Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 June 1952 — Page 4
DINING DIVISION—Buffet, pedestal table, arm chair, side chair and drop-leaf server.
Py ELIZ ABETH TOOMEY.
~NEW YORK; June 3 —
wo i Sevan. only. “months, ° Ditta Viviana has been
waiting ina strange: COR
try just so he could put his gleaming statuettes on display ghelves where Americans would see them. Now the dream has come true, but the people who are“picking up the hand-painted figurines don't know why the blue-eyed young: man stands by yo wistfully and: 50. silently, - i tia Vivianiis Walching | for
ing for enough buyers so he can _ go back to Italy and reopen his . workshop in Milan. He is silent, because in the seven months he's been living in a Brooklyn rooming house he learned only a few words of English,
” » » “YOU LIKE?” he asked timidly when one woman lingered longer than usual before the tiered shelves. His display is part of the “Italy Today” fair at the Grand Central Palice.
Showers Announced
Three parties will precede the marriage of Miss Ruth Campbell and Donald P. Stevens June 14. : Tomorrow Mrs, P. A. Schaffner, 5945 Guilford Ave, will give a kitthen shower at 7:30 p.m. . Coming to the event are Mrs. Ross T. Campbell and Mrs, Charles E, Stevens, mothers of the engaged couple; Mesdames Ross D. Stevens, P. D, Powers, Kennedy Reese, James W. Trotter, H. Emory Thomas, William N. Fleming Jr., Ernest Edwards,
Ernest Rupel and Parke A, Cooling and Miss Elizabeth Gardner.
Friday Miss Campbell will be feted at a personal shower, Miss Elizabeth Gardner, 1705 W. 50th St., will be the hostess. A family dinner party will hénor the future couple at 6:30 p. m. Saturday. Mr. and Mrs,
William H. Petersen, 5037 N.°
Pennsylvania St., will
hosts,
Infant Mortality
Infant mortality was held to a new low last year; despite the upward curve in births.
be the
. 3
each smile of ApPrOVAT BHA hop® pl afied
Ey
The. fa ; isitor moved on
Lucca; a Tuscany town which is the home of figure craftsmanship, that the original December date of the fair was changed” to June. Mr. Viviani discovered his mistake after he got to a Manhattan hotel, For three days, 1 didn't
know what to do, then. I got a
«EAP of=dbe eity to-Hnd where: ihe Iial{an pe a dived.”
ug an n Tatetpret
. HE Dios T go ik to Italy, “because I had made so many plans to come. My father's house we sold for part of the money, and I got a loan to help. It was hard to go back without doing what I. dreamed of. I already had good success in Europe, but I wanted to be introduced to the American market.” The 32-year -old crafisman found a room in Brooklyn and
Hoosier Students
To Be Graduated
Times Special NEW YORK, June 3-—-Miss Barbara Teare, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Alfred Teare, B86ll Manderley Dr. Indianapolis, Ind.,, and Miss Suzanne Stilwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Neil C. Stilwell, Kokomo, will be graduated today from TobeCoburn School for Fashion Careers. Miss Teare will begin her retailing career with ‘L. 8. Ayres’ about June 10, Miss Stilwell will tour Europe this summer and upon her return in August will join the execu-
tive training department of Rike-Kumler, Dayton, O, ~~ Relatives to Attend Wesleyan Exercises Mrs. Joe Rosenthal, 4450 Indianola Ave, and Mrs, Abe
Wides, 45168 Washington Blvd, mother and aunt of Julian Rosenthal, will leave Satirday for Delaware, O., to attend his graduation from Ohio Wesleyan College, Ceremonies will be Monday on the campus. He is a member of amma Delta Fraternity,
Phi
faker, Sculptor Eager for- Approval
stored his carefully-packed fig-
from “Terralge” a special baked paste he developed. Carefully he learned to say
“How do you do,” then hand his
lefter to storé managers who might want to stock his stat~ uettes, This silent sales apprbach brought 15 customers and enough money to keep him nere until he “rir ‘opened: = Eon MW Ai 4 TWAS H A L ONELY? The question ‘was relayed through the interpreter. “Tanto” he said with a sigh that ‘made translation unnecessary. He lifted a figurine and revealed two snapshots, one of his wife, the other his “Bambino.” “Someday maybe I will come back with them and with more statuettes,” he said. “Then we will sightsee iike tourists. Now 1 have been too worried even
‘to go see the Statue of Liberty.”
