Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1951 — Page 7

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WEDNESDAY, OCT. -. Modern Minute Women—

68 PTA.

Blood Gifts. Overdue at Red Cross

By AGNES H. OSTROM Times Club Editor

OUR advance blood

31,1951 P= ee -

pledge is overdue at the

Red Cross Blood Center,

18 W. Georgia St. The tel-

ephone is LIncoln 1441. Make that call now before there's a penalty, It could be the life of an American kid in Korea. It could be your own. This week only pledges made by 5 p. m. Thursday will count on the fourth battalion roll call in next Sunday's Times.

. 4 5 BE CERTAIN YOU are pledged as a blood donor by that time to count on your group's percentage Sunday. Be certain you have an appointment to save a life. Without your gift pint of blcod there can be no reprieve from death for those wounded GIs over there. A special East Side area PTA operation to. provide lifesaving blood gets underway tomorrow. PTA presidents and safety chairmen of 23 schools will meet at noon in the Red Cross Chapter House for a planning session under the direction of Mrs. Leonard E. Pearson.

» tJ » MRS. PEARSON is T8chnical

High School blood donor pro-

gram chairman as well as chair man of the East Side operation. She is working in co-operation with Mrs. Nicholas Kira Jr, Indianapolis PTA Council safety chairman and donor drive leader. Arrangements will be mapped for a house to house donor recruitment canvass based on wards and precincts in the area. Lists of workers will be submitted from each” participating

“school.

That i is .a recruitment for life —-life through a magic red liquid ppt cannot be manufactured ut must be a gift from you.

n = " ADVANCE APPOINTMENS for gifts made yesterday at the Center by Modern Minute Women and their “Buddies” included Mrs. Walt Cameron and Leon Shirley,” School 69 PTA; Fred L. Flowers, School 24 PTA; Mrs. Kenneth Allen, Fleming Garden PTA, and Mrs. Ollie Hidelman and Mrs. Margaret Johnson, School 58 PTA. Mrs. George Davis .Jr., St. Vincent's Hospital Guild; Mrs. David R. Davis, Athenaeum Turners Auxiliary; Ralph Anderson, Alpha Chapter, Theta Nu Chi Sorority: Miss Esther May, School 38 PTA. and Mrs. Elsie Allison. George H. Leap Jr. and John D. Jennings, School 45 PTA. Mrs. Harry Wade, Delta Nu Sorority, and Mrs. Dennis Shannon and Mrs. Olga

in the three R's or the classics.

Sigma,

Hickey, Indianapolis Deanery, National Council of Catholic |

Women, Sacred Heart Parish. Other recent donors of blood gifts at the Center have been John W. Jones, Lawrence School

" PTA; Robert B. Pierce, Lorraine

Chapter, ITSC; Mrs. Jennie McClurg, Indianapolis Alumnae Chapter Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority; Mrs. Betty A. Beavers, School 45 PTA; Miss R. Joy Haine, Stephens College Alumnae; Edward A. Baker, NCCW Holy Cross; Wallace J. Wolff, Alpha Delta Latreian Club, and Frederick E. Sammis, School

By LOUIS RAINIER

HOW TO PICK A MATE

Now that you've burned the mortgage and decided to redecorate and refurnish your home, you undoubtedly have some cherished pieces of older vintage that you hate to part with . . . things you've lived with for a long time and have grown to love. A comfartable old lounge chair, maybe. The one the man of the house considers “his.”

When this unsettling situation arises the first thing to do is to decide just which pieces you intend to keep, then pick mates that will blend harmoniously with them. This will not be difficult if you are careful to choose pieces that scale with one another. Try to avoid the monotony of too many curves, and by the same token, don’t fill the room with furniture that has all straight lines. A room containing a mixture of styles can be unified by a simple color scheme.

Elephant gray walls, white ceiling and pale gray carpet put a room in a fresh, fashionable mood. Coral slip cover on old lounge chair correlates it with new coral wing-type chair. New occasional chair is lime green. Mahogany breakfront becomes room’s focal point.

Come in: and let us help you over your decorating hurdles. We have many more ideas for successfully combining the old with the new.

Easy Terms Available Open Eves. Till 9

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Times ohoto by William A. Oates

ADULTS Ii IN SCHOOL—Miss Ginevra McCoy and Mrs. F. F. Crail, School 15's principal and education chairman, respectively, take pointers from Dr. Earl Tannenbaum of Indiana University.

Parents Take Junior's Place

HE school bell still rings for Indianapolis parents. Granted there's no .formal instruction

But in a

more casual “let down your hair!’ and “what's your problem’ atmosphere parent education today attains importance far beyond the larnin’ of yesteryear. Sponsors of this tremendous training nrogram to aid Mom and Dad—and teacher—in better knowhow of modern parenthood-—and education —is the Indianapolis Parent-Teacher Council parent education and study group committee. Actually this committee promotes a fivepoint program. According to Mrs. Leonard E. Pearson, chairman, “the most important part of parent education is the course planned by the local grass root unit.” These study courses— growing out of specific community need--are underway in many city schools. Others are blueprinted. Credit is given by the state PTA for completed eight-hour courses. oo “o on . ADDITIONAL POINTS are the council spon.1) Leadership Training Institute; 2.) Parent-Teacher Organization Course; 3.) PTA-Buptler Seminar Series, and 4.) PTA-Butler Home-School Institute. Dr. Earl Tannenbaum. Indiana University field consultant in community services, is conducting the Leadership Training Institute in area sessions. Course goal i= to train a limited num-

0 aca oon oe 0 0030 0Caa ocd

0-000 0010 0c) Qo pon 0030 60)

ber of persons (only 15 are accepted in each class) to lead panel discussions and be more’ adept in public speaking. He opened, the series earlier this month in School 15 on the East Side. Institute finale will be in two sections on the North Side. The first will be Monday at School 27, the second Tuesday at School 86 where Mrs. Grace A. Granger, principal, has asked to attend, too. .

