Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1937 — Page 21
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Local Men
FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1937
Local Clubs’ |
PAGE 2! Voters Plan
Diversions
Are Varied
Golfing, Duncing Loafing Combat Boredom.
and
Vacation stay-at-homes who have
learned how to avoid midsummer |
boredom, seek their week-end diversions at Indianapolis Country Clubs. Somewhere between the gaiety of the week-end of the Fourth and the climactic Labor Day season comes a period when city life palls. Golf rounds, social events, swimming, cards or plain relaxation with pleasant company offered by local clubhouses make tempting diversions. The mere idea of the annual moonlight terrace dance at the Indianapolis Country Club tomorrow night is a refreshing hotweather thought.
Wemmers Direct Event
Mr. and Mrs. W. HL. Wemmer are cochairmen of the event. Dinner is to be served at 8 p. m. and dancing is to begin on the terrace at 9 p. m. and last until 1 a. m. The Commanders orchestra is to provide music.
Assisting on the committee are |
and Messrs. K. W, Atkins, Ralph W. Boozer. Otto Eisenlohr, Dudley R. Gallahue, Sylvester Johnson, Charles Latham, E. B. Martindale, Perry E. O'Neal, H. A. Pinnell, William G. Sparks, John B. Stokely, W. H. Wells and John G. Kinghan. Among reservations listed to date are those of Mesdames and Messrs. Mercer. Claude Jones, Roy C. Bain, Mercer, Claude Jones. Ray C. Bain, Hal Keeling and Sheldon Sayles.
Marks Anniversary
Meridian Hills Country Club is to celebrate their 12th anniversary tomorrow, with Mrs. Stewart Greene as arrangements chairman. * Golf. tennis, swimming, bridge
Mesdames
and a putting contest are included | of activities for the |
in the list women. Men in the club are to take part in a new members’ tournament, which is to be a partnership fourball affair. E. G. Mueller and E. E. Swanson are in charge of the event. A large birthday cake in pastel colors is to feature the picnic supper to be served at 6:30 p. m. on the club lawn for all members and their families.
Supper Held
Members of Highland Golf and Country Club met last night, “maids-night-out,” for their weekly buffet supper. A three-piece orchestra provided dinner music. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dowling are club entertainment committee chairmen. A six-man golf team from the Indianapolis Country Club is to compete with a similar team from the Highland Club on the Highland course tomorrow afternoon. Children from Hillcrest Country Club are to be guests of children from Meridian Hills at the Meridian Hills pool at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Pantzer and daughters, Dorothy and Peggy, are spending two weeks in Ray View, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Myers, 4165 N. Pennsylvania St., are to leave Tuesday for New York. They plan to sail July 30 on the S. S. California for a six weeks trip abroad. Mrs. Elizabeth Meal and family are to occupy the Myers home in their absence. Maj. and Mrs. Charles E. Cox Jr. have left for their summer home near Ludington, Mich. They were accompanied by their children, Charles and Diane, Major Cox's mother, Mrs. C. E. Cox Sr.; Alex Metzger Jr., Mrs. Cox's mother, Mrs. Albert Goepper and Mrs. Edna Martin. Mrs. Martin is to leave
next week from Michigan for a visit |
with Mrs. George C. Brinkmeyer, Falmouth, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dowling, 5507 Washington Blvd., are to leave next week for Burt Lake, Waloon Lake and Wequeaonsing, Mich. They are to visit their daughter, Miss Helen Marie Madden, and Miss Jean Madden at Minnewonka Lodge, Three Lakes, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Barnhart are in Mackinac, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. William Low Rice and daughter Joan left today for Lexington, Ky., where they will attend the Lexington Horse Show, which is to be held this week-end. Mr. and Mrs, William P. Ander.son, 3703 N. Delaware St. have as their house guests Mrs. C. S. Otzbach, Mrs. A. B. Buchmiller and Miss Muriel Dorms, all of New Haven, Conn. Miss Mary Elizabeth Cornell is to arrive Sunday from Dayton to be the house guest of her aunt, Mrs. H. J. Lacy, and Mr. Lacy, Kessler Blvd. Mrs. Lacy’s uncle, R. O. Gill, Los Angeles, Cal, is visiting them, also. Dr. and Mrs. George Lowe and daughter Elizabeth have gone to “their country home, Lowhaven, near Carmel, where they will take up permanent residence.
