Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1950 — Page 11
Famous
| Waiches
lance!
TCH DE!
J
our
E OF | | A'S
GHT s_Right
FINE EED
EL
OSE sHT
-H
od af
BAND D
ll, watertight, ire’s & watch
EEK |
Mrs. J. Russell
“bride . attended William Woods|
"Lot's build a house . , ." Mrs. Ogden Field guides the ideas block building i is a popular pastime in the Green Hil Farm School,
Schaab, Mary Anderson, Christopher, Ralph, Ann, By JEAN TABBERT ~ESTHER DALGLISH is an Indianapolis pionéer. Her Green
Hil Farm School, just north of Carmel, introduces small children
to the serious business of living. But the learning and “classes” add _ "up to genuine fun for the two to six-year-old pupils. Begun less than a month ago, the school is so popular Mrs. Dalglish has decided to turn it into a year ‘round project. The winter semesters run from September through May, the summer term} in June and July.
A typical morning? Starting at 9:30 o'clock, the tots choose
their favorite activity, play unrestricted. It may be block build~hollow-
ing with large “pieces; easy for the tiny children to grasp. Or painting at the easels, Or perhaps a play “acted out” by the Youngs s » ¥ »
AT 10 O'CLOCK there's a mid-morning ach ot milk and crackers. Then follows organized play, outside whenever the weather is suitable. The children especially enjoy rhythm dancing, when they expand their imaginative ideas. To “kitty cat” music they demonstrate their impression of pussy. Along with the fun, good co-ordination and posture are learned. ““Circie time” is another popular “class.” Here the nursery set expresses its ideas and tells simple stories, Always there are interested ears to hear the ‘tales. Modern living, Mrs. Dalglish
Miss Beatrice Ann Cooper To Become Doctor's Bride
Miss Beatrice Ann Cooper and Dr. John Huston Jr. will be married at 7 o'clock tonight in the home of the bride's parents, Mr. ‘and 4908 Central Ave, Dr. Logan Hall, pastor of the Meridian Street Methodist Church, | will officiate. Dr. and Mrs, Huston, Milwaukee, are the bridegroofh’s parents. Miss Helen Jean Cooper will be) Dr. Huston attended DePauw the bride's only attendant. The| University and is a graduate of] bride will wear a pale green or-/the - University of Wisconsin! gandy frock. She will have a Medical School. He is affiliated daisy hegdband and carry a co-/with the Phi Gamma Deita and lonial bouquet of daisies. |Nu Sigma Nu Fraternities.
Wisconsin Trip Dr. Erwin Huston will be the, To Be Feted best man. The reception will be|: Mrs. William F. Moran will give| In the bride’s home. {a linen shower and luncheonAfter a trip to Wisconsin, the bridge tomorrow in the Riviera] couple will reside in Chicago. The Club. The party will. honor Miss Mary,
College and is a graduate of Put-| Annetta Pfau whose marriage to due University. She is a member George F. Mueller wil be at 9 July 15, in the St. Philip] {Neri Catholic Church.
of the Xappa Alpha Thetala. m,, Sorority.
DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING RINGS
As Shown by
Charles Mayer
For over a century—selecting dia-
& Company
monds at Charles Mayer & Company has been dons with complete assurance. The diamonds you select were first carefully _chosen by our experts. We invite you to see our fine collection representing a wide price range.
Deferred Payments—No Carrying Charge
oie
AND © 29 W. Washington St
Jamie Dalglish, Sally Mallory, Charles Schaab and Ralph Drybrough. Constructive
Photos by John R. Spicklemire, Times Staff Photographer. oe “Now make a circle . . ." Mrs. Field plays games with (left to right) David, Karen Lake, Chatles Cynthia, Sally, Jamie and Charles Snyder.
thinks, permits parents little time to devote to the cultural inter-
__|Chapter, Rochester, also will be
“Mrs.
~ {honor her during the day.
