Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1952 — Page 14
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© PAGE 1a
APRICOT ORGANZA-Full skirted formal gown has wrap for $29.95 in Block's Gown Room,
The Mature Parent—
Timely
hesitated—and then,
in. Mary's mother stared at furniture, then at Mary, ‘and in a cold, brisk voice said, “1 don't know what you think “you've been doing. Please put my furniture back where it belongs. 1 Mary had always seasive air toward the furniture. her mother would m up across a room and shift
Athenaeum Unit To Give Party
The Athenaeum Turners will present & play, “The Glass Menagerie” followed by a dance in the Keellersaal at 8 p. m. tomor-
row. Table reservations for the evening have been made in the names of the following members: KE. J. Ruddle, J. H. Corder, George Lennox, J. R. MeCormick, C. W. Hunt, T. W. Bosse, Jack G. Messmer, J. C. Ransel, Gordon Mess, James Kiraly, Ralph Thompson, P. J. Shreve, H. H. Young, NeoSuust Smith, Carl Seirsdale, 8. A. Hale, Bruce Herndon, Robert Waddell, Thomas Waddell, Ralph Davis, E. L. Murray and T. D. Lee. William Watters is general director for the play. Jack G. Messmer is dialogue and screen director. The set has been created by Louis Popcheff, asgisted by Elbert Murray, Ed Unverzagt, Jack Monro and members of the Athenaeum Turners Theater group. Leading characters will be played by Mrs. Melba Githens, ~ John Roberts, Mrs, Mary Malatesta and Ed Foster!
Nature Walk Is Scheduled
The Children's Museum will sponsor a nature walk for Interested children from 10 a. m. to noon tomorrow. The group will meet In the Riverside Park shelter house near the west end of the 30th street bridge. John F. Carson, museum naturalist, will lead the walk to Sullivan Lake and give the work for the Girl Scout bird finders badge. School 57 patrons, teachers and pupils will hold a family hour at the museum from 2 to 5 p. m. Sunday. Miss Wallace Montague, principal, will be assisted by Mesdames James Stewart, Harold Jackson, James Zoercher, Ralph Graves, N. O. DeArmitt, L. G. Stevens, Don Sawmiller, C. C. Bauermeister and Raymond Hudson.
Also in the group will be fac-.
witty members of the school and junior hostesses, Ann Bauermeister, Marcia Graves, Nancy Hudson and Shirley Stevens.
Return From Florida
Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Horton and daughter, Janet Sue, and ‘Mrs, Lillie Curry, 414 Beecher 8t., have returned from a trip to St. Petersburg, Fla.
+ resented her After this, when from a chair to go a mantel ornament pack to its exact three-inch distance from the clock, Mary would grit her teeth and think, “Oh, how 1 wish somebody would marry me 80 that I could have a home of my own!”
when he rolled his train track
an inflexibility example. All we need
STUDENTS
Mrs. Lawrence
midriff, diamond
Ee | ¥
pointed bodice,
Hints on Orderliness
RIEL LAWRENCE NCE, when Mary Whitcomb was 16, a particularly important boy was coming to take her to a party. She set her - pretty brown hair in a new style described
in a newspaper and as she waited for her pincurls to dry, read an interior decoration article. One of the pictures seemed particularly elegant.
In the course of time, Mary got her wish —& husband, a home, plus a small son named Davey, What do you think she sald to Davey
back the living-room rug to put on the floor? She said, “Put that
rug back exactly as you found it! You know mother likes her room ‘just so!'"” Psychologists tell us that while we’ do not inherit traits of character; we can grow up with tendencies to overcome. 80 we have no real excuse if we suffer, like Mary Whitcomb, from
that has been inspired by bad
to do is recognize the real nature
of our self-righteousness and perverted idea of “orderliness” —and see that our refusal to truly share our home with our children may be our resentful reaction to someone else's jealous possessiveness toward their belongings.
* ¢ ¢ of human nature often refer to
over-rigid orderliness as “hoarding.” They say it's based on fear that we haven't the capacity to
replace what is used or weakened by sharing
mother’s posI think we
things first.”
Re-elected
Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher
Three officers of the May Wright Sewall, Indiana Council of Women, were re-elected at the biennial convention yesterday in the Hotel Lincoln,
They are Mrs. Lowell 8. Fisher, president; Mrs. T. E. Dalley, Lafayette, recording
secretary, and Mrs. H. P. Willwerth, treasurer. New officers are Mrs. T. R. Clarke, first vice president, and Mrs. H. E. Binford, Bloomington, Mrs. Russell Cushman, Fortville, and Mrs. Elmer Richter, Anderson, second through fourth vice presidents. Officers to be named later by Mrs. Fisher are the corresponding secretary, parliamentarian and historian.
