the |je, 1590 Indianaola Ave. treasplace of Mrs. M. E. Robbins, 'urer; Deeda Hensley, 5840 Wash-

ington Blvd., rush chairman, and Jeanne Robinson, R. R. 16, activities chairman.

whose term expires this year.

Those renamed are Mrs. Frank Weimer, president; Mrs. B. Lynn Adams and Mrs, Fred L. Iske, first and second vice presidents; Mesdames Julius L. Rockener, Laurence R. Hayes and Fred J. Brown, recording, corre-

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820 N. Audubon Rd. treasurer; Patricia Welch, 3635 “Totem Lane, marshal; Cynthia Baker, 626 E. 60th St., scholarship chairman, and Huldo Pfaff, 4505

Guthrie,

Marilyn Thomas, Lauralee Burke, Jack Hensley and Dave Thomas.

WCTU Born in 1873

so long. . Wrong. Way: Since the other made the call, feel that

you cannot bring it’ to an | WASHINGTON--The Women's end. Tie Christian Temperance Union grew Right Way: Since the call lout of the women’s crusade, was made.to- fou at your of’

‘started fn 1873, by the women of| {Hillsboro and Washington Court | House, |

fice during ‘working "hours, feel free to bring the conversation to an end, as you can always explain that you are busy. i : i

O., to fight saloons. Head-| quarters of the WCTU are in Evanston, JL

- v

Kappa Kappa Gamma — Ruth |

TUESDAY, MAR. 22, 1949

Loops Mink

About Neck Like Pearls

Furs Are Small To Fit Purses

By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Mar, 22—A loop of mink to be worn around the [neck like a fur-bearing rope of pearls came out of the prolific |imagination of Esther Dorothy ithis week to spark her newest {collection’ of small furs. The ‘furs are small, Miss Dor. othy said, for three reasons: Women are. Pocketbooks are, And it's spring. Capes and jackets are cut to a {pretty new diminutive. Stoles are |designed to be wrapped and {tucked around the shoulders with {no ends dangling. - “You don’t have to drag them,” {Miss Dorothy pointed out. | Shoulders are narrow and |sloping to give what the designer calls “the little pathetic look” or, |in mink, “the poor little rich girl |feeling.” : ! As almost always in a Dorothy. - |designed collection, there are new furs and new treatments of old ones. For one thing there aren't jany heads and tails in Miss Dor|othy’s neckpieces this season. {She's tired of the anatomical |trimmings. Minks, .martens and | foxes are lopped off “at the heads jand at the rumps” and sewed together to look as if they'd come off one three-yard animal.

Blue Broadtail Is Medium-Priced

| The twisted loop of mink can |be draped around the shoulders {like a single or double lei, knotted {like a strand of pearls or tied into a bow under the chin. : | Another “little” neckpiece has {the markings of an anchovy and the texture of a beaver and looks {like a brand new fur. It turned out to be sheared silver fox, |christened “silver clipper.” There's a new colored fur in {the collection, too—a midnight {blue American broadtail that |comes within a moderate price range and locks elegant in the [small capes and jackets. Small, jeweled buttons are {used part or all the way down the {front of many of the short {jackets and capes. A white {ermine sweater bound in black {velvet has white pearl buttons {down the front and matches the |buttons to one cuff and the but{tonholes to the other. The sleeve lof this jacket is cut extra long to have a pushed-up look even Tr — + ~ when it's worn at full arm length.

Marydale Guild Longest wraps in the collection

lare a group of tunic coats dePlans Festival

isigned to cover the bottom of a Plans for the. first festival o

{suit jacket. The tiniest -is a “tidbit” of silthe Marydale Guild will be made at tonight's meeting of the

¢ ver blue mink that just wraps around the throat and has a pink group's council. It will be at 8:30 o'clock in the Claypool Hotel.

rose on its tip. The guild's festival is set for Apr. 22 and 23 in the Holy Cross Hall, 123 N, Oriental St. Proceeds will further the work of the guild in providing better. facilities and equipment at Marydale School. The school, located at 111 West Raymond S8t., is associated with the Sisters of the Good Shepherd. :

[2

Church Bells Ring For Woman at 100

NEWBURYPORT, Mass. — All the church bells in this city pealed recently in honor of Mrs. Ellen E. Chisnall, who observed her 100th bigghgay in this port city. To reach a happy, healthy centenary, she recommended the help of God and good care from your own family. Mrs. Chisnall received an apostolic blessing from Pope PiusyXIL

Start of Suffrage WASHINGTON—The organization of a women’s rights fr#vement in the U. S. in 1848 was an outgrowth of the anti-slavery struggle.

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Return From Trip Mrs. Russell’ Willison, 1 E. 36th 3St., and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, Kessler Blvd., have returned from a month motor trip through the Southwest. While in Tucson, Ariz. they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle Jr.

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