Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1952 — Page 4
Times photo by William A. Oates Jr
NORWAYS LEADERS—Mesdames Chet K. Lamber, Harry Crumpacker, Elias C. Atkins and
Philip Reed (left to right),
Federation Speaker Cites. Perils of Overpopulation
VERPOPULATION was described as a menace to civilization by William Vogt, national director of Planned Parenthood Federation, in a public address here last night. “Unless” we do about it,” declared the speaker in the Marott Hotel, “it is going to continue to kill men and ‘women and children and babies at an increasing rate.” He asserted when overpopulation is especially severe, people die of out-and-out starvation, If less acute people are badly . undernourished, don’t have enough land to produce their food, clean water to protect ‘their children against diseaza or clothing or shelter to protect them against cold
weather. ~ » ~
HE DESCRIBED vividly the scenes he had seen of swollen bellies of sick and hungry babies, emaciated people and diseased persons when too many people were matched against “too little land, food, water and forests.” “About every second pulse beat there is one more person jn the world whose stomach must be filled,” he said. The problem, according to Mr. Vogt, is not only in Latin America, India, China and Africa but in slum sections of Washington, New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. » » ” “WE HAVE ALREADY spent " thofisands of millions of dollars in overseas aid. The more the populations increase the more we shall have fd spend. If we continue to try to support the world's * shall pay exorbitantly not only in money, but in basic, irreplaceable resources.’ India, the speaker said, “is making planned parenthood an integral part of its economic development program,
Turn Style me Tell
Yo
Pepper Mills have always held a prominent place at the gour- , met’s table. Their tremendous appeal has made more conversation and more successful parties than most table acces-
sories.
At such a little price don’t miss ~ having one for yourself — and
something
multiplying people we
“While I have been talking,” Mr. Vogt declared, “the world's population has increased by 2500 hungry people. Here is the explosive power that can destroy our civilization. “I'l go even further “and prophesy human fertility will destroy our civilization unless it 1s controlled.”
‘Far Eastern
New officers elected at a dinner meeting of the Indianapolis Maternal Health League, sponsors of the talk, were Mrs. J.
Landon Davis, president; Mrs. Emmett 8S, Huggins and D. F. Evans, vice president; Mrs. Don Carlos Hines, secretary, and William F. 8hafer, treasurer, . -
Policy’
To Be Subject of Talk
"QUR Far Eastern Policy” will be the subject of John C. Caldwell's. talk on the Indianapolis Town Hall series Friday. The program will be’ at 11 a. m. in the
Murat Temple. Born in China of American missionary parents, Mr. Caldwell has spent most of his life in the Orient. During World War II he was sent behind the Jap lines by the Office of War Information to set up underground connections. He has worked for the Voice of America and in 1947 was sent to Korea to establish a U. 8. Information Center on the 38th Parallel. Currently he is a special consultant on Korean oP, for the Army. Mr. and Mrs, Caldwell were among the last civilians evacuated from Kimpo by air. He is the author of “American
Agent,” a book about his ex-
periences in China.
Over the Tea Cups Club to Meet
Miss Evelyn Sickles, 304 W. 43d St., will entertain -the over. the Tea Cups Club at 2:30 p.m. Friday. Mrs. Amos B. Carlile will be assistant hostess. “Beirut Beckons” will be the subject of Miss Gertrude Rhoades’ talk, before the group.
~ For Valentine Polished Wood
Just in From France
Only $ Each . No Tax
Handle Style
| of explanation.
| Muzzy quite | properly went
John C. Caldwell
- Blackwood on Bridge—
— Re-elected
By Guild
HE three officers of
Norways Foundation Guild were re-elected at
yesterday's annual meeting in the Child .Guidance Clinic.
They include Mrs. Harry
Crumpacker, president; Mrs, Harry Reld Jr., vice president,
and Mrs. Ralph Edgerton,
secretary-treasurer. Renamed to the board of directors with the officers were Mesdames Walter Pritchard, Philip Reed, Elias C. Atkins and Harry Mallinson, New members are Mrs. Chet K.
