Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1952 — Page 4
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RECEPTION in the Mirror Room of the Marott Hotel followed the marriage of Miss Mary Sue Jacobs to J. Warren Bixby at 2:30 p. m. yesterday in McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church.
Bhen-Courtney photo
Latreian’ Club Will Induct 3
HREE new members will be welcomed at a business meeting of Alpha Lambda Latreian at 7:45
p.. m. Sept. 2 in the home of Mrs. Don MacLeod, 5272 Cornelius Ave. : They are Mesdames Charles McComb, William Guyton and Robert Whitham. New officers of the club are Mrs. Samuel O. Dungan II, president; Mrs. Howard B. MecChord, vice president; Mrs. Jess Pritchett and Mrs. Ralph W. Starr, recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. William Pert, treasurer; Mrs. Don MacLeod, parliamentarian, and Mrs. R. P. Frey, historian.
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COMMITTEE chairmen are Mrs, McChord, program; Mrs. Thomas Donlon, ways and means; Mrs. Pritchett, membership; Mrs. Starr, telephone; Mrs. Pert, finance, and Mrs. Frey, publicity. Mrs. William Mace, delegate to the Seventh District, Indiana Federation of Women's Clubs, Mrs. Robert Fatout, alternate, Mrs. Starr, delegate to the Indianapolis Council of Women; Mrs. James E. Zink, alternate; Mrs. Merlin King, welfare, and Mrs. B. Allan Sutton, blind school products.
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The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Jacobs, 5818 Central Ave. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jay C. Bixby, Vincennes. Miss Dottie Stonestreet was maid of honor and Miss Merrie Joe Ober and Miss Marilyn Gibson, bridesmaids. Ray Bruning was best man and Jan-and.Jay Jacobs, ushers.
” ~- un THE BRIDE wore a gown of ivory lace over satin with the sculptured bodice appliqued with seed pearls embroidered: In a leaf outline. Long sleeves extended into bridal points over the hands. The bouffant hooped skirt of satin cascaded into a cathedral train. Her tiered fingertip veil fell from a lace half hat and she carried a white orchid surrounded with white rosebuds. The maid of honor wore a gown of aqua lace and net over taffeta, The formal lace bodice had an insert of pleated net and a short bolero jacket. Bridesmaids were similarly gowned. All the attendants wore headpleces of pink rosebuds. After the reception the couple left on a trip to Chicago. The bride -wore an aqua faille suit with matching hat and brown accessories, Mr. and Mrs. Bixby are Butler University graduates. is a member of Delta Gamma’ Sorority, and he is a member of Sigma Chi Fraternity,
Will Fete Bride-to-Be
Miss Barbara Pratt, 4037 College Ave. and Mrs, Robert Summers will be hostesses at a miscellaneous shower tonight for Miss Roberta Wood. Miss Wood will be married to Richard R. Moore Sept. 7. Guests will be Mrs. Cyrus E. Wood and Mrs. Earl P. Moore, mothers of the betrothed couple; Mesdames l.ena Swegman, Clarence Wood, Otis Pratt and Don Toler. Misses Susie Berry, Janet Taylor, Carol Keen, Frances Lindley, Kathy Dawson, Dorothy Jeffries, lL.oils Bock, Dorothy Little, Vivian Schilling, Margie‘ Shepherd, Lora Marlette and Carolyn McCoy.
Try Apple Wedges And Dip Sauce
Popular appetizers are bright red apple wedges topped with a tangy peanut butter spread served dip style. Combine one cup chunky peanut butter and one-fourth cup mayonnaise. Add two teablespoonfuls chill sauce and one-half cup chopped mustard pickle. Blend thoroughly. Cut spicy red Washington Winesap apples into wedges. If desired, sprinkle apple meat with lemon or pineapple juice to prevent discoloration and arrange the apple wedges, skin side up, in a ring around the tray with the dip mixture in the center.
Defense Speakers Named
ANEL leaders for a discussion of “Active Participation
of Women in County Civil Defense” have been announced for the Indiana State Department of Civil Defense meeting all day Thursday in the World War
Memorial. They are Mrs. Samuel Pullara, president of the East Gary Town Board and director of that community's newly organized civil defense unit; Mrs. Frederick Ellis, director of women's activities for Vanderburgh County; Mrs. Arthur Ferm, civil defense co-ordinator for the schools and PTA of St. Joseph County, and Mrs. Lyman Baker, director of women's activities for Fulton County. Mrs. Olive Remington Goldman, as previously announced? will be principal speaker on the subject “Civil Defense and the World Crisis.” » ~ ~
MRS. GOLDMAN is assistant director of women's affairs, Region V, Federal Civil Defense Administration, with headquarters in Joliet, Ill. She {s a graduate of Vassar College and has done graduate work at Har-vard-Radcliffe and the University of Illinois. She has traveled widely in Europe and accomplished further private study while in Italy, Austria and France, where she met her husband. In 1949 she was appointed United States representative on the Commission of the Status of Women of the United Nations for a 3-year term. She is the mother of four children.
