Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 February 1950 — Page 6
— BRAND-NEW TRU
Page 6 Feb.
The Indianapolis Times | 22, 1950
Organizations—
Monday Club Honors
Founders at Tea Tomorrow Afternoon
Mrs. Carl Klein Is Social Chairman For Event in Propylaeum
The Monday Club will honor its founders with a tea
afternoon in the Propylaeum.
tomorrow organized in 1895. It was affiliated with the Council of | Women in 1867 "and the Seventh District Indiana Federation ‘of ¢# Clubs in ; i Mrs. C¢ {lein, chairman of the social committee, is in charge of the arrar ents. she i3 being assisted by Mesdames Roy \ ter Ulen Watters, Grover C. Long, Olla
The club was)
En John Dow g Johnson and Frank B. Flanner, and Miss Marg Eval Mr W.- y I Mra. George E. Maxwell, club. president will pi i i [I } ; } Mra. Thom: A. Bunch, second vice predident, Is in charge of the program M Helen Hollingsworth will discu “Decorative Fat f the H ' and Miss Victoria Montani, harpist, will pla ne secs cus con Farm Bureau 4 tee ofthe Kappa Kappa Gamma — 1 Sans wi roe winner 0 Ends Session | morrow S Kearsley Urich,”Carmel Counties Honored | Mrs. Frank Parrish will assist . te renting aiter- For Membership ‘ent chapters will be Mrs. David, ~A pageant, “Over the Top With Brewer, Indiana University; Mrs. the Township,” this morning conCarolyn Tucker, DePauw Univer- cluded the two-day 20th soclal] gity: Mrs. Charles Sargeant, But- and educational conference of the | ler University; Mrs, F. ¥. Lloyd, Indiana Farm Bureau Inc, in the| Purdue. - University, and Mrs. Murat. Temple. : Claud Jacquart and Mrs. Kare, Beanblossom Township, Monroe Kistner, ‘out-6f-state groups. County, was honored for the she p ze membership | The Woman's Rotary Club will highest percentage tm F gain over last year. meet at 6:15 p. m. Monday for dinner in the Propylaeum. €.| “International Underst: nding” Walter McCarty, editor of the was the subject of an address by
Indianapolis NM
“Signs of the Times.” Ma
tur, Ill, and Dean Mary L. The Altar Soclety of the St,
Christopher Catholic Church will
Jews, .will speak on Mrs, Julia Harwood Hiller, Deca-
t-
thew of Purdue University talked | fon the homemakers short course. |
Voluntary health insurance was!
sponsor a book review at 8:15; urged in resolutions presented at| p. m. tomorrow, in the church's ine closing session. They also ad-|
social room. vocated that the county set up i
ts)
Mrs, Clifton J. Hirschman will own council to study local health! review “With a Feather on MY needs. Resolutions also were pre-
Nose” Farm ‘Bureau's Internation
(Burke). {aenteq to continue support of the
al
The 1908 Club will have elec-| ppjendship® program and the girls’ | tion of officers at its meeting nextip,momaker short course in Pur-
Thursday. The 1 p. m. luncheon| fy ater will be in the home of Mrs. C, ©, 0U¢ University. Warnock, 4324 Park Ave, | According to present plans, four
| women from will be brought to this year through Ttionai Friendship program.
Mrs. Fred Noerr of the Flower] Mission Hospit: il will be a L Bpec a
ter will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the home of Miss Joan Stump, 2154 8. Pennsylvania St.
weeks, Support of the PU homemak
The Indianapolis Chapter, Na- jn the summer,
foreign countries this country| the InternaThey| The Verae Sorores ITSC Chap- are expected to visit farm com-| today munities in Indiana for several
er|
| short course for girls, six weeks. was first voted
ha
.
I
Mrs. Newton Worley and L. T. Stafford . School 34's individual projects.
Warhs: U. S.
Mesdames Walter L. — Mac Miles, Edward Sedam and Bert c. McCammon
. . . aprons for collecting contributions and for sale.
Mesdames R. K. Bude. Joe De@enzo and Lew Carmean + + + School 21 mothers get ready for a bake sale.
By AGNES H. OSTROM THERE HAVE been many famous marches in Members of the 86 local units of the Indianapolis ParentTeachers Association . Council have joined a current one that has historic possibilities; too: They are the recruits of the state PTA “March in the Month
tional Sereen Council, will have on by the Farm Bureau women| of March with Gifts for Na-
a benefit luncheon bridge Friday jaqt
They provide in the home of Mrs, Alvin John-
year.
