Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1952 — Page 8
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JUDOR “ALUMNS—Mrs. William H. Wemmer left),
Times photo hy Dean Thnmesnn
newly elected president of the Tudor Hall
School Alumnog Association, chats with two new. members, Miss Barbara Foltz {cewter) ond Miss
~,
Janie Essig (right).
Tudor Hall Alumnae Elects Officers
LECTED president of the Alumnae Association of Tudor Hall School at the yesterday in Woodstock Country Club is Mrs. William
group's annual luncheon
H. Wemmer~
She will be assisted next year by Mrs. Edward Frederick H."Day Jr. secretary, and Miss Ann Huesmann,
3. Duhn, vice president; Mrs.
Mrs. Suzanne R. Mayer,
; Holliday.
Named alumnae trustee is
un o HONORED WITH the school’s graduating class is Miss Rebecca Garrison who was awarded the Fredonia Allen Me-
Mrs. Frederick T.
” 22 members of the
morial Scholarship given each year by the alum-
treas-
—~
nae association to a graduating senior entering an Eastern college. Miss Garrison,
the daughter of Prof. and
: . ison, _ Mason, ich. enter crinkled leaves have a special = Fwoysr: ‘directors ‘will be Mrs. eae Cin I Wn the fail | si; —— son and Mrs. Richard C: Vonnegut, along with retiring president.
® AlS0-Was Te-
cently - named winner -of “a Radcliffe national scholarship for
the Great I.akes area
EG
HOME SWEET HOME-—Kappa Delta Phi “Sorprily ‘members, “Mrs. Wayne Hinsch, Miss Maxine Overlease and Mrs. William A. Alexander (left to right), add finishing touches to one of the bed-
rooms in the new girls’ home, 1236 N. New Jersey St. being sponsored by the Indianapolis Federation of Churches.
There are Others
back, In Anglodays, single girls got such- jobs as milking and spinning. Married women reserved the privilege of making the family bread, which was a large item in the diet, The homemaker was called the bread kneader or “lae-dige” which later became our word “lady.” So baking bread is, historically ®peaking,
one of the qualifications of a lady
Centuries Raxon
often
the sorority.
The home is a Wheeler Mission project A complete room was furnished by
Park School Announces
1951-52 Honor Roll
DE NORMAN JOHNSON, Park School headmaster, has announced the honor roll for the year 1951-52.
It includes third grade B honors:
Dennie Myers,
Robert Sherwood and Stanley Selig.
Fourth grade A Rredell Evan Noyes gnd Stephen Vali
Philip Jack
Such a Delightful Gift
On So Many
Occasions Ideal for
Your Week-end Hostess
Our New England Food Pantry specializes in making up attractive food packages and hampers for gift giving. So nice to take along—or to send to your gra-
cious hostess after you have returned home. The=
“tasteful” way to say “thank you" for a wonderful
time.
SPECIAL GIFT PACKAGES AND BASKETS are
made
up according to your
specifications as to
contents and price—and are available for ® Birth‘days ® Anniversaifes ® Wedding and Shower Gifts SL onvalescent ® Bon Voyage.
¥ Charles Mager a Lompany
* 29 WEST WASHINGTON STREET »
hanors:
Keller,
net. Fifth grade B honors: Bert McClure, Baxter Rogers and Robert Shane and Nicky Doney and Stevan Thomas, beth
second semester, and A honors: Jan Carpenter. = ® » SIXTH GRADE A honors: Richard Kroot, Steven Spencer and Richard Wilson; B honors: Harold Bredell, David Chambers, Russell. Fortune, Jack Mead and Henry Whitesell and Walter Foltz, second semester. “Winning Middle School hon-
ors were Thomas Dalglish, Wil- -
liam McPherson, Stuart Schaefer and, John. Stiles. Middle" School “high honors .went to Don Hines and Tod Pontius. John Allen and Philip Whitesell received Upper School hone ors and Stephen DeVoe, John Esterline, Richard MtCrae and Peter Weldon, Upper School
| high honors.
