Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 38, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1931 — Page 8
PAGE 8
A Day's Menu Breakfast — Cantaloupe, cereal, cream, crisp broiled bacon with cress, pop-overs, milk, coffee. a a * Luncheon — Cold sliced meat loaf, creamed carrots, bread and butter, fruit pudding, milk, tea. a a a Dinner — Currant soup, fried spring chicken, potatoes Julienne, creamed cauliflower, stuffed beet salad, chocolate souffle, milk, coffee.
Cool Drinks in Summer Healthful r BY SISTER MARY NEA Ssrvlce Writer There is much satisfaction in knowing that we may imbibe almost its many long cool drinks on hot Bummer days as we like. The large percentage of water in all soft drinks is of prime importance, while the fruit juices usually used for flavoring add some mineral content. Research workers tell us that “water has the property of absorbing more heat and not being affected by that heat than other substances. It will absorb the heat lrom your body, and in possing off In the form of perspiration the evaporation cools you; hence there Is good reason for sipping a cooling beverage not only in immediate cooling effect but in the ultimate effect.” It is also interesting to know that ginger ale and innumerable other bottled beverages made with “charged” or “carbonated” water ere healthful drinks, according to the Chemical Research of the United States department of agriculture. Have Food Value These beverages are of some food Value due to the sugar used in their making, while the fruit juices, acids and extracts and other flavors from aromatic herbs and. roots as well as the -carbon dioxide gas present act as a tonic and mild Btimulant. When you are making drinks for Burnmef refreshment, take care not to make them too sweet. A sugar syrup is better than plain sugar for Bweetening. The flavor of the finished drink is more bland and smooth. Remember that this syrup acts as a dilutent as well as a sweetner and must be considered \vhen water is added. If your refrigerator is stocked Vdth a bottle of sugar syrup, fruit syrup and ginger ale, you can make a delicious, zestful drink on a minute’s notice. Sealed in Jars Fruit not perfect enough in shape for canning, can be used to make ft fruit syrup. The fruit is washed and crushed to extract the juice. It is scalded with or without sugar and sealed in sterilized jars. Since sugar acts as a preservative, it is a good plan to add it before sealing. Onecup sugar to four cups juice is a good propodrtion to use.Don't hesitate to combine fruit, juices. The excess juice left from canning small fruits and the juice from canned fruits always can be psed to advantage in summer drinks. Remember that lemon and lime juice give a pleasant tartness to ftll fruit punches. Another point that adds imtnensely to the flavor of fruit beverages is the addition of grated lemon rind to the'sugar syrup. Make a “simple” syrup as usual. When cooked, add the grated rind of two lemons for every cup of sugar used bnd let stand until cool. Strain and pottle or use as wanted. Ideal Thirst Quencher Raspberry shrub is invitingly tart, tnaking it an ideal thirst quencher ftnd code/, However, it is not as good a drink for children as “ade” of some flavor or a fruit punch. Grownups and those persons who V’ould reduce their weight will especially appreciate this delightful. old-time drink. Six quarts raspberries (red or black), 1 quart cider vinegar, granulator sugar. Wash and pick over fruit. Put berries and vinegar into a stone jar end let stand for thirty-six hours. Keep covered with a cloth. Strain through a jelly bag and measure juice. Put into preserving kettle ftnd boil ten minutes. Pour into Bterilized bottles and seal. Dilute With ice water to serve. MISSIONARY GROUP WILL HOLD PARTY Ladies Missionary Society of St. John’s Evangelical church will hold ft tea at 2:30 Friday at the church. Mrs. Charles Mueller, who has visited the leper colony at Carrsville, t>a., will speak on “Leper Work.” Members of the society will act as hostesses during the tea hour. Mrs. August Ebell, president, is in charge of arrangements.