20]
scholarships of $50 each to two|
tional Headquarters.” Object Is funds for the re-
son, 3707 'N. Meridian St. girls from each of the state's ten| cently announced National y . ‘ {districts. » | PTA headquarters to be erectEe doin ss Ive haptor! Awards were presented ‘last! ed soon in Chicago's neareon tomorrow untidy 38th Street MI8ht to the high scoring counties, north. side. Spearheagding the Branch, Indiana National Bank. in the state. for 1949. In order, state drive is Mrs. Bert C, McHostesses will- be Mesdames T. [hey were Montgomery, Spencer, Cammon, Indianapolis PTA G. Way, Ruth Alloway and Daisy Wayne, Marion, Hancock, Madi-| Council president. The local Garrison. Mrs. Jules Zinter will 50n Vanderburg, Cass, Boone,| chairman is Mrs. Edward Sespeak. Fountain and Allen. Miami and dam, vice president of School i a | Ripley counties tied for last place.! 34 PTA. Cass county won first place for| «qr we can get 25 cents from Spun Rayon Brings ne rural youth trophy. | each member, g we'll. meet our |
Many New Fabrics
Spun rayon yarn is produced sized the theme,
of rayon. This yarn has made possible a variety friendship must be expressed of entirely new fabric types, has given us rayon fabrics re- tive programs.’ sembling waoolens, worsteds, cottons and linens,
Mrs. Raymond Sayre of Ack-| (worth, Ia., guest speaker, empha-| “We live in the —by-twisting together-short-lengths same big neighborhood. -We-must form of rayofi learn to live with each other. This |
in
and goodwill as much as through ac-|
First place in the public speaking. contest held yesterday after-|
Short ravon. fibera-also-ean--be Noon went to ‘Mrs. Gladys Miller,
C ounty.
blended with other short fibers, of Allen such as wool, cotton or nvlon.| C—— That is, rayon and a different Sharpen Selssors
fiber can be spun together in a
{ | | |
single yarn, which 18 used for cutting through fine sandpaper|
one of the new blended fabrics. several times.
|
YUE “SERIES
FOR
REELS.
35ic
ach STEREOSCOPE $2.00 Another new series to
roll contains 14 lifelike pictures with depth on film ’
add to your Tru-Vue library. Fach film
35 mm. safety
[0 Prince Valiant 7 Captain Marvel [1 Howdy, Doody 7) Hoppy the Bunny 1 Tale of pefor Rabbit [7] Bedtime for Dagwood [] Puss in Boots [7] Popéye Meets the
CHILDREN |
goal,” say the two chairmen. And a large percentage of the
| city’s 16,800 members already “have plans to earn and collect
the $4200 local share of the state's $25,000 goal. They've raided the ‘‘suggestion” box for ingenious ways of making their unity’ gifts or their own. Many are pegging ANETTeontributions a3 "special | gifts, $5 or more. Special gift donors will have their names in a gold book to be filed in
Scissors may be sharpened by| the state office.
Gifts for the building, the first in the world dedicated ex; clusively to parent education
and -welfare-of gH-ehildren—wil- | finally be collected in a cere- Ienarge of the musical program.
4
|
history.
. “3 fation.
mony at the state convention in French Lick. Following the state banquet “Apr. 20 prasidents from Indiana’'s 1050 local units will drop. gold envelopes with the number of their schoel and containing a check or monev order into a gold replica of the national headquarters building. The state chairman is seldom seen without a cookie basket over her arm. Whoever buys .a cookie contributes to the building fund. Mrs. Newton . Worley of School 34 has already $3.79 by serving brownies and ‘coffee to the teachers at recess . .. and is filling orders for five “dozen brownies and three cakes. L. T. Stafford, principal, has made his five dollars by selling made- -over
Poetry Society Plans Meeting
The Indiana Poetry Soc jety will! meet at 2 p. m. Saturday in the YWCA. Miss Katherine McPher-
(son will preside and Miss Pearl!