Honor Graduates
Graduating seniors of Tudor Hall School will "be honor guests at the annual Alumnae Association luncheon at { p. m. Thursday in Woodstock Country Club. The graduates will be welcomed into the group. Mrs. Albert Lang is general chairman of the luficheon. Mrs. Morris Brown is in charge -of decorations and Mrs. Willlam "Bertermann will be representative for the class of 1927 which this year will observe its 25th reunion. New officers of the Alumnae Association will be elected and announcement will be made of this year's winner of the Fredonia Allen Memorial Scholarship given each year by the Alumnae Association to a Tudor Hall senior who will enter college in the Kast next fall,
No Ironing Needed
Turn knitted underwear wrong side out for washing. Use cupped hands to work suds through solled parts. Rinse well and hang double over line or rod. No ironing needed.
a
a future.
7" If their preference is modern, a line to satisfy their demands is a new co-ordinated dining and bedroom grouping by the American Furniture Co. of Martinsville, Va, bizarre angles and
> The pieces, eliminating
‘weird shapes, are plain without starkness, “date” them. it .has a rich, creamy color as flattering as candlelight to your home. The shade will provide an excellent contrast to the currently popular dark tones in carps,
their design will never Made of sturdy oak,
draperies and accessories.’
Many of ‘the pieces are th wheels, for ex-
popular with the television set, a ‘OUTSTANDING, too,
The Mature Parent— iF
: ‘Diy Ca un a.
"By MURIEL LAWRENCE : HE is 80 years old and comes from New England. When she recently became a great-grandmother, she and I were
among those at the hospital visiting the Noting that she was looking a little tired, I offered to take her home when I
new mother.
left. As we settled ourselves in the taxi, she said, “Ah, well, young Babsy won't have her sorrows to seek now.” She is not at all the kind of old lady who makes doleful pronouncements like this and I was startled. “Why more sorrows than you or I?” I asked. She gave me a sharp little look. “Why don’t you write a column on duty?’ she demanded. “That's what I gave my “young ones. They got "love, couldn't give it. and girls got on all right.
going to fail your children. as love.
promise. odd
DUTY IS DOING what we are supposed to do. not concerned with feelings deed. Like so many old practical ideas, the idea of duty has fallen among light-minded thieves who have so robbed it of value for us that we no
It is
longer credit what ‘it can do.
Duty is to act from moral conviction. Though an act of duty is less noble than an act inspired it is still an act of which we mortals
by love, can be quite proud.
Duty comes in handy, for example when
a
is the bed bar headboard; a unit that combines sleeping accommodations with } Storage, Six spacious drawers plus
too, but there were times when I just Then I did my duty. You younger folks wear yourselves out to frazzles, so scared you're Duty’s nigh as good Why don’t you say so?” So I said I would say so and I'm keeping my
BEDROOM BEAUTIES—Dresser matches mirror; bed and bar for sleeping and storage.
Furniture Hints for Newlyw
By JEAN SPICKLEMIRE
Times Homes Fditor
WHEN young marrieds are furniture buying, they prefer equipment with
$198.50.
articles.
drawer.
Thus
choose from.
$89.50.
P
the best.
Mrs. Lawrence
The buffet, has six drawers and a partitioned felt-lined silver A drawer and shelf are concealed behind each cabinet door. The pedestal table opens to 96 1fches by way of three 12-inch apron leaves. It's $139.75. Arm chair, $29.95, and side chair, $24.50, have rubberized hair interior cushions for comfort.
Sheila or Bill want to embroil us in excitable defense against an insolent or false charge. It does not requife us ‘to feel tenderness for bad temper, but just to do what we are Fupposed to do.
eds
two unique sliding cane panels We a miximum of space for tucking away.