League Forum
Members Named
DriJohn E. Stoner, Bloom. ington, Indiana University pro« fessor; H. J. Noel of the CI0PAC, and Willlam Book, Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce executive secretary, will be members of “The Citizens’ View of '52” forum at 8:15 p. m. Thursday in the Indiana World War Memorial. Dr. Clarence Efroymson, Butler University, will be moderator for the event sponsored by Indianapolis Women’s +Voters League, Life magazine and NBC.
Omega Nu Tau Will Initiate Two
Miss Josephine Abbott, president of Alpha Chapter, Omega Nu Tau Sorority, will preside at the formal initiation ceremony at 7 o'clock tonight in the Hotel Riley. Following the ceremony, dinner will be served. Mrs. Marion Fentz and Mrs, Donald Harris are chairmen. Mrs. George Jones and Mrs. Floyd Dunham are the two pledges to be initiated. .
80. it with others. They say that over-orderly people live im a constant suspicion that they are unloveable and unwanted and incapable people.
begin to be much clearer -and
happier about the disorder children make in our homes when we begin to realize that order is a state of mind, rather than the way a room of furniture is arranged. It is the ability to put “first
Travelogue Speaker
Sam Campbell, philosopher of the forest, will give illustrated travelogues at 3 p. m. and 8 p. m, Sunday in the Riviera _ Club, The first session is for the younger set and the evening lecture is for the adult membership and their guests,
9
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HE Newman Mothers Club's annual spring card party will be in Block's Auditorium at 1:30 p. m. Monday. Mrs. Kathryn Abbott is general chairman, assisted by Mrs, J. F. O'Mahoney. On the reception committee are Mexdames George - Rice, William Holland and 8. V. Foxu Mrs. E. W., Beay and Mrs. Jasper Minnis are in charge of special gifts, and Mrs. A. F. Moseman and Mrs. Francis Ohleyer, door prizes,
“ ~ o MRS, K. J. REILLY and Mrs. H. J. Baltz are on the candy committee. Mrs, Robert Wik son and Mrs. Galvin Douglass head the ticket committee, Assisting them will be Mes dames Wiliam Catton, L. P. Pluckebaum, Mason Phillips, Louis Ostheimer, J. M. Zeller, J, H, Thompson, James Scott, A. A. Bchmidlin, Max Kriese, Robert King. C. J. Koschnick, John Beckerich, William Wade, Louis Kirsch, John Spalding and J. A. Klebes, 2
Expert Tells Budget Tips
Times Special CHICAGO, Apr. 18;~ Living on a strict budget is not a way of getting everything you want, according
to one of the experts. “It's a way of getting what you want most—which means leaving out many things greatly desired,” sald Miss Mazel Kyrk, home economics professor in the University of Chicago. “It would be folly to think a budget would solve our. economic problems” she told housewives. She spoke at the first of a series of six lectures on how to get the most out of family income, ” » ¥ SHE SAID the person who says “1 never spend an extra cent so why budget? is just the person who should be budgeted. “It's even more important for that person that the most essential things be secured,” she said. Miss Kyrk warned a budget should not be used by a housewife to reform her husband if he drinks a nip too many or buys too many two-bit cigars. “That's the person who almost always says the budget doesn’t work,” she cautioned. “Big reforms just can't come so easily,” she continued. “You just don't make yourself over as to taste, temperament, values or buying judgment by making a budget.” » . s BEWARE of the budget experts, she advised. “There just isn’t any expert who can say what you want to buy most with your income. ' If the advice was radically different from what you wanted to do, you wouldn't do it anyway.” How do you start a budget? Buy 50 cents worth of paper. Keep track of expenditures for a month or two—to see what you have been doing right and wrong. Then tally your fixed costs such as rent and non-fixed items such as food and balance them against income. If your deficit is still showing, buy another 50 cents worth of paper—and start figuring again. : Eventually you may break even.
A. SCALLOPED FRONT, large saucer buttons. In melyellow and beige. Sizes “4 to
95
B. SMARTLY. PLUNGED NECKLINE, side buttoh fim. , havy, aqua and yellow, Sizes 12 to 20,
8.95
Mothers Club’ Card Party fo Be
-
ih
PARTY FLOWERS—Mrs. K. L. Reilly (left) and Mrs. H. J. Baltz select floral decorations for the Butler University Newman Mothers’ Club card party at 1:30 p. m., Monday, in Block’s Auditorium. Party proceeds will support activities of the campus organization.
