Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1940 — Page 9
TUESDAY, MARCH 12,
y/ Ephamar Club
Charter Group
To Entertain]
State Assembly Women’s Unit Arranges Luncheon
For Tomorrow.
Luncheons, talks and a guest day program are planned for women’s club meetings tomorrow. Mrs. John Downing Johnson will talk ‘on “Parliamentary Law” at a meeting of the WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON CLUB tomorrow. Officers will be elected. Hostesses will
be Mesdames Eva Wright, Monterey Hobbs and Charles Trotter.
Hostesses for the 12:30 p. m. luncheon of the STATE ASSEMBLY WOMAN'S CLUB tomorrow at the Marott Hotel will be Mesdames Floyd McMurray, William Bridwell, Adolph G. Emhardt, William H. Harrison, Emerson McGriff, Arthur R. Robinson, Henry Schricker, Herbert Wadsworth and Ernest C. Ropkey. The luncheon will honor past presidents.
Mrs. W. S. S. Johnson will be hostess for a covered dish luncheon of the WOMAN'S ADVANCE CLUB tomorrow.
Charter members of the EPHA-
‘MAR LITERARY CLUB will re-
ceive at the organization’s guest day program tomorrow at the Ban-ner-Whitehill auditorium. Special music has been arranged by Mrs. Laura Craig Poland. Hostesses will be Mesdames Arthur S. Brown, Andrew Underwood, Floyd Hughett, and Jennie Wilson Barnes.
Mrs. E. W. Stockdale will read a paper on Queen Victoria and Lucie Duff Gordon at a meeting of the MINERVA CLUB . tomorrow for which Mrs. M. E. Burkhart will be hostess. Mrs. C. H. Becker will assist the hostess.
Mrs. John W. Thornburgh will gpeak on “Chile” at a dessert luncheon meeting of the MANDALAY CHAPTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL STUDY CLUB at 12:30 p. m tomorrow at the home of Mrs. C. E. Stout, 2130 N. New Jersey St. Mrs. Josephine Duke Motley and Mrs. M. B. McDonald will present a musical program. Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames William H. Snyder, Scott Smith and Oscar Burghard.
The ELECTA CIRCLE will meet at 12 o'clock tomorrow at the home of Mrs. George M. Spiegel, 2220 N. Alabama St.
Mrs. J. C. Teegarden will give the program at a luncheon meeting of the CURRENT LITERATURE CLUB tomorrow. Mrs. Charles H. Over will be hostess.
Travel Group
Installation Set
The Panamanian Chapter of the International Travel Study Club Federation will meet with the newly organized Rio de Janeiro Chapter, which it is sponsoring, for installation of the chapter and officers, tomorrow, in the Citizens Gas & Coke Utility auditorium. The meeting will start at 10:30 a. m. Officers to be installed are: Mesdames Harvey Glusenkamp, president; Kenneth Itwin, first vice president; Leon Roquet; second vice president; Lloyd Miller, recording secretary; Jacob Harden, corresponding secretary; W. A. Rieman, treasurer; George Hacker, auditor, and. Kenneth Baker, Federation delegate. : Guests will be the Federation's
Extension Committee of which Mrs.
Max Norris is chairman and the Installation Committee headed by Mrs. John Price. Special guests will be Mrs. J. Francis Huffman, Federation president and Mrs. John W. Thornburgh, honorary Federation president. A luncheon will be: served at noon. The committee in charge consists. .of Mesdames Charles R. Livingstone, chairman; Raymond Barrows, Fanchon Eaton and Philip Hulskamp of the Rio de Janeiro chapter; and Mrs. Edward Mashmeyer of the Panamanian chapter. Mrs. Blanche Barry, president of the Panamanian chapter, will be hostess for the meeting and Mrs. John Nackenhorst of the same chapter will be in charge of plans for the installation. Mrs. Rertha Walton Baker, a member of the new chapter, will speak on ‘Chile.”
Washington Union, W. C. T. U., to Meet
The Washington Union of the W. C. T. U. will meet Friday at 1:30 p. m. with Mrs. Emma Cravens, 51 N. Holmes Ave. ! Mrs. Walter Hogan will be in charge of the devotions and Mrs. Raymond Trulock, president of the Washington Union, will preside.
