Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 April 1951 — Page 9
R. 20, 1951 Owners
J hompson ers of America, rmer Gov. M. E. porgia speak on American Prin. p. m, state cone eeting in Severin
Mr. Thompson t with the Office stration, but re-er-day job after was ‘“‘consulted /hile drawing the
dt, Chicago, naof the property ation, will also will be installed (fter elections at
1, pastor of Cadle open the convenwith a prayer. s will include J. te president, and Alex M. Clark, sibility.”
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FRIDAY, APR. 20, 1951
Honors Organizations— Club Activities Include Convention From a convention to a final : % RE
spring meeting, club activities for local women are designed to keep
PTA Group
Mrs. Greig
State Head Given Life Membership
By AGNES H. OSTROM
Mrs. Jack C. Greig, newly elected Indiana Parents and Teachers Congress president, was presented a certificate of life membership in the National PT Congress follow-
them busy. Sixteen Indianapolis women will be official delegates to the seventh annual house of delegates meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary to the Indiana State Medical Association. The sessions will be held next Thursday and Friday in the Terre Haute House, Terre Haute. . The program will include a Thursday dinner ‘speech by Dr. W. W. Bauer, Chicago director of the bureau of health education of the American Medical Association, and a Friday luncheon talk by Mrs. Charles Sewell, Otterbein, administrative director of Associated Women, American Farm Bureau Federation. Megnbers of the house of delegates, the policy-making body of the auxiliary, daughters of physicians. Local delegates include Mesdames Frank Hall, Bert Ellis, Otis N. Olvey, Dan Talbott, Charles Y. Knowles, Ray Miller, Harry Pandolfo, John Swan, Roy Myers, Paul Merrell, Lester Bibler, Glen V. Ryan, Earl W, Mericle, Albert Donato, Thomas Cortese and Jerome Holman Jr.
Installation Set Mrs. F. M. Gargher, Michigan City, will be installed as president at the closing session. Also attending will be Mes-
are wives and
g
STYLE SHOW-——Mrs. Lawrence Gegerich (left) and Mrs, Law-
dames Philip B. Reed, W. Bur- rence
Kramer (right) discuss fashions to be shown at the card party
leigh Matthew, Charles F. Voyles and style show to be sponsored Thursday by the Holy Cross Naand Frank M. Gastineau. tional Council of Catholic Women. Wasson's will present the style
Ca
The local branch of the Woman’'s Auxiliary has opened {ts drive for surplus medical supplies and drugs for General Hospital clinics. Mrs. O. L. Kirklin is chairman of the second semi-annual collection. The public will receive approximately 4000 pounds collected from the doctors by the auxiliary and distributed through the hospital clinics. Mrs. Kirklin is being assisted by Mesdames Morris Paynter, Rex Joseph, Walter Ramage, C. W. Siekerman, Norval Folkening, Edward Bloemker, Otto Bakemeier, Lester Bibler and Frank Ramsey. Mesdames Keith Hepburn, Frank Teague, George Rader, R. A. Solomon, Frank M. Gastineau,’
show.
Paul Fouts, Charles George, Kenneth Kohlstaedt, Robert D. Howell, Donald White, T. A. Hanna, Joseph L. West, Herman Kuntz and Roy Geider.
Card Party Set
The committees and plans for
the April Circle card party and style show of the Holy Cross Na~ tional Council of Catholic Women are announced by Mrs, Lawrence Gigerich and Mrs, Lawrence Kramer, co-chairmen. The party will be held Thursday in the Holy
Cross hall following the 8 p. m.!
style show by Wasson's. Committee members include Mesdames Henry Wernsing, Robert Shipman, Joseph White,
| Shortridge; Margaret Paton,
James Gavagham, Margaret
i
|Yaggi and George Hoffman and {Miss Margaret Dierkers. The annual election of officers of the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’s Clubs will {take place at its final meeting Thursday. The group will hold a dinner meeting at 6:15 p. m. in the Woman's Department Club. Five local high school girls will be dinner guests. They are winners in the club’s essay contest, “My Vocation.” They are Donna Knox, Broad Ripple; Judy Hanna,
\
Warren Central; LaVerne Jarrett, Washington, and Eda Jane Atwell, Tech.