Marydale 4-H Club
Plans Fair Entries
The 4-H Club of Marydale School: will have three entries ip the Indiana State Fair—a mitted baby cap, bootees and a woven rug. Members have won many ribbons on ‘their articles recently exhibited in shows, such as dresses, knitted items, weaving, ceramics, woven and hooked rugs, canning, flowers and shell work. All materials used in 4-H _elub projects are supplied by : , Khe Marydale Guild,
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Urges Daily Bible Reading
Times Epecinl WASHINGTON, Aug. 25— Daily reading of the Bible in every American home is urged by the General Federation of Women's Clubs in a new pamphlet just issued as a part of the federation’'s Americanism campaign. Mrs. Oscar Ahlgren, Whiting, Ind., president, is featuring Americanism as the dominant theme of her administration and advocating dally family prayers and grace at the table as a return to the pattern of American life established by our forefathers. “In order to stress an active Americanism program, {t is essential that we recognize democracy's fundamental concept of religion. The trend toward activities which are the antithesis of a religious way of life is weakening the character of our people. A democracy cannot survive without an alert, strong and intelligent citizenry of high moral character,” said Mrs. John Whitehurst, Baltimore, chairman of the Americanism department.
Bridge Results Given
Results are announced for the Lincoln Bridge Club's Friday night game. Winners“were N & 8 (Possible Score 189)— Mrs. W, Wayne Warrick, Louis Kahn, 1225; Jerry Epstein, Charles E. Stimming 112.5; and Mr. and Mrs. George P. Ryan 107.5. E & W (Possible 168) —Mrs. Randall Bass, Mrs. Arch - Falender 98; Gilbert Cohen, Irving Cohen 96 and Mrs. Willlam Epstein, Miss. Marge Quinn 91.5.
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yard all and put him in his pen. 1903 N. Whitcomb Ave.
The Mature Parent—
Too Many Expect
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES vely Lady of Tomorrow . . .
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MONDAY, AUG. 25, 1952 |
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Times photo by John R. 8picklemire.
JK ATHLEEN ANDERSON, 4, gives her pet rabbit a carrot. He runs and plays in the day and Kathleen bribes him with a carrot when she wants to catch him She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elton L. Anderson,
Marriage
To Provide Heaven on Earth
By MURIEL LAWRENCE N Friday last week, Helen and Sam, neighbors of mine, were called out of town unexpectedly for the week end. Just before they left, Helen remembered a pair of expensive theater tickets she had for Satur-
day evening. She rushed to the phone and called her favorite teen-age niece to suggest that she
and a friend make use of them. “I don't know whether I can find anyone who's free for tomorrow night,” her niece objected. “Try your pal Grace,” her aunt urged, “I know she wants to see this play. Just the other day she was complaining that she couldn’t get tickets.” When her young relative still demurred, her aunt lost patience. “What's the matter with you?” she demanded, “Have you and Grace had a fight?”
“No,” she was told.
S06 S
GRACE 18 17. Whether we are 17 or 37, such dependence upon male approval fs morbid and It also will prove -most burdensome for any young man unfortunate enough to
unwholesome.
undertake to support it.
If Grace does not recover from such dependence, she may never be able truly to love a man.
“It's just that Grace wouldn't accept an invitation now even if she were free, Aunt Helen. Even if she didn’t have a date with a boy, she wouldn't want me to know it. She'd die if she thought anyone suspected no boy was taking her out Saturday night.”
dependent upon
counselor said,
P
set it to jive for of cosmetic ads a promotion on
Mrs. Lawrence
When young women set themselves such merciless standards of sex attraction, they do not feel love, but hate for the sex that makes them so
its approval. They take revenge
{pon any man who does approach them by making so many demands upon him that to save himself, the young man has to run away. : In my presence recently, a noted marriage
“It is the expectation that mar-
riage will give us heaven on earth that is back of much marital unhappiness in this country.” Grace was not around to hear this statement. No popular song writer was there to take it and
young people to hum. No writer was present to seize upon it for Feminine Charm. So Grace may
never learn that it was made.
