Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1938 — Page 17
THURSDAY, JULY 28,
+ Cold Soups
~ Delightful
-
Tells of Connoisseurs’ Favorites.
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
The pleasant surprise of a cold] .-Soup will start off your hot dinner smoothly. The vogue for these cold
1st Course Famous New York Chef
¥ Suited
for Shopping,
soups grows larger every year. The ‘ chef de cuisine of a famous hotel in New York told how he makes -- them for his connoisseur patrons. Let’s all become connoisseurs. ® Chilled Gumbo (Serves 4 to 6)
; One leek, 1 heart of celery, % " _ green pepper, 1 tablespoon butter, % ‘cup diced raw ham, % cup diced chicken, 1 quart chicken broth, % -*_ pound diced fresh okra, 2 tomatoes - peeled and seeded, salt, pepper, ash | Worcestershire sauce, 1 tablespoon granulated gelatin, - +
Chip finely the leek, celery and ‘pepper. Saute in butter without ' © allowing mixture to brown. Add diced ham, cook 3 minutes. Add diced chicken, cook gently 5 minutes, stirring from time to time. Now add chicken broth, mix well | . and turn into soup kettle. Simmer
a
Travel
| days they will be wanting to take
Youngsters ! Want Peace
Lonnie Was Fretful Child |x
“rill Left by Himself, ~ Writer ‘Relates.
‘By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “Mrs. Stone thought that her two new young lady boarders ‘would make a big fuss over 3-year-old Lonnie because they were teachers in the Nursery School. But the two pretty girls never picked him up, or asked him to give them a Kiss. «I suppose that some of these
him along to -their school,” thought the kindly mother, “but I think, busy as I am, I'd better attend to my child myself.” ‘Recently Lonnie began to cry more than usual, wouldn't eat, took tantrums and began to hit Susan. It all worried his mother. In the meantime, the little fellow: wotild go to the teachers’ room and play quietly. He was as good as gold with both of them. ? Children ‘Need Peace They didn’t talk to him—or at Bimal] the time. From their desk ‘appeared great crayons and large sheets of paper. They made him a tent with a rug, too, but Miss Janie said to Miss Erla, “He'll like that better next year.” So they took it. down.
“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIM
Horseback Riding
Is Included
~~ On Campfire Girls’ Schedule
© “Over 85 Campfire Girls are enrolled ha two-week camping period of the fourth summer season-at Camp Delight on White River, 18 miles
northeast, of Indianapolis. Special activities of the period have included a Boy ‘Scout Reservation where 18 campers had © camp craft.
Dinner to Honor - Miss Marie Kane
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd W. Burns will entertain a group of friends at the Severin Hotel roof garden tomorrow night in honor of Miss Marie Kane,
farm and the high
Kiger country home.
week-end trip to the ing in “advanced
| Another group took an overnight horseback ride to the E. V. Brown school girls stayed overnight at the Earl G.
Indianapolis girls enrolled at the camp include: Louise AX, Dorothy Rae Beebe, Mary Jane Bowne,
Henrietta Rohde, Betty Roth, Eliza‘beth Rybolt, Carita Sadler, Virginia Specker, Marjorie Tacke, Rosemary Wanner, Kate Webber, Dorothy Webber, Judith Hinman, Clarice Mauck, Lila Lotka, Helen Cortrecht, Evejyn Essig, Margin Kelly, Dorothy Bayer, Patricia Chamberlin and Susan Alvis. :
3 Out-of-town campers include Martha Markland and. Marjorie McConnell, Zionsville; Betty Miller, Portland; . Ruth Bibos, Betty Jane Edington, Jane Hetrick, Franecs Jones, De Lee Jones, Barbara Kirk, Bloomfield; Joann Hatfield, Helen Miers, Mary Lu Wheeler, Jeanette Rutherford, Betty - Jean Newgent, Barbara Kelly, Virginia Kelly, Greensburg; Jean Kidwell, Barbar Lowry, Marilyn Jones, Virginia Holmes, arilyn Downer, Downer’s Grove, - Hl. : an Others are Patricia Netcott, and
PAGE 17
Patsy - Osborn, Bloomington; Anne Chatten, Elizabeth Buckingham, Geraldine Engelschall, -Lisle, Ill; Alice Jane Gray, St. Louis, Mo.; Elsie Nichols, Grace Nichols and Patsy Nichols, : Milwaukee, . Wis.
