Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1951 — Page 6

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DAR Adopts MacArthur | |

Resolution Group Indorses Military Record

. WASHINGTON, Apr. 17 (UP)— The Daughters of the American Revolution gave Gen, Douglas MacArthur a vote of confidence! today and praised his record as a “great military leader.” Some 6000 DAR's, gathered here for their 60th annual Continental Congress, applauded as they | adopted a resolution commending Gen. MacArthur. | The resolution stated: i “Whereas Gen. Douglas MacAr-| thur has maintained dignity, proved loyalty to his country and demonstrated ability in the con< duct of his life as a great military leader, “Resolved that the Daughters of the American Revolution commend him for his record and express confidence in his continued defense of American principles.” Mrs. James B. Patton, DAR president, pians to call Gen. MacArthur in San Francisco tonight, spokesmen said. She will try to persuade him to address the DAR Congress this week while he is here testifying before Congress.

Other Measures The DAR Resolutions Committee, spokesmen said, is preparing geveral other resolutions reported to oppose sending

rope without congressional consent. international treaties unless “ “TrdePendence” of U. 8. action is

safeguarded. socialized medicine,

world government and the display of the United Nations flag in a position equal with or over

the American Flag The Congress, representing 166.0000 women, also may receive a resolution partially supporting Universal Military Training legislation and others pralsing the work of the Senate Crime Investigating Committee and the House Un-American Activities Committee. President Truman believes the united free nations are building their defenses at a rate “which we trust will discourage further Communist attacks” and aggression, He told the DAR in a brief message last night that the “first naked militarv assault” of world wide communism has been checked in Korea.

Product of Revolution He predicted the United States

and its allies will win freedom's fight. He pledged ~the United States “to fight to preserve the

freedom as other generations of Americans have fought to preserve it.” “We people of the United Btates are the product of a revolution.” Mr. Truman said. “The founders of our form bf government were revolutionists. They were men and women who left their homes and their jobs, their —— farms and their villages, to make common cause against opDEession and a threatened tyrann “It is the task of ig ‘present generations of the free world to understand and to defend. with armed force if necessary, this

troops to Eu-.

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Ripple. Library

PLANS UNDER THE BIG

Talks Set

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mes ph

Henry E. Glesing Jr.

to by

“ P—Charles Nakarai shows

Earlene Wright the circus display which carries out the theme of the Hoosier Student Librarians Association state meeting Saturday

in Broad Ripple High School.

ADULT librarians... are well on their way, Saturday High School for the Earlene Wright

Hoosie

L.awrence (

state president of the Hoosier Sti students who figures

one of many local planning. She works in the school 3 brary at Lawrence Centra Like the other members of the state association, she plans to

study to be a librarian following her high school graduation. Charles Nakarai, Broad Ripple ireshman, is responsible for his school’s work in carrying out the conference theme in everything from decorations to program. He is the son of Professor Toyozo W. Nakaral, Butler University school of religion, and Mrs. Nakarai. a librarian in the archives of the state library.

Will Preside

Charles, chairman of the general session at 10:30 a. m.. will preside at the meeting preceding the group discussions. Approximately 63 per cent of Hoosier high schools, many of

r high school library assistants they will meet at Broad Ripple

ir third state-wide conference.

‘entral High School junior and idents Librarians Association, is in the pre- conference

whom are represented in ‘the state association, have some form of library club. Broad Ripple has 20 members. The program for the all-day meeting includes a 9:30 a. m. mixer, 10:30 a. m. group discussipn, noon luncheon, 1:30 p. m. program and 3 p. m. visit to Holladay Memorial Library for teens. Miss Mabel Leigh Hunt, dren's author. will luncheon. Tech High School radio students and the Tech Choir will be featured on the postluncheon program. Three Broad Ripple students in

chilspeak at the

clown costumes will lead the circus parade to the various sessions of the all-day meeting

Four librarv exhibits will be displayed in the school during the meeting.

1600 Delegates Expected

At State PTA Congress

Helping “Mama” get ready

for convention took precedence

continuing liberation of the hu- Over all eise in hundreds of Hoosier homes up and down. the

man spirit.”

Hails Women

In Politics Fairchild Speaks

To Women's Council Women can give politics. “the life blood of every community,” the transfusion it needs to wipe ,out corruption and vice, Marion County prosecutor Frank Fairchild =aid last night. Speaking before the Inter-Group Council for Women as Public Policy Makers. in the Hotel Washington the prosecutor said, “in this day of political immorality, ft i= more important than ever that women take an active part in politics.” He urged them to use the balance of power which they have, to exert their right to run for and be elected to any political office.

