Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1952 — Page 8
Times photo by Dean Timmerman
MINIATURE OLYMPICS—While swimming enthusiasts will be Trying out for the Olympics in Broad
Ripple Pool this afternoon, these youngsters will
be seeking race honors in the Meridian Hills
Country Club pool. They are Tommy Riddick, Gloria Fausset, Pamela Fritschle and Marilyn Rid-
St. Philip Is Scene Of Wedding ISS MARY JO O’'DONNELL became the
bride of Terrence O'Hara
at 10 a. m. today in St. Philip Neri Catholic Church. The Rev. John Wells performed the double-ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of -
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. O’Donnell, 560 Eastern Ave. The . bridegroom is the son of Rep. -and Mrs. Joseph R. O'Hara of Washington and Glencoe, Minn. Miss Kathleen O'Donnell was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Mary Ann McGinley and Miss Kathleen Dugan. Jerry Backen, - Glencoe, was best man. Ushers were Patrick O'Hara, Washington, and Charles A. O'Donnell, . = n = THE BRIDE chose a dress of white tulle and lace with a portrait neckline edged with scalloped lace and sheer crystal pleating. The molded bodice and mitts were of princess lace and the nylon tulle skirt was accented with an apron effect of lace. The skirt extended into a chapel sweep and her double tiered fingertip veil cascaded from a tiara of beads and orange blossoms, She carried a white orchid on a prayer book. The maid of honor wore stardust blue nylon tulle with a formal pleated bodice and accordion pleaféd jacket. - Bridesmaids wore similar gowns in ballet blue with braided tulle bands-in-their hair. After the ceremony there was a breakfast in Holly Hock Hill followed by a reception in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew (O’Brien, 2629 E. North St. The couple will leave on a wed‘ding ‘trip and will be at home after July 14 in Rapid City, S.D The bridegroom attended St. John University, Collegeville, Minn.
Soap Well, Then Wash
To remove grease and oil stains from white cottons or linens, rub the stain well with soap or detergent before washing in hot sudsy water. If stain remains, sponge with carbon tetrachloride.
dick (left to right).
Latest Fabric Dye Will Be Introduced i in Fall Fashions |
By BETTY LOCHER Times Fashion Editor
AN EXCITING new development in, the dyeing of fabric .
called Chromespun was introduced to the nation’s fashion editors in New York recently, It is. a name you will want to remember and look
for in fall fashions. Later it will" be used in home furnishChromespun XEstron acetate fiber was introduced in black only several years ago. This pure black had such fabulous color - fastness “that it was adopted by the Navy for sailors’ neckerchiefs.
8 = n THE BLACK would not crack off on white blouses and did not bleed when washed. Since then the Tennessee Eastman Co., a division of Eastman Kodak Co., has worked to perfect, this dye in color as well as black. This year it is a reality in brilliant color that will last the life of the garment. Chromespun provides color fastness to light, atmospheric fumes, - perspiration,” washing and dry cleaning fluids. A piece of Chromespun was soaked in Clorox bleach overnight and came out unharmed.
My Day—
As you probably know, acetate fiber is in liquid form before it is squeezed through tiny holes called spinnerettes to make the thread. Usually this thread is then dyed. In the new process, the dye is added while the fiber is still in its Hyuid form. * n ou »
MANY BEAUTIFUL fabrics will be available in'Chromespun yarn. There are satins, taffetas, twills, baratheas, failles, ‘repps, ottomans, stripes, jacquards and plaids. You'll find it used, in dresses, suits, blouses, separates, sportswear, rainwear, neckties and accessories.
Before long you also will be able to buy Chromespun for your home in curtains, draperies, bedspreads and upholstery fabrics. Every garment or piece of yardage of this fiber will be tagged with the name “Chromespun.”
Freedom Is As Important-
Today As It Was In '76
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT HYDE. PARK, July 4—Today we mark another
Fourth of July and I hope throughout the country all of
us will re-read the Declaration of Independence. This document, written by our forefathers, breathes
a spirit of devotion to liberty.
