Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 April 1951 — Page 31
5, 1951
‘am which r volunteer of its proT years of
1 be placed Ip ledders + programs ature study
, from 9:30 )e on plan1d carrying d cookout. res, menus, ding methA cookout
beginning ature hike, ames and
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man's Dee unity Wel- ¢ hostesses L the final
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nel discustners for a ) presented adianapolis
} will give | Clean-up, ign. Mrs. W. 8, f reserva-
‘injury, you know what forgive-
"Owe No Man"
SUNDAY, APR. 15, 1951
Spring Dante Planned Apr. 27 by Teen Group
Times photo by Henry E. Glesing Jr.
GETTING READY—Cynthia Wilson (standing) tries a new hairdo on Judy Turner (seated) for the Junior Assembly Dapce Apr. 27. Dick Ruddell casts an approving eye on Cynnie's job. Junior Assembly and Saturday night class members of Mrs. William Byram Gates are preparing for their
Spring party Apr. 27. The teens will dance from 9:30 p. m. to midnight in the Columbia Club.
Committee members include Joan Cassell, Barbara Griner, Martha Harrison, Ruth Ellen Moores, Natalie O'Dell, Ann Starr
Reed, Virginia Ross, Barbara Sovine, Betty Tincher, Martha Warren, Mary Jo Welsh and Carolyn Wilson. Charles Hendricks, Philip Imes, David Johnson, Thomas |
Langsenkamp, Samps McQuiston, Richard Medaris, Martin Moore, Richard Myers, Richard Ruddell, Jon Schmidt, Raymond Smith, Robert Sparks, Richard Travis, Ralph T. Walrod Jr. George Weber and Charles Yott.
Delta Zeta Sorority Plans Annual State Day Luncheon
Mrs. Russell Costello, Pontiac, Mich., Delta Zeta Sorority national vice president, will be guest speaker for the 34th annual Indiana state day luncheon. The luncheon is set for 12:30 p. m. Apr. 28 in the Claypool Hotel Riley Room. L “Can We Meet the Challenge?” will be the speaker’s topic. In addition to 1000 invitations to state members, special invitations have been issued to the sorority’s chapters in Ken tucky and Louisville Universities and to alumnae groups in Lexington and Louisville. The program will include presentation of achievement-activi-ty awards to a member of each Indiana chapter, awarding of the state day attendance cup and skits by the college groups.
At Speaker's Table
At the speaker's table will be the three sorority founders, Mrs. J. M. Coleman, Loveland, O.; Mrs, George Galbraith, Columbus, O., and Mrs. Orison H. Hayes. Others will be Mrs. A. M. Romberg, local alumnae president; Miss Irene Boughton, national executive secretary; Miss Frances Westcott, past national president; Miss Jean Johnston, state chairman; Mrs. Kenneth E. Lemons, state day general chairman, and Mrs. Argel Pion,
Mrs. Russell Costello
+
Miss Nancy Haase, DePauw |
University; Miss Shirley Lyster, |
Franklin College, and Miss | Mary Conroy, Indiana Univer-
Ft. Wayne alumnae chapter sity, presidents of the college president, who is assisting with chapters in the state, also will arrangements. be at the speaker's table.
The Mature Parent—
Your Child Will Forgive If You Forgive Yourself
By MURIEL LAWRENCE
IFF YOUR YOUNGSTER has been giving you a hurtful and difficult time lately, think a little. Have you done something to | him which makes you feel ashamed? Do you feel that you have done him some injustice? If you have, forgive yourself. Then the child will forgive you. Try it. Children can forgive the wrongs we do to them only if we take the leadership in forgiveness. Mrs. M. abandoned her 6-year-old. son after her husband deserted her. But she loved her child. So she worked for another
human being to hurt someone and suffer for it, remember what was written hundreds of | _ years ago: “Owe no man anything, but to love one another.”
| Annual Card
half dozen P t S t years to make ar Yy e 3. home tor Mrs. Christina Hinchman has He didn’t ap- |been named chairman for the an-
¢ ‘nual spring card party of the Children’s Sunshine Club. It will {be at 1:30 p. m. Apr. 26 in Ayres’|
preciate it. He preferred the
. One frets when Mrs. Lawrence |Auditorium. Mrs. M. pro- The event will benefit the under-|
privileged children attending the| Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp. | Committees assisting include! Mesdames B. L. Byrket, 8S. R.| Lovick, J. F. French, W. J. Weaver, T. G. Evard, J. T. Wallace, A. D. James, F. J. Smith and Harry German. Mrs. R. B. Straughn, president, and the club past presidents, will be in the receiving line.
Frank Fairchild | To Be Speaker
Frank Fairchild, Marion Coun-| ty prosecutor, will be guest speak-| er tomorrow for the 7:15 p. m.|
tested his late hours, her boy said: “You walked out on me without telling me where you were going. Now it's my turn.” Her son said that because his mother still acted ashamed of herself, even though she had corrected her mistake. When she accomplished her self-for-. giveness, she and her boy worked out the real home.
IT'S VERY HARD indeed to live with a child, or anyone else, for that matter, to whom we feel we are in debt. We are apt to say “yes” when we want to say “no.” When we do say “no,” we may say it sharply and unreasonably. We have a tendency to see defiance and slight where they do not exist. When they do exist, we. may be afraid to mention them.
If you have ever forgiven someone else for doing you an
cil for Women as Public Policy| Makers. i Presiding, at the meeting in the Hotel Washington will be Mrs. {Walter Leckrone, president. Miss {Alice Harding will be in charge of the program.
| - Tg 1s Plan Open House The Central Indiana Council,
Boy Scouts of America, will hold | an open house in honor of Mr.
ness means.
It means being reunited with yourself, being a whole person
meeting of the Inter-Group Coun-|j
and Mrs. Frank M. Chase, incom-
again. Your wholeness is what your ehild may be asking for by his fmpertinence, disobedience and
v
Canasta—
You'll Make Serious Error By Freezing The Pile Un
By OSWALD JACOBY
IF NOBODY MELDS or takes the discard pile rounds of play, you may decide to throw a wild card: This type of discard announces to all the other players that you expect to get the pile eventually and that you are willing to make an all-out fight for it. If your opponents also decide to make a fight for the pile they may likewise discard wild cards. In such a case whichever side gets the pile will really win a barrelful. Incidentally, if I throw a wild card and then an opponent throws a wild card also it usually means that one of us is crazy. Very seldom can you expect both sides to get through the entire
* OPEN MONDAY NIGHT
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
: for several
e
drawer, holds up to fruits, vege-
tables.
stockpile without letting any- |get the discard pile eventually, body take the discard pile. If [you will get your wild cards back. somebody does manage to get . » = the pile, the other side has | JF YOU do not get the discard certainly misjudged the situ- |pjle eventually, you have probably ation. made a serious error in freezing When your side freezes the pile, the pack to begin with. (There assuming that you know what you (are exceptional situations, how-
are doing, you can afford to dis-|ever, in which’ you expect that card additional wild cards. If youineither side will be able to get
so — EE m—
PAGE 3
[the pile. These usually occur to- pile and thus make a contribution ward the end of a hand.) to them. If your opponents freeze the pile, it is usually prudent to give|discard a wild card in this situathem credit for a tiny bit of com-|tion only if you think that the mon sense. They must expect to|opponents have made a serious
win the discard pile sooner or|TMistake in freezing. Or if you pretty sure thidt you can later. If their expectation is well through to the end of the founded, it is foolish for you to|pile without giving away throw your wild cards into the|pack.
¢i¥
ess Your Side Has Cards
It would be sound for you to
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