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Voege have |
left for a trip to Florida. They were accompanied by -their son, Clayton Voege, and Frank Richard Wilking, scm of Mr. and Mrs. Frank O. Wilking. Miss Marie Stevens is spending a few days at the Chalfonte-Haddon Hotel, Atlantic City. _ Among the guests at the St. Regis Hotel, New York, is Mrs. F. D. Stalmaker. Mrs. Gladys B. VanSant is stopping at Chalfonte-Haddon Hall, Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Sutherland have as their house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph F. Grossman and their daughters, Joyce and Nancy Jane, Yonkers, N. Y, and Mr. and Mrs. Gonard Felland and sons, Jeremy and James. Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Raiston are on a trip to California, Banff and Lake Louise, Miss Sally Butler and Miss Arti Sue Kerly, 1733 N. Meridian St., are at the Chalfonte-Haddon
Miss Dorothy Spahr (left) and nessy reminisce about gay times
|
Miss Jane Hen-
] at Northwestern |
Reminisce of Northwestern
Times Photo.
University. Miss Hennessy was graduated last spring and Miss Spahr plans to return in September.
P1 Beta Phi Show Teams
Are Named
Mrs. Robert S. Wild, chairman of |
the Pi Beta Pi Alumnae Club bene- | fit show to be held Aug. 10 in the | William H. Block Co. auditorium, | has announced chairmen and mem- | bers of ticket selling teams.
George Purves, magician, and his troupe are to appear. Proceeds are | to go to the sorority settlement | school in Gatlinburg, Tenn. Teams are as follows: Mrs. John L. Golthwaite, captain; Mesdames C. R. Hamilton, B. C. Lewis, Edwin W. Camp, Jasper P. Scott and R. D. Pritchard. Mrs. Truman Hoover, captain; Mesdames E. R. Smith, Harold Crater, S. O. Brewer, Wayne Kimmel and Irving Palmer,
| | |
Others Listed Mrs. Hollis Leedy, captain; Mes{dames Roy Lee Smith, L. L. Flint,
| Horace Storer, E. S. Hildreth and | Mrs. |
| Miss Sara Elizabeth Miller. | George Herman Boots, captain; | Mesdames Norman Comtois, John K. Collins and Misses Lena Lohr- | man, Myrta Thomson and Kath|erine Hanna. Mrs. C. Norman | Green, captain; Mesdames Loran | Sickenan, Robert Manfeld, Paul V. Brown, Albert Mueller and E. E. Reed. Mrs. Heber Williams, captain; Mesdames Ray H. Briggs, Russell Williams, Walter Zirpel, Edward Gallagher and Miss Marion Darr. Mrs. Lee Fox, captain; Mesdames A. Hernly Boyd, Robert Terry, Thomas Rhodes, Waldo Barrett and Willard Gearen. Mrs. Buford Cadle, captain; Mesdames 3urcihard Carr, Richard Hill and Miss Evelyn Forsythe. Mrs. Harry Morton, captain; Mesdames H. C. Gemmer, M. R. Granger, Ralph McQuiston and Misses Lettie Blue and Margaret Kellenback. Mrs. Scott Walden, captain; Mesdames Ruell Moore, Robert Butterworth, Ralph ! C. Gery and F. Noble Ropkey.
Phi Tau Deltas To Give Dmner On Anniversary
Beta Chapter, Phi Tau Delta Sorority, is to celebrate its 10th anniversary tomorrow with a dinner at Hollyhock Hill. Cerise and silver, the sorority
colors, are to be used in appointments and a bouquet of sweet peas, the sorority flower, is to form the table centerpiece. to be marked with the member's “secret sister” gift. Mrs. Leon Burton, president, is to be in charge and entertainment is to follow in the summer house. Mrs. Harold Eden is arrangements chairman assisted by Misses Louise Berndt and Elizabeth Hughes. Members who are to attend are: Misses Louise Kunkel, Bertha Huffman, Elizabeth Hughes, Louise Berndt and Mesdames Clyde Andrews, Leon Burton, Ernest Mills, | Edward McElfresh, Charles Creas- | ser, Harold Eden, Gerald Foltz and | William Stewart.
