Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1952 — Page 31
in its 35th
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SUNDAY, APR. 6, 1052
OUBLE or nothing was Wades’ party last night.
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the passkey to the Harry This social was one where
you couldn't possibly lose your husband or wife. Among the twosomes who attended the twin party
were Mr. and Mrs. John Bagnall With the help of a couple of artificial chignons, attached to their hair, Mrs. Bagnall’s poodle
and her hubby's curly crew cut were the same. They wore
‘matching plaid shirts and
Jeans. This was one party where it paid.for guests to see double.
IF RAW STEAKS ARE conducive to race track victories, local meat dealers had better stock upion the meat from now
for the 500-Mile event. Miss Fay Taylour, Dublin, Ireland, stopped” off in town this past week to look over the Speedway track. Getting behind the wheel of an English-made car, she sampled the Indiaffapolis track. Miss Taylour claims her victories are the result of eating a raw steak before each race, Taking the sharp curves, she decided that Americans are the biggest lead foots in the racing field. This gal leads a fast life, SL { THE NAME OF YESTERDAY'S Matrix Table Hoosier Headliner Award winner speaks “for itself. Miss Lois McNear Canright, reporter on the South Bend Tribune, received this honor and she really can write those straight news stories. The group met in the Antlers Hotel.
5 ” » IT’S POSSIBLE, today, to take a trip through Pakistan and not travel outside apolis.--Col. and Mrs. Arthur W. Herrington will address guests in the Propylaeum tonight, following a buffet supper, on Pakistan. They will also show colored films to illustrate the talk. It’s a speedy way to visit distant lands. ” ” » BICYCLES ARE REPLACING cars as a means of transportation. At least, so it appeared recently on Berkley Rd. A father was seen in that vicinity toting a pink and blue blanketed child in the bicycle tray. Trailing behind. was his wife, peddling her two-wheeler, and a 4-year-old son riding a tricycle.
THE OHARLES
portraying Toni Twins.
In their driveway were two late model cars, Dressed in Sunday best, the family was on its way to pay a social visit to friends. Two things cag be said about this. It's a healthy and economical way to’ travel, » - - A DEPRESSION HAS hit members of Alpha Chapter, Sigma Delta Pi Sorority. But despite this fact, -social life still goes on as before. The depression, only for one evening, will be felt tomorrow night when members attend a Hard Times party at the home of Mrs Oscar Buehler, 924 Lesley Ave. The hostess will be assisted by Miss Marie Sullivan. It's a cruel world. » » ” HAMMONDS, 7248 N, Pennsylvania St., have turned ‘nautical. They recently docked ‘their Chris Craft, “Aljoe, at. the Naples, Fla., yacht basin. Sailing away on the Aljoe, they: left the Naples shores for Ft. Lauderdale - where they are
vacationing. Dr. and Mrs. G. B. Wolfe, 4488 Washington Blvd, and their house guests, Mr. and
Mrs. David M. Klausmeyer, Williams Creek, left the Wolf's Naples home for the east coast of Florida to meet the Hammonds. The three couples cruised back to Naples. Mrs, Wolf is planning to stay at her winter home through May. ® x = 3 RECENT DWELLERS at the Casa Linda, also in Naples, were Norma and Dud Gallahue, Tom and Martha Madden and Bill and Kakie Mothershead. Other Naples visitors from Indianapolis are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Adams, staying at the Naples Gulf Apartment Hotel, and Dr. and Mrs. Bishop Mumford, living in the Naples Beach Hotel.
1 . . Spring Musical’ The Homemakers Club is sponsoring a “Spring Musical” at 4 p.m. today in the Seventh Day Adventist Church, 2150 N. Capitol Ave. The public is invited.
ASSEMBLY SCRAPE00K-—Mesdomes Albert F. Walsman, H, Walker DeHaven and Julius T
(left to right).