{Eastburg is program chairman. | Miss Virginia Cravens is to be tthe-guest-speaker—Her—topte-wiil™ {be “Poems We Live By.” She is |executive secretary of the Indi-
|ana Central College Alumni As-|
Mrs. Carol Valerie Wilson will talk on “The Poet, Robert Frost.’ | Original poems will also be read. —Anna—Mae—Hintor—is—in+
raised
army surplus pup tents to the students A card party and “galloping “breakfast” at home are on Mrs. Sedam’s personal agenda and she'll assist with the school's bake and candy. sale and magician show, School 21 mothers will hold a bake sale in a nearby. gro--cery. School 16 will add to its collection of $7.22 with a candy sale at the March meeting. Mothers in School 54 are completing small aprons to be dfstributed by “block hostesses’ to all the members, Donations will be placed -in the Fall pockets. Five . mothers . School 29 are making on as well as handkerchiefs, for sale. : “A penny for every inch around the waist” i8 the project in School 30 and Manual Training High School with ‘prizes offered for the largest | and smallest walstlines. Pens nies for every year -of their
| age will help fill the large china |
pig set out by PTA members in School 38. .8chools 1, 57 and 91 will collect their donations through | huge paper sales. Movies, ma-
‘gician shows, candy and donut |
“sales are becoming popular. Other units are setting out “friendship” baskets during meetings or selling “bricks” for |" the building via special bulletins with envelopes attached. Final plans are being rushed
| by other schools to get in ste 1 8 > Announce : - ——Sehoot-51=1:30p 1 Mrs Bert CT it in a single fabrie- and-see-it-youy—————— Team captains and workers! -
—with the march toward | headquarters.
the mew
Robin Hood, Band Have Big Appetifes .
ROBIN HOOD and his band of merry men are a very CHUNETY SPEW Sra wa 4 The props committee of the Junior Civic Theater discovered the appetites of the characters when they hegan to list the scenes in which Robin Hood and his followers take time out to eat.
its versfon of the famous play Friday; Saturday and Sunday in the theater, It seems that Robin, Friar Tuck and Little John get hungry in almost:every scene. The props chairmen, Bill Pohlmann and Doris Lytle, decided that a search for foodstuffs was in order. The committee canvassed local stores and merchants and hit the jackpot. Ayres’ display department came up with a dummy roast chicken and the Chambers Range Co. found a plastic turkey. They biggest thrill for the committee came when
Kingan & Co. donated a 25- |.
pound ham--a real one.
‘Strike’ Party
The “staff of the Moorehouse Cafeteria offered to bake the ham for the young actors and the cast members have volunteered to eat it at their “strike” party Sunday night. The strike party is a tradition-it follows the last performance of each play when the dismantling or striking of the sets is set. Friday night's’ showing of “Robin Hood” will be a me-
morial nee-for
The Junior c vie “will present
Bill Pohlmann and Doris Lytle . .. Ebrets, Boyd I. Miller, Ruby Hoffman, Russell Willson, Har= vey Trimble, Scott Legge, Alice Holoway, Frank Hatfield, Virginia Brackett Green, T. O. Conger, Neal Campbell ‘and James Folke. , Also Misses Helen G. Coffey, Helen Scheerin, Helen Fleischer, Gertrude Brown, Margaret Eastridge, Sara and Eldena Lauter, Ethel Curryer and Fanny Miher; Dr. and Mrs. Phillip B. Reed, Percy Weer, Dr. and Mrs. P. T. Dixon, Dr. George F.
[} Steve Canyon Roughnecks fo = — 1 CHARLES MAYER & COMPANY | N 29 West Washington Street | Indianapolis, Indiana | Please send to Trreserersssiiiiiiiiesiaees | | AQAress-iiiuaresesseserernssssnscessensenss | : | boity ...c...iieee, cerieseeee State iin. | n Stercoscope at $2.00 | | 0 Rolls of Film at 35%;¢ each § {OJ Charge [1 Cash or Check 0 C.0.D. 1 1
a
* Mail and Phone Orders Carefully Filled
Charles Mayer wd Company
29 wes} WASHINGTON STREET ©
+h perfor for-the-iate
Leonard Lowe Wild. Leonard was active in the Junior Civic. Proceeds of the event will go to
‘the Civic's building fund in his’
name, Patrons. for the memorial performance include Mesdames Rosamond Van Camp Hill, J. W. Coffey, Hortepse Raup.
Burpee; Dustehy F. Buschmann,
T oye, Paul a.