Miss Reed, Ferdinand Montani Wed in St. Catherine’s Church
Miss Josephine Reed, daughter of Mrs. Florence A. Reed, 2312 Nowland avenue, and Ferdinand V. Montani, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Montani, 2640 North Meridian street, were married at 8 this morning at St. Catherine's church, with the Rev Fentan G. Walker officiating. The altar was decorated with palms and ferns, lighted with cathedral candles. Pasquale Montani, harpist, played. The bride wore a princess gown Os white chiffon, fashioned with very long skirt. She wore a tulle veil, made with a lace cap trimmed with orange blossoms, and carried bride roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Raffaela Montani, sister of the bridegroom, was the maid of honor. She wore peach chiffon with hairbraid picture hat to match, and carried Johanna Hill roses. Another sister, Miss Ceclia Montani, was bridesmaid She wore green chiffon, Iwith picture hat to match, and tamed rae*
EDITH FAIRBANKS TO WED ITALIAN COUNT
Ceremony to Be Held in Chicago Miss Edith Anne Fairbanks, ! daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren ! Fairbanks of Indianapolis and Chicago, will marry Count Ruggero Visconti di Modrone of Milan, Italy, at 4:30 this afternoon in the apartment of the bride’s parents, 1500 Lake Shore drive. The Rev. Louis Giambastani will perform the wedding ceremony. Miss Cornelia Warren Fairbanks, who will be her sister’s only attendant, will wear a gown of yellow chiffon, a brown hat and slippers and carry a bouquet of talisman roses and delphinium. Giuseppe Castrucchio, Italian con-sul-general at Chicago, will be best man for the bridegroom. The bride, whose father will give her in marriage, will wear a severely simple, untrimmed gown of ivory : satin with a long train and ivory | tulle veil. She will carry calla lilies. I The ceremony will be performed | before an improvised altar of j banked greenery and calla lilies in j the drawing room. Indianapolis guests will include | Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Fairbanks, ; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stalnaker and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Sutphin. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Fairbanks, Pasadena, Cal.: Mr. and Mrs. ( Matthew Taylor, Miss Margaret | Taylor and Mrs. William C. McKin- j ney, Pittsburgh, elso will be guests. The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Charles Warren Fairbanks, former Vice-President of the United States. She was educated at Miss Master’s school, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y., and at Sheldon-Nixon school, Florence, Italy. She was presented at the court of St. James. She is a member of the Indianapolis Junior League. The bridegroom is a member of one of the oldest and most widely known families in Europe, and has spent the last year in America studying American banking and financial methods. He is a descendant of the rulers of Lombardy, thirteenth to the fifteenth century, and his ancestors, who began the famous Milan cathedral, have been noted patrons of Milanese art. Count and Countess Visconti will sail Saturday on the Conte Grande for Genoa and will make their home in Milan. Mrs. Reagan Is Honored at Tea Fete Mrs. J. E. Reagan, and her daughter, Miss Berenice Reagan, entertained Tuesday with a tea at their home, 2887 Sutherland avenue, in honor of Mrs. Silas Reagan, formerly Miss Elizabeth Bruington, Council Bluffs, la., and her mother, Mrs. Byron O. Bruington, who is visiting her. Yellow and blue garden flowers, delphinium, shasta daisies, yellow roses, and gladiola were used through the house. The tea table, laid with a filet cloth, was centered with yellow daisies and delphinium. At each end of the table ■ were candelabrae holding yellow J tapers. The hostesses were as- : sisted by: Mesdames Charles 8. Wiltsle. Carl H. Weyl. Charles A. Gerrard. C. A. Pritchard, M. D. Nelson, T. A. Hendricks. Harold Binkley, E. W. Rogers, Charles Obold, Isaac B. Woodard, H. E. Rasmussen. John Madden. James P. Hoster, B. W. Gillespie Jr.. C. F. Wiltsle Jr.. C. P. Cartwright. H. W. Fieber, George Heidenreich, Hadley Green. Misses Elizabeth Hayes and Josephine Madden Out of town guests included: Mrs. James Zoller, Cincinnati; Mrs. Charles Baxter. Knlghtstown: Mrs. Guy Lemon. New York; Mrs. Frank Strohn. Narberth. Pa.: Mrs. L. F. Follett. Ottawa, 111.; Miss Elizabeth Humphrey. Saratoga Springs, N. Y.; Miss Dorothy Reagan. ;nightstown: Miss Margaret Bannen, Milwaukee, and Miss Eugenia Harris, New York. Miss Barrett Will Give Tea for Her Guests Miss Eleanor Anne Barrett will be hostess for a tea this afternoon at her home, 3173 North Delaware street, in honor of her house guest, Miss Elizabeth' Hall, Braintree, Mass. The tea table -will be centered with a plateau of Talisman roses. Summer flowers will be used throughout the house. Miss Barrett will be assisted by: Mrs. E. Clifford Ecrrett, her mother; Miss Florence 'Barrett, her sister; Miss Cora Fletcher, her aunt, end Mesdames William Averill Johnson, Douglass Pollock Johnson, WilUam J. Henshaw, Misses Eleanor Green, Sara Tyce Adams, Frances Hamilton. Anne Speers, Elizabeth Hlsey and Joan Johnson.-