This document was written by men who were adventurers. For \ a variety of ] reasons they had left their own countries and come to live in a new world. Just crossing the ocean in those days was a terrifying undertaking and one that only hardy souls would undertake, Everything was a gamble, a gamble for very high stakes namely, life or death, To these men who came to
-
Charles Mayer and Co.
Holiday, Closing
Closed All Day Friday, July 4th and Saturday, July 5th
"29 WEST WASHINGTON STREET
this-—ecountry, being revolution ists was nothing new, They succeeded in establishing the United States of today, and we are the inheritors not only of these first adventurers but of the many waves of immigrants who followed year after year, o ” » WE MUST NOT. be allowed to forget our forefathers had little security. Each generation took care of itself, That is probably one of the things we should always remember on the Fourth of July. We seek to build a world in which our children may be more secure with material needs and from fears of aghaps we ld not want to spare our children, since it is the things we have to struggle for that are most important to us. And each generation should have some measure of struggle. We have acquired in this country a fair amount of physical ease over the years, but we must not let that blind us to the fact we have a struggle still before us which is as much a spiritual as a material struggle. Our forefathers came here for freedom’s sake and we must not barter away that freedom. The right to think and express our thoughts, the right to listen to whatever we choose, the right to meet and talk with whomever we choose—these are
| £till important to us.
Charles Mayer and Company
Having convictions and confidence in ourselves and in what we live for is tige only real thing on which we can base our freedom and our security today, Just as it was in 1776.
ere
uv
ager
“ome to work in her office.
Last week the girl brought her an indignant “It's his injustice
romplaint about her executive.
[ resent,” she said. ® “I pre-
pared this layout exactly as he ordered but when his client didn’t approve it, he accused me of ‘misunderstanding’ what he said.” ; The young woman enjoys a ine salary and @pportunities for advancement. However, these facts were of minor concern to her. “I'm thinking of quitting,” she told my friend. “I like this job—but-I won't take injustice from anyone.” To me, later, my friend said. “I took a deep breath
run away from injustice?
arth?’ ” +> b>
WHAT SHE said brought the talented but untrained young woman back to earth, We must stop producing young people who believe that they are entiltled to perfect justice It makes them into poor employees, poor Wives and husbands and- poor
from their world.
parents.
We produce them by over-riding their sense if justice when they are little boys and girls. Allison, for example, returns from an errand When she protests hat butter was not on the grocery list, her
o the store without butter.
iy : “a POLIS TIMES
~and gave it- to her + straight without frills. I said, ‘Who are you to Just who do you think vou are to rate perfect justice from your boss or anyone else? Who chose you to enjoy the priviiege denied to every other human being on
mother brushes this truth aside. presses anger at this injustice and her anger is rejefted as improper, forbidden and “bad.”
1g re - 7 ¥ . : Sh ! «sug Ideas of Injustice . LAWGENCE FRIKID of mine is personnel man-~ » of an adver tising firm. She is
now very interested in the career of a talented young woman who has Tecently
Allison ex-
EI
SINCE THIS does not dispose of it. Allison is left to live with it the best she can!
So she
sets to work to glorify the ugly thing. Just as
with teachers.
imposition.
Mrs. Lawrence afford it.
the oyster surrounds an irritating grain.of sand with pearly, relieving substance, Allison begins to romanticize her forbidden anger. ; She begins to«think of herself as a victim of oppression, not of a mistake made by a tired mother. If her idea of justice continues to be violated by her parent, she will continue to glorify her resentment. She will look for justification for her noble indignation, choosing friends who carry similar grudges. .
She will have trouble
oe @
GRADUALLY, she will see injustice everywhere until the most reasonable denial appears
A wish for a bigger allowance
will be her title to it, regardless of the fact that she has not earned it, or that her parents can’t Allison has become an adolescent who believes she. is entitled to special privileges, Often when our-older boys and girls persecute us with demands for more money, for “rights” in the family car, they are acting from their idealized picture of themselves as Noble Victims of Oppression.
Their preoccupation with this
picture so distracts them that they cannot ‘accept the realistic suggestion that rights to most
stride.
things have to be earned. ] Young people whose chiidhood ideas of justice have beef considered and instructed carefully can take injustice from the world calmly in their it does not alarm them. They register it and deal with it.