Sharp-Long Vows Today
Rite to Be Held In Sweeney Chapel
|Designing Woman
Miss Rosemary Ann Long will become the bride of Paul Eugene, Sharp in a 7:30 p. m. ceremony today in Sweeney Chapel, Butler| ‘University. The couple’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Long, 4601 E. 34th St, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl F.“Sharp, 1162 W. 34th St. The Rev. Lewis A. McAdow of the University Park Christian Church will officiate. Miss Betty Lou Long in aqua taffeta will be her sister's maid of honor, She will wear matching mitts, Susan Parmer will be flowergirl.
Male Attendants
Robert Brown will be best man. Square corner table set-up,
Ushers will be Joseph Beecher
and Thomas Reese. ‘Plan Activities
The bride's gown, made by her! grandmother, will be fashioned
of white satin with a scalloped!
lace yoke.
a white Bible topped with a white orchid. ' Immediately following the reception to be held at the Hillcrest
Country Club the couple will Wheatley Branch, the Blue Trileave for Cincinnati. - {angle Residence and the Central
On their return they will live at'1621 N. Capitol Ave.
Hold Benefit Show
Adults aren't the only ones backing the cancer fund. Eight
local students five to 15 years old spection.
near 58th St. and Pennsylvania St., gave a benefit show during spring vacation. Participating were Martha Barden, Marthene and Jim Browning, Patsy Brown, Susie Fineburg, Babsy Larman,
Bob Canipbell and Boyce Eildson. wood, Fla.
Have You Selected Your
Wedding Invitations Wedding Announcements Informals
Her shoulder length! veil will fall from a tiara of Sponsored next week by the local orange blossoms. She will carry YWCA to mark the celebration of
Corner tables are just what the doctor ordered for compact arrangements of upholstered furniture. If there's enough room, try this long table idea. The rightungle seats are separated and persons seated on them more comfortable than with the typical
For YW CA Week
| A series of activities will be
national YWCA week. Opening the program will be open houses from 3:30 to 5:30 p. m. Sunday at the
Branch. Weekday activities will be scheduled in the gym, swi pool or clubrooms. A play, “We Call It Freedom,” will be presented at 8:15 p. m. Wednesday. Workshops will be open for in-
On Florida Trip
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Archer, 3967 N. New Jersey St., left today for several weeks stay in Holly-
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Miss Pace
To Be Bride
Church Ceremony Set Tonight
Miss Betty Lou Pace and James E. Lyell will be married in a double-ring ceremony at 8:30 p. m. today in the Englewood Christian Church. The Rev. Harry Poll will officiate. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Pace, 430 Eastern Ave. and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lyell, 1216 Eugene St., are parents of the couple. Only attendant and matron of honor, Mrs. Paul Crawshaw, will wear a frock of peach taffeta and ne
Best Man
James Young, North Salem, will be best man. Ushers will be William Moore and Bernard Langenbacher. The bride will wear a gown of ivory satin accented with a sheer Yoke and a small collar. Her full skirt will fall into a cathédral train. Her two-tiered fingertip veil of imported illusion will fall from a Juliet cap trimmed with seed pearls. She will carry a white prayerbook topped with a white orchid. Immediately following the reoeption in the church parlors, the couple will leave for a motor trip the southern states.
State Youth Unit to Meet
Council to Elect Officers Thursday
Officers will be elected and an auditing committee appointed Thursday at the meeting of the Indiana Youth Conservation Council in the World War Memorial. Registration will be at 9:30 a. m. Speakers and their topics will be “What Is Indiana Scholastic Art Exhibit,” Mrs. Alvin C. Johnson; “Yard Beautiful Course in the Public Schools,” William A. Evans, and “How Organizations May Aid the Children's Symphony,” Miss Josephine Madden. The board of directors is recommending the executive board be enlarged to include a correspondIng secretary and immediate past president. It is further recommending the office of secretary and treasurer be separate offices. Mrs. Thad Clarke will give the nominating committee report.