Cites Gaming Drive Referring to his current drive on organized gambling, he pointed out ‘gambling was economically unwise and politically unhealthy for a community. It causes corruption of officials, a breakdown in law enforcement and economic danger where it exists uncontrolled “Women,” he deélared, “are the ones most interested in safety of their homes and familias and in the integrity of holders. “During the past few elections in Marion county the women's votes have not only heen important, they have been the deciding factor.” Presiding was Mrs. Leckrone, group president.

Walter

their office:

state today.

“Mama” and some

ers Congress which opens tomor,row morning in the Murat Temple here,

According to state PTA headquarters in Indianapolis plans are being made for some 1600 delegates and 500 visitors at convention. A preconvention feature will be tonight's 7 o'clock dinner meeting of the state board in the Hotel Lincoin Travertine Room.

Band to Play

Registration will a. m. tomorrow and gional led bv local unit presidents will be at 9:30 a. m. The Warren Central High School band will piay. Presiding at sion will be Mrs. ker, Greenfield, state president; Paul F. Boston, LaPorte (first vice president, and Mrs. E. W Arnett, Bloomington, second vice president. Dr. Herman L. Shibler, Indianapolis public schools superintendent, will give an address on “Education for Freedom.” Mrs Walker will review IPTC work for the year.

begin at R

the proces-

the opening sesJoseph W. Wal-

Election Planned

Features of the afternoon program will be a demonstration of visual! aids in the classroom and a clinic on “What Services Can the. Rural PTA Render in the Improvement of Rural Schools?”

Gov. Schricker will greet the PTA representatives tomorrow hight. Dr. John H. Furbay,

Annual Glassware Sale It's a Real Spring Housecleaning

Odd Lots of Discontinued Patterns

20% TO 50% OFF

If You Like Bargains—

You'll Love This Sale! |

ALL SALES FINAL

NO EXCHANGES! NO RETURNS

Charles Mager ud Company

Ing out might result in accidental new product now available at

® 29 WEST WASHINGTON STREET © {eating by pets or small children,

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“Papas” too, were tying up the loose ends jof household and business responsibilities. i They were preparing to attend the two-dav, (the Indiana Parents and Teach-

TWA'’s director of air world education, will give the main address.

Polls for the election of presi-|

dent, first vice president and secretary will be open Thursday morning. Convention will adjourn following installation of officers Thursday afternon.

Election Held By Auxiliary

Yonex s Bureau Group Meets

The Auxiliary to the (‘hildren's Bureau of the Indianapolis Orphan Asylum held election of officers vesterday in the home of Mrs. Albert Campbell, 4505 Park Ave. New officers include Mrs. James Gregory, president; Mrs. Robert E. Jones, vice president: Mrs George B. Huff and Mrs. Robert Raber, recording and .correspond. ing secretaries; Mrs. Bruce Savage and Mrs. William Garvey, treasurer and assistant treasurer, and

Mrs. Charles A. Gallup, general chairman. i It was announced at the meeting the annual foster mothers’ luncheon will be May 11 at the Warren Hotel. Mrs. Charles E.: Brown is in ‘charge of arrange-

ments, Guest speaker will he the Rev. Howard Stone, pastor of vington Presbyterian Church.

Dental -Dames

"Plan Dance

The Indiana University Dames will hold a “Bowery Ball” in honor of their husbands, dental!

school students, at 8:30 p. m. Apr.! Mrs. Amos Sourbrine, Newcastle, Rose City Garden Club, and Mrs. Herman Hall,

28 at Hilltop House. Special dance teams will be on the entertainment program. Mrs. Charles Hamer is general} chairman.

ser, Sidney Schwimer, John Vogel, Jack Vorhies, Rodney Phelps, William Meeks, Paul Cottrell, Charles Denton, William Detroy, Ray Price and William Norris.

Need Warning Sign Of Spoiled Food

Heed warning signs that tinned foods have spoiled. Be suspicious

|of bulging cans, leaking cans or cans with split seams.

It's best not to risk even a tiny taste, since] very: small amounts of ruined]

foods can cause dire results: Make certain, when you discard]

such a can, that you make permanent disposal. Casual throw-

'Long. Stumpf and Katherine Alsmeyer.

: {July 14 and 15 in gardens for a special benefit.

ers; Mrs. D. B.

1951 convention of hibits,

the Ir-|

Dental

skits and numbers by|

Committee assistants| include Mesdames Harold Glas-

'Organizations—

Card Party an

Announce List of Committee Leaders

A card party, meetings and a covered dish luncheon highlighted the organization news today. The Cathedral High School Mothers Club will hold a card party and bake sale at 1:30 and 8 p. m. Friday in the school auditorium.

Committee include

chairmen

| Mesdames James Domadio, H. A. .Zeyen,

Ray Sweeney, Kenneth Bea, Dan Moran, William Catton, William. J. Mooney, Harry Hammond, C. R. Beck, V. J. Obergfell,

| Russell Battreall and Don Moore.

Mrs. Edward Gass is general chairman.