¢ se 3k . - Aid to Cool Sleeping For cool sleeping on torrid sume mer nights are comfortable short flared ‘pajamas. of batiste or rayon. The necklines are low, squared or V, the prints dainty flowered de=
signs on white and pastel grounds. :
Imported Belts Popular New imported belts with unuse ual decorated buckles: are exquie sitely hand-embroidered in bright , colored native designs by . Hune garian peasants... Just the accese sory to wear with youthful dirndle and cool pastel-or: white linens.
who is a guest in the city representing the Scotland Empire Exhibition at Glasgow. : Miss Kane, who is on a good-will tour of the United States, is to be honored guest at a luncheon Satur-day-at the Columbia Club. While in the city she is the guest of Mrs. Among those at the speakers’ table Saturday will be Governor and Mrs. Townsend; Mesdames Thomas R. Marshall, Barnard. Samuel M. Ralston, Clayton Ridge, Meredith Nicholson Jr., P. R. Mallory, Wilson Mothershead, Miss Joan Pratt Johnson, Dr.. James W. Putnam, Arthur V. Brown, J. I. Holcomb and Maj.-Gen. Robert H. Tyndall.
Thelma ‘Bowne, Katherine Bruck, Joan Buet, Peggy Byrum, Bonnie Campbell, Beryl Campbell, Suzanne Cohen, Ernestine Congleton, Ruth Mary Conrow, Virginia Dalton, Mary Lou Douglass, Margaret Ann Eash, Shirley Einbinder, Virginia Esten, Jackie Fabel, Jane Gage, Joan Gotschall, Rosemary Grush, Joyce Hesler, Dorothy - Heddrich, Betty Johnson, Beverly Keeler, Phyllis King, Adair Kirch, Mary Jo Mackey, Dorothy Montgomery,
Marilyn Mueller, Jean Musseman, |
Marjorie Nelson, Polly Overly. ' Also attending ate Suzanne Orth, Suzanne Pehrson, Ruthann Perry, Ruth Ann _ Pope, Sarah Rainey,
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Advertisement
| shop the town, yes every inch and spoh | In places new and places old, :
. .-gently 30 minutes, keeping lid on. ~..Add okra, trimmed and cut in %a- _._ inch pieces, peeled and seeded tomatoes, and simmer until okra is well done.
Skim all grease from the soup and
Where your visits mean a lot. | prowl and browse to my heart's delight, And pass this word to you—
“1 declare,” said Mrs, Stone one | day, “I think you're both spoiling | ‘him. He won't be good now anywhere except with you.” . “No, that isn’t it, really,” said
. season. Strain and add the table- . spoon of gelatin which has been dissolved in #@ little cold broth or wa-
Miss Erla quietly. “You see he is at the age when he likes a little peace and quiet. Possibly you are so anxious to train him well and have
FROM THE KITCHENS
The merchants listed op the lines below, Are the friends we need as we come and go.