. ’, oe oo oe

MRS. WALTER THOMS, Indiana PTA Congress board member, will teach the ParentTeacher Organization course. It will be next month at Manual and Shortridge High Schools. The five sessions of the Butler Seminar Series early next year, in co-operation with Dean J. Hartt Walsh, Butler University School of Education, feature round table discussions. Both parents’ and educators’ problems are laid on the green carpet. A new angle will be two sessions “For Men Only.” Final event on the PE agenda will be an all-day workshop and tour May 8 at Butler. Mrs. Pearson's committee assistants include Mesdames Frank Harrington, Arthur West, Herbert Doll, Ray Fenter, Earl Pipher. Meredith Stader, Stanley Moore, Maurice 'Schornick and Delmer Huppert. And five men completely in charge of the ‘For Men Only” seminar meetings—Harry May. Lawrence A. Clark, John D. Goodin, Charles E. Hester and Owen C. Pohimann. (By A. H. 0.)

WHICH COST “THE MOST” 30. BUILD?

A

long, lithe streamliner? building, you lose.

2% million dollars.

Glamorous trains!

Our way of saying,

THE INDIANAPOLIS ‘TIMES

Top Priority

Tall apartment building or If you give the nod to the

The new streamliner cost

- “Better service for youl" Toe

Given to Civil Defense

American Medical Association Women's Auxiliary

members are giving top priority this year to civil

¥ defense, Mrs. Harold ¥. Wahl-

quist, Minneapolis, national president, said here yesterday. “We must help abrogate ex-

. isting apathy in America to-

day,” she told Hoosier doctors’ wives at a luncheon in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Guest speaker for the Indiana State Auxiliary, Mrs. Wahlquist declared “our efforts as auxiliary members must be as individual lay members in the or-

ganizations to which we belong

in our various communities. n » = “IT 1S necessary to create a desire in people to do something about civil defense, to know what they can do in case of an emergency and to recognize the necessity for being prepared.” She stressed the importance of auxiliary groups as a ‘‘supplementary force to the men’s groups” and good public relations at the grass roots level. Emphasis also will be made on recruitment of nurses “an indispensable ally,” on voluntary health insurance as the American way and the American Medical Education Foundation.

= = = ALREADY $625,000 has been contributed to this fund, newest major undertaking of the American Medical Association. Now the funds are being merged with the Nationai Fund for Medical Education with Herbert Hoover as honorary president. They are available for distribution for operation expense of medical schools. It was announced Mrs. Roy V. Myers has been elected state district counsefors chairman, a newly created executive board office. Presiding was Mrs. Fargher, Michigan City, auxiliary president. Highlight of today’s program for the medical wives was a style show and tea in Block's

F. N. slate

Auditorium. The annual ban- | quet of the State Medical Asso- | ciation, will be at 6:30 p. m. |

the Indiana Roof A dance will follow.

today in Ballroom.

Keeps It Hot

You can keep second servings hot with a miniature fireplace that gives off heat from a tiny candle. You just put the coffee pot, casserole, or heatresistant serving dish on a Wire rack over the flame.

Lift Lid of Boiling

Thick, but pliable pot holders are a necessary item in every kitchen; a doubled-up dishcloth or dish towel is a Boor substitute.

: And the Pennsylvania Railroad . : has put 19 others just like it in service. Wonderful trains!

PENNSYLVANIA Go by Train... Safety with Speed and Comfort

Deanery Council Hears Mrs. Adams

‘ “Nations must co-operate for collective security. In a.world as it is-today, order and peace cannot come hy accident.” Thus spoke Mrs, Harry 8S. Adams in an address last night to members of the Indianapolis Deanery Council of the National Council of Catholic Women. Mrs, Adams, member of the Foreign Policy group of the Women Voters League, stressed the work of the specialized

agencies of the United Nations. She said the United Nations technical assistance program is now reaching 65 countries and is advancing methods which are in line with the principles of helping others to help themselves.

New Fall Colors

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~Miss Bruns ls Wed

Zion’ 's Lutheran Church, New Palestine,” was the scene of the marriage of Miss ‘Marilyn Ann and ‘Wifliam G. Roth7:300 p. m. Saturday.

Bruns kopl at Vows were read by the. Rev. Werner P. Krug. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman C. Bruns, Cumberland. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Rothkopf, 2744 Barth Ave, Attendants of the bride were Miss Eloise Mearling, maid of honor, and Miss Audrey Ortel and Miss Elinor Sue Bruns, bridesmaids. The bridegroom was attended by John Jefferson, best man,

and Joe Hawkins and Otto, Strakis, ushers. After a short wedding trip;

the couple will be at home at

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Cleaning of Clothes

If clothes are stained with perspiration, sponge the stained part with warm water to which a few drops of vinegar hag been added. ; Then sprinkle powdered pepsin or baking soda over the stain, work it into the cloth and let it stand for an hour or two, keeping the stain’ moist. Brush off powder and rinse well. Color may sometimes be restored to the affected part of the clothing by dampening the stain with water and holding it over the fumes of an open ammonia bottle.

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