The St. Francis Hospital Guild

{will have a card party at 1 p. m.

Apr. 26 in the Food Craft Shop. Mrs. Julius Armbruster is general chairman. Mrs. Edward Schneider and Mrs. Bernard W2imer are in charge of the tickets. Committee members are Mesdames Balint Anthony, Peter Specht, William Murphy, Karl Keifer, Albert Lechner, John William Faust, Walter

Others are Mesdames I. G. Boyd, Henry Gardner, Fred Koch, {Roy Nation, Matilda Mill, Lillian [Robertson, Charles Gaither, William Klefker, Rosemary Amphor, Elizabeth Kistner and Mary Kiss{ling. Final arrangements were made by the group, for a Summer Fiesta the hospital All parishes of the city will be asked

ito co-operate.

The Alpha Chi Omega Sorority Alumnae will hold a meeting at 7:30 p. m. Thursday at the Irvington branch, Union Federal and Loan Bank. Serving as hostesses will be Mrs. Edwin Kelb, Mrs. William Ellis, Miss Betty’ Graham and Miss Sue Guthridge.

)

The Mothers Club of the English Avenue Boys Club will have a covered dish luncheon at 12:30 p. m. next Tuesday at the club. Installation of officers will be at 2 p. m.

IFC Readies

Convention

Arrangements

Chairman Named

Mrs. Jasper P. Scott, Oaklandon, ~ Seventh District, Indiana

Federation of Clubs president, has...

been named chairman of local arrangements for the state IFC convention here next month. It will be May 2-4 in the Claypool Hotel. Other named include Mrs. Zionsville, reception; Mrs. Ben Nigh. Morristown, door; Mrs, Maude Collins, Pendleton. ushMitchell, Kokomo. breakfasts, and Mrs. Ira Pomeroy, Plainfield, luncheons.

Dinner Chairman Mrs. Hermine Colson. Bluffton, dinners; Mrs. Fred Starr Greencastle, time keepers; Mrs. Cassel Zirkel, New Castle. pages; Mrs. Howard Miller, Attica. exand Mrs. Bertha Didway, accompanist. Aides to Mrs. Claude S. Knox. president, “will be Yvonne Hiler, Walkerton, Mrs. Herman Zechiel, Knox. Hostesses will be presidents of the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth and Ninth Districts and Mrs. Scott. They are Mesdames Pomeroy, Nigh, {Colson and Mitchell Yespectiv ely:

committee chairmen C. W. Cook,

Steele, Mrs. and

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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d Luncheon

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TUESDAY, APR. 17, 1951

Are Among Events for Week

ZTA Plans Province

Luncheon

Butler Event Set for Week-End

Delegates to the Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority Epsilon Province convention Saturday and Sunday at Butler University will take part in workshops geared to the convention theme of “Constant Values in a Changing World.” Chapters from Indiana and Illinois will be represented. A 1 p. m. luncheon will be Saturday at the Atherton Student Center. The program will feature “Realities You Can Bank On.” Mrs. Oliver M. Reed, Indianapolis alumnae president, will be mise tress of ceremonies.

Speakers Table

At the speakers table will be Mrs. Byron Kortier, Eau Claire, {Wis., national council’ member; Mrs. M. O. Ross, wife of the president of Butler University who will be a special guest; Mrs. Jack Greig, alumna of the Butler ZTA chapter and only candidate for

{president of the Indiana Parent

Teacher Association Congress; Mrs. James K. Gardner, Chicago,

province president; Mrs. Helen Winton Jenkins, Evanston, natianal secretary-treasurer, and

Miss Mary Jean Yoder, Elkhart, province secretary-treasurer. Others will be Mrs. T. W. Frid-

MONTHLY PARTY—The first Friday of each month this scene takes place at Marydale School. Among the Marydale Guild-sponsored activities is a party for girls having birthdays during the month. Serving the cake are Mesdames Nicholas Reinhart, Russell Battreall and Carl Kehrer (left to

right). the school.

Proceeds of the guild's card party next Tuesday will be used for this and other projects at The card party will be at 1:30 p. in. in Block's Auditorium.

Blackwood on Bridge—

Guessing on Opponents’ Distributions Is Easier if They Are Good Card Players

THERE ARE TWO basic

hand. They might be called actual and inferential.

sources of information in counting a

An f{llustration

East dealer

of actual information is the case where a player shows out of a Neither side vulnerable

suit after following to two rounds.

When this happens, you are cer-,

tain that he started with two cards in the suit and. of course, that indicated exactly: how many cards his partner has in the same suit.