.- ter. Stir until well blended, cool, . ‘then pour into cups and chill thor- Si : oughly. Serve garnished with quar- a a; pe
ters of lemon, ’ : For a day’s shopping in town this summer or a sightseeing exMille Fanti (Chicken Broth pedition abroad, Molyneux’s -ensemble shown here is both practical | Italian Style) and elegant. It is made of wool crepe, in light navy, with the tulips - and rounded neckline done in white embroidery. The model in the (Serves 4 to 6) : background wears a pleated silk skirt in navy blue and a natural One quart strong chicken broth, 2
linen jacket. . 6 tablespoons grated Parmesan + . cheese, sprinkle of grated nutmeg, * 3 egg yolks well beaten, 1 cup cream, * salt, pepper, 2 tablespoons minced < parsley. : Into a soup kettle put the chicken | J. broth and bring to boiling point. Add the grated Parmesan cheese and a sprinkle of nutmeg little by little, stirring the broth briskly the *. ‘while with a whisk or wire beater. ‘ Remove the pan to lower heat and allow the broth mixture to simmer very gently for 10 minutes. Beat = egg yolks until very light and fluffy =~ and add gradually cup of cream. * « + Stir egg and cream mixture into the
Their kindness and needed ware highly ranks OF FINEST MEATS Whether you buy or merely say—
: " Le In From coast to coast Kingan’s Reliable Corned P-. Just Looking, Thanks! i Beef Hash has achieved the popularity of becom- s 2 = s = 8 ing an All-American Favorite...Only the choicest : ‘meats and new Maine and Michigan potatoes are Need to relax your tense July nerves? used, expertly seasoned, making this outstand- HE Red Gazelle Room at the Hotel Severin is better s ie . . than a vacation... .- ingly delicious dish. : I stepped in today and the gorgeously cool:-air was as good as a trip to the mountains! The tables are round and cozy, a perfect setting for you and that certain person . ..
Two low soft red davenports face each other, inviting you to rest in peace 0 $ § ¢
OF AMERICA'S PACKERS
him behave perfectly, you keep him too closely under your eye. Children get fretful when -spoken to too
often. And Lonnie Improves
“At the Nursery School we make a point of giving our little people | this peace they seem to need. They play beautifully. Occasionally they fuss a little over toys but we let them work it out their own way. In a minute it is over and they have forgotten the tempest. They get their regular Bape, too, and a little lunch of milk and crackers at the rest period. And they learn to do things for themselves.” Mrs. Stone said thoughtfully. “Since you speak of it, I guess I have been after Lonnie too much, ,If he gets away from home for a while maybe it will be better for | ; him and for me. He might eat better, too.” > The Nursery School proved a really fine place. Lonnie slept and
Cinderella Romance Offset Depression, Says Matchmaker
Insist on
By HENRY LEE before you face the world again!
; - Times Special Writer -NEW YORK, July 28.—These are dog days for the Schatchens, most of their clientele being away at camps on the Borscht circuit or elsewhere trying their luck independently, but Mrs. Dorothy Jaffe said today that the Cinderella romance of the millionaire diamond importer and the widow with the three children has more than made up for the summer depression.
You can perch high on a red leather stool, too, if you enjoy the intimacy attained around a bar. Delicious morsels of food are served,
RELIABLE
"broth which has been removed from the fire. \ * When thickened and smooth and -. creamy, season to taste and strain into cups. Put into refrigerator until thoroughly chilled. When ready to serve, garnish with minced pars:ley and serve with bread sticks,
Weeks-Graf Nuptials . Read at Logansport
] Times Special ¥ LOGANSPORT, July 28.—One marriage was solemnized here Saturday and another July wedding was disclosed. Miss Betty Weeks, industrial
nurse, and Clifford A. Graf, insurance agent, were married Saturday afternoon. The Rev. H. R. Hosier officiated at the Ninth Street Christian Church. Miss Sylvia Pritchard
o . and Dan Porter were attendants.
Miss Margaret Elizabeth Gangloff’s marriage to Walter W. Kobel is announced. The ceremony was performed at Peru by the Rev. A. H. Gallmeier.
Today’s Pattern
“He~was the only millionaire I ever had,” she said at : her apartment office, 2415 Morris Ave. the Bronx, where, under a picture of Othello and Desdemona that usually is mistaken for Romeo and Juliet, she conducts her professional matchmaking. . . Arranged 3000 Marriages Since 1924 she has arranged about 3000 marriages, she thinks, about 50 to ‘60 couples yearly paying her sliding’ fee in addition to a small registration charge. ” “Besides the 50 to 60 who are honest; maybe ‘200 couples don’t ever tell us,” she said. : “It’s. like -the doctor,” explained her:husband, Harry, a lawyer and one:of her early customers who had thought he wanted a schoolteacher. “Some women come in here and promiise everything, the way they do to a doctor, who is going to save their life. When the operation is a success, they say, ‘Doc, you know I ain’t workin’.” They have to let it go at that, depending .on the honor system and the fact that their .10,000 circular letters a month bring them more clients ‘than they need.