The entire affair,
Dresser and mirror at $189.50 highlights partitioned top drawers for hard-to-deposit small
$149.50, comes in two sizes, It
* +
BECAUSE THE furniture is so sleek, it's possible to accessorize it in many ways. Then, too, there's a variety of styles that make the line as individual as a monogram. For example, three dining room table styles are available to
ground, making it easy to clean underneath and
around. Moderately - priced, the cost won’t capsize a
young budget. ture Co.
Exclusive with Frank's Furni-
* <
IT CALLS -FOR the control of the tongue’s biting retaliation. It strengthens you and me to leave the room where juvenile anger rages and make a kitchen neat and tidy. It fortifies us to calmly jron the row. It sends us to the sewing basket and the angry boy's socks that need darning. Though it cannot assert the divine peace of love, it can assert order of action in the midst of emotional disorder—and order is the root of peace. If we do not think creatively for ourselves about this fine gift to children, we will continue to regard duty as a smugness and self-righteous-ness, and fall into the frustrations inevitable when we give nothing because we can’t give
hirt needed for school tomor-
Dr. Albert Schweitzer is one of the great loving spirits of our day. In his book, ‘Memoirs of Childhood and Youth,” he recalls a teacher
—a man who always had every lesson carefully
My boys
proper hour:
but with
prepared; who never gave more or less knowledge than he had planned to give; who always returned copybooks on .the proper day at the
eo @
“EXPERIENCE OF this self-disciplined activity had a distinct effect upon. me,” Dr. Schweitzer. / manifested in even.the smallest matters is a great educative influence and that it accomplishes what no exhortation or punishment can, has become with me a firm conviction.” Duty done well is humility and courage. It is both the recognition that we have failed to give the perfect thing apd the Qecision to give ‘the less perfect. Those who sneer at it are romantic people. While they are still about love, those of us who have turned to duty
writes “That a deep sense of duty,
making pretty speeches
when love has failed in us, are enjoying the love
Job-Seekers Number About Same Now As A Year Ago
HERE were about the same number of men and women in Indiana seeking jobs this past April as there were April a year ago, according to a summary released recently by the Indiana Employment Security Division.
Women filed 6000 of the 15,210 new applications for work registered in local offices of the division. Demand for Industrial workers, domestic help and outdoor laborers brought a substantial increase in new job openings listed by employers last month, raising the total to 13,739 from 12,119 in March.
~ w n NEARLY 9350 nonfarm workers found jobs through the division. Beginning of the planting season brought a
Graduation Set Thursday
Tune commencement of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian
«= Church, 47th and_ Park Ave, will be at 7 p. m. Thursday in *
the church. Mrs. Oral W. Bridgford, director, will present the diplomas. Of the graduating group, #2 have attended the nursery as well as junior and senior kindergarten, 21 have completed junior and senior kindergarten and the remaining graduates have attended one complete year in the senior kindergarten. A one-ring g¢ircus complete with parade, "band. ringmaster, animals, clowns and tambourine dancers will precede the presentation of diplomas. A _picnie trip in chartered buses Friday will be the last activity of the school term.
Class to Graduate
. Graduation exercises for ‘Classes B-2, C-2 and D-2 of the
boost in agricultural activities, Both testing and employment counseling, two of the division's special - services which help channel job seekers to openings
where their employment potentialities can be most fully utilized, were widely used last month. Division records show a total for April of 2437 counseling interviews, Nearly 1700 aptitude and proficiency tests were given during the month when tests and counseling were made available to graduates in many high schools throughout the state.
that sneerers are just talking about.
New Sorority Officers Installed
New officers were installed by Delta Beta Chapter, Psi Iota Xi Sorority, at a pot-luck dinner last night in the 38th St. Branch, Merchants Bank.
Mrs. John Conway, retiring president, is advisor. Other officers are Mrs. John Cockley, president; Mrs. W. R. Porter, vice president; Mrs. S. G. Hill and Mrs. Roy Mitch, recording and corresponding secretarfes; Mrs. H. D. Nelson, treasurer, and Mrs. R. V, Martin, conductress.
Keeping Leather
Leather will stay supple if you apply a thin coating of white vaseline with a soft cloth. Rub thoroughly,
and then remove excess, >
National
"the single girl “regards ner il something.