" Lamber and Mrs. Murray 'De-
Armond. ” ” ” FIVE NEW MEMBERS have been announced for the qneyear organization which gives volunteer support ‘to Norways Sanitorium. They are Mesdames J, Duane Dungan, Donald Bowen, Raymond Mead and Robert Willlams and Miss Helen Fleisher. Under a new plan adopted yesterday each member will be required to give 72 volunteer
- hours service a year at the’
sanitorium or six hours a month. Projects for the year will be redecoration of Long Hall and a cottage unit at the Sanitorium,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
=— 3 Officers .-
¥
LOCAL TRAVELERS—Mr, and Mrs. Guy C. Dixon (left), 7021 Park Ave., attended the seventh annual Industry Review Forum over the week-end in San Juan as guests of Pan American World Airways and the Puerta Rican’ government with-top U. S. business; industrial and financial executives and their wives. The event, first to be held outside the confinental U. S., was designed to display the economic opportunity offered by the U. S. island possession. They are shown en route. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Blackley (right), 1 W. 28th St., are spending a 10-day vacation on the island of Maui in Hawaii. This is the third Hawaiian vacation for the couple. They arrived by plane from San Francisco Thursday.
Guest Speaker Is Named by Fairbanks DAR Group
Council of Women Hear
Talk By GM Official
HERE is always a reason for the behavior ‘of any
individual” Ralph L. Lee, member of the General |
Motors public relations department, told theIndianapolis
Council of Women today. Mr. Lee, Birmingham, Mich., was the afternoon speaker ‘at the all-day eession in Ayres’ Auditorium. His topic was ‘People As They Come and Are.” A supervisor must approath trouble with employees in exactly the frame of mind he approaches mechanical trouble—there is a reason and when found it can be corrected, he explained. “Behavior is the key to the cause and cure of all organization breakdowns and problems.”
” tJ n EXPERIENCED, SUCCESS¥UL leaders, he said, learn some people can go farther in certain directions than others with the same amount of effort. They learn the type of people,
both as to vocation and person-,
ality with whom they are
dealing. “Neo individual” he declared, “regardless of his natural inclinations is {he same all the
time because he changes with
conditions.” = . HE LISTED THOSE conditions as physical and mental health, state of nerves and finances, and domestic, social, shop and boss relations. “Since all these conditions change from day to day, getting acquainted with each= of our employees is only half the story. We must keep aquainted with them [through man to man contacts.
“We would not set up a
machine and let it continue to
burn dut parts without inspection until it got us into trouble.” Harvy Foster, FBI special agent, talked at the morning session, Mrs, H, L. Hasbrook presided. 3
same way and
Will Attend Club Parley
8ix Indiana clubwomen will
leave Monday for Cleveland for the Mississippi Valley Conference of the General Federation of Women’s Club .on Tuesday. It will be in the Statler Hotel there. Attending will be Mrs. Claude S. Steele, Knox, Indiana Federation of Clubs president; Mrs, Victor A. Selby, Fairmount, IFC first vice president, and Mrs, Edwin I. Poston, Martinsville. Mrs. Theodore F. Fleck, Seventh District, IFC, president; Mrs. Jasper P. Scott and Mrs, W. D. Keenan. Mrs. Steele is a GFWC dress tor and Mrs. Keenan, Epsilon Sigma’ Omicron. chairman for GFWC,
Chairmen Named.
For Card Party >
Mrs. John Wood and Mrs. Clark Gates are chairmen of the St. Philip Neri Catholic Church Altar Society miscellaneous card party to be at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the school auditorium, 535 N. Eastern Ave, They will be assisted by Mesdames Patrick Sheehan, Everett Walters and Anna Gentry.
Mrs. Jane Myers
Betrothal Announced Mr. and Mrs. Otto Schmidt, 5808 Lowell Ave, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Mrs. Jane Myers, to James ‘T.-
Vawter Jr., Petersburg, son of
Mr. and Mrs. James T.“Vawter|
Sr., 952 N. Linwood Ave. The wedding date has not been set.
"We Missed Six,’ Exclaimed Mr. Muzzy
"WE MISSED six,” said Mr. Muzzy, inaccur-
| ately, when he had a look | at the dummy hand. He
then proceeded to go down two
{| at a contract of only three- | odd.
it J” Pepper Mills
This was not -easy and requires a bit
Miss Brash opened her fourth best heart the seven and Mr.
up with dummy's queen, which held the trick. ’ From here on, however, he
Mr, Muzzy
| went completely off the beam,
It was clear, even to him, that he had to bring in at least four diamond tricks” to make
| his bid.