500. Clients Indexed
They have a cross-index file of 500 marriageable clients, 60 per cent women, and they've had inquiries from Honolulu and Poland. Their territory, though, is the metropolitan area and a. swing thereabouts of about 100 miles. They prefer American: professional people. “We're not the kind of Schatchen, with a beard and an umbrella,” Mrs. Jaffe said. “In fact, we don’t like that word. We are matrimonial consultants.”
. | any number of lawyers and school-
\8291
T= dress proves, once again, that the simple things, when designed with ingenuity and good taste, gre the best. : Although the line of Pattern 8291 is nice and slim, it isn’t tight
tight anywhere. The dress is per- |
fectly comfortable for reaching and * stretching. Those mere round beginnings of sleeves are charming 40 look at and much more flattering to your arms than a sleeveless
line. ; i Pattern 8291 is designed for sizes ‘14, 16, 18, 20, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 requires 4% yards-of 35-inch. material; 2 yards of ;ricrac to trim. , To obtain a pattern and step-by-step sewing instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address and mail to
Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St, In-
a
teachers, and their latest, prospectus lists: a ‘55-year-old widower who owns 10 apartment ‘houses. - Most of the ; -women, especially the older ones, are: worth up to $250,000, Mr. Jaffe ‘said, and the young ones are beautiful.: : “If Mr. Ziegfeld were alive today,” he said, “he could pick a chorus from our girls.” :
dren, who met the diamond broker Shiough them, was like that—beautiful. “A’'woman with three kids is difficult material,” Mrs. Jaffe said, “but ‘as soon as I laid my eyes on her, I looked at Mr. Jaffe and we both thought of the diamond broker. Drove $5000 Car
He had come up one day in a $5000 car, : looking like a French count, with a chauffeur and a footman. He had met a lot of women on the Riviera, but nobody 2 caled to him until he met this lady. “After four weeks they took a boat to Europe, got married on the boat, and mow —~they are honeymooning. They sent the three kids to camp.” “And he is going to give.me a diamend bracelet,” Mrs. Jaffe said. “It was so lovely all through.” - Most of the paying clients are grateful - like: that. One lady moved into the Jaffe’s neighborhood, and. evefy Sept. 27, her anniversary, has breakfast with them.
Suggests Combination
and fashionable colors come and go with the seasons, but the stylewise woman has always in her wardrobe at -least one all black or black and: white costume. Irene Dunne recently wore a sheer black crepe dress with simply draped bodice, short full sleeves, gently flared skirt, its four soft inverted plegts supplying the ftont fullness, under 2 Diack “and white tdoited en, Ii gote. Carrying further the black and white théme, the film star's accessories were of black kid, her chic exaggerated
&
They have married off two judges, |
The divorcee with the three chil-|
Fashionable color combinations |
Marjorie Ferree Heads Sorority
Miss Marjorie Ferree is the newly elected president of Indiana - Psi chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. - : The chapter of the international educational and social sorority for young women was recently organized by Mrs. Ada Mason Townsend and Miss Esther Lewis, international field representatives. Other officers are Miss Virginia Peters, vice president; Miss Margaret Farmer, recording secretary; Miss Opal Franklin, corresponding secretary; Miss Mildred Heavrin, treasurer, and Miss Monte Johnson, program committee chairman.
Marks Camp Togs Easily Young son or daughter will appreciate having camp clothes plainly
identified with name tags or initials.
Inexpensive woven name tags, together with a special adhesive cement are quick and easy to attach and can be purchased by the ‘dozen.
Re ee
beret of |
ate better, and grew in politeness.
