Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1951 — Page 17

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THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1951

Federation. of St

Promotes Wholesome Exchange of Ideas

By JOAN SCHOEMAKER “TO PROMOTE better relations among the various schools, their pupils, communities and student councils, and to help them solve (heir problems through an exchange of ideas,” « « « that’s the creed of the new Indianapolis Federation of Student Councils. Monday four representatives

of the organization will attend a national convention for student council representatives at Gamaliel Bradford High School, Wellesley, Mass. : They are Mary Ann Edelen, Attucks; Tom Cisco, Howe; Florence Redding, Shortridge, and John Mutz, Broad Ripple. Thomas Stirling, faculty sponsor from Howe, will accompany the group on the four-day national convention.

Plan Discussions

Mr, Stirling will speak on “The Limitation of Student Council Authority” at one of the Tuesday sessions. Thirty discussion groups and 13 prob‘lem clinics will cover the theme, “Youth f.eadership in a Changing World.” The local group, reorganized this spring, elected Dick Moll, Broad Ripple, as president. Ad- ’ ditional officers, as prescribed in the new constitution, will be elected in the fall. Seven city high schools, Attucks, Broad Ripple, Howe, Washington, Tech, Shortridge

Fete Opens Nurses' Home

Complete Facilities At Norways

The completion of home facilities for 24 student nurses at Norways Sanatorium was marked by an open house from 4 to 8 p. m. Tuesday. The home, at 1850 E. 10th St. is a project of the Norways Foundation Guild and will accommodate student nurses taking psychiatric training at Norways. Mrs. Lida May Jury, new housemother, will be in charge. The first students will be from Ball Memorial Hospital, Muncie. Guild committee members responsible for the project and hostesses were Mesdames Ralph Edgerton, Chester Lamber, Ross Kitchen. Clarence Efroymson, Harry Reid Jr., Walter Pritchard, Charles Trees, Forrest Teel, Harry Mallison and Harry Crumpacker. Also assisting at the open house were Mesdames Ralph Spaan, Murray De ‘Armond, E. C. Atkins, Earl W. Mericle, Philip B. Reed and Raymond Crom.

DAR Lunch Is Held

The Jonathan Jennings DAR Chapter celebrated Flag Day with a luncheon meetinig today. wi Walter E. Nelson, newly ele recording secretary, was hostess in her Brendonwood home. New officers installed with Mrs. Nelson were Mrs. Carrol B. Stine, regent; Mrs. Chester W. Albright, vice regent; Mrs. John W. Kadel, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. John T. Clark, treasurer.

A Thrifty Staple A pound of vitaminized mar. garine is a thrifty staple in any household. Use it for greasing baking pans, scrambling eggs, brush chicken with it melted, put it in mashed potatoes, sauces, pastry and cakes. See how many pennies you'll save. .

Decorative Note

Majeska, jewelry designer for La Tausca, has a delightful new decorative note in her New York apartment. Holding back the sheer white organdy curtains of her bedroom are enormous swags of oversize fake pearls tied in a big knot at the side.

! IT'S A REAL HIT!

Everything for Kiddies! There’ are musical toys—wheel toys ~—guns—cowboys suits—kites —banks— brooms—sweepers ~—drums—horns—tea sets — novelties — knick knacks — trucks—skis— MORE THAN we can ever list. For Boys and Girls—Big or small!

All Sales Final! No Returns!

| Charles Mayer and Company (+. 39. W. Washington Street @ indianapolis

+e et » . fy AN A PB BB A BN ST ceri gain a

Times Photo by Dean Timmerman,

CONFERENCE BEFORE THE CONFERENCE—Dick Moll (right) briefs four local delegates to the national convention for student council members. The four, who will arrive at Wellesley, Mass., Mon.

day, are (left to right) Mary Edelen, Florence Redding, Tom Cisco and Johnny Mutz

and Manual, are represented by three delegates each at the council meetings in the local school board office.

Advisory Board

The students themselves will act as an advisory board established to. discuss and give opinions and helpful sugges-

tions to the schools which are members. These local discussions will include many of the things to be discussed at the national convention next week. In council meetings, representatives will discuss the topics that they consider as students in their own social groups « « « Drojects, point systems,

o

training for democratic living, better interschool relations, recreation.

In the three meetings held so far, the local group has completed initiai organization steps and made plans for the fall and winter meetings preceding the state convention scheduled here in the spring. .

fudent Councils Is Organized Here Royalton Committees

Are Named

| Patrons, officials and com-

Patrons, Officials Also Listed

|mittees are announced for the Royalton Steeplechase Saturday at Wells Hampton Farm.