Brewer's Yeast Rich Brewers’ yeast, which is be Ing increasingly used in baby foods, foods for old people, and cereals, is one of the richest natural sources of the vitaminB complex, as well’as of excel-" lent proteins, minerals, and”
other food factors. Its name comes from the fact that veast cells are used to ferment all ale and beer. Before the brews
| are packaged. the yeast is fil-
tered, specially processed. and dried, u yiela brewers’ yeast.
be. used for A~SURHLY_ higher.
By BETTY LOCHER Times Fashion Editor
I” HAPPENS every spring at housecleaning time.
and straightened all closets, passed outgrown clothing down to the next generation, but invariably end up with things that
good” to throw away. Chances are they end up in
a spot, where they gather dust for years, If you do discard them, the very next week you'll find a perfect use for them. v ~ - WE'RE HOPING you didn't discard an outmoded fur coat last week, because it is just the thing to use to have a fur-lined suit jacket or coat made for fall, The idea stems from Career (Girl Fashions in New York who are working with Wasson's locally. There are six different styles from which to choose, one of which ig’ photographed. You can choose a style and then select the wool fabric you like to go with it. The fabrics are all wool Forstman's Duva coating in a’ wide range of colors or Forstman’'s rambledot tweed.
Be 5 -
THE PRICE of the jacket or coat, including all labor and material, is §100. Matching skirts may be had for $15. Furs considered most lamb and squirrel. Mink, otter, beaver, nutria and ermine may
price . Special estimates may be had on other furs. You can bring yeur outmoded oY ¢ovat directly to the Fur Repair - Deparement..an- Was son's Eighth Floor. There you may see the models and the fabrics from which you may choose, It takes: four weeks to make the ensemble. It may be added to your September bill ér .you can put it in the layaway until fall.
Try Savoy Cabbage Savoy cabbage is a fine home - garden vegetable. dt iz not often found in. markets though its
hs HE
TRIB
The Mature Foon
_THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
There's a Use for Outmoded Fur Coat
You've diligently cleaned ;
are slightly out of style yet “too
the attic if you still have such’
suitable are .
nite ut ST
Nene en pn es
FUR LINED SUITS “ARE FASHION NEWS—Don't discord your tired fur coat. The fur can be reconditioned and used to line a
EA
Il-Timed Prasehing Is Wasted
By MURIEL LAWRENCE HIS morning, Connie again “forgot” to make her bed before going to
school. And when she got home, she announced that she was going shopping with her friend for Ella's spring Jacket, Connie's mother said, “T would he ashamed to go shopping “with my bedroom in the condition yours is in. When I was your age, I shad to make my bed and Aunt Lou's, too, before gomg to school, I my faults, but nobody can ever say that I shirk responsibility. I was brought up to face it, not run away . from it like young girls nowadays. I don't know where you or your father would be if I ran off and left you to get vour dinner yourselves. Someday you'll learn that the world won't take excuses for work left undone. . , . This is what children call “preaching.” They do not like it because they sense that it is criticism disguised in unassailable language. It makes them
new
Mrs. Lawrence
may have
uneasy and nervous, the way we are, too, when we sense the presence of an enemy who talks like a friend.
” - n CONNIE'S . mother should have said, “No, you cannot go shopping with Ella this afternoon, Your room needs atten. tion. Please go upstairs now and take care of it.” = When moral lessons are given to criticize, they are offensive. When they are badly timed, they lose their power. Connie's mother would have heen wiser to postpone her lecture on responsibility until Connie had some first-hand experience in the value of making her bed before going to school. When the child had proved for herself that she earns the freedom to dispose of her afternoon time by making her bed in the morning, she will be in the market for a statement relating responsibility to freedom. Until she made a test of this truth for herself, the most eloquent lecture is just words. Moral lessons are lessons in truth. We do not want to ever stimulate resentment at truth in children, but recognition of it We are lured “preaching” to youngsters through fear of forthright requests and orders. n 4 ~ OF US suffer from fear unknowingly. So we
into 1l-timed
MANY this
shouldn't be alarmed to discove er we are one of its million But we should be
concerned~ with uncover-
victims. most ing it and learning how it came to be planted in us. Connie’s mother, for instance, can't give forthright orders to her child forthrightness was so discouraged by her training. When she used to move on impulses to duck dish-
because
washing and bedmaking, she was called a “lazy” girl. "To avaid such hurtful condemna-
tion, Connie's mother became a dutiful child. But since her motive for compliance became praise instead of her own freedom and selfrespect, she developed little self-respect and great dependence on praise. Today, her dependence on praise is still her problem. She
RA fee. thes oe a 7 .