WHEN you are on a diet a house guest brings you a box of candy. WRONG: Make a point of saying that you are on a diet.
RIGHT: Be gracious enough to accept the gift with expressed pleasure, instead of wailing about your diet. ” . . " YOU have a small group of women to your hbuse for - lunch, WRONG: Bay, “Just sit anywhere” when the luncheon is served.
RIGHT: Tell the guests
ing her installation yesterday.
Joe Craw, New Castle, made the presentation. 4 Mrs. Greig, Dr. A. A. Smith, West Lafayette, first vice president, and Mrs. George Mellin, New Albany, secretary, were installed by Mrs. Joseph W. Walker, Greenfield, retiring president.
The new officers and Mrs. Carl Schloesser, London, state office manager, will represent the IPTC board at the 1951 national convention. This announcement was made at the post convention board of managers meeting in the Hotel Lincoln.
Five to Be Elected
Five national officers will be elected at National Congress May 21-23 in Miami Beach, Fla. Indiana is entitled to 183 voting
delegates.
* Board of managers members planning to attend include Mrs.
{W. A. Seibert, Lawrenceburg; Mrs.
Charles Boynton, Elkhart; Mrs. R. J. Rossow, Evansville; Mrs. Leonard Miller, Boonville; Mesdames Ray Linville, C. H. Boyer and Walter Brown, Lafayette; Mrs. Lewis Stanley, Richmond; Mrs. Dwight Perkins, Bedford, and Mrs. David P. Ashton, New Castle.
Also going to Miami Beach will be Mrs. Leonard Pearson, Tech High School PTA president, and Mrs, Silas Muller, Lafayette city council,
Mrs. John A. Davis, who served as convention arrangements chairman for the two-day state meeting which adjourned yesterday, was named chairman of the committee to decide the place and date for the ’'52 state convention. Also serving are Mesdames Basil Fischer, Greig and Schloesser.
June 25 was set as the date for the next executive committee and board of managers meetings. They will be at 9 a. m. and 10 a. m. respectively, in the Union Building, Bloomington.
Conference Next Day
The Indiana University conference will be on the campus the next day and the three-day workshop will follow. Dr. Donald] Simon, Bloomington, Region Five vice president, will have charge of the workshop on “Leadership Training in Home-School Co-op-eration.”
During convention Indiana's na tional headquarters fund was swelled by contributions of $402.68. Earlier Mrs. Bert C. McCammon, headquarters fund
Kindred photo. Mrs. Bennett Kraft
The Indiana League of Women Voters will be represented at the council meeting in Washington Wednesday and Thursday by Mrs, Hubert Hall, Crawfordsville, and Mrs. Bennett Kraft. At the Wednesday night dinner meeting Rep. and Mrs. Charles Brownson and Rep. Cecil Harden will be guests of the two delegates. “American Leadership in the Free World” will be discussed by W. Averell Harriman, special assistant to the President.
DAR Congress Closes Today
Evening Banquet
Is Final Event
WASHINGTON, Apr. 20 (UP) —Some 6000 tired Daughters of the American Revolution prepared to wind up their 60th Continental Congress today and go home for another year. The DAR planned to pass more resolutions, install eight newly elected officers and have a final get-together at an evening banquet. DAR spokesmen said they might pass another and stronger resolution supporting Gen. Douglas MacArthur who highlighted their week-long gathering with a threeminute speech yesterday. They gave him a vote of confidence early this week. That was before the General accepted their invitation to speak.