Dominic Montani was his brother’s best man. Ushers were cousins of the bridegroom, John Montani, Anthony Montani, and Fred Gioschio. A wedding breakfast at the Columbia Club followed the ceremony. The table was centered with a wedding cake on a plateau of roses. After the breakfast Mr. and Mrs. Montani left on a wedding trip to New York. She traveled in an ensemble of blue, with white accessories. They will be at home after July 15 at 2312 Nowland avenue. Chapter to Convene Alpha Tau chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, will have a business meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Antlers. Sorority to Meet Beta Tau sorority will meet at 8:15 tonight at the home of Misses and Anna belle Land. ,8i
What’s in Fashion?
Cool Street and Office Clothes Directed By AMOS PARRISH
NEW YORK, June 24.—We have no illusions about hot weather. When it’s hot, it’s hot, and most anything you wear is too much. But since we can’£ go around dressed like a South* Sea Islander, the kind of fashionable clothes that are coolest are worth talking about. Fashion etiquette pays no attention to weather, and folks who have to be about the street or in business offices have a certain formality they must keep up, weather or no. And to meet this demand there are a lot of clothes designed for comfort this year that still have a look of formality. Everybody knows how comfor-
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pattern No. 33 5 Size Street City Namn State •%••••••••>•a••••••••• ■■
ip j fill t I 333 M
CHIC SPORTS TYPE WITH PLAITS. Here’s a pretty little washing frock for your summer wardrobe. It can be carried out in almost any fairly firm cotton, linen, rayon or tub silks—perhaps most lovely in the last. The original was in citrus yellow with brown buttons and brown patent leather belt. The shirt is smartly plaited. And the crossover effect of the yoked bodice is smart. The flat slimness of the hipline has not been forgotten. Style No. 335 may be had in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38. 40 and 42 inches bust. Dotted batiste, plalded gingham, cotton mesh, eyelet or plain linen, pique, shirting silks and wool jersey are lovely for this wearable dress. Size 36 requires 4 yards 35-inch. Our large Fashion magazine shows the latest Paris styles for summer for adults and children. Also instructive lessons in sewing. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coiA (coin preferred). 9m
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
table shantung is. You’ve worn it many summers in sports costumes of natural color, pink or blue. You can wear it this summer in dark colors that are just as cool as the light ones, but more suited to city streets and offices. A suit of shantung is the good choice of many fashionable business women, In navy blue (one of the smartest summer colors), brown or black, combined with a fresh white blouse, you’ve a costume appropriate for the biggest city’s streets or the biggest executive’s office. And as comfortable as anything is in mid-summer. Smart Collarless Jacket There are many kinds of shantung suits. The one we’ve had sketched was selected because of its smart collarless jacket. It has an extra cool look and interesting things can be done with blouse collars put outside, as in the sketch. The diagonal closing, you remember, is a Vionnet idea and one of the best suit fashions. Cottons and linens are made up this summer into costumes formal enough for such use, too. Those simple, one-piece, tailored looking dresses that have their own matching jackets are the kind we mean. The dresses are usually sleeveless, so the jacket is kept on the street or in the office. But—this same sleeveless dress, without the jacket, can be used for sportswear, too. And the jacket can be worn with other costumes. Silk Jacket Dresses Jacket dresses, by the way, are one of the best solutions to hot weather costume problems. Printed silks are fine because they keep fresh looking so long. Dust and dampness don’t show as plainly on them. And the silk jacket adds no extra warmth. We’ve had sketched a printed jacket dress that we like especially because of the white frill at the neckline. White at the neckline of a print is one of the most fashionable summer ideas. The jacket is fine, too, with its comfortable wider sleeves and smartly indicated waitline. Three-Quarter Sleeves Sher materials like georgette are fashionable again this summer, and they’re cool. Printed silk one-piece dresses with loose three-quarter sleeves are quite correct—and cool—for the street. And like the jacket dress illustrated, these one-piece prints are cooler-looking and much in fashion when they have a white lingerie type collar. So—if you choose cool-looking, cool-feeling materials in styles that keep the arms covered, but not constricted—you can just about satisfy the demands of fashion, formality and comfort. fCopyright, 1931. by Amos Parrish) Next: Amos Parrish writes on the fashion for color—and how it is done.