Ex-Service Women
To Be Guests at Tea |
The Indiana department of Amerjcan Legion nurses will entertain with a tea in honor of former service women from 3 to 5 p. m. Aug. 21 in conjunction with the Legion Auxiliary convention here Aug. 20 to 23. A The fourth annual reunion dinner for the nurses will be at the Hotel Antlers Aug. 22. The tea will be at the Veterans’ Hospital. The arrangements committee includes the Misses Florence Martin,
Theresa Magruder, Gertrude Hasen- |
jaeger, Margaret Cody, Peal Claybauch, Maude Hamilton, Catherine “Lory, Mary Canary, Elizabeth Gabler, Flora Kennedy, Tulie Roberson and Mesdames Elizabeth McDerpiot Lela D. Clark and Birda ‘ood.
Announce New Ornaments
New hair ornaments for the up- |.
ward coiffure are in: the guise of minute musical instruments—tiny violins, mandolins, banjos—nice to
wear at country club dances; or a clever gift
. CORNED BEEF
HASH Ask Your Dealer for
RELIABLE
SPAGHETTI and MEAT HUNGARIAN GOULASH A CHILf CON CARNE DEVILED HAM
Fo, hy » LL
Red Gazelle Room, Severin Hotel,
Is he right? - - - Oh but yes!
M~ HILLMAN says stability and permanence is the foundation upon which real business confidence is built. And that’s so right, because we like to enter and buy in a shop where an atmosphere of stability is prevalent, the whole conduct of the place seeming to dwell on the intention 3 _ of staying in business for a long time. You know when you buy from a shop of this type that what you purchase there is the height of perfection— You appreciate it doubly don’t you? Of course, and you. should. Women as we are, a mite vain perhaps, but why not? feel a delicious confidehce when we know we are impeccably groomed. . . . Ready for new
and thrilling conquests! HILLMAN’S, 13 N. Tlinois.
Hustle - - - Bustle - - - and RUN!
S is the last week of Marott’'s 10% discount sale on flattering wisps for your legs—Hose! You really went for the lace toes I told you about last week. There's a few more at 79c, so keep moving! Several famous makes are included, too—two threads for my sisters who trip the light fantastic regularly or decide to go a bit frivolous in the afternoon. Three threads for the rest of us practical bodies. (Heaven help us.) Bless the dwindling days: of July—and Marott’s, for g 10% discount on their always lovely hose, which invariably do ~ things for our legs! Main Floor—Marott's Store, 18 E. Washington. - i
N Q %
Shoe
.
Clear and elegant as a crystal lake!
hare what you'll say when you see this table lamp at Goldsteins—it’s‘ truly a heart lightener—such beauty and grace . . . to make your home speak a little louder your personality which is definitely your own! : Such an object will make your friends wonder just why lp your home is such a .delightfully different place to go— Ere This lamp has a cut crystal base with two rows of long, delicately’ pointed prisms like beautifully formed icicles—five at the top of the base--five more around the center, they hang gracefully and form a perfect pice -ture! : ‘The shade is white silk bound at the top ; and bottom in white satin ribbon. Dun’t wring your hands in despair when you think of -it in terms of dollars . . . because the cost (I'll hold you up) is merely $4.98! Your friends will guess fifteen, the rocking chair brigade (neighbors) twenty or more. . . . I've bought mine, so run along fast! Goldstein’s 16 E. Washington,
® 8 = ® = =»
California here I come!!
WO heavenly weeks of an expertly planned California journey—What, I ask you could possibly be more grand than that? - Mr. Black handles every detail, just do as he ‘tells you and nothing but a perfectly a relaxed pleasure can envelop you. Leave Saturday for Chicago, the first leg of your trip, where your party gathers at the Hotel La Salle for dinner and delightful entertainment in the exotic “Blue Fountain Room.” : Onward. you speed toward Los Angeles —with stop overs at all the points of interest. . The cost? Youll smile, says Mr. Black. Trava Tours, Circle Tower Bldg., 7 E. Market. : : PE
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Any doubts? Need any help? I can always dig up something unusual and new as the next minute! Call RI-5551 or write i
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