‘Theta Delta Sigma Fetes Recent Bride
Mrs. Donald Sears, a recent bride, was honor guest recently at a shower given by the Theta Delta Sigma Sorority in the home of Miss La Frenda Jchnson, 7205 N. Belle Vieu Place. : in Guests included Misses Kathleen Usher, Elizabeth Jones, Patricia Geraghty, Geraldine Jensen, Rachel Ernestine Parker, Betty
e Ruth Mae Fischer Mrs. ‘Amick, we
| { |
supper, card party, social.
Each place is |
| are
Kappa Sigma Chi.
Paul Jones, hostess. Dinner.
2210 E. Garfield Dr., hostess. Alpha Chapter, Sigma Phi. 6 p.
Holy Angels Altar Sodality.
Ave. Benefit card party. Mrs.
Public invited.
Gossett Family. burg, host.
Sun.
Henry Shulz, president.
Indianapolis. Aug. «=. program. Basket dinner.
EVENTS
SORORITIES 7 p. m. tonight.
Beta Chapter, Sigma Delta Zeta. 8 p. m. Mon.
4933 Brookville Road, hostess. Spread. CARD PARTIES
5 p. m. to 8:30 p. m. Tues. Mrs. Dee Barnes, chairman. Lavelle Gossett Auxiliary, V. PF. W., 8:30 p. m. Sat.
Ladies Auxiliary 103, Railway Conductors. 8 p. m. tonight. Robert H. Love, 2618 Gale St. hostess,
REUNIONS Arlie Smith, five miles north of Browns-
Residents, former residents, New Point, Ind. Sun.
Former residents and residents of Harrison County, living in and near Garfield Park. Games and speakers on
Snively's Tea Room. Mrs. Miss Ruth Baase, m. Mon. Miss Josephine Beck, Cafeteria Hall, 701 King Howard Logan, chairman.
Mrs. Garden party and cards.
Garfiela Park.
breakfast biscuits . . . what will your
when temperatures soar.
Soaring Temperatures Fail To Discourage Canning Addicts
When winter comes and the man of the house orders jam for his
answer be?
A surprising number of Indianapolis women are preparing for just such emergencies even though it may mean toiling over a hot stove
The brides and those who are too-busy-to-bother may be content to run to the corner grocery store for their preserves and jellies but home-
housewifely vanity for many moderns. Mrs. W. L. Horne, 1835 N. Penn- | sylvania St. is one of those who | cans furiously, by the dozen jars! and far into the night, if necessary. | “Some people may think canning | went out with the horse and sha” Mrs. Horne says. “But not at our house.” | She takes great pride in concoct- | ing choice pickles and marmalades, the recipes of which have been handed down for generations in Kentucky where she lived formerly. One of her favorites, which invariably makes a hit with guests, is a piccalilli which she makes from red cabbage. Poke berries, the sort which grow along the roadside, she says, are used in crushed form to color the mixture a brilliant red.
Makes Southern Pickles
Peach and orange marmalade, made from Elberta peaches (the deep yellow variety) and California oranges, is another of Mrs. Horne's preserve masterpieces. Southern pickles like Mrs. Horne's are unusual in Indiana. She cuts large cucumbers in lengthwise strips and flavors them with brown sugar, a dash of cinnamon and white mustard seed and adds tumeric to the vinegar to give it color. Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz, Brendenwood, have a hand in preserve mak-
|
ing at this time of year. She has]
taught her cooks a knowledge of | various fruits and their adaptabili- | ties. Transparent apples are best for apple sauce, she says, and Grimes Golden, Maiden Blush and Jonathon apples are the varieties she utilizes for jellies. Preserves of pear shaped. and round shaped yellow tomatoes are specialties of the Hitz family. Flavored with ginger root and slices of lemon it makes a tasty spread that will reward any cook for her efforts, Mrs. Hitz believes.
Strawberries Favored
Mrs. William Low Rice reports that the favorite spread in her family is good old fashioned strawberry preserves. They are made of the Missionary variety, selected berries of large size and “home-grown,” Mrs. Rice adds. A delicacy which she describes as “melting in your mouth” is a jam which her mother, Mrs. C. E Miles, Frankfort, just happened on by accident Its ingredients are rhubarb and the meat and peeling of juicy oranges. Slices of orange are placed
made dainties are becoming a sheer®
a
| 1ooking dish when turned out on a
compote, Mrs. Rice says. Most of the women who go on preserving sprees take their greengrocer into their confidence, they say. That's how they know what varieties of fruit are best for each purpose and at what season they will be cheapest.