AFTER A DIP IN LAKE MICHIGAN
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In the group of Indianapolis people, above, enjoying the beach at the Edgewater Beach hotel during their stay in Chicago are, left to right, W. J. Pray, Mrs. Pray, Mrs. A. J. Wohlgemuth, H. W. Rhohdehamer and Mrs. Rhodehamer.
Card Parties
There will be card parties Thursday and Sunday afternoon and night at Holy Cross hall, with Mrs. Jacob Kramer, chairman. West Side Euchre Club will hold a card party at 8:30 Thursday at municipal gardens. Members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers will give a card party for the benefit of the unemployed members of the organization at 8 Wednesday night at Castle Hall, 230 East Ohio street. Women of Mooseheart Legion will hold a card party at 2:30 Thursday at 135 North Delaware street. Mrs. William Anderson will act as hostess. Marion council, No. 738, Security, Benefit Association, will hold ft
Miss Swan to Be Bride \ at Church Marriage of Miss Kathryn Swan, daughter of Mrs. Herbert G. Swan. 4812 Broadway, to Charles William Buckey, Washington, D. C., son of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Buckey, Cambridge, 0., will be solemnized at 8:30 tonight at the Central Christian church, with the Rev W. H. Shullenberger officiating. Palms in graduating shades of : green and other greenery, will deco--1 rate the chancel and the altar. A pair of five branched candelabrae ; with lighted cathedral candles will 1 flank the altar, and a single taper , will be lighted at each side of the ; altar steps. Mrs. Fred Jeffry, organist, will play, and Miss Vera Deardorff, Carmel, will sing. Sister Maid of Honor Miss Margaret Swan will be her sister's maid of honor, and the bridesmaids will be Miss Katherine McClure, Dayton, 0., and Mrs. Bruce Weyer. Gowns of the three attendants will carry out the bride’s chosen colors, orchid, yellow and green. They will be of organdy, fashioned alike, with tight basque waists, and full circular skirts reaching to the floor. They will wear white accessories, and each will wear a rose from her bouquet in her hair. Miss Swan will wear yellow and carry Talisman roses, tied with a deeper shade of yellow ribbon; Miss McClure will wear orchid and carry Butterfly roses, tied with a deeper shade of orchid, and Mrs. Weyer will wear green and carry Butterfly roses with deeper green streamers. Relics to Be Worn The bride Will wear a princess gown of ivory satin fitted at the hipline, with a train dividing into two points, a cowl neckline and a bertha collar of rose point lace, which her mother wore on her wadding dress. Her veil will be of Brussels net, falling from a coronet of orange blossoms and rose point lace. She will wear a small gold pin, shaped as a heart, with key attached, which has been worn by the brides in her family for four generations. Her bouquet will be a shower of Bride roses and lilies of the valley. Thomas Buckey, Newark, 0., a cousin of the bridegroom, will be the best man. Ushers will be Ralph Compton, Daniel Harvey, Bruce Weyer and Lloyd Evans. Reception to Follow A reception at the home of the bride’s mother will follow the ceremony. The bride and bridegroom will receive before a banked array of palms, baskets of lilies, daisies, roses and other garden flowers, which will be arranged about the home. The bride’s table will be centered with a wedding cake decorated with pink and white roses. Mrs. Swan will wear poudre blue lace over orchid chiffon and a corsage of roses. Mrs. Buckey will wear poudre blue georgette, with corsage of roses. Honeymoon In East After the reception the couple will leave for a wedding trip through the east before going to Washington, where they will make their home until winter, wTien they will proceed to Marion, Va. The bride will travel in an ensemble of black and white, with white accessories. Out of town guests at the wedding will be Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Ely and Mrs. Kate