_ PAGE ET
Times photo by Raymond Bright ravis
Assembly Club to Celebrate 27th Birthday
HE 27th birthday of ~ the Indianapolis Branch, State Assembly Woman's Club, will be celebrated at
a 12:15 p. m. luncheon Wednesday in the Marott Hotel. Two charter members of the organization, Mrs. Julius C, Travis and Mrs, H. Walker DeHaven, will review the club's history. The first meeting nearly three decades ago was a tea in the home of Mrs. Charles Buchanan, now deceased, .whose
Tri-Kappa Meeting Set
Mrs. R. J, McQuiston, Brendonwood, will be hostess for the 12:30 p. m. luncheon tomorrow of the Indianapolis Associate
Chapter, Kappa Kappa Kappa Sorority. This is the inspection meeting which will be conducted by the province officer, Miss Edna Fieber, Brookville. Hostesses will be Mrs. V, C. Stoelting, chairman; Mesdames Nate Chapman, J. Tracy Davis, C. R. Elliott, D. C. Hess, Albert Puckett, Dwight H. Risley, W. I.. Toms, O. L. Walter and C. N. Webber. Officers of thé chapter will meet at 11 a, m. in the home
of Mrs. H. H. Turner, 6989 Washington Blvd, to review the year's work with Miss
Fieber.
husband was then serving in the legislature. She was interested in knowing the wives of the men with whom her husband worked in the General Assembly and invited them to her home.
» ” » ONE OF THE CLUB {treasures is a scrapbook begun at that first session:
Mrs. Buchanan's interest in Rlower ‘Mission Hospital also will be observed by the current ‘membership, Gifts of old magazines and .glasses of jelly for
the hospital patients will be collected. Mrs, George Diener, project chairman, will give a short talk on Flower Mission,
Party chairmen are - Mrs.
Ffank Finney and Mrs, Earl Buchanan, Their committee includes, in addition to Mrs. Travis and Mrs. DeHaven, Mesdames John Atherton, M. 8. Fansler, Ralph Gates; Richard James, Leroy Portteus Ernest C. Ropkey, Fred Wiecking and E. M, Dill
The branch is affiliated with the state group founded in 1921,
College-Bound Girls Will Be Briefed on College Life at Tea
SoiSg> seniors are scheduled to learn more than the three R's of university life at the Indianapolis Panhellenic Association's tea for high school senior girls Saturday in Ayres’ Auditorium.
They'll be briefed on all phases of higher education at the 1:30p. mm. program. More than 640 invitations have been gent to seniors in Tudor Hall School, Broad Ripple, Manual, Howe, Technical, Shortridge, Washington, Ben Davis, Decatur Central, Lawrence Central, Pike Township, Southport, Speedway and War-
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ren Central High Schools. Each high school counselor also has been invited as well as Miss Florence Guild, public school administration representative. Association officers will be in the receiving line,
~ ~ ~
MRS. GRAEME SUPPLE will be moderator for the panel of college girls. It will include “Grades” sey, Bufler University; “Money,” Miss Larilla Brown, Franklin College; “Clothes,” Miss Ann Abbott, Purdue University; “Dates,” Miss Janet Sage, DePauw University; “Outside Activities,” Miss Jean Tutterow, Indiana University, and “A Scholarship Recipient,” Miss Norma Stultz, Butler Univer- | sity, During the tea questions will be answered about the various | schools hy college representa- | tives wearing their school ban- | ners for identification. " p—
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hon and Miss Nancy Lowe, Pur-
due; Miss Barbara Hoffmeyer and Miss Carol Hertling, Indiana, and Miss Elaine DeMoss and Miss Janet Callon, DePauw, ~ » . MISS SUZANNE AREND and Miss Ann Kanze, Hanover College; Miss Margaret Welford and Miss Jo Reed, Ball hate Teachers College; Miss Evelyn Arnold and Miss Dixie Stahr, Indiana State Teachers College, and Miss Sylvia Merrill and Miss Betty Lou Kernadle, Franklin,
2
Mrs. Marie Wilcox, Wishing: . ton High §chool dean of women,
will lege. The planning committee for the afternoon includes Mrs. R. E. Skinner, chairman, Mesdames Raymond Elliott, 8. Walker Downing and L. D. Dalton. Panhellenic delegates and their alternates will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Butler University Atherton Center, Mrs. W. Irving Palmer will talk on “Flower Arrangements.” Mesdames Thomas Cortese, John Cavosie; R. P. Burkle and Richard Lennox are on the refreshment committee.