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SHE WILL GO right on believing that all her problems of self-distrust will be solved as soon as that unfortunate young man comes along to set up heaven on earth for her. When the poor boy fails, Grace will take the
first train to Reno.
Although I
nothing of the
life, not crutche
ual,” writes Dr. to do with the ship between m
infidelity in ma
Until our boys and girls faithful to themselves, we will continue to have
trust that we are not producing
many young people as romantic as Grace, we are producing thousands who suffer from the impression that sex and marriage will solve their problems of loneliness. Sex and marriage will do
kind, as they are enrichments of 8 for living it.
“If the relationship between the sexes becomes a refuge from loneliness of the individ-
Arich Fromm, “it has very little potentalities of the real relationale and female.” learn to be more
rriage.
Find Music Makes Dish-Washing Easier
By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK, Aug. 25— Do the dishes with a little Johann Strauss in the back-
ground. You'll find it makes
the job faster and more fun. At least that's the finding in a ‘dishpan survey conducted in Philadelphia. One hundred housewives and one lonely husband participated in the musical test. The women and the one man spent three successive nights washing dishes to music. On the first night, they listened only to peppy tunes; the second was given to slow, waltz tunes; the third night, they had a ‘longhair’ session. The women reported the music affected their work, much the same as industry has found harmony relieves monotony on the assembly line,
u on o MORE THAN half of the women found they worked with
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the tempo, speeding up their motions with bebop; slowing down with Beethoven. One housewife reported: “you need something snappy like ‘A Guy Is a Guy’ for stacking them. The ‘Blue Danube’ is good for glasses and silverware, and a rousing polka helps in scouring pans.” Did they find that music im-
proved their ‘emotional attitude” toward doing dishes? “Definitely,” some of the
women reported. ‘It keeps our minds off a miserable chore.” A good 50 per cent said: “Nothing can improve our emotional attitude at dish-washing time.”
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MOST WOMEN understand this attitude, The testers ‘estimated that, from Maine to California, the average woman spends too much time doing dishes, and in 30 vears washes a stack twice as high as the Empire State build-ing-—tons of plates, cups, glasses,
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“Music just puts me to sleep,” said another. Only 13 per cent of the women reported the music had a jarring effect. “The most soothing thing I can think of is quiet,” said one mother of four boys. Sixty-eight per eent of the women preferred to listen to the waltz or semiclassical type of music. Next in order were popular tunes, Latin- American rhythms and heavy classical. Three-fourths of the women found music helped relieve general housework fatigue,
Miss Pittenger ls Bride Of Robert Robinson Jr.
BEFORE Mrs. Robert D. Robinson Jr's. marriage at 2:30 p. m. yesterday in Fairview Presbyterian
‘Church she was Miss Cynthia
Pittenger. The Rev, Carl Hatfield performed the ceremony. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pittenger, 923 BE. 57th St, was attended by her sister, Mrs, Charles Randa. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Robinson, 8200 Spring Mill Rd., was attended
by his brother, Jay Douglas Robinson. Ushers were Francis Feeney, Chicago; Donald Brown, Cincinnati; Egbert Driscoll, Marion, Mass, and Richard T. Stout. . ” ”
THE BRIDE wore a ballerina length blush pink chiffon gown over a deeper shade of pink taffeta. The bodice had a chiffon fischu over the shoulders. The skirt was sprinkled with insets of imported lace motifs encrusted with pink pearls. Her shoulder-length veil fell in a circle from a net cap embroidered with lace.
The matron of honor wore a dress of pale lavender net over satin with lavender shoes and a band of red roses in her hair. Following the ceremony the couple greeted guests at a reception in Meridian Hills Club before leaving on a wedding
Show Smart
Fall Outfit -
Prospective
Purdue Girls To Be Guests
GRBLS entering Purdue University this fall will
be guests of Sigma Kappa at a buffet dinner and treasure hunt from 6 to ® p. my
tomorrow in the home of Mrs Willlam Hutchison, E. 86th Sty
Dinner will be served in the Hutchisons' log cabin. Sorority
and campus songs will be sung by chapter members with organ accompaniment. Miss Ruth Oehring, Oak Park, Ill., will give a report of the sorority convention held this summer in Pasadena, Cal, ” ” ” PURDUE alumnae assisting the hostess will include Miss Vivian Hatch, Mesdames George Benko, E. Lee Kennedy, Jack Simmons and Jack Nugent. Active members of the Purdue chapter attending will be Miss Ruth Lynn Silver, Park, Ill.; Mis Ruth Klinger, Lafayette; Miss Jackie Crouse, Rossville; Miss Jean Anderson, Bicknell, and Misses Mary Baker, Margaret Leighty and Joanne, Adair.