needs it so much she has to dis- |
guise her irritation at
her |
daughter in noble language no- |
body can find any fault with. When we have to deliver highly moral sermons to reinforce a just request or demand on children, we should examine our need for the grand, noble words, If we really believe that we earn freedom by taking responsibility, we do not need to reassure ourselves with speeches about it,
Times photo by John R. Spicklemire
«ROSE THEME—Mrs. Fred Ranney Jr. works on decorations for the rose ball and rose luncheon of
mega Nu Tau Sorority this week end.
Sorority Announces Rose Ball Date
HE annual rose hall and rose luncheon of Omega Nu Tau Sorority will be ,
Saturday and Sunday.
The ball will be in the K. of C. Hall from 9 p. m, to 1 a. m. The luncheon at 1 p. m, will follow a Grand Council meeting at 10 a. m. in the Gold Room of the Hote! Washington. Mrs. Robert L. Anderson, Lambda Chapter, is general
Tau Chapter,
tions,
Laer
chairman for the week-end activities. She will: be assisted by Mrs, John Darting Alpha Chapter, reservations; Miss Marie Cook
»
tickets and orchestra, and Mrs. Fred Ranney Jr., Chi Chapter, luncheon décora-
Assisting with dance ‘decorations are Mrs. Joe Hinsaw and Mrs. Harry Wacker, Lambda Chapter. Mrs. Thomas Cisco.’ geand president, ° will Preside at the council meeting.
support of |
)iz in Time for Father's Pay!
199, for $5
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79
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ironing needed. In coat or middy style,
green, gray, tan. Sizes A to D.
om
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169 3 for S35
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Wasson's Men's Store, Street Floor
an A——— 1 >_<. §
a NR
2
i BE 3 i
>
i Bl NN Ye,
~ Sale? "2.30 (0-350 Pure Sill Ties A
ob nel RH a IN Ns
ET —
will see Su Chapters’ Arts and formance | rium. Pvt Camp Att New York London as star of the sent “The Marionette: Of nonth 26-year-old 23 motion | guest star die Cant shows and He has als of Broady which are now. Sunday's a variety ¢ fiesta novel costumes light bulbs. ing with tk hands to w will manag effect. If you've feld Follies an act with circular st more effect “AN exotl in the" Orie will -highli rounded by will includ actor, an ic is the only world, and land. Proceeds be given to ship fund.
IT "ISN’] who can thing or tv of Miss Dia ter of Mr.
St., such is ~The Me next week tend their
DeP: Not:
GRE sell J. Hu
“both a dil
university A dinner of the boar followed b; the Humbe After cc eises tomo Stadium, A bert will er fet supper.
HONOR the five rec degrees at and the fc ment heads Among t. be the com President ¥ of- Stephens Mo., and tt er, the Rev St. Johnsbu
HONORA to Ear! B.
Meth To G
OBER will p ist Hospit and comn Tria RIAN( Butler the local both plan soon. An initia university | today in th be followed the hotel. To be i Mary Ruth and Laurel ones. will bs F. Means James H. F New offic tion are XN president; 1 vice preside man, trea Wolfe and recording secretaries;
rush chairn Siebe, mars
THE JU! the Butler . Trianon wi of the univ uating Mon Honor gu party in ti will be Mis: Deloges Jul son Kenda man and N New offic tion are M