Slides Shown
Roy John, managing director of the Associated Retailers of Indiana, presented slide films on problems of Indiana retail merchants at a buffet supper meeting of the Broad Ripple Business and Professional Women’s Association last evening at the Thomas Cafeteria. Mrs. C. R. Barnard conducted community singing.
FOLKS LIKE YOU
You'll like the other guests at the Bismarck.’ They, too, =njoy and appreciate good food, ‘unobtrusive service } and restful rooms.
Emil Eitel Karl Eitel Roy Steffen
3 Ga HEART O |
IUMARCK
HOTEL-CHICACGO
1940 _ Ham Waffles, Mushroom Sauce Make Exciting Supper Dish
Something new and exciting for
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX Something new for that bridge supper? How about crisp ham waffles with sauce made of canned button mushrooms and chicken broth. The men will like it and the women won't object either. Canned mushrooms come in three packs—button, sliced and stems and pieces. Each mushroom canner carries each of these packs which come in three sizes for home 'use—2 ounces (2 cup), 4 ounces (1 cup), and 8 ounces (2 cups). Ham Waffles (Serves 4) Two cups sifted flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1 teaspoon salt, cup finely shredded boiled ham, 1 tablespoon sugar, 3 eggs, 1% cups milk, 4 tablespoons melted shorten-
ing. = Sift dry ingredients together. Beat egg yolks until thick and lemon colored. Mix with milk and stir into dry ingredients. Add melted shortening and shredded ham. Fold stiffly beaten egg whites into this mixture. Bake on hot waffle iron. Serve at once with chicken-mush-room sauce. Chicken-Mushroom Sauce Three tablespoons butter, 1 8ounce can (2 cups) button mushrooms, 3 tablespoons cornstarch, 1% cups canned or fresh chicken broth, powdered sage, salt, pepper. ' Drain mushrooms. from broth. Heat butter in skillet and brown mushrooms. Remove mushrooms Add 3 tablespoons cornstarch to butter and stir to smooth paste. Add liquid from canned mushrooms; add chicken broth. Cook, stirring constantly, until clear and creamy. Season to taste with salt, pepper and very little powdered mace. Add mushrooms, heat through, and serve at once on the hot ham waffles. A handful of honors!
- ham waffles with chicken-mushroom sauce.
the bridge supper or luncheon—
STATE CLUBS
Mrs. Wayne W. Houser is the newly elected president of the CURRENT LITERATURE CLUB OF MONON, IND. Other officers elected recently are: Mrs. Mary E. Reed, vice president; Mrs. B. B. Curtis, secretary and treasurer, and Mesdames Orin W. Farris, Herbert Harrway, Ray Mashnio, William Fausett and’ Miss Goldie Craft, council. ‘Members recently held a Golden Jubilee Birthday party.
Mrs. Lee Reeves recently reviewed “A Roof Over Our Heads” before: members of the TWENTIETH CENTURY CLUB OF GREENCASTLE, IND. Mrs. Frank Woliung was hostess.
Miss Emma C. Puschner, national director of Child Welfare for the American Legion, spoke at a recent
meeting of the Martinsville Depart- |
ment Club at the Sycamores. TWwo0 puppet shows, “Jack and the Bean Stalk” and “Little Red Riding Hood,” were presented under the supervision of Mrs. Charles Curtis.
The SECOND DISTRICT OF THE INDIANA FEDERATION OF CLUBS will hold a Fine Arts Festival May 31. Mrs. Ernest Myers of Sullivan will be chairman. County convention dates in the district include Monroe, April 13 at
Bloomington; Morgan, April 18 at|-
Paragon, and Sullivan, April 25 at Sullivan.