Xi
“The Moles Fat: No. §
| her ideal of an eagerly self-sacrificing mother,
of (left to right)
are Syn
It's ding artist lure or in tently studies her model.
ests of their childrén. Her school tries to fill that void, provides the- patience necessary to teach consideration, kindness, adjustment to group play. ‘When the pupils Jeave at noon, they’ ve had a’ "wholesome luncheon, are contented and ready for their naps. ” Ld » » » ~ VIGOROUS Mrs. Dalglish is well-equipped to head the school.
She founded Gateway, a nursery kindergarten in Haverford, Pa.,
near Philadelphia. Adjacent Bryn Mawr and other institutions use it as an observation post for their students, When Garven
medical editorial department at Lilly's, his wife decided to start a new. venture. She holds many scholastic honors.
Two of her own four children, Jamie and Campbell, are en-
rolled, Besides the ones pictured above, the Green Hill roll book lists Carol Holliday, Jeff and Tristram Peirce, John Johnson and David and Duncan Wurm. In addition to a nurse and physician, the staff includes Mrs. Ogden Field, widely known local nursery teacher; Miss Jane Bassett, Tudor Hall graduate who'll enter Mount ‘Holyoke in the fall, and Miss Dorothy Summers, formerly of Gateway and spending her third year on Mrs. Dalglish’s staff. She'll begin nurses training at Methodist Hospital after the summer r term.
ITSC Chapt ter
To Entertain New President —- Fo-Be Honored
Mrs. ly elected president of the Inter-'be in Jones Restaurant. national Travel Study Club, Inc. will be honored at a tea tomorrow {by the Heather Belles ITSC Chapter. It will be held from 2| ito 4 p. m, in the Wo.aan’s De-
r Wessels to Give. Bridal Dinner
Mr. and Mrs.
ner today
daughter, Pauline, and her fiance,
a
c ‘hurch.
pogvan)
Dalglish moved his family here after he became head of the
Paul FE. Wessel! wil -ertertdi “With a a bridal ame =stderablein honor of their,
. Clinton Davisson, new- Martin Sallwasser. The party willl
; is time oo eat... " David Gruen (third from right) politely declines another cracker from Miss Jane Bassett. Other tots at their regular mid-marning milk lunch | Jait to right) Ann Sherwood, Christopher French, Cynthia New and Charles |
Occasional Dislik
] Is Not Unusual
By HAROLD F. STRONG PARENTS ARE HUMAN BEINGS. Like other people, parents sometimes
think ignoble thoughts and feel unworthy emotions. Now and again they find themselves
resenting or being jealous and ashamed of their
youngsters. If these sentiments do not jibe with those
“ascribed to them on Mother's and Father's Day
greeting cards, they are nonetheless real ini a lot: of us in some period of our experience with our children. They are only dangerous teelings when we pretend to ourselves that they do not exist. As our youngsters often dislike us, too, they are quite able to understand and forgive our occasional dislike of them, What they ort forgive is .our pretense. - . ~4 KNEW A MOTHER who Tesnted er Sider 8 his arrival
Because she could not reconcile this desire with
she hid her resentment away,
It came out in a guilty effort to appease. her defrauded boy by overindulging him, buying him | what she couldn't afford, fussing over him with exaggerated endearments. But he knew, and one | day he stole from her.
uh i
WHEN 1 WAS finally able. persuade that her reaction to 1 URI
- her val had been oe Hy an understandably human one, into tears, : whelmed her, to her boy
grew the understanding and rroctiog they both : had craved. a That's how it w rks. It not our annoyance 2 or anger with our dn that divides ils from us, It is the guilt we feel * tTiriace experiencing 5
them.