More Parties Are Announced
A PPITIONAL parties have been planned for tomorrow night's “Butterfly Ball” in the Woodstock Club under the sponsorship of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Junior
Is Married
Miss Viola Daniels became the bride of Charles E.
Thorp Il at 5 p.m. Apr. 12 in’ the home of the Rev.
¥
Ernest E Bollard, 1136.
Churchman Ave. The Rev. Ballard is pastor of the Lincoln Park Baptist Church. Mr. and Mrs. Fenton W. Daniels, 1936 Central Ave., and Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Thorp, Dandy Trail, are the couple’s parents.
~* 8
Times photo by Raymond Bright
Auxiliary. Entertaining before the dance in their home will be Mr. and Mrs. Ben Weaver. Guests will include Dr. and Mrs. E. Paul Tischér, Messrs. and Mesdames D. C. Duck, William Stout, Robert Wacker, Robert Reid, Ricks Madtson, Kenneth Kinnear, William Beard, Donald Fobes and Kurt Jensen.
Dr. and Mrs. George Rader will have as guests at home preceding the dance Dr. and Mrs. A. T. Ross, Messers. and Mesdames Frank Fairchild, C. BE. Brown, Walter Huehl and R. T. Lochry. The Louis W. Nie party.will include Dr. and Mrs. James D. Peirce, Dr. and Mrs. Sprague Gardiner, Dr. and Mrs. J. Neill Garber, Messrs. and Mesdames Henry Peirce, F. D. Anderson, J. B. Watson, Paul Wick and Harold Hartley. Among patrons for the dance will be Messrs, and Mesdames H. C. Krannert, Fermor Can- | non, N. H. Noyes, Fred Willkie and Harold B. West, James Rose and Dr. Harriett O'Shea.
Luncheon Tomorrow
Mrs. Dee E. Kasson, 5420 N. Capitol Ave. will be hostess at 12:30 p. m., tomorrow for a luncheon for alumnae of the National College of Education. Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. Jewett Snepp.
Wasson's Pin Money Shop, Third Floor 1
Regularly
Mrs. ! $33 to
| 849
a o
Chairman
Named
Miss Marjorie Berry was today announced as chairman of the planning committee for the “Magnolia Ball” to be May 5 on the "ndiana Roof for members of the 31st (Dixie) Division, The ball will be a part of the Indianapolis “Dixie Day” celebration sponsored by the Indianapolls Service Men's Center, Ine. The group also will sponsor a morning coffee reception at the center before the division's band parades to the Monument Circle for a noon concert. Members of the planning committee making arrangements for the ball are Misses Mary Ransdell, Cluta Ransdell, Joane Jones, Barbara Fark, Beverly Jenken, Jeanne Prange, Doris Mayhew, Mary Medien, Lila Lee Donovan, Marlene Lawson, Patricia Wheeler, Nancy Lake and Jeanne Flynn. The dance has been set for 8 p. m. until midnight.
vassar guild
FRIDAY, APR. 18, 1052 Banquet to Mark
ORT IES
Yi
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Anniversary
A birthday banquet. in honor of the first anniversary of the installation of the Rev. John Hammon will bé held by members of the North Unitarian Church at 6:30 p. m. today in the Orchard School Gymnasium. Mrs, Neill McKinstray is event chairman. ‘Each table will represent a month of the year and be decorated accordingly. Guests will be seated according to the months of their birthdates.
Heads PEO Council
Mrs. Helen Newby was re. cently elected president of the Indianapolis Council of PEO, Other officers are Mrs. Vera Cordry, vice president; Mrs, Helen Klingaman and Mrs, Marguerite Colyer, recording and corresponding secretaries, and Mrs, Elizabeth Seifker,
treasurer.
re — | ect TS AS A ————— ———
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FRIDAY, ; S | Still FFICIAL contesta Contest. Each en Official Entry in which class ment is to be Names and be printed oc blanks. Do not of the blank. by The Times ceives your gar tral Branch, I He Library ar as a receipt. Keep the st presented wher entry at the | test. Also, kee you spend in n ment so you c: on the form. The contest ¢ * there is still Send in the Re at once, indicat fication you wi (By
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Times ¢ Registr
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