As they have been trained to
make cases for their truth clear, thoughtful and
convincing, they can make such cases to bosses, husbands and wives. They do not carry chips on the shoulder to bring exaggerated heroic emotions to issues that are the commonplace problems of all of us.
Employer Has Responsibilities, Too
NOTE: This is the last article on a series for teenagers — and parents — by a newspaperwoman-mother who has made a long study of the problems of -baby-sitting.
By EDRIE VAN DORE Times Special Writer
HARTFORD, Conn., July 4—The person who employs a baby-sitter has certain very definite responsibilities toward the “sitter, the gitter's parents and her own children. : She should know, first of all, what kind of home the sitter comes from, who her parents are, how old she is, her general state of health, and what previous experience she has had or families she has worked for, If the girl is new at baby-sit-ting, the employer should ask about her general reputafion and disposition. No child who
has ever shown any inclination
toward meanness or cruelty
should be hired as a baby-sit-ter. » » 2 GENERALLY speaking, sitters of 15 and 16, high school or college students . are preferred. If yaunger children are employed, there should be some other responsible person within reach—a neighbor or their own parents. ~The sittef should. be. told what time she is to arrive, and what time you will return home. If you cannot get there at that time, telephone her. She should be taken home or invited to spend the night, in which case her own mother must be notified. You must tell the sitter where you are going and give her the telephone number plus seat number if your destination is a play or concert. See that your doctor's telephone number is written down where she can see it easily, even in g panic, and the num-
Hodgson “photo
Mrs. Carl Neville Jacobs Jr. was Miss Shirley Ann England be-
fore her marriage at 7:30 p gelical and Reformed Church.
. m. yesterday in the Zion Evan-
Parents of the couple are Mr.
_and Mrs. Delford England, Speedway, and Mrs. Anna Jacobs, 1141 Broadway, and Carl Jacobs Sr, 642 E. 19th St.
{een
BE
ALL DAY
STH
T=lock's
WILL -,
CLOSED
—
TOMORROW JULY
ber also of some other close relative. We hope she won't need it, but let it be there if she does. 5 un = IT'S NICE but not necessary to leave your teen-age .sitter a little snack of something, or tell her what she may have out
of the ice-box. She will appreciate it. This is hospitality to a guest=it is not part of her pay, and she should be paid promptly at the end of the evening. Don't ask her to wait until the next time.- It isn’t fair: If you can’t afford to pay a sitter, don’t have one. The sitter will take it for granted that she can use the radio or television; caution her against ‘turning them. up too loud. Tell her whether or not she can bring a girl-friend, but ‘ask _her not to entertain boys or a crowd of young folks. Your home is no place for her to have a party. Never engage a sitter who
"has a cold or any other illness.
You'd do better staying home than to expose your children to sickness. If your children are ill, be sure to consult the sitter's mother before asking the girl to come. A teen-ager who hasn't had measles or mumps may contract them from small children. ” ” ” DON'T COAX. a sitter to come and care for your children on .a school night unless you have-a bed or cot where she may go to bed at her regular hour. Even this is not recommended. . Teen-agers sound sleepers and not too apt to waken if a baby cries or an accident occurs.
V
A ipa ry
—
4
are
Do,
FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1052
ip
E WAY to a man’s heart maybe through his stomach. But this same road can also be successfully
used on a dog according to
Larry Stone.