You can't go wrong on this sort of information unless the opponent who shows out of the suit has revoked. But then you are rewarded with a two-trick penalty so you don't have to worry too much about that. Inferential information is the kind you get by guessing at the opponent's distributions, basing your “guesses” on their bidding and play of the cards. Oddly enough, such inferences are inclined to be more accurate when you are playing against good opponents. In other words their bids and plays ean usually be counted on to be orthodox. But drawing inferences from the bidding and play of Mr. Muzzy is like building a house on quick-

Take today’s hand, for example. The accepted opening from three cards to the queen in your partner's bid suit, is the lowest card. Mr. Muzzy doesn't know this—or if he knows it, he ignores it.

Opens With Queen

HIS OPENING was the queen of hearts. Mr. Dale won with the king and cashed the ace on which Mr. Muzzy played the deuce. Next came the jack of hearts. Poor Mr. Champion never even thought of -the right play. He “knew’ Mr. Muzzy was now out of hearts. Still confident of making the hand (and why wouldn't he be?), he ruffed with the jack of spades. After that, there was no way to prevent Mr. Muzzy from winning a trick with his 10 of spades and

the sure club loser completed the set.

ra —————————— I,

Music Clubs Meeting Set

sand. A group of Indianapolis women will go to Muncie Friday for

the state convention of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs. Mrs. Albert M. Warner, soprano, will be on the program. Miss Marian Laut will be her accom-

panist. Also going from here will be Mesdames Claire McTurnan

oy

Frank W. Cregor, H. N. Edington, William H. Gibbs and Robert W. Blake. Mesdames F. H. Sterling, Caryl H. Cook, Bliss Wells, Maebelle Ellis and Earl R. Briggs. Members of the Anderson Evening Musicale will Mrs. l.awrence Parke Smith Muncie, is state president.

YEAR BOOK AWARDS—A feature of tha recent Garden Club of Indiana convention at Pur-

due University was the awarding of ribbons ta clubs for year books, They were presented by Mrs.

C. V. Steed, Redkey (center), or

Central West District director, and Mrs.

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Representing winnin elma, Rural

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Robison- Ragsdale Events Scheduled

The Robison-Ragsdale Post and ,/Auxiliary announce coming events: At 4 p. m. Sunday the group will have a Kkite-flying contest at the Knightstown Home, Knightstown, for Division 30. Movies will follow and a pitch-in supper will be served. Mrs. John B. Long and Stewart Maxwell are general chairmen. On Monday the .Armazindy

be hostesses®*Chapter of the Riley Cheer Guild

consisting of auxiliary members will go to Riley Hospital for sewing and bandage rapping.

Dramatic Fraternity Honors Local Student

Times State Service

HANOVER, Apr. 17—Andy Pelham, Hanover College senior, has been elected to Theta Alpha Phi, national honorary dramatic fraternity at the college. He has been active in the Hanover Players the past two years. The son of Mr. and Mrs: Howard B. Pelham. 4525 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis, Andy has just returned from San Miguel de Allende, Mex... where he visited friends during spring vacation.

holm, Blue Island, Ill. state mem{bership chairman; Mrs. Ralph | Odell, Ft. Wayne, Indiana state

{membership chairman; Miss Virfsel Roe, Franklin College registrar, and the presidents of the seven active chapters in Epilson Province. Mrs. Merrill Sullivan, general chairman for the luncheon, will be assisted by Mesdames Eugene (Rader, H. H. Blankertz, Norman (Warren, Richard C. Lennox, John Andersen, J. N. Bailey, K. W, Carr and John Shelby, and Misses Barbara Bassett, Jane Gibson and (Mary Katherine Green.

Girls' School Project OKd

State Garden Club To Build Greenhouse

A project begun several years ago by Irvington's Green Thumb Garden Club crystallized into a state-wide project last week. Federated garden clubs of the state in convention voted to accept as their next project the building of a greenhouse at the Indian Girls School at Clermont. Women of the Green Thumb Club encouraged flower interest at the school by planting a few bulbs around the buildings several vears ago. Then they made a flower garden. Later. courses in making winter corsages and decorations for the. girls’ cottages were directed by the Irvington club members,

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$250 Given The Green Thumb Garden Club {with Mrs. Herman Bischof,

chairman of its greenhouse committee, is backing the project, As soon as the new state president can complete her organization a state chairman will be appointed and will collect all money given for it. Garden club leaders hope pub-lic-spirited citizens outside the club as well as in will contribute. A total of $250 already has been given, according to Mrs, Irvin Morris, publicity chairman for the state clubs.

Wednesday's s Menus

BREAKFANT: Stewed rhubarb, shredded wheat, crisp bacon, enriched toast, butter or fortified margarine, coffee, milk:

LUNCHEON:

Casserole of

canned kidney ‘beans with grated cheese, wholewheat bread, butter or fortified margarine, sliced tomatoes, mocha marshmallow float, tea. DINNER: Cold sliced lefte

over roast, creamed potatoes, canned peas, enriched bread, butter or fortified margarine, spring salad, French dressing, sliced oranges and bananas. cookies, coffee, milk.

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