Thompson, Milwaukee; Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Gilbert and daughter Dorothea, Princeton, Ind.; Mrs. Emma Lowe, Paris, 111.; Miss Pearl Warden and Melvin Warden, Cambridge, O. Buckey is a graduate of Ohio I State university, and a member of < Beta Kappa fraternity. . POWELL PUPILS TO GIVE DANCE REVUE Louise Poweil will present her young dancing pupils in a “Kiddie Revue” at 8 Thursday night at Meridian Hills Country Club, as a part of the club’s regular Thursday night entertainments. A special dinner will precede the program. Thursday, July 2, “Mid Summer Night’s Dream,” will be presented under the auspices of the Civic theater.
■ benefit euchre and bunco party tonight at US’s East Maryland street. Tarum Court, 14, Ladies of the Oriental Shrine, will give a bridge tea from 2 to 4, Thursday afternoon, at the Banner-Whitehill parlors, 31 South Meridian street. Hostesses will be Mesdames George W. Spin- | ner, Mary Hubbard, and Lloyd Tucker. AMICIfIA CLUB IN ANNUAL OUTING Amicitia Club held its annual | summer outing Tuesday at Brookside park. Twenty-five members were present. It was announced I that a pledge of SIOO to the Indiana , Christian hospital had been paid. Following committee was appointed to arrange the President’s day party in October: Mesdames i Albert chairman; John Matthews, ;&&Bk Castas, E. S.
PSWfUgP;; I#s% .vJB
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
IT was Sunday afternoon at the city zoo. Multitudes of people ! milled back and forth without ; apparent purpose, enjoying the sunshine and puzzling over the | animals, which, though so near * to us. yet are so alien and incomprehensible. Children scampered between men’s legs and screamed to one another. Tired-looking women, in pathetically worn clothes, smiled and stared. Stolid men carried babies in pink and blue blankets. In the distance the smoke of picnic fires drifted through the trees. Silks and satins brushed against patched gingham. At the zoo. at least, all men are equal. And in their search for amusement, are not all men pathetic? If 'fce would put some of our effort into providing fun for the masses, we might not be kept so busy building jails to lock them in. For every mortal is making a constant escape from boredom. We perform Herculean labors in an effort to obtain amusement and to get away from reality. a a a THE government, while ever ready to pounce upon the erring, uses very little ingenuity in devising pleasure for working | men and women. We love to set up our “Keep off the Grass” signs and always are calling at--1 tention to the fact that the wild flowers must be saved. m But what about saving the sanity and the soul of mortals who are sick for a bit of pleasure and fun; who pine for a flight into carefree hours? Might it not be wise for us to invent new holiday occupations for the people whose every-day life is one long struggle with monotony and drabness? A large part of our crime has its inception in the restlessness of individuals who are bored, unutterably bored, with living and who make these rash and ineffectual attempts to procure excitement. Few busy and interested people commit crimes Club Leaders Honor Guests at Tea Party Mrs. Ann L. De Rcss entertained Tuesday night at Ye Old Boarding House tearoom in honor of Miss Lucy Osborn, president of Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’s Club, and Mrs. Adah O. Frost, president of the state federation. The party also was a house warming to open the new tearoom at 32 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. R. Harry Miller, Miss Merica E. Hoagland and Miss Marjory Ford, state corresponding secretary, also were honor guests. Guests, fifty-two in number, were members of the Indianapolis club who attended the recent statfe convention in Ft. Wayne, and. Mesdames Thomas O’Brien, Ray Lowe and Lucille Morrison, Constantine, Mich., and Miss Margaret Gilbreath, Ft. Wayne. The hostess w r as assisted by Mrs. Ethel Bradley, Miss Autumn Bradley and Miss Patricia Mallory.