Larry was invited to attend a Fourth of July picnic in
Northern Beach by hosts Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Courtney. But the Courtneys’ Great Dane had,
Weybiis will begin ® Sunday from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Riddick Auditorium for singers and ac-
for the past few months, Te... =~ ne same category may
fused to accept Larry as a friend. Consequently, every time he went to the Courtneys’ home, the dog had to be leashed up to avoid any accidents. This morning, he bravely told his hosts to let the animal loose and his trick worked. The dog was. bribed with a can of dog food. After all, dog food especially prepared is bound to be tastier than Larry's leg. = uo u IT MAY BE confidence, else it may be necessity. Whichever it is, the Olympic swimmers came to Indianapolis completely prepared for their Helsinki trip. Every one of the girls arrived here with Mer passport, packed bags and shots. Undoubtedly, it was a combination of both elements since a swimmer can’t go far without confidence and then, too, the trip abroad is a hurried one without time for preparations. =
# =” WILLIAM DUGGAN, a retired. attorney who recently
moved to Speedway, and also a great ‘sportsman, claimed he was trying to catch a goodsized trout in Michigan last week and was faced with frustration for three days. On the fourth day, dressed in old slacks and wearing his favorite fishing hat—a battered fedora—a. gust of wind carried his. chapeau away down the lake. Upon retrieving the precious item, he discovered a 10-inch trout hooked into one of the flies stuck on the hat. And-in-order-to-prove-to-his friends that this was no fishy tale, he had his wife photograph the hat and fish while he held it. The Duggans returned from Michigan yesterday. = 2 n SEEING IS believing in the drugstore at 32d St. and Central Ave. To show the authenticity of Band Aids’ waterproof quality, the proprietor has set out a glass bowl with water and has the Band Aids stuck on the interior. To add a little color, he also has a goldfish swimming in the "ef : F ” »
IF YOU ‘atend
» Mrs. Robert
were impresesd with the holiday.
The punch bowl was set in:
an ice-carved firecracker and when coffee was served after the meal, the hostess presented each of her guests with a paper banger. (The long toys used at children’s birthdays that bang when the two end cords are pulled.) This was meant to add the firecracker noise associated with the holiday. = » = IF YOU'RE a teen-ager and have talent or ambition, you're needed for this year’s teen-age city charity musical show.
‘also try out on Monday from 7 to 9 p. m. Wednesday from 7 to 9 dancers, singers and actors may show their stuff. But vou don't have to have talent to take part in the show, Back-stage workers, who play as important a role as the actors, are also needed. 8. o "
MISS SUNNY CROUCH, 3643
N. Illinois St., has found a way
‘to make a corsage grow from her epidermis. But ‘she’s found the technique that will give a similar effect. By heating strips of adhesive over a light bulb and fastening the flowers to your skin with
the same tape, you practically
become soil for a garden. And
it stays on there, too.
Announce Engagement
The engagement of Miss Mary Caroline Goodwin: to Ernest L, Scott, Madisonville, Ky. has been announced by Miss Goodwin's parents, . Mr. and Mrs,
John K. Goodwin, 1220 Pick- .
wick Place, Golden Hill Mr. Scott is the son of Mrs, Lucien Ruby of Madisonville. The wedding will take place at 2:30 p. m. Sept. 20 in the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church McKee Chapel. The bride-to-be attended Lindenwood CoHege and North~ western University. She is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta ~Sorority: . Mr. Scott attended -Wabash College and is a Delta Tau Delta Fraternity member. He is now in Officers Candidate School, Ft. Bliss, Tex. }
Teen-Agers Will Act as Hostesses
Hostesses are announced for the Western Tennis Tournament July 14-21 in the Woodstock Club, The teen-age girls will act as
hostesses at the matches and.
also at the welcoming party.
July 15. Zelman’s luncheon today in her Marcy Village home, you really
Kathie Williams, will ‘be assisted by Anne Morrow, Emily Lamb, Lisa Miller, Bettie Hall, Louise Hamilton, Cotton Ayres, Peggy Ferguson, Judy Black, Julie Cain, Eliza beth Hammond, Sue Eaglesfield, Susie Miller, Penny Pearson and Anne Williams.
Will Meet Monday
The National;Council of Alpha Omicron Alpha Sorority will meet for luncheon at noon Monday in the Warren Hotel, Mrs. Russell Furr, New Au gusta, national president, will conduct the business meeting
at 1 p. m.
Wasson's Is Closed Today
Celebrating Independence Day
AND
Wasson's Will Be Closed Saturday, July 5th
So that Wasson’s co-workers may enjoy
a mid-summer three-day holiday
+ Wasson's Great’ July Sales Begin Monday, July 7th ~~ -
See Sunday Newspapers for Details
Well, not really,
AR, chairman,
J /
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