., be doing while . she is looking
|
The Bridal Scone
Tow SDAY, JUNE 3, 1952
A List of Parties
ls Announced By Three Brides-to-Be
THREE BRIDES-TO-BE ‘announce a list of the parties to be given for them before their marriages | in the
near ‘future.
- Miss Janetnelle Weirick, who will be wed to Hugh
Arthur Thornburg June 22, will be feted at a luncheon Saturday in the Terre Haute Country: ‘Club, The hostesses will be her maid of honor, Miss Betty “Caye Burns, and Miss Burns’ mother, Mrs. R. F. Burns, A number of Indianapolis persons have been invited. Next Tuesday Mrs. M. F. Olinger, 7001 N. Meridian St. will give a lingerie shower. June 11 Mrs. Richard Jacksoh will be the hostess at an everyday china and crystal shower in the home of her motherfin-law, Mrs. William C. Jackson, Carmel. The hostess’ mother, Mrs. T. G. Harvey, also will assist. June 12 Miss Edith Allen and Miss Rea Bauer will give a tea in Ayres’ {fp iroom. and June 13 Mrs... Ross Halgren will be hostess at a luncheon in the Columbia Club. Mrs. James Ingles, 5747 N. Meridian St., will honor Miss Weirick at a gadget shower June 16 in her home. The bridal dinner will be given the night of June 21 in Highland Gelf and Country
We, the Women—
a
ing out om Ji: dest forever se
Club by Mr. and Mrs, Fred A. Beck, friends of Miss Weirick’s family. It will follow the rehearsal.
- » » The bride-to-be of Charles John Randa Jr. Miss Joey Pittenger, will be honor guest at the bridal dinner her parents will give June 13 after the rehearsal. The couple will be
-wed June 14 in the Meridian
Heights Presbyterian ‘Church. Mr. and Mrs, Arthur O. Pittenger will give the party in the Meridian Hills Country Club. Before the wedding the bride's maternal grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Pittinger, Selma, and her maternal grandfather, George W. Sherman, will give a luncheon for out-of-town guests attending the wedding. The future bride’s parents will entertain at a buffet supper for out-of-town guests after the
‘wedding in their home.
Saturday, Mrs. William Penny, 3540 N. Meridian St., gave a pantry shower for the bride-to-be. May 24 there was a miscellaneous shower for the future bride ‘in the home df Mrs. Edward Randa, Riverside, IIL
- without: Answering andathe. 1ial:l ~ UE] Pre Ta camploy- the {10D leaf. server. Its two shelves : : ith th 5 Hed : yy So w TT & BHAT RE BE TTA . D.: Shoop lids ppp opis, Jesioned w e he ousewife in oe k. d GC ; Sccngoitas Buri hite ahigh iinkinn:ARerioln soauantances. a ee oe grew RI 6 fool, THI Yo Fle be 6a 200 TTT geen 0 yep S-% ter e as. ral ued vi Lo and dark. suit. Bl explaming In may t In at once, mIDHDIZING TEXIE REEATE Most Jrawers; beveled. tor: Boer. ol C8 Nia pe CBR NEE tdci Rast hes oi? Adu’ get werd... Baglish about the figures that {rips from the kitchen. have no hardware to break the simple lines or ; UPH wh on wi hh fo AWE"03 4 PRVHIRT PROBE S84 aha artist and bis workers make It’s especially handy for buffet- style meals, interfere with cleaning. Pieces are set off the IP TO THE sweet girl gradua 0 wi Soot be 8 -
A business man says he has found that married women, and widows and divorcees with dependents make
"better ;galeswoman than single girls, - He figures that is because all too often Hob 3 to
around for a husband, and so does not take it seriously as does the woman who knows she may be working for years. So here's the tip: If you want to get ahead in your job, defiberately avoid giving anyone the idea that the job isn’t really important to you. Don’t spend every free minute chatting with the other girls about where you went last night and where you're going tonight. Nothing makes a job ‘seem less important than escaping from it every chance you get. v . 2 2 = DON'T KEEP giving “I don’t know” as'an answer. On any new job there will “be plenty that you don’t know. But let that be a challenge to learn rather than an excuse for not doing a certain thing. Don't given wémen a fishy stare and play up to the men. You are going to have to work with women and serve women —it will pay off to treat them with friendly courtesy. Don’t make a habit of being a few minutes late to work. The person who rushes in late every day starts each "day at a disadvantage.