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WHEN she is sitting talking to a man, a woman drops something on the floor.
WRONG: She tries to pick it up before he has a chance to retrieve -it for her: RIGHT: She lets him pick it up for her.
MOE ia ES Mrs. Robert D. R
obinson Jr.
trip to Jasper National Park in the Canadian Rockies, For traveling the bride wore a blue falille suit flecked with wine and wine accessories. The couple will be at home after Sept. 13 on the Indiana University campus, where the bridegroom will attend medical school and the bride will be in the university. She attended Wheaton College and he attended Dartmouth. College. i
Auxiliary Luncheon
t..Mrs.: E. Carl Watson, 5865 Winthrop ‘Ave, will entertain members of the Delta Upsilon
sistant hostess. ‘rects your facts when you
U a : . 2 Auxiliary at a luncheon-bridge . a ” at 12:30 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. 2 : i naer 00 Harry G. Crawford will be as- YOUR husband often cor-
By BETTY LOCHER
A CAREER girl can have a
complete round-the-clock fall wardrobe for
about $185, according to
Miss Muriel Uebel, who is visiting Block’s today as representative of Glamour magazine.
Miss Uebel will commentate at a “Co-operative Career Wardrobe” show at Block's, based on fashions from the September issue of the magazine. There are performances at 2:30 and 5:30 p.‘'m.
Happily for everyone, size ranges will be included in the fashions—briefs, talls, half sizes, women’s, misses’ and juniors’.
The specific clothes included in the wardrobe are mix-match separates from which many different combinations can be made for any hour of the day.
2 - ”
BASIS OF THE wardrobe is the winter suit, which consists of a full length coat over a slim blouse. The second ensemble consists of three wool jersey separates, a blouse, pleated skirt and cardigan.
Next comes a black rayon jersey skirt and cocktail blouse and a nylon net skirt that can be teamed with the low-cut blouse for a short formal.
All these outfits are in blend- |]
ing colors so the skirts and blouses can be mixed and matched in endless combinations,
For accessories Miss Uebel advises a near-match look. No longer will gloves match hat, shoes . match bag. Blending shades of one color—browns into beiges, rusts into gold, shades of green or shades of blue, will give a effect in accessories.
HARVEST COLORS are being promoted, olive and hunter green, rust, grape tones, scarlet and royal blue.
Miss Uebel gives six fashion |
points to remember when selecting a fall wardrobe. Pleats are everywhere, used unexpectedly. Winter suits coats with matching skirts are big news. Wrapped waistlines and modified middies are important. Soft fabrics are newer than crisp ones. Winter cottons in tweedy textures will claim attention,
six |
skirt with a blending
water-color |
including gold, |
that are really a
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are telling a story. WRONG: Stop in the middle of what you are saying to argue with him each time,
RIGHT: Tell him in private that you wish he wouldn't interrupt when you are telling a story.
Remove Wrinkles You can remove wrinkles from your slipcovers, while they are still on the furniture, by simply running over the areas with your steam iron.
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Reqular $25 CADET SUITS by famous maker. Sizes 13 to 20. 17.90 Regular 1.69 to 2.98 SHIRTS, SHORTS, and T-SHIRTS. Broken sizes 3 to 6, 81
BOYS' SLACKS in broken sizes for juniors, cadets and huskies. 13 to 1 off
Regular 5.59 to 5.95 CORD SLACKS in solids | fancies. Broken sizes 4 to 12, 3.88
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SIX-WEF for Miss Earlier
ets to fly to
Millholland. R air attache f there. Originally, visit for a she has decided to tend art scho try. There's onl lem facing | now. - She'll h: Spanish in or get around wv preter, " THE David 79th St, ar Florida vaca Rather than vember to le water Beach, this week end. But there w son for thei parture. Last vested in a mc water and Mrs loves decorati model the new sonally. The; here next mo ally seftling i winter, un FOR Ed Mc N. H., wearin; bund under quite correct. Mr. and Mrs Shelbyville, we when they fi] houseguest. _ But disturl pride last 1 Hayes enterta ner party for of the bolder McLeod if the an eastern fac Mr. McLeod quite a celebr plained the c¢ the plaid from he was a dire
My Day— Calls To Bar
HYDE tion that a 1 the public 2 action must raising of ren ture. Congress d to end the pro gram of ren control in nor mal areas aft er Sept. 30, ex cept where lo c al govern ment bodie vote to con tinue it. Phila delphia an Pittsburgh ar the latest larg cities to vote ¢ federal rent
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Fashion
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