TOMORROW: Parents si Should claim Wi right SH
to correct thelr children,
p Mis Mi
Her Father
Officiates The Second Preshyteri
|The Doctor Says—
Of Tonsils Duri
possible to make a diagnosis?
without any paralysis developing, Q—What do you think about”
of the disease? W.J.W,
A~There- is some difference of opinion among medical men on this problem. There does not 1 seem to be any reason why the | tonsils should not be removed in the polio season If there is not much polio n the commu-
Today or. Jordan writes the last of five articles giving common sense advice about polio. Hysteri- - cal fear, he says, is unnecessary if polio should strike your family.
nity. In view of the difference | of opinion, the only thing I can | | say is that I would not want to | { have my children’s tonsils removed when there was a con- | of polio in the |
Ht May Be i as Well to Post
> By EDWIN P, ngs M.D. VERY YEAR A GREAT MANY RUMORS go around about -=_polo, some -of--which--are-true-and-some-of -which-are not; The questions in today's group all deal with this problem, Q-Is it true that a person can suffer a mild attack of. polio without ever having any paralysis or without it being
A-—Yes, it is. The virus which causes polio ean Sometimes be recovered from a person suffering what appears to cpabd Many people kre "Helle ved “to “HAVE Wad an ta of the disease without its ever showing in the nerveous system or
the removal of tonsils during |
_the polio season? 1s this likely | to prodiice a more severe attack |
| However, If a youngster is al- |
be put to bed
or all of the disappeared.
_ against polio? A~Polio is
an
get infantile paralysis than if | they are kept quiet? J, In A—The latest study on this question that I have seen Indicated that exercise taken before the definite symptoms of polio have developed does not Increase the severity of paralysis.
Q-Is there
country?
| city and In the - Q—Is infant
| lowed to engage in physical activity after the fifi symp- | death today? toms have appeared, then the A-=No, It is later paralysis is a
pparently number worsened. This Probably mths means | : _ that youngsters can be allowed normal exercise even when polis |
ISR Removal IF ng Severe Epidemic of Polio
is epidemic, but at the first sign of a sniffie, an upset stomach, _or any other. iliness they-
until a diagnosis has been made
= . . Q-Are older people immune
sin-older people 2 under 20, but they do eateh it somethimes and not all are completely nmans.
paralysis in the city than in the
A~The disease strikes people ~Hving in both city and country, and no one yet has been able | to find any great difference be- | tween the attack rates in the
of the most important causes of
Church was the scene at o'clock this !
Officiating father, Dr. Jean 8. Milner, : Frantz,
Mrs. Milner, live In 514 fan 8t. Mr. Day's p
in Vero Beach, Fla.
should and kept there
symptoms have
Mrs. C. R. A. not as common
ax 1018 hy Hoss
The ivory = Dridal gown: was fashioned with a sweetheart
» * more infantile
P.D.
country, ” ile paralysis one
Reader L not, There are a |in
amount « area in which we lived. There-is I some reason fo believe that | Youngsters who have had their tonsils out and do get polio do |
get the more serious bulbar |
Miss Wessel and Mr. Sallwasser; type of the disease.
will be married at 8 p. m. tomor-| row in the 1rvingion Methodist
" | Q-—1f children exercise strenuously are they more likely to |
partment Club. Mrs. Davisson is {founder and honorary president! - lof the Heather Belles Chapter. | ‘In the receiving lin» will be] {Mesdames John Thornburgh,| Lewis Armel, Harry Curry, John| {Henry, Carl Dietz, Elva Henson, | Gerald 8. Decius, Virgil: Colvin, | {Basil Fischer, H. Mac Hollings-| worth, John K. Wood, Annah E.| Core and Neil 8, Webb and Miss {Nellie Hallarn. Members of the Bonnie Braes:
honored. Installation of this new chapter recently by Mrs. Davisson was her first official act since her installation. Mrs. Garry Daniels, Rochester, president of the chapter, also will be in the receiving
3
line. | Mrs. Donald McClure, arrangements chairman, is being assisted by Mesdames Felix Brown, Curtis Jones, Howard H. Maxwell,” Herbert Gray, Ross Tustison and ! Elsie Bell and Miss Frances Patterson.