» 8 =» rn
AT TRICK TWO, then he led
| the queen of diamonds from the
Dinner Set
SOUTH WEST
South dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH Mr. Abel S—K 8 7 H-Q 6 D-Q J 863 C—A 817 : EAST
WEST Miss Brash Mr. Dale S-QJ5 S—109432 H-AJB75383 H-102 D-=none D-—K 4 c—Q 6 OJ 10 4 2 OUTH Mh Muzzy S—A 6 H-K 9 4 D—A 109752 C—K 9 The bidding:
1D 1H 3D Pass SNT All Pass
NORTH EAST
board and went into a long huddle after Mr. Dale promptly played the four. What were the odds of dropping the king with only two cards of a sult outstanding? Jr, Muzzy. couldn’t remember.
Pon to Attend Annual . Alumnae Council
He knew this much. He knew that he would be kidded unmercifully if he finessed and lost to a singleton kfng.
He frowned, stared at the ceiling, pulled his lower lip out of shape. He looked suspiciously at Miss Brash and found out exactly nothing: » » ~
HE THOUGHT ABOUT his problem so long that he finally developed the hallucination that if Miss Brash got the lead with the king of diamonds, she could
run the rest of her heart suit”
against him. He had ‘to guess the diamond situation correctly . So he went up with the ace. “Drop it!” he roared. Miss Brash dropped it. But “it” turned out to be the lowly trey of clubs. Thus Mr. Dale was able to gain the lead and fire a heart through Mr. Muzz$'s king. Miss Brash
rattled-off five heart tricks to ‘ put the contract down two.
Of course the diamond
finesse was automatic. If it~
lost, Mr. Muzzy still had the hearts stopped and he only needed four diamond - tricks anyway. >
Members and guests of the Cornelia Cole Fairbanks Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will hear a guest speaker at the 6:30 p. m. dinner
meeting of the group Thursday.
The session will be in the Propylaeum. Henry B. Degelan, Kokomo, will talk*® on “Flags of the United States.” Mrs. William F. Maurer is chairman of the hostess committee.
She will be assisted by Mes dames Richard R. Howard, Wile liam H. Howard, Bernays Ken=nedy, William B. Kitchen, Louis H. Levey, John E. Hollett and Leroy H. Millikan.
‘ {41 for Big Displays and 7 BIGGER VALUES in
DROP LEAF TABLES
CREDENZAS « CHINAS « DINETTES
Located as we are in our own Factory Building, where floor space is not at a premium, Emrich's can and do display the widest possible variety of styles and sizes. Be sure to see Emrich’'s great selection of Early American Dinettes; Credenzas, Chinas, Corner Cupboards and Drop-Leaf Tables in Maple, Cherry, modern Blond woods, and 18th Century Mahogany. Comparisen will prove our prices much
- lower.
Mahogany Drop Leaf Table
2-Pedestal base, metal claw feet.
26x36 leaves down, opens to YA Cf ~ 5§2-50
Walnut or Mahogany Drop-Leaf Extension Table— 38x25//; leaves down, opens to 38x70 with secret folding leaf. Metal feet with casters. 2. Pedestal $7850 B50 evr rnreit erste trmeseitive tes coh rs rts is reiki te issn Walnut or Mahogany Drop-Leaf Extension Table——26x40 leaves aon, $99.50 opens to 40x84. 3-Pedestal base, mefal feet and casters, and 2-12" fillers. = 3-Pedestal Mahogany Drop-Leaf Extension Tablewiezy le leaves ‘$1 10-00
down, 42x63 leaves up, extends to 99". Metal feet ..........
42" Mahogany Credepra Buffet—has 2 full length drawers ad a + double: $ 50 97 door cupboard compaftment ........ coitus 54" 18th Century Mahogany Credenza Butfebevith eyelid front and $122: 50 attractive carvings. & Drawers and 2 cupboards ...................
33" 18th Century Mahogany China Cabingt—has | drawer and 2- dor "$1 09 50 cupboard in base; 2 glass doors with 3-shelf China above. ..............
42" Mahogany Combination Credenza China—2 full length doris $1 56-00 and double-door Supbesrd; iyo sliding glass doors to 3-shelf China. .......
SHOP WEDNESDAY €% ~ PM
Sat. and Man.