Box reservations have been

made for James S. Rogan, William B. Ansted Jr., Cornelius 0. Alig, Alex Thomson, Charles Mayer, Thomas J. Umphrey, W. E, Kuhn, Herman C. Krannert, Willam R. Krafft, L. J. Noonan, Lyman 8. Ayres, Fred Cline, H. F, Krimendahl, C. Bruce McConnell, Otto N. Frenzel, Louis Schwitzer Sr, ‘William C. Griffith and Rus‘sell White. | Joseph J. Daniels, Anton Hulman Jr, Mrs, Wiliam H. Wemmer, John Bookwalter, J, BE, Cain, George Sadlier, Sylvester Johnson Sr., Harrison Eiteljorg, E. B. Mhrtindale, W. F. Souder Jr,, Edward A. Block, J. Emmett McManamon, Ralph 8. Norwood, Harold R. Taylor, Howard Intermill, Edwin T. French, Burford Danner, Ronald B. Woodard and George Hoster. Officials 'will include Carter P. Brown, C. O. Alig and Mr. Krimendahl, stewards; Mr. Kuhn, Mr. Sadlier and Mr. Mayer, judges; Edward Kinney and Gilbert Sheely, course clerks; Sylvester Johnson Jr. and Paul DeVault, starters; Robert Bohlen and Mr, Woodard, scales clerks. Wally Nehrling and Arnold

Blackwood on Bridge—

{ding shown in toda was not giving a no trump raise’ His bid was Blackwood—asking for aces. He learned his ‘partner

odd and made it with ease. Some players, and good ones

to make the slam suggestion than by jumping to four no trump.

too, use the four no trump bid range.

ing a slam at six no trump. This is "foolish, In the first place, 3°20 pass. you have a hand which justifies such probing, there are other ways

THE BEST way is to bid some ner would be justified in bidding]

bid whether he is interested in going on.

There Are Other Ways to Make Slam Play Than by Jumping to Four No Trump .

WHEN MR. DALE BID four new suit in which you have highisix no trump after you jump his i Mis: Esther Wilson, no trump in the sequence of bid-'card control—preferably a minor. two no trump bid to four, ar Lan dud M Hildegarde Wemmer, y's hand, he You can judge by partner's next extremely rare.

THEORETICALLY,

and shown a willingness to play your principal strength is.

{at game only. Those hands where your part-|

Clare Maxwell

Is Promoter of

By United Press NEW YORK, June 14 — Clare Maxwell Young, housewife and

the old adage: “You never like the person you owe money to.” | Since last January, Mrs. Young! as “ambassadress of good will”| for Fist Federal Savings & Loan Assn. of New York, has been visiting new owners of First Federalfinanced homes to chat about babies, rosebushes and living room drapes and, incidentally, to win friends for the association. Mrs. Young's unique public relations job came into being when First Federal's president Harold C. Hahn expressed the wish that “people could know we're not just a cold name, but a friendly or-

ganization.”

Largest in N. Y.

First Federal is the largest savings and loan institution in New York state and the 14th largest among the 6000 throughout the country, With an $8 million mortgage volume last year alone,

Come To Our FAMOUS FOURTH FLOOR

Summer (learance and House (leaning Large Group of TOYS All in Good Condition

Reduced "2 Price and Less Items Priced 5¢, 10¢, 25¢ up.

the association found it just about

mother, is hard at work changing |

Young Thrift

{impossible to achieve the close, | small-town relation with borrowers that it wanted.

Hence, Mrs. Young,

{secretary to President Hahn, took {H—8 3 2 over the job of convincing new DA 1042 home owners that the old concept! C—9

of a hard-hearted “Simon Legree” mortgagee is no longer true.

Varied Requests

Mrs. Young's reports to President Hahn are “gossipy” stories

the family pup or gardening problems as subjects more relevant to the savings and loan field. But, in the words of President Hahn, they are a record of “extraordinary success” in creating warm personal relationships. On occasfon, Mrs. Young has given advice on everything from premature babies to hand-painted curtains, and once was called upon to give professional help to an expectant pup and a canary bird with epileptic fits. In her more representative visits, however—she makes about three a day in Jersey and Westchester—Mrs. Young first introduces the First Federal and its

» To enferfain you during Summer vacation! 3» To take on vacation! » To give as gifts! » To put away till next Christmas! Don't Miss It — You'll have a circus yourself! Bargains every where! It's d big “shoot "em up" affair — Everyone will be going "THIS A WAY" TO CHARLES MAYER and Company's Famous Toy Foor.

No Exchanges! No Layaways!

eet

employes via a photo album, chats with the housewife about her home and family, and discusses any mortgage problems. These, however, she merely registers with the office. Mrs. Young distributes illustrated dime-saving books to children in the families she visits and currently is waiting for a go-ahead to present more impressive new home gifts—perhaps a rhododendron bush or telephone message pad.

Designing Woman

MIX-MATCHING—Cabinets

in natural wood finishes grow more popular for the kitchen. The handsome sink cabinet and range smoothly fit into the sweep of pine cabinets, and @ table and chairs, a light fix-

ture and perhaps a small pata | can J room |,

formerly |8—10864 8

Today's Hands

South dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH Mrs. Keen S—-KJ17 H—Q 7 D—-KQ93 C—-AB874 WEST Mr. Abel

EAST

Hl st. ——————————— rr —————————

you are [ee Kuhn. os ned his Dash If he merely Yeturns | to fhrte no|asking him to bid six if his two, had only one, s off at five- trump, you can pro again, no trump bid was a maximum 3 lyour hand warrants it, by bid-land to play at four if it was a cludes Mrs. Sylvester Johaton ding still another suit at the fourminimum. If partner now bids four, But there just isn h _{no trump, he is again saying he difference between a maximum! ere as a no trump raise, suggest-|,.', i terested in slam and youland a minimum no trump bid. Als The probing method is not only! mm In other words, after that se-'a substitute for the jump raise in| MisS Gretchen Wimmer, quence, he is not asking for aces.no trump. He has already made a limit bid'exact technique.