Rousing Welcome The Daughters gave the General, his wife—also a DAR—and their son a rousing welcome yesterday., Afterward Mrs. Russell William Magna, honorary Presi-
officers that yesterday also was “the anniversary of the Battle of Lexington in which the Minute Men fired the shot that echoed around the world.” : Among the resolutions already passed by the DAR was one asking Congress to cut the federal budget and freeze foreign economic aid. The DAR also passed a resolution for a survey of its
dent General, reminded the DAR|
chairman, announced local units own budget in an effort to balhad given $13,857.01, more ‘than gnce it. half of Indiana's $25,000 goal. The| Their membership report building will be erected in Chi- showed a net increase of 2500 cago. {members during the past year for The final count for registered a total of around 166,000. Durdelegates and visitors at conven-|ing that period the organization
tion was 1891. This is an increase over the last two conventions in Ft. Wayne and French Lick. This year’s program finale was a panel, “Citizens in the Making,” given by five Jefferson High School students.
By MARGUERITE SMITH Times Garden Editor Q—What can I plant on a shady terrace around a porch? We have used tuberous begonias but the strong west winds whip them too much. Allisonville Rd. A—If the porch is not high above the terrace (so that you need tall plants to hide the foundation), consider ground covers. You can then plant spring bulbs under them for color early in the season. Some of the ground covers can be counted on to stay green the yéatr around, too. Possible choices — Japanese spurge (pachysandra), myrtle, ivy, wood violets, ajuga, eunoymous radicans. If you start grape hyacinths here and there
lost more than 5000 members— about evenly divided between deaths and resignations. But they added about 7500 new members.
New Officers
Mrs. Donald Bennett Adams, national chairman of the Chil. dren of the American Revolution, encouraged the DARs to register more of their young relatives in that organization. * “Don’t be skittish about your age,” she sald. “After all, if you're a grandmother, we know you're over 21.” The DAR yesterday elected Miss Lillian Chenoweth, Washington, and former D. C. regent, as honorary vice president. Elected as vice presidents general were Mrs. John N. Pharr, New Iberia, La.; Mrs. Willlam L. Ainsworth, Derby, Kas.; Mrs, Young H. Yarbrough, Milledgeville, Ga.; Mrs. Harlow B. Kirkpatrick, Pittsburgh; Mrs. Harry J. Smith, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Miss Margaret Goodwin, Beloit, Wis., and Mrs. Roy E. Heywood, Portland, Me.
Mrs. Hasbrook Named
Council President
Mrs. H. L, Hasbrook was elected president of the Indianapolis Council of Women yesterday at a called meeting in the American National Bank.
in the bed you will soon have| Also elected were Mrs. Carl them covering the ground, pro-/Sauer and Mrs. John Donagh, ducing their pretty blue flowers frst and second vice presidents; in spring, with their foliage Mrs. Robert Straughn and Mrs. green almost all year long. George Kamphaus, recording and corresponding secretaries, and Send all questions on garden-|Mrs. Kurt Schmidt, treasurer. ing to Marguerite Smith, The| They will be installed at the Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis May 1 meeting in the Hotel 9, Ind. Lincoln.
My Day— Death of Bevin Casts Shadow Over London Trip
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT GENEVA, Apr. 20—A shadow was cast over our
brief London stay when we heard the news of Ernest Bevin's death. Winston Churchill's description of him
as a valiant spirit was a most fitting one. When Mr. Bevin was last in the United States, many people felt he should’not have undertaken such a trip under the condijions of health that were already bothering im. The former foreign minister's heart was in the work of the Labor government and one could only admire his devotion to a cause and his real strength as a leader of the workérs. Without him I doubt if the people of Great Britain would have understood so well why they had to go through these years of sacrifice, 0 6
WHEN MEN are in the arena 8f political life there are often times when. one cannot see eye to eye with them on every subject, . and that was true at times for me while Mr. Bevin was foreign secretary. © hws Nevertheless, as Mr. Churchill said, “He has his place in history, and as a leader of labor in a difficult period he acquitted
where to sit at the table,
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aT,
himse]f with courage and showed great qualities of leadership,”
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