Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 February 1951 — Page 8

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Organizations—

—— League of Women

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= Voters’ Study Units To Hear Discussions

| George Craig, Past Legion Commander, | To Speak at Post, Auxiliary Dinner

Three local women's groups will meet tomorrow and two are ‘scheduled today. | A discussion of “Faith, Purpose and Power” (Warburg) will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow by the United Nations and Foreign, Policy Study Groups of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters, It will meet in the West Room, World War Memorial. Gordon

Cl b PI Dolley Wil pe Sicased nthe ub Plans [stem | Program

afternoon session. { - Mrs. Robert C. Blackman, 5505 |N. Illinois St., will be hostess for! the Indianapolis Alumnae Asso- : {ciation of Kappa Delta Sorority Unit to Study . lat 7:45 p. m. tomorrow. Economic Education Miss Lucille Garland, Mrs, Times Special Edwin E. Crain and Mrs. C, H.| WASHINGTON, Feb. 19— A|Gibbs will handle the election of! program of economic education officers. The group also will elect! for its members will be organ-|® vorug delegate to the national | convention. ized by the General Federation cid of Women’s Clubs, Mrs. Hiram Mrs. David H. Sherwood will Cole Houghton, Red Oak, Iowa, 15Cuss plans for the spring rum-| president, announced today. mage sale. The sorority contribu-|

form of a series of finance for-| Work wil Pri discussed by Mrs. | ums under the direction of Mrs. ~Yron W. Kilgore.

Ambrose Diehl, San Francisco,| The American Society of Wom-

sprees sie he defense op Accountants will hear teachers, The forums, to be held at State poe Dupe the Lain Sonos) Federation conventions this; Talk,” at its 6:15 o'clock meet-. spring through 1952, will include, tonight in the Spink Armisi speeches from members of the | protel Institute of Life Insurance, the ie American Bankers Association, and the Association of Stock 10 Plan Card Party change Firms. Informational kits| George Craig, past national] |will be provided for the approxi- commander of the American Le-| {mately 15,000 local clubs. (glon, will discuss “Americanism” | before the John H. Holliday! | American Legion Post and Aux-|

Discussions Planned

| Forum discussions will includer lary 5 dimer in il Naval lin the domestic fleld budget: bills," Tne ‘auxiliary will hold a busi-

{bank accounts, debts, estates, in- ness meeting following the dinner! isurance, investments, mortgages,/to discuss the Mar. 9 card party social security, taxes for old age = the Riviera Club.

and survivorship insurance, sav-| A luncheon honoring past pres-| ings plans, taxes, wills, home jdents was given today by the {ownership, trusts and annuities. Phi Delta Theta Mothers’ Club! | Discussions in the national feld jn the chapter house. Mrs. Ken-.

Wear More Waves and Fe

MONDAY, FEB. 19, 1951

r.Curls

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Softening influence of the new hairdo trend—more waves, fewer curls—appears in coiffures Al The program will take the| tion to the national philanthropic ated by the official hair fashion committee of the National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists As-

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sociation, Shaped and styled to flatter the heart-shaped face, the style (right) has daytime chic which can be easily converted to evening glamour. Gentle waves (left), according to the committee, are going fo be popular because of their softening influence and ladylike look.

WHAT DOES your hairdo do for you? An excellent question for you to consider, says the official hair fashion committee of the National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists Association. A hairdo should be a flattering frame for your face, which will give you a head start on fashion. Composed of the foremost hair fashion authorities in this country today, the committee is in a position to be able to view the American woman with an unprejudiced eye and tell her just what she can do about her hair and what her hair can do for her. & 88 y AS AN EXAMPLE, the committee has unveiled its new styles which point up a very definite trend of more waves

and fewer curls . . . more waves because there's a softening influence in the gleaming highlights of a wave styled to the shape of your face.

If you take mirror in hand and analyze the shape of your face, the first step toward a more flattering hairdo has been accomplished. Next you must consult an expert on the subject, your hairdresser, whose training can whip up a coiffure that will work wonders for your facial contours. The most nearly perfect shape of face is the oval, the committee explains, and even these lucky women need a smooth and simple coiffure, one which has been shaped and shortened to classic lines. If you consider your coiffure

baby sister, Pamela Jean. Jackie's parents.

~Times Photo by Bill Oates

JACQUELINE SUE HART, 3, feeds her favorite doll just like her mother feeds her

We, the Women—

Men Complain of Hostile Reactions to Courtesy :

By RUTH MILLETT : FIVE women were standing at a bus stop in broad

daylight when a motorist, looking for a certain street

pulled up to the curb, rolled down the car windows and leaned his head out to ask directions. All five women haughtily turned their backs on him before he could open his mouth. The man who was telling the story said: “What's the matter with women, any way, that they're so sure every man is a masher?” : And other men in the group went on to say that it's getting so a man hesitates to hold open a heavy door for a strange woman, or pick up a dropped parcel for one, or do any other little courtesy because the reward is more likely to be a glare than a gracious “Thank you.”