= ” ” DON'T act as though your job is beneath you. Give it dignity by doing it well, Maybe you ARE just working until you can find a hus- _ band. But you don’t need to
‘Patriots of America,
Ruth Millett
handicap yourself by giving away that secret. ~You may not find that hus-
: band. And ‘even if you do, you .still may want a job...
Group Pla ne Luncheon
Mrs. Leroy H. Milligan will preside at the 12:30 p. m. luncheon Friday of the Indiana Chapter, Daughters of Founders and in the
Propylaeum. After the luncheon, Mrs. Edmond Burke Ball, Muncie, and Mrs. Herbert R. Hill will give reports on the general court
"held in April in Washington.
Mrs. Hill was honored at the Washington event because of her gecent election as national secretary of the organization. Mrs. Ball is honorary national president,
reo
A DINNER guest insists that you do the dishes so. that she can help with them ~—but you would rather leave them until your guests are gone. WRONG: Feel you must do as the guest ‘suggests, RIGHT: Thank the guest, but say that you would rather leave the dishes, so that you can spend all of your time with; your guests.
New Use for Tape
If you are sentimental about your wedding and engagement rings, you'll probably never remove them from your fingers, While working in the garden, you can prevent dust. and dirt from getting into the setting by encircling a strip of transparent’ ta round the finger.
Another Shipment—Just In!
at charles mayer and company
1847 Rogers Brothers servers. 5l/5-Inch, clear crystal divided relish dish in the teardrop pattern—plated. silver. pickle. fork (for olives, pickles, lemon slices) and plated silver relish spoon {for relish, jam, jellies,
nuts, cottage cheese).
Perfect Gift for Brides!
Birthdays! Anniversaries!" Hostess!
Please add 25c¢ for postage and packing on mail orders.
PONT WAIT! I CHARLES MAYER & COMPANY |
290 West Washington Street I Indianapolis, Indiana .
| OMY usar ivvs suse kensnnens BAe coure tersesseses RELISH SETS at $2.95 each
COME IN | TODAY! Phone LI-5501 or | Mail Your 0 Charge Order
| Please send $0. enisticiisdasivinnaniincone
| Address Aer ssINtsNlNIIIN ARRAN RRE SY
fons me se ec tc i fn se ne ct et
pS
[J Cash or Check
ot i — —— ——————— —
Use Convenient Coupon for Mail Orders OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY 9:30 TO 8:30 P. M.
Charles Mayer and Company
¢
»
©
HERE'S ; 1236 N. 1 group of yo * Wheeler “Churches, und ect of supplyi for first time these girls a sthey are usual homeless. Col the help of va ftable organiz sion has purcl the New Jer purposely for Included in have - donated help is Kappa ity. Members their jeans ar to scrub floors hang curtains bedrooms. TI pletely furnish dded persona t a more att: the- girls who in a few days. .. The Rew. ai C. Hunt will ¢ ion and a hou there to super » MISS C BRUNET, 181 8t., has ado “Practice what For the pas! Montreal; Can been teaching classes in the J Ahiropractic. - vi ro be gradaa.
“hii Sontraat bi
and ‘actually p has been teact Mr. and Mr Montreal, will the graduation
8 SURPRISES fire. And a 1
what Mrs. Jo 1348, Shannon
gry plannin, ception for her drew Philips,. C - to arrive here ing. The event come home on
It's a To Lat
FANY effi in indus time and lab But won from departme: for example, stores label an wares. in Time spent lists of articl this spring ma; times over lat home economis culture Depar For example, | ing time to la box of winter « of contents as away, and the what is stored At any time to get out one or a wool shir vacation trip won’t have to | out all the stor fall you can .b systematically them. E THE EASI most efficient v ter clothes, bl seasonal items ment plan. Fil
Miss Betty
Becomes a Miss Betty A! Waldo G. Mye were married her parents, Mr ter JA. Etchast St, afinounce.
After a shor apolis, the cot home in Des Thursday. The uate of the C Nursing School
dood hol po
2
mR WARS Se
aL] A A