Patrons Named
Messrs. and Mesdames. Maxwell Coppbek, Jack Harding, - ' Landon Davis, Francis J. Feeney, Walter Cook, Lyman B. Whitaker, George Ziegler, Herbert A. Pinnell, L. G. LaJarts, S. 8. Boone, E. I, Larsen, . E. C. Atkins, Royer K. Brown, Ny | (Ha Nord, John Gordon
3
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collecting props for Robin Hood. Kinghan, Owen C. Pohimann,
Horace N. Roberts, Walter W. |
Houppert, W. A. Dyer, Paul 8. McNamara, Harold C. Buell, Raymond F. Mead, Kenneth E. I.emons, Harry Karcher, James F. ‘Peeling, John R. Rickley, .C. P. A. Locke, Volney M. Brown, John Burkhart, Glen JT. Beall, Leroy" ( Gordner, Jack C. Drewry, Jack Hatfield, Gordon N. Bryan-and Calvin R. Hamilton. Messrs. and Mesdames W. C. Bacheldepp BL. Curtis, Gondrd . Felland, int, J. Goldthwaite, Vernon Grindle,~ Walter Hiser, Herbert™S. King, ~ Benjamin C. Lewis, Harry E. Jennings, Paul H. Moore, W. F. Palmer, George W. Pittman, | Robert W. Pritchard, A. C. Raup, Noble Ropkey, L. J. -Shappert, Donald B. Shaw, Charles Sipe, Jasper P. Scott, Roned Tony and Edwin M
z=
i Mrs,
Mrs. Marion Glaze, Mrs. Emerson Ferguson and Wanda Lou | Asher . . . measuring for "a penny for Svety inch around the waist"
in School 30. Campaign PTA Council
Sets Meeting |
{will have its board meeting at 9:30 a. m. next Wednesday in the {Marion County Child Guidance| |Clinic, 1949 E. 11th St. Dr. Philip Reed, ‘director, and Miss. Grace Fraser, psychiatric] social worker, will conduct a tour through the clinic. They will describe its functions. The! institution is designed to help! ‘children with emotional diffi-| culties. i After the meeting the board! members will have a luncheon in| the Potter Fresh Air School. Mrs.! Lillian Lewis is principal and Mrs. Oswald Daft is president of the! SChoolI PTA
Symphony Names Team Captains
Mrs. John A, Alexander, Wom-| len's Committee Chairman for the Maintenance Campaign of the {Indianapolis Symphony Orches-|, tra, announced today that a speclal effort will be made to gain smal donations. Letters are being mailed hy the committee to all $1, $2, $3 and $4 contributors who. have not been contacted perzonally in the hope that they will repeat their donations. The goal _
{
for the campaign.
Twhich is in its third week, is $86,000. This is over $14,000 less! Several PTA units will meet] |than last year's goal. The re- NeXt Wednesday.
re {duction was made. possible be- School 8—1:30 p. m. Red Cross film, “Human Growth.” Talk byw Manual High School students. | School 33—6 p. m. “Pitch-in” bas-| | ket dinner.
[cause of the orchestra's economy {measures and increased concert, |attendance.
ounce Captains
McCammon, - speake lare announced. They are Mrs. Chorus to sing. T. Mothers
|Willilam J. Stout, captain, with School 77—1:45 {Mesdames Robert ‘Garret,, Rob-| Hopper. speaker. Mm. Samuel H. 'ert Reid, Max Bartley, Robert E. School 86—7:30 p. m. Fathers’
Wacker, Hirma Sexson, Bruce, ny ht. N Cracraft and John Stalcup and Eid Meredith Nicholson |
MRE PHOEHE Yeo, ! Mrs. Saul Bernat, captain, with 25881 bow,
Mesdames Kyler Comstock, W. M. ) R Crain, Frank Gerke, Henry Hoss, Board Re- elected Five members of the Indianap-
Richard Nay and H. B. Stitt and Misses Mae Engle, Marjorie Gas- olis Athletic Club—were all reton, Chirrlotie Lieber and Mabel elected to the board of directors ~~ for-a-threesyear-térm this week. Helen “Shepard, captain, They are McFarland Benham, with Mesdames Stewart Green, Joseph I. Cummings, Bowman Frank Ederharter, Erwin Muhlen- Elder, Conrad Ruckelshaus and bruch, M. P. Speakman, Susan/Charles R. Weiss. [Shedd Hemingway and Alice ——————— | Trueblood and Miss Hazel Thomp-| |son.