$105.50 Modern Gray Walnut Dinette— with 34x50 extension table, opens ; $89.50 $131.50 Mahogany Drop-Leaf Table and 4 Shiraz pedestal table $288.50 Jr. Size Pencil Stripe Walnut Suite with 34 34x50 exfomien able,
Until DINETTES Jr. and Full Size SUITES 40 62"; 4 chairs, with Chartreuse plastic seats, "Now only .oveiiirirrinineinnes rsa rsnvea Tinie aneiine is uh lnaves down, Wangs P 3 hairy have Nesgle-paint pattern $109 50 opens to 62"; 48 4.dr Cred ith 2 b . treuse Boltaflex seats. Hy i coi Tae. Supbeardsi-4 Chairs, Cher 51 99.50
HMA ne trea sR aie
NEW | women. day appes pajamas al And this didn’t end The early-ris a new look with the fl curl . style popular. An especia outfit was w Delman, vi Amesbury, | tomed to bound” clims Borrowing nites, her c¢ ing red com; foot pads. . But don't these radic: Carey's brea as-you-are es u WHOEVE] onion soup new bride to it all the mq Mrs. Niche 58th St., in capture me month's wedc purchased a She wanted husband wi soup. Completely adventure, = teaspoons © tablespoons. Parisian mer calling the s: ing. By the ad: gallon of wi to approach soup. But sh husband on month, (aln divorc#), or travagant ar The onion the end of f also of the the Farrises. = ABOUT t to a slow bo be the recent fet supper g Mrs. Henry 8 Ave. The Far-] centered guests, Dr, Talbot, who Kong last” w parents, Rak ris Schwartz The men home with China, havin the Talbots’ women depar visit departn spired by J mingo . broc: joned on ori Mrs. Talbe her husband week ffom w for~a short She will retu
to await hin
bands are |! bring a trun clothes with into big mon =
IT CAN }§ vision has = its realism |
H. Ridge, Im this. Upon her
Screen . Guild she found h
- watching T\
ment she cc was: “I saw _ th story this af! interrupted t fer me a gla
B® * Trade-l
"The WE Origin
New giant tube, direc
J Lifetime pi
built-in FM Plug-in for player.
$330.50 Jr. Size Autumn Tan Mahogany Suite——with 48". Cred drawers, 2 cupboards; 34x50 ‘extension Table; 34" China with ding ns doorst 4 Chairs, Now .............c.0.000s “e
. several for Gifts! Plated Silver Department -
3" Tall ol : At Warren Mrs. Paul W. Burkholder, Cr Sin lh 21 W. {6th St. and Mrs. Ben- [#™ >" mnt tus aenves jamin R. Turner Jr. 4554 | :
$219 50
Dr. and Mrs. 3 Jewett “Reed,
| opportunity to meet. together,
& Hl . } CHARLES MAYER & COMPANY | oA S18 p m. dinter will high-. : Cre. . Come In! : i 29 W. Washington Street || light the Feb. 15° meeting of BAY) be mong he _ : ‘$296.00 Full Size Modern Pencil Stripe Walnut Suite—with 50" Cre- > : e Your | Indianapolis, Indiana | the Young Professional Wom- . the United States attending ‘ denza, 3 drawers, 2 cupboards With silver drawers; extension Table 42x62, $237 50 Phon | om sie on Pepper win 4p | ems Club. It is scheduled 10 be the annul session of the Wer - opens to 74"; 5 diners and | Host. Now ........teeerunnnveivnnsnnnns, Order! | n Style: B 08 a "|| in the Warren Hotel. lesley College Council. BEST , : : = of ; Teo A442 40s0000nnsetanesrnesarenany . ; I~ It will be at the college in > LL 5 I. | I Miss Marjorie Ford of the In‘ * wweyeqley Mass, Thursda y TERMS " 5501... | Address ....... 0. 000es00000numen § Slanapolis Business: and Pro- through Saturday. o | Aail Your city State fesstona! Women's Club will Edward A. Weeks Jr., editor FREE : Ot LE ii ehiisa | meak on posable amiation of the ‘Atlante Moun. ana AXT ne Order! he Sa frm with this national organization. Nei Proyrasns ses i TAXI meet : Toa «| In Ge middle of its eighth sions of the council. | 3o.and Srom ! 324 W. MORRIS ST. ; . : Emrich's or and Lt ford yore aretessional wom Vi « PAN 1 wen Hoy soul on wutnivren ye ; en of all races and religions an sting | in Florida an iW 0 FREE. Since 1881 -
Street Indianapolis ras 1nd hare ox, 21 W. Keser Bled, are in PARKING TRE NONENOF SETTER PURNITURE FoR LESS organ. ene ven