,

Events— |

Contemporary Literature

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TOMORROW

Study | Group, Indianapolis Branch, American Association of Uni-| versity Women—7:30 p. m. Mrs. C. F. Otten, 4456 Central, Evening of mystery, Mesdames O. M. Helmer, Merrill Bryan and! Arthur Coller and Miss Agnes! Brown.

{Chalcedony—12:30 p. m. Marott

Hotel.

|Expression—1 p. m. Mrs. J. B.|

Fortnightly Literary—2 p.

Miller, 48 N. Audubon Road; hostess. Program, Mesdames/ Walter Jenney, O. E. Anthony and Hilda Peabody. {

m. Propylaeum. “George Washing-! ton’s World,” Mrs. O. L. Kirk-| lin; “Outer Circle—Character| Sketches,” Mrs. Henry E. Gib-

will include consumer prices, ra-

/tioning, savings bonds, price con-|

trols, dangers of inflation,

in- potters,” jcreased production, surplus, for-|

feign trade agreements, and then

work of the Economic Co-opera-

tion Administration.

Guide for Brides: No.

Preferred

Hesitation Step Is Outmoded

-.By MARY BROOKS Times Special Writer

You won’t want to gallop breathlessly down the church aisle. But neither do you want to

| teeter and totter every step of

that long, last mile to the altar. This latter mode of glide-and-halt locomotion, formerly

'mothers of all Butler campus or|ganizations.

8 | Mr. and Mrs. John Hart, 3017 N. Colorado. Ave., are Natural Walk

enth Badger presented a program | on “Josiah Wedgwood, Prince of|

Honor guests were Mrs. al 0ss, Mrs. James Stewart, Dean Elizabeth Durflinger and house!

£DIsHING THE DIRT X

By MARGUERITE SMITH | Times Garden Editor {

{Q—Fve been told you could raise’ carnation® out-of-doors in the

mid-March if you have a not too warm spot to keep them growing on.

Mrs. C. R. Barnard, 6138 Broad-|

in need of a complimentary change, the committee has a few general suggestions to follow, according to the general type of classification into which your face falls. = » “ WAVES over the forehead, dipping slightly off center always, are for the square face. A side part is generally much more attractive for this shape of face. Upward lines which halo the face and softly brushed cherub curls are for the round-faced woman who needs to lengthen the lines of her face to make it appear more oval. - > For the long or heart-shaped face a side part is suggested. Unusual and unique hairstyles, or the ultimate in high fashion, can be worn most easily by this type.

Hear Parley Delegate

The Auxiliary to the Children’s

Bureau of the Indianapolis. Orphan Asylum held a luncheon today in the 38th Street Branch, Merchants The little plants National Bank. Mrs. John Mason

garden. Is this correct and can go outdoors under plant Moore, state delegate to the Mid- | way, will be hostess for a dessert! how could I do it? Would I protectors as early as mid- century White House Conference, {luncheon at 1 p. m. Thursday. have to buy plants or could I April if you don’t force them to Was the speaker. {Guests will be the Sigma Kappa! sow seed? Mrs. E. F. C. es edu

|Mothers’ Club. The

{hold election of officers follow!ing the luncheon.

‘Nurses to Meet

|

known as “the hesjtation step,” ’!

is now fairly outmoded. . The newest, and by far the most sensible way to proceed in the wedding processional, is a slow natural walk. It should be done in slow rhythm to the organ music, but don’t let the tempo drag or you'll have your

{Alumnae will hold a dinner at in April. But to be sure of first! 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Haw-|

thorn Room. i

too tender growth by too much heat indoors. The seed is so hardy you can safely sow it outdoors very early (in March) but if cold weather nolds back germination the plants may not bloom until the second year.

group will A—Yes, you can raise carnations out in the garden that will al- | most rival the greenhouse vari- | ety for size and will definitely

be as fragrant. I once raised {| some that blossomed the first The General Hospital Nurses! year from seed sown outdoors,

1 Send questions on gardening year bloom, you'd better start te Marguerite Smith, the seeds early indoors—about' Indianapolis Times.

LS Apes & Co.

If we don’t look out, the men are going to | son. father and attendants wobbling give up trying to be gentlemanly and cour- [Grolier Fine Arts—Noon. Mrs. self-consciously like intoxicated teous. And you can't blame them if they do. Rebekah V a ndercook, 4526 sailors.