Spanish War Veterans Auxiliary to Meet
| The Past Presidents Club, Maj. Harold | C. Megrew Auxiliary, United Spanish War Veterans, will meet at 7:30 p. m. Saturday in the Central YWCA. . Mrs. Mamie“ Love will preside. Mrs. Elizabeth A. Gwin will speak on the lives of Washington and Lincoln, -- Mrs: -Agnes Wiley and Mrs. Marie C. Williams will be {hostesses at the socig] hour.
Nylon Knit Fabric Easy to Wash
For sheer elegance; there's De
3 ANG
|
It washes like a dream and| the whole dress dries in one hour. | Ironing is no problem at all. The! skirt of deep unpressed pleats is|
add ever so much to thei
exact width of-the fabric. The| {shirtmaker blouse has tiny pearl! {buttons. The narrow tailored belt | i” of black velvet.
Retouch Worn Spots Shoe dye or India ink that! matches. dark leather chairs or upholstery may be used to reouch scratched amd worn cor-
(Harden asserted:
Continues | The Indianapolis PTA Council
8S TAT/ONERY DEPT. pownsrars
|De Johnson's fabulous. white ny-| x - - | lon knit. A new fabric that’s hers oth : exclusively, the nylon looks an feels like gossamer chiffon.- | : —
GIBSON TART” SAYS — You can
Against Socialism
Group Hears
Congresswoman “Misled by meaningless slogans and sweet-sounding words, Amer ica is racing toward state sociale
4 ism,” Mrs. Cecil-M. Harden told
the Caroline Scott Harrison DAR Chapter today. The Republican Congresswome an spoke at the 56th -anniversary luncheon meeting of the group in the chapter house, She listed five steps “in the stairway leading to a socialistic America.” They were nationalization of American agriculture through adoption of the Brannan Farm Control Plan education - and health, thereby securing government entry into the most private aspects of our personal lives, destroying medical freedom and conditioning the minds of our young people to accept the false docirines which are being offered in exchange for our liberty. Nationalization of American industry through creation of a
{labor-government monopoly, exe
cessive taxation and government competition; confiscation of pri. vate property through subsidized “housing; controlled rents and ex+eessive taxes, and capture of our
To Jools by the executive arm of
government, thus destroying the constitutional balance of power,
Importance of Voting
“We are are farther along the
{road to socialism than most of us realize,”
declared the Covington representative, only Hoosier wome an in Congress. She said she does not believe a guajority of Americans prefer socialism. ‘having seen what it has done in England. There. is still time to stop it if we will but
{recognize the danger and stop
being consoled by slogans and
~ meaningless sweet - sounding
{words which flow out of Wash-
ington in an unending stream.” Pointing out only slightly more
ithan half our adult population took the trouble to vote in the
1948 presidential election, Mrs. “If I have a
message for you today, it is this,
Take a serious interest in politics. {Convince your friends and neigh-
bors of the importance of voting
{—intelligent voting. Do your part [to reverse the trend toward ab-
senteeism at the polls on election day.” - Special guests at the annivere
{sary luncheon included officers of
the Indiana. Society and regents of ‘the four other Indianapolis chapters, Mrs. Clyde E. Titus
spresided—at the luncheon. Mrs; —
Frederick D. Stilz was in charge of arrangements and Mrs. Ray iT. Fatout and Mrs. Odin F, |Wadleigh were hostess chairmen.
Don't Mix
Your Fabrics
Times Speeial NEW YORK, Feb. 22—Dorothy Liebes, weaver, designer of fabuously beautiful fabrics, = was asked at a recent designer's clinic if she had a pet peeve in home furnishings. She answered that what she objected to most was what she called the “unmatching coat and pants,” or the use of two fabrics fon a sofa or chair, especially if the weltings contrasted with the rest of the cover, “There seldom is good reason {for teaming two patterns—if the {furniture has good lines they're (harder to see with such confusion.
Single Fabric Each pattern steals importance
from the other and the effect-may
be cluttering in the room. Contrasting weltings—or cord'ings—guide the eye pointlessly and | restlessly up, down and cross-
Ey You own a sofa or chair that {wears a mixed costume, imagine
agree with. Mrs. Liebes -that it | Would be better that way.
Women May Bs Judges
LONDON — Women may now become ‘judges in the royal ‘court “the: “Isle: or Jers =
COMPLETE STOCK GIBSON _ GREETING CARDS
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