Personals
Miss Mary Elizabeth Axby, Lawrenceburg. is the house guests of Miss Mary Lynn Weyl, 719 East Sixteenth street. Mrs. Wesley Shea, 4366 North Meridian street, will leave Friday for Lake Maxinkuckee for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Tom E. Elrod, 333 North Irvington avenue, have issued invitations for a dinner bridge party at 7 Friday night at Whispering Winds. Mrs. Carrie Perkins, Colonade apartments, will leave Saturday for an eastern motor trip with her brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette Perkins.
j Cracroft, Richard Coleman and Warren Wise. Gives Breakfast Party Mrs. P. J. Clark, president of the j Independent Social Club, entertained club members with a breakfast party Tuesday at her home, 2214 Park avenue. Mrs. Walter More gave a musical program. The ' club will hold a picnic Sunday at ! Noblesville.
FREE-FINGER WAVE Every day except Saturday j This coupon good for FREE finger wave if 35c shampoo is taken r or good for FREE marcel capably given under expert supervision ever v day except Saturday. 9:30 to 5:30. and Monday and Wednesday evening. 6 to 9:31. Avery small charge for all other treatments. CENTRAL BEAUTY COLLEGE 2d Floor Odd FeUow Bldg. Li. 0432. BE BEA#m> \
City Pair to Be United in Horne Rites Miss Marcella Mathews, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Mathews, 3124 Washington boulevard, and Robert B. Berner, son of Mrs. Maude Berner, 3540 North Meridian street, will be married at 3:30 this afternoon at the home of the bride’s ■parents. The Rev. Wiliam Rothenburger will perform the ceremony before the fireplace, which will be banked with palms and ferns, interspersed with clusters of roses and delphinum, and flanked at each side by cathedral candles in sevenbranch candelabrae. Pasquale Montani will play during the ceremony. His program will include “Beta Sweetheart Song” and "Delta Zeta Sweetheart.” Miss Maxine Quinn, maid of honor, will wear a blue lace dress with blue lace mitts and slippers, and carry an arm bouquet of pink roses. Dale Maulsverry will be best man. The bride, whose father will give her in marriage, wil wear a white lace period frock. Her tulle veil is bordered with lace, and has a lace cap caught with orange blossoms. She will carry a shower bouquet of Bride's roses, orchids and lilies of the valley. A reception will follow the ceremony. Mrs. Mathews’ gown will be gray chiffon and lace, and Mrs. Berner's, beige lace. Both will wear shoulder corsages of roses. The couple will motor north for a honeymoon, the bride traveling in a beige wool suit with matching accessories. The at horn a address is for July 8, at 3239 North Ilinois street. The bride was graduated from Butler university last week, and is a member of Delta Zeta sorority. Berner was graduated from Purdue university last week, and is a Beta Theta Pi.
Just Every Day Sense
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Follett, Ottowa, 111., and Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Miller, will entertain with a dinner party tonight at Meridian Hills Country Club in honor of their sister, Miss Dorothy Reagan, and her fiance, Horton' Humphrey, who will be married Saturday in Knightstown. The dinner table will be centered with a plateau of summer flowers in the bride’s colors, peach and green. Covers will be laid for: Mr. ar.d Mrs. Follett. Mr. and Mrs. Miller. Miss Reagan. Mr. Humphrey. Mr. and Mrs. George F. Humphrey. Mr. and Mrs.