H ostesses to Club
Mrs. Lester Theobald and Mrs. John W. Little Jr., were to be hostesses for a meeting of Alpha Kappa
Latreian Club today. iE
Award Winner
The State Council of the Daughters of the American Revolution was to announce the winner of the D. A. R. good citizenship ‘contest at a meeting in the Claypool Hotel this morning. ; The young woman winning the
| contest receives: a five-day trip to | Washington in April. The contest
is. a part of the good citizenship pilgrimage of the National Society D. A. R. which was started in 1934 at the suggestion of Mrs. Ruth Bryan Rohde.
of the contest is Mrs, Robert B Hougham, Franklin, Ind. > Mrs. William: H. Schlosser, Prank-. lin, Ind. state regent, will preside at the meeting today. Reports of officers, committee chairmen and chapter regents will be made.
bers of her board, Mrs. LaFayette LeVan Porter, Greencastle, Ind, state regent elect, and members of
the new board last night at a dinner in the Claypool. ..
Writer to Talk To Penwomen
Mrs. George Phillip Meier will
-|speak ‘on “Trophies of the Lion
Hunt” at a meeting of the Indiana Branch of the American Penwomen Saturday: at her home, 3128 N. Pennsylvania St. : Miss Virginia Fout and Miss Blanche. Young will be assistant hostesses, Mrs. Nellie G. Owen, nominating committee chairman, will report for the committee. New members of the branch recently certified by the two national boards of review in Washington include Miss Helen McGaughy, Greencastle; Miss Myrtle Johnson, Indianapolis; Mrs. Hazel Magee Bowman, Odin; Mrs. Gorge W. Haaff, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Laurentza Schantz, Lafayette.
produced and sold during the past five years. Mrs. Cecil Chittenden, Indianapolis, has been certified as a member at iarge.
Chairman for the Indiana section |
Mrs. Schlosser entertained mem-|-
PAGE
3 Circles Join
|| In Luncheon
|| The ‘Social, Priscilla and Queen | Esther Circles of the Third Chris-
© ltian Church Home Service Depart-
; Jackie Lou McClarney, 1U (above), will represent the fourth generation. of her family which has attended Horace Mann School 13 at the Parent-Teacher Association observance of homecoming and community night tomorrow’ evening at the school. The late Mrs. Susie Dennis Beliis, her great-grandmother, attended School 13 about 67 years ago. Her grandfather, Robert Bellis, also was a pupil there. Mrs. George McClarney, Jackie Lou’s mother, will be a member of the alumni hospitality committee: for the homecoming of alumni, principals and teachers. Judge Henry O. Goett, a graduate of the school, will speak on “Every Day Living in a Modern World.” Donald L. Edison, an alumnus, will show pictures of “A Day at School 13.” Mrs. Alfred Lyons, an alumna, will be pianist: for the community singing and a former teacher, Mrs. Minnie Poundstone, will direct the singing. Several former students will appear with the Manual Girls’ Glee Club.
Membership is based on work |
Dance Scheduled
The Indianapolis Railways Auxiliary 1070 will entertain with a dance and euchre party Thursday night at the Bon Ton Club, 322 E. New York St.
re SN %. ..and so, gentlemen, | flew here ’ to present this...”
Information - Reservations: Your Travel Agent, or
Lincoln 2596 108 W. Washington
MORE
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PLEASURE PER PUFF
PUFFS PER PACK!
THEY'RE OFF— on the mile-long Mt, Van Hoevenberg run at Lake Placid, N.Y; with “Bucky” Wells driving. Fifteen breath-taking turns to go. Fifteen chances to taste the supreme thrills of speed. But in smoking it’s different, very different. “It’s slowburning that makes a cigarette tick with me,” “Bucky” Wells says. And he means what he says, because he’s smoked slow-burning Camels for ten years.
“ONE-TWO-BOB! ONE-TWO-BOB!” And, as .the crew bobs, “Bucky” picks up speed... 60—70—80 miles an hour, driving high on the glassy wall of ice as he swings the quarter-ton steel sled around the curve. But in the field of cigarettes, this daring speed. ster gives the laurels to the quality of slow-burning that he finds in Camels. You can tell by their ‘mild, mellow’ taste that Camels burn cooler, slower—and scientists have confirmed this: Camels burned slowest of all in recent tests. (See panel, right.)
THEY'RE hot after business . « « after your customers. Beat them to . TWA airline. For short trips or long ones . .-. fly. Save time and make money by putting TWA’s service to work for you . . . it’s the businessman’s airline—it’s the shortest, fastest, coast-to-coast, -
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—% TRANSCONTINENTAL =...
ment were to have luncheon in the
Christian Men Builders’ rogm of the
church at noon today.