Can Bartlett Pears Bartlett is the pear to can, local
grocers advise. The Seckel is the |
pear for conserves, they say. Everyone knows that the Montmorency is
the pie cherry but few housewives may remember to take their grocer’s advice and buy black sours for brandying and Bing and Oxhearts to can. When it comes to plums, your favorite grocer will probably recommend the Italian prune plum for preserves and the Burbank Red to can for compotes and the Damsons for jam. Whether or not you are among tine “canning crew” this summer, you'll probably admit that a bowl of home-made white free-stones, each with a pink cheek, swimming in their own honey-yellow syrup is a dish for a king . .. or any husband.
Grocer Can Help On Preserving Problem
Before you start preserving, take your green-grocer into your confidence. Tell him just what you want to do and, if possible, talk to the member of the firm who does the actual buying. He can tell you what varieties of fruit are best for each purpose, when they will be cheapest, often get them for you at the bottom of the market price il he has your order in advance. Another thing—before you start, get regular canning equipment. This should include scales, a proper processing kettle with trivet or rack, a big enamel kettle for jams and jellies, wooden spoons, dripping bags, jar lifters, something that pours well for hot sirups. You'll find a light, cheap tray will save you miles of footwork carrying hot jars. A blanching basket to fit your kettle also is a time and finger saver.
Mprs. Stewart to Speak
Mrs. Naomi Stewart, citizenship teacher under the Americanization project, Marion County WPA, is to speak before the Y. W. C. A. Art of Conversation class at 9 a. day. Her subject is fo be
1
|
| lifetimes chasing golf balls and are gray and bent with age.
| more accomplished golfers.
Are to Golt In Scotland
Caleb Lodge and Dr. John Aspey to Leave Tuesday.
By MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Scotch fairways and rolling greens in the Shakespeare country have taken on a special meaning for Caleb N. Lodge and Dr. John A. M. Aspey. They are busy polishing up their golf sticks in the anticipation of leaving Tuesday for a golf tour of Scotland and England.
Tonight they are to be honored |,
with a send-off party to be given at the Highland Golf and Country Club. Thirty of their friends will be present at the buffet supper to wish them bon voyage and “par” records. The S. S. Dutchess of Bedford is to take them from Montreal, Canada, to Glasgow, Scotland, and they will waste no time after disembarking in getting on the golf course, they say. “Scotchmen are as wild about golf as Americans are about baseball,” Mr. Lodge said. “So we naturally are expecting some keen competition.” Golf Started in Holland
Contrary to the general belief, however, golf was originated in Holland (not Scotland) more than 400 years ago, according to Mr. Lodge. Its adoption as a national Scotch game has come about because of the long hours of extended daylight there. “It's an after dinner sport for the entire family over there,” Mr. Lodge explained. “The natives have time for a leisurely meal, the men of the house linger over their pipes while the women clear up the dishes, and even then there is plenty of time for 18 holes of golf before dark.” Mr. Lodge and Dr. Aspey have traveled in Scotland and are familjar with the St Andrew's Club, Glen Eagles Club and others of the famous golf clubs of Scotjand but this is their first attempt to compete with the Scots.
Golf Cheap There
From an economic standpoint, golf is a money-saving game as played in Scotland. All courses are public and the caddies consider themselves wealthy when they receive a shilling (25 cents in Amerjcan money) for a day's work, according to this golf team. “Caddying in Scotland is considered a profession,” Mr. Lodge said. It seems that many of these “impedimenta carriers” have spent
From Glasgow Mr. Lodge and Dr. Aspey expect to play on links extending down through Edinburgh, the. Shakespeare country and on to London, England. They plan to set sail for home Sept. 7—as wiser and
Vanderlips on Wedding Trip To Continent
By HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer NEW YORK CITY, July 23.—Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Cox Vanderlip are aboard the S. S. Statendam on a
few days traveling on the Continent. Mrs. Vanderlip is the former Candace Baird Alig, daughter of Mrs. Otto Fidele Alig, 1070 Park Ave. and Des Moines, and the late Mr. Alig. She is the grandaughter of George Alig, Indianapolis. The couple was married Sunday in the chapel of the St. James Protestant Episcopal Church, New York. Because of the death of Mr. Vanderlip’s father, Frank A. Vanderlip, well-known banker and philanthropist, the ceremony was performed in the presence of only the immediate families. Mr. and Mrs. Vanderlip are to take an apartment in New York on their return from the Continent.