Elinor Carpenter, Bride-Elect, Honored at Shower Fetes
Miss Elinor Carpenter, whose marriage to Allison Verne McCullough, Utica, N. Y., will take place July 11, was honor guest this afternoon at a miscellaneous shower and bridge party, for which Mrs. William T. Randall, 842 East drive, Woodruff Place, was hostess. Gifts were presented the brideelect by Mrs. Randall’s little daughter Suzanne. The house was decorated with garden flowers and appointments were in rainbow shades. The table at serving time w r as centered with a plateau of roses and garden flowers. Guests included: Mesdames Oris Stanfield, Norman Schneider, Otto Mahrdt. Rudolph Miller, Edward Greene, H. P. Tilman, Paul Carpenter, Walter Carpenter, John Fickle, Roy Meyer, A. A. Ogle. Misses Katherine Kenney and Geneva McCoy. Mrs. Mahrdt was hostess Tuesday afternoon at a bridge party and personal shower at her home, 501 West drive, Woodruff Place, for Miss Carpenter.
m _ Brighten ’ ';:':'\ the breakfast fc|| with berries. I. 'T^V'i| “I pile luscious red straw*j * berries on our Shredded PMfcJi Wheat Biscuits and then M pour cream or whole milk fb over them. The flavory i |V shreds blend with the juices - °f the berries in such a way as t 0 Btimu^ate the most jaded ™*V*fanL appetite. Shredded Wheat is *- sohealthful and wholesome.’* M NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY * “Uneede Bakers” SHREDDED WHEAT mTH ALL THE BRAN Os THE WHOLE WHEAT
Bridal Couple to Be- Guests at Meridian Hills Dinner
.JUNE 24, 1931
Daily Recipe CHICKEN SNOW 7 2 cups riced potatoes 2 tablespoons butter 1 egg 1-2 teaspoon salt 1-2 cup hot milk 2 cups diced chicken 1 teaspoon, minced parsley Beat egg until light and add with butter, salt and milk to potatoes. Beat hard and add chicken and parsley. Turn into a buttered baking dish and bake 20 minutes in a moderate oven. Serve with creamed peas and fruit salad.
Director Is Elected by Zorita Club At a meeting of Zonta Club on Tuesday night at the Lumley tearoom. Miss Elizabeth Bettcher unanimously was elected director to fill the unexpired term of Miss Anne Feeley, newly elected president. Convention reports were made by Miss F ;eley, Mrs. Willa Proctor. Miss Jenny Higi and Miss Patricia Elliott, who were delegates to the national convention of Zonta Clubs last week in Cleveland. For the next meeting, June 30. a chicken dinner will be held at the Kopper Kettle, in Morristown. Miss Eve Wiles is in charge of arrangements. Miss Sue Stuartt will entertain the entire club at breakfast on Sunday at her home, 2905 Ruckle street. Flowers in the club colors, bronze and gold, will be used in decoration. Before the breakfast there will be a swimming party.
MerriU Esterllne. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Megargle. Miss Elizabeth Humphrey. Saratoga Springs, N. Y.: Miss Margaret Bannen. Milwaukee: Cameron Baird. Buffalo. N. Y.i Charles Moores and William Davies. Mrs. Esterline w 7 as hostess Tuesday for a handkerchief shower and luncheon bridge at her home, 5122 North Pennsylvania street, in honor of Miss Reagan. Guests included: Mrs. Grace FJ-eagan. Mrs. Mark Bundy, Miss Irene Wooten. Knightstown; Miss Jean Cunningham. Hammond: Mrs. Folr lett. Mrs. Miller. Miss Bannen. Miss Humphrey. Mesdames James Cook. Stewart Cline and John Paul Jones.
At serving time, crystal baskets of pink and blue flowers centered the tables. Guests with Miss Carpenter and her mother, Mrs. Walter N. Carpenter, were: Mesdames Stanfield. Schneider. Randall. Wendall. Phillip Roth. Roy Myers. Schuyler Mower. Herbert Galloway. John Shaw. D .L. Greggory. John Korra. Georg* O. Browne. Russell T. Cooke. C. J. McCoy, Robert C. Becherer and her house guest. Mrs. Robert Bloomer. New York, and Miss Edna Nowland. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Augusta B. Hollister and Mrs. John J. Mahrdt. Gum Remover You can remove chewing gum that has adhered to your clothing or shoes by using some benzole on a bit of cotton. It absorbs the gum and if rubbed carefully with more cotton doesn’t even leave a spot.