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“She Taundors Robes for Sunrise Service
RS. A. D. LANGE laughs it off as a “push-button job." But
, there will be 9% white-robed
grateful persons on the Monu-
ment Circle northside steps next Sunday morning-—-and Mrs. James M, Ogden-—who
know it was much more than that, Several weeks ago Mrs, Lange paid an annual visit toMrs. Ogden's to gather Information for her yearly story on the Monument Circle Easter Sunrise Carol Service in the Columbia Club magazine. In the backroom she spied boxes spilling over with surplices in varying shades of white and cream. She discovered from Mrs. Ogden, founder of the service and the Ogden Junior Chorale, they were chorale-owned robes worn each year on the Circle by adult ushers and guest soloists, ~ - ~
WHEN MRS. LANGE left she not only had her facts, but also, a hlige bundle of 95 robes. which she learned needed washing. This about to be one. woman laundry felt secure, however, for awaiting her in the utility room of her Conaroe Rd. home was a new washing unit, Of every gize and in all conditions—they had been accumulated through the years the robes were promptly sorted and labeled—8 for small, M for medium, L for large, Even X8 for extra small and XL for extra large. “Just like brand names for famales,” her husband observed. . Then this efficient modernday washer woman mended and bleached the garments before starting them through the washer, With fron ironing it was a four-day job. Mrs. Lange averaged about 25 per day. But she evolved her own system when she discovered {roning the robes wet worked best, 8he simply removed them one, at a time from the wet pile, hung the next robe to be ironed on a hanger from a light fixture,
Sp eaker
cad
“String Quartets, Past and Present” will be the subject of the program and talk to be given by Mrs. R, D. Howell for the meeting of Mu Phi Epsilon Sorority at 8 p. m, tomorrow, Mrs. Erwin E. Luessow, 2960 8. Meridian St., will be hostess, Assisting her will be Misses Charlotte Lieber, Mary Moorman, Charlotte Moore, Mrs, James A. Moag and Mrs, Glifford McMurtrey. Illustrations of Mrs. Howell's talk will be given by the Mu Phi Epsilon String Quartet made up of Mrs. Howell, Mrs. W. W. Thrasher, Miss Char-
lotte Reeves and Miss Martha A. Burton. Their selections will include numbers by Borodin’ Carl von Dittersdorf and Shostakovitch,
“associated with
“Really,” says Mrs. Lange, shrugging off credit for the Herculean task, “I just love the power I get from pushing buttons” (the washer, that is). The only complaint has come from the good-natured man-of-the-house who remarked he waa always “bumping into those angel sults hanging on the light.” Mrs, Lange has been closely the service since her daughter, Pat, now Mrs: Allan W. Reinking, Baltimore, joined the chorale as a
‘A PUSH-BUTTON JOB'—Mre: AD." Lamm *
seventh grader to
each year before the Easter service aren't Mra, Ogden, despite all the many helps and services given to the service in its 30-year story, * still looks un wonderful prin A clean w ty robes now back in her house,
Woman's Dept. Club
To Hear Dr.
Flpeniels
“HR FACTOR: Human Relations Today” will be the subject of a talk to be given by Dr. Ethel J. Alpenfels before the Woman's Department chub at 1:30 p. m,
Wednesday in the clubhouse, Dr, Alpenfels, a native of
Colorado, is associate professor of education in New York University, She has achieved eminence as an anthropologist, educator, author and lecturer. 8he was chosen as one of the flve most outstanding women in the fleld of human relations in the United States last year. Mrs, Margaret Fleury will be chairman of the social hour. Assisting her will be Mrs, William F. Summerville Mrs, Frank Uhl and Mrs, Albert Stump will pour. New members and mothers and daughters of the club will be honored at the tea.
Purse Size 31
» . AN ART FESTIVAL and spring tea will be held by WDC'’s art department at 1:30 p. m, tomorrow in the house, Taro Antrassisn wilyive
a talk og pCmbosition Creative Process in Pn
will be Joa or the PE the Mary : ng BR dap ment i n as 0 the Day” and will discuss her art experience.
Mrs. Lamar 8. Strong will be in charge of the i assisted by Mrs. Charles H. Klaisler, Mrs. John Thorn h and Mrs, Henry J, Windt preside at the tea table. 3
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