Franklin Road, hostess. | George Rogers Clark Chap., ITSC {i =1 p. m, Mrs. W. D. Lentz 3651 Forest Manor, hostess. { Program, Mrs. Ray Hanger. {Grand Pre Chap, ITSC — 6:30 p. m. 38th St. branch, Indiana National Bank. Speaker, Mrs.! Jules Zinter. Newman Mothers—1:30 p. m. | Butler University Atherton! | Center, Book review. | (Chap. Q, PEO—12:30 p. m. Mrs. James Rainey, 5440 Carrollton, ! hostess. Program, Mrs. Frank! | Wise. i Tuesday Quest—12:30 p. m. Mrs. C. G. Minton, 6477 Park, hostess. Wy-Mo-Dau—12:30 p. m. Mrs. G. J. Kamphaus, 4818 N. Pennsylvania, hostess. Program, Mesdames C. P. Brady, George Seeley and Laura C. Poland. Zeta Tau Alpha Mothers—Noon. Butler University Atherton Center. Meeting in chapter house, 715 W. Hampton Drive. Mrs. Floyd Beck, hostess chairman. | PTA UNITS {James E. Roberts—1:30 p. m. “Freedom Through Memory,” Mrs. Bert C. McCammon. Founders Day tea. Decatur Central-1 p. Founders Day tea. Edgewood-—7:45 p. m. Founders Day skit by Mask and Gavel Club of high schopl. Lowell—Founders Day at Warren Central. Margaret McFarland—2 Founders Day program. {Southport Grade—2 p. m.

No Requirement At the suggestion of a nervous reader who has watched many versions of the stilted, old-fashioned aisle pacing, we have brought up the subject. And after some investigation it seems that many wedding | groups think the “Lohengrin | Hobble” is a social requirement. But “tain’t necessarily so,” as the Gershwin song title sug-

» ” n TO HAVE a woman glare at you with Ruth Millett hostile or suspicious eyes just because you've done her a small courtesy or asked for a bit of information as one human being asking help of another must be pretty disconcerting. Let that happen to a man a few times, and he’s sure to think | women as a group are an unfriendly, suspicious, ungrateful lot. { It’s all so silly, too. Any grown woman ought to know how |! to take care of herself well enough so that she doesn’t have to treat every strange man with obvious suspicion and distrust. Maybe she thinks she is being a “lady” when she acts like that. But a real lady is gracious in even her slightest encounters

gests, Here are some accepted rules to follow in planning a | dignified but graceful wedding | processional: Try the rhythm of the slow natural walk with the | organist’ to achieve the right tempo for all concerned. Start everyone off on the left | foot and see that they're all | in step, though this is not as | important as achieving a natural look. Maintain an equal distance | (say six counts or beats) be- | tween members of the bridal party. Two full steps ‘should | separate the ushers. 2

Order of March. Allow about 12 feet between | { the maid of honor and the | bride. | The entire procession goes down the aisle inh this order: Ushers in pairs (shortest leading), bridesmaids (singly or in pairs, according to height), maid or matron of honor, and the bride on her father’s right arm, After the ceremony the recessional is: bride and bride- | groom, maid of honor and best man, bridesmaids paired with ushers, members of the fami- | lies. { In a home or club wedding there is no recessional.

TOMORROW: “The Proper Guest.”

m.

Charles Mayer & Company

Most of Mother's and Grandmother's cherished posses- Pr yf

| a {

$2500 Grant Voted ‘To Medical School

tally dear. SA 0 | The Indianapolis Chapter of Soroptimists International voted {a $2500 grant to the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania. | The fund establishes three yearly { Soroptimist citations of $500 to women graduates of that college {for further research study. New members of the group are (Miss Ruth Embhardt, Miss Laura Martin and Dr, Jessie E. Wilder. (Mrs. Ralph Lewis, president, ap- " {pointed Dr. Nadine Fisher, music pany.’ ; |chairman, and Miss Hannah {Thompson and Miss Jeannette Kight, financial assistants.

Charles Mayer und Company

© 19 WEST WASHINGTON STREET o

sions are from Charles Mayer and Company. Right from

| {

the engagement diamond—the table silver, china and

glass—and a number of treasured gifts held sentimen-

Young folks today get a special thrill out of selecting their important purchases—and receiving their wedding gifts from Indiana's Oldest Gift Store.

To all there comes a feeling of deep pride and satistac-

fion in saying "It came from Charles Mayer and Com.

OTHER 4% “OLD FASHIONED", = ABOUT THE WAY YOU GIVE \g Members of Delta Chapter, ASPIRIN TO youn Sua |Alpha Omicron Alpha ‘Sorority, You are, M1" ore en w INDIANAPOLIS 9, INDIANA were luncheon guests today of give St. Joseph Aspirin For Children. : ~ |Mr8. E. F. Spitznagel, 4611 Broad- goss No need 16, break em. Buy Bt | ———— ceca ” way. mt | Joseph Aspirin For + 3%,

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Sorority Luncheon

Shower Is Planned

Miss Gennell Jarvis will be

honor guest at a miscellaneous shower tonight. She will be married to Clyde Winkler Sunday. Hostesses will Koenig and Miss Billie Bounsall. The The party will be in the Bounsall home, 4504 Winthrop Ave.

be Miss Carol

does big things

Through your generosity it brings aid to millions every year . . . whenever, wherever disaster stikes. Give now ... wear one with pride. It's “a great little button’

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