Law Club Here Picks Officers | —— Mrs. Glenn Cruzan was elected |
president of the Parliamentary Law Club recently organized in her
wedding trip and plan to spend a |,
+
Photo by Dexheimer-Carlon Studio.
Mrs. J. Harold Wright was Miss Elizabetn Jane Kaylor, daughter
of Thomas H. Kaylor, before her
marriage July 17 in the Irvington
Methodist Church. Mr. and Mrs. Wright are on an extended Western trip and are to be at home after Aug. 15 at 4515 E. Washington St.
Mrs." Lakin Feted On 86th Birthday
Mrs. Elizabeth Lakin was honor guest on her 86th birthday at a party given recently by friends and neighbors at Brookside Park. * Guests included Mesdames Harry Caster, Helen Sheets, Anna Morton, Charles Griesie, Nellie Deakin, Ethel Deakin, Lillian Price, Pearl
Keene, Lillie Abrams, Lola Pendergrast, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Box and Miss Marie Miller.
Mrs. Wood Is Chairman
Mrs. Edson T. Wood is chairman of the regular dinner and contract bridge to be held in the Propylaesum at 7 p. m. tonight. She is to be assisted by Mrs. O. G. Pfaff and Mrs. John W. Kern. '
Fall Class In Speaking
League Bureau to Furnish City Organizations - With Lecturers.
Preparations for the Indianapolis League of Women Voters’ fall speakers’ class on Trained Personnel in Public Service are to be under
way early in August. Mrs. Virginia Moorhead Mannon, Indiana League program and legis lative director, is to leave soon for Chicago, where she is to consult with Government research experts on recent achievements and econo mies throughout the United States, The speakers’ bureau is to provide speakers on the merit system from the Indianapolis League to Indiane apolis organizations’ meetings dure ing the fall and winter. More than 100 organizations were addressed under a similar project carried out by the local League last year. Consideration of the notable gains in the establishment and improvement of state personnel programs during the past year are to be included in the discussions of League speakers.
Merit System Studied
Mrs. Mannon is to make a study of the merit system laws adopted by the states of Arkansas, Connectie cut, Maine, Tennessee and the exe tension made in California, New York and Wisconsin during the past year. She has just completed a study of the rules governing eme ployment in Indiana state departe ments which operate under a merit system. The study is to be incorporated in the new edition of the Indiana Voters’ Handbook which is to be published by the Indiana League of Women Voters in September.
Omega Nu Taus To Go to Lake
Members of Omega Nu Tau sOrority are to leave Sunday for a week's vacation at Lake Manitou. Those attending the house party are to be Mesdames Hartzell Boren, Thomas Cisco, Robert Trees and Misses Marjorie Stewart, Jeannette Kissinger, Lois Myers, Edith Pake, Clara Cassidy and Vire ginia Gill. Members who plan to attend over the week-end include Mrs. William Ruscher, Mrs. Louis Cox and Misses Virginia Steuerwald, Dorothy Head,
Virginia Carter and Betty Loos.
home. 2138 N. New Jersey St. Members are parliamentary law | students of Mrs. Cruzan. They are | to meet once a month for luncheon | and business and study periods. The club's objective is cultural and practical application of par- | liamentary law. | Other officers named include Mrs. E. C. Wakelan, first vice president; Mrs. I. H. Derby, second vice president: Mrs. Samuel Kirazian, recording secretary; Mrs. Charles Ruminer, corresponding secretary, Mrs. D. H. White, treasurer, and Mrs. O. C. Dorah, auditor. The board of directors is to include Mesdames Cruzan, R. J. Roller and H. B. McIlvaine. Mrs. John E. Cook is year book chairman assisted by Mrs. Mary Edith Armel; Mrs. P. P. Barrett and Mrs. W. A. Ferguson are cochairmen of the communications committee; Mrs. Robert White is in charge of publicity and Mrs. Merle Safford is to be assisted as membership chairman by Mrs. Ovid Mann and Mrs. McIlvaine. Mrs. R. H. Roller is to be historian.
Gadgets Lessen Work One answer to the problem of how to cook in small space is an electric roaster that will bake, broil, steam or stew. There is also the electric mixer—a machine which mixes batters or eggs and does the beating jobs that heretofore have meant hard work in the kitchen. The up-to-date ones are juice extractors, vegetable slicers and shredders, meat grinders and silver polishers. :
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