2 or, chairman, and Mr. and Mrs.

‘t that much, H, Wemmer, Cornelius O.

It is also a more It tells where dled

: Mr. McClure.

Mr. hiasters Will Be Hostess

A June 30 ceremony will unite Miss Patricta, Foster and | Robert James Neylon. The 10 a. m. rite will be in St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Parents of the couple are Mrs, bert B. Foster, 751 E. Ter-

i. C., Young, William Shimer, Warren E. Haley, Lowell DeMunbrun; Ivan Groomer, Nancy Stevens, Frank Holland, Ralph Kottkamp, Elsie Weck and A. J. Wichman.

Weck, Mary Lou BSusemichel, Norma Norris, Pat McHale, | Lois Mathis, Vivian Wheeler and Helen, Marilyn and Pat Crothers. .

Also, Misses Tynan, Inge

‘We, the Women—

else. All he wants is a chance to make up for the past three years.

Shrimpton, announcers; Willis py Jr. and Russell Fortune] She wants to accept him Jr. paddock judges; Louls| on those terms but is finding Schwitzer Sr., chief patrol judge;| that i isn't as easy to forMrs, Joseph Bari, Mrs, wiames give and for- | Leffel, Misses Joan Frenzel, Ann get as it is | Kennedy and Gretchen Wemmer, to promise to { Dr. Leffel, Lucius Hamilton, Ed do so. | Wiest, Mr. Barr and Gale “1 go-along | Fletcher, patrol judges, and Wil- fine for a {liam Schroeder, timer. . few days” {| Marion Wilsor, Herb Hayes, she writes, (Cornelius Alig Jr. and David “thinking Moxley, outriders; Dr. Leffel]: everything physician; W. W. Garverick, vet- will’ be all erinarian; Henry Moore, stable right again supervisor, and Dobbs and Rellly, and then all farriers. : the hurt and Mrs. Kuhn, program chairman, Ruth Millett d is illusionwill be assisted by Mrs. Max Bon-| ment seems to overwhelm me,

Susie Clark, Nancy Leffel, Linda |Sadlier and Roxanna and Jenney

The entertainment committee

| Ronald Woodard, Mesdames Wil-

Johny Brant Jr, Wells Hampton and George Sadlier and

| Sponsors’ invitations were hanby Mrs. Schroeder, chairman, and Mesdames Robert P. Fortune, William Gessard, George H. McClure, Irving Lemaux Jr. { Farkington Danner, Henry Warren and Willis Adams Jr.

The course committee includes | Burford Danner and Ed Kenney, {co-chairmen; Douglass Campbell, {Jack Brant Jr. Wells Hampton, |Jean Black, Marion Wilson and

S—~AQ92 i108 For Alumnae Club C-582 | Mrs. L, A. Sturgeon, 350 E 60th SOUTH St., will be hostess for the final Mr. Dale meeting of the Rogkford College] 8—35 Alumpae Club. Mrs. C. J. Julian H—-AKJ954 will assist the hostess at the 8 Dg o'clock meeting tonight. | C-KQJ106 Officers to be installed are Miss |

of the people she visits, just as|The bidding: likely to concern the baby’s croup, SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST Herbert 8. Sloan, vice ‘president;

1H Pass ZNT Pass 4NT .Pass 5D Pass 5H All Pass

Mrs.

i |

Joanne Reese, president; Mrs. Clarence M. Cole, secretary, | |and Mrs. Howard H. Henderson, treasurer.

and I wonder if I can go on living with him. I had so much faith in him that it has been a terrible shock. How

can I forget and go on living as though this had never happened?”

You can’t. For it did happen. You can't hope to either forget or have the same kind of fatih in your husband's love that you once had. But you can be happy again, If your husband is sincere about how important his family is to him, you can in time rebuild your marriage and make it strong again. = = = TO BE, HAPPY again is going to take a lot of determination and willpower. You can't forget the other woman but you can make yourself stop brooding about her. You don't forget a serious illness once you recover. But you

Show Husband You Still Love and Respect Him

By RUTH MILLETT THEY ARE both in their early fifties and their youngest child, a daughter, is a college student. For the most part theirs has been a good marriage. But three years ago, the husband began an affair with another woman. It is ended now and he assures his wife that his family means more to him than

‘Parents Group Elects Mrs. William 2. Hall was elected president of the Tudor Hall Parents’ Association at its recent luncheon meeting in the Meridian Hills Country Club. Other new officers are Mrs, William Niles Wishard Jr., recording secretary, and Mrs. George T. Russell, treasurer.

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