GFWC Head | To Be Honored
{ imes State Service | WHITING, June .23—Mr, and Oscar -A, Ahlgren of this |eity are in Red Oak, la, to at{tend the all-day celebration being |held today in honor of Mrs. Hiram |
Crushable,
{ing in the federation headquar-| {ters in Washington since her! ieléction at the Boston convention two weeks ago. ‘She arrived in| {Red Oak this morning. { Various organizations of whic hi |{Mrs. Houghton is a member wi) O«} | [ment there will be a banguet| {Sponsored by the Chamber of} ommerce. 1
‘House Guests { The Ahilgrens will be guests in| ithe Houghton home over the : | week-end. i {| Mrs, Houghton has appointed] {M>s. Ahlgren to serve as a par-| [ticipant in the National Confer-| lence on Standards for Teacher-| | Preparing Institutions to be held] | Tuesday through next Friday ini {Indiana University. The confer-|
Wonderfully easy for
Second Floor
|ence is being sponsored by the National Education A Fy
4 LH
Dashing, side-fringed Celtagal braid that shapes to any head.
BLACK NAVY WHITE BEIGE BLOCK'S BUDGET HAT BAR,
{Cole Houghton, General Federa-| Colorful, tion of Women’s Clubs president. curiae MP FHOUENON- Nas -DOeN- WOT Kat Comfortable
laweling Comparion
|
packing
or wearing on land or sea.
will be consolidated into a Pullma as the “Spirit of St. Louis.” Ab the another Pullman and Reserved - Representatives, Coach Attendant
and the new Indianapolis Limited,
ANNOUNCING CHANGES IN PENNSYLVANIA RAIRROAD'S
between Indianapolis and
ST. LOUIS + NEW YORK + WASHINGTON ||
Effective Juge 25, 1950, the “Spirit of St. Louis” and The J ersonian liner between St. Louis, New York and Washington and will | opecise inaugurated between Indianapolis and New York. Special Services formerly featured on The Jeffersonian including Train Passenger
Master Dining Cars will be continued on both the “Spirit of St. Louis”
n and Reserved Seat
Stream.
—
same time the Indianapolis Limited
seat Coach Streamliner — will be
s, reserved coach seats and new
EASTBOUND
Advance Pullman and Coach reserva_.tions from Indianapolis—Pigtshurgh and intermediate points to Philadelphia and New York have been transferred to the new streamliner, Indianapolis Limited.
Advance Coach reservations from Indianapolis—Pittsburgh and intermediate points to York, Baltimore and Washington have been transferred to
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PASSENGERS HOLDING ADVANCE RESERVATIONS ON--THE JEFFERSONIAN AND “SPIRIT OF ST. LOUIS’ FOR DEPARTURE ON AND AFTER JUNE 25
reserved seat coaches on the “Spirit of St. Lowis.” Pullman reservations remain im sleeping cars on the "Spirit of St. Louis.”
WESTBOUND Advance Coach reservations from Pitts. burgh — Indianapolis and intermediate points to Terre Haute, Effingham, East ° St. Louis and St. Louis have been trans. ferred to reserved seat coaches on the “Spirit of St. Lowis.”
his
PLEASE NOTE NEW SCHEDULES EFFECTIVE JUNE 25, 1950 Lv. { Ar, Ar. Ar, Indianapolls | Philadaiphie | New York | Washingien THE AMERICAN 107 PM. | 437AM. | &30AM. | GSOAM. Pullman and Coach Train ni Ey . fe THE PENN TEXAS 2210PM. | 5:32AM. 7:10 AM. 7:30 AM, Pullman gnd Coach Streamliner { INDIANAPOLIS LIMITED 42ASPM. | 7:27 AM. 8:55 AM, _— Pullman and Reserved-Seat Coach Streamliner : “SPIRIT OF ST. LOUIS” 4:50 PM, -— -— 9:35 AM. Pullman ond Reserved-Seat Coach Sireamliner : THE ST. LOUISAN 10:45 P.M. 2.54 PA 430 PA, 510 PM. Pullman and Coach Train All Times Shown Standard Time Add One Hour for Daylight Saving Time
Please check advance reservations Jor use om or after June 25 with your agent.
Go By Train.
——
For reservations phone Rlley 9331 % : a
~ PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
Sofety—With Speed and Comfort