Mrs. Alice Newland was to be
kitchen chairman and Mrs. Jessie ‘was to be dining room| hairman, assisted by Mesdames H.|
G. Boyer
[J C. Barnes, William Neal, Earl Kyle, Hattie Steinwender, George Tempke and Charles Rocap. : . The Circles were to hold separate executive meetings at 1:30 p: m. and at 2:15 o'clock they will assem-
ble in a general meeting. Mrs. G.|
W. Stout, president of the Home Service Department, was to preside, assisted by Mesdames Rocap, C. W, Shackleford and F. E. Lockwood, Circle presidents. ot
The Mothers’ Chorus of School}:
62, directed by Mrs. Fred Crostreet, was to sing; Mrs. Ruth Estes, as-
Christian Church, was to lead devotions, and Mrs. W. F. Rothenburger was to review “The Nazarene.”
Mrs. Morton Keith was to be in|
charge of the program.
tm —are - Brookside Unit to Meet
The Brookside Mothers’ Club will hold its monthly party Friday at the Brookside Community. House. A covered dish supper will be followed by dancing and games.
* Band Soloist
Miss Jeni Shaffer (above), vocalist, and the Wabash Collegian
sistant to the pastor of the Third ' Orchestra will provide music for
the dance to be held March 23 at
. the Naval Armory by Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority. :
Indorse mominee The Board of Directors of the Woman's Department Club voted at a recent meeting to indorse Mrs. W.
D. Keenan as a nominee for first|
vice president of the Indiana Federation of Clubs. The election be held in May, 1941. :
NARS
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INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
Hl €
will
Is Due Today Western College alumnae of Indianapolis were to make reports on the progress of the alumnae campaign to raise funds for & new dormitory at the college at a meeting this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Mary Dye Beach. Among ‘those who were to report are Mesdames Beach, Herbert Blinn, Charles Buschmann, Ray Fatout, red Gifford, Bryant Gillespie, Helen Hull, W. J. Kinnally, Bertha Wright Mitchell, Charles ‘Rose, Leonard A. Smith, Carl Weinhardt; Misses Madeline Alig, Gretna, Brown, Lillian Calloway, Mildred Harvey, Mary Hostetter, Janet Keller, - Ginevra - McCoy, - Betty. Ritchie and Nancy Todd. : ; Miss Hazel Rowe, campaign committee chairman, will map further
steps for the remainder of the drive, which will end March 29.
Meeting Called
Beta Chapter of Theta Delta Sigma Sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Betty Wolff.
LUMINALL
. for all interior paint work. It saves time and mone and gives a beautiful i | rative effect. We have a full line of lovely colors for dining rooms, living rooms, ° bedrooms, etc. Luminall white is highly light - reflective — excellent for walls, closets and rooms with poor exposure. May be applied over masonry as well as all other common
building materials.
CENTRAL
Wecllpaper and Faint Corpo NOW AT 127 EAST WASHINGTON ST
[FOR THE THRILLS AND EXTRAS IN SMOKING -
EXTRA MILDNESS
EXTRA COOLNESS. EXTRA FLAVOR
AND EXTRA SMOKING —I PICK THE SLOW-BURNING CIGARETTE
... CAMEL
* TF you want to know how it feels to go 80 miles an hour on a racing bob-sled, “Bucky” Wells of Keere Valley, N. Y. can tell you. But when it comes to cigarettes, “Bucky” Wells is on the slow side... the slow-burning side. If you know your cigas rettes, that means Camels! “I ‘know that Camels burn slower,” “Bucky” says. “There’s cool comfort in a _slow-burning Camel. Mildness — more flavor. Every puff is a fresh treat to the taste, and—get this—there are many more puffs to enjoy in a Camel. Slow burning means extra smoking. ‘I'd walk a mile fora ....’” Even if a gust of wind did carry away
“Bucky’s” last
word, not many people
would fail to realize it was C-A-M-E:-L. Camels are made from costlier tobaccos— drawn from the greatest treasure of mel.
lowed tobaccos
ever brought together in
one place in the whole world.
In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25% slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest-selling brands tested — slower than any of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus equal to ~~ :
5
