Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 August 1940 — Page 4

PAGE 4 Assist

and C. R. Fitzpatrick (left to right) are assisting

Mesdames Henning Johnson, Norman F. Janke | with arrangements for the 20th annual Birthday

Birthday Dinner

Dinner which Alpha Omicron Alpha Sorority will have Friday at Cifaldi’s. national president, will speak.

Foie:

Times Photo.

Mrs. J. R. Sentney, the

Two Friends Wi

ll Give Shower

For Lucille Camp Thursday;

Sue Ammerman

to Be Feted

An announcement of an approaching marriage appears with

showers for brides-to-be in today’s Miss A Mary Rossell and Miss Norma Gantner will give a bridge party and personal shower Thursday night at the Rossell home, 781 W. Drive, Woodruff Place, for Miss Lucille Camp. Miss Camp will become the bride of David B. MecQuinn, Franklin, Ind., Aug. 11, at the Woman's Department Club. Guests with Miss Camp will be Mrs. R. G. Rossell, mother of Miss Rossell; the Misses Elizabeth Sullivan, Mary Murphy, Irene Zimmern, Marie Joyce, Lela Dipper, Pearl Smith, Dorothy Gray and Maude Fiscus. ” ” ”

Miss Kitty Lou Fitzgerald and her mother, Mrs. Donald D. Fitzgerald, will entertain with a linen shower at their home, 5757 Allisonville

Road, Thursday night for Miss Sue Ammerman. Miss Ammerman will be married to James O. Harris, son of Mrs. John H. Allison, Aug. 17. Guests with the bride-to-be will be her mother, Mrs. K. V. Ammerman; Mrs. Allison, the Misses Helen and Doris Ellis, Sally Heilman, Ruth and Carolyn Rehm, Jeanette Barnett, Mildred Theising, Mary Jane Shafer, Jean Meek, Mrs. Thomas May nad Mrs. Robert Straughn, un Miss Marjorie Edmondson, Plainfield, Ind., will entertain Aug. 15 with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Tosca Guerrini, who

will marry Kenneth M. Smartz Aug. 25 Guests with Miss Guerrini will be her mother, Mrs. V. A. Guerrini, Mesdames Howard Wilson, Margaret Shimer, Glodine Horton, the Misses Gladys Miley, Mildred Hosey, Phairy Queener, Jearuldine Nicely, Helen Guerrini and Maxine Edmondson.

Miss Margaret Cade and Miss Charlynn Murray entertained recently at Haw Haw Hills, 3401 E. 65th St., with a personal shower in honor of Miss Julia Hutchens,

whose marriage to Paul S. Johnson will take place Aug..29. The hostesses were assisted by their mothers, Mrs. Edna Mae Cade and Mrs. John W. Murray. Guests with Miss Hutchens were her mother, Mrs. O. E. Hutchens, Mrs. Robert D. Johnson, mother of the bridegroom-to-be, Mesdames Della Taylor, David Johnson, Robert Foust, the Misses Marie Johnson, Mae Johnson, Yvonne Jarvis, Mary Cade, Leonore Heppner, Jeanne Heppner, Mary Meyers, Betty Culley, Jane Bennett, Barbara Clark, Mar-

u u

” n

pre-nuptial notes.

|jory Craft and Clementine Beche(rich. h & o

Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Shimer announce the approaching marriage of their daughter Betty Jo to Meredith L. Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Scott. The wedding will take place at 7 o'clock Friday night in the Centenary Christian Church. The Rev. David S. McNelley will perform the ceremony. 8 2 ”

Miss Thelma Lambirth, marriage to Thomas Rasmussen will take place Aug. 11, was honor guest at a miscellaneous shower given re-

Donna Jacobsen. The party was given at Slattery’s home, 5102 Carrollton Ave. Guests were Mesdames Henry Lambirth, William Giezendanner. Easel Corrie, Norvell Davis, Mamie Mace, the Misses Alta Lambirth, Eva Call, Doris Boyd, Henrietta Dux, Cecelia Bates, Harriet Jones, Catherine Stanton, Lucille Michaellis, Gladys Kennington, Cleo Mae | Miller, Mae Brennan, Mary Patterson, Wilma Brier and Joanne King.

Patsy Boggs Shower Guest

Miss Alice Jane Rice, 5896 Washington Blvd., will entertain Wednesday night with a linen shower for Miss Patsy Boggs, whose marriage to Richard Vincent Ware will take place Sept. 4. Besides the bride-to-be, guests will be, Mrs. Harry Boggs, mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Harry Ware, mother of the. bridegroom-to-be; Mrs. Sidney Rice, mother of |the hostess; the Misses Joan Casey, {Jane Renard, Eileen White, Jule | Turner, Marjorie Pike, Adeline Rice, |Mesdames Edwin Dunnington, Don {Underwood and William Harbison and Richard Disher.

Curtains of Glass Bring New Effects

Curtains and draperies woven of pure glass are setting sensational new styles in window decorations. New curtain materials of glass fiber are woven in gossamer gauze and lustrous net; drapery fabrics come in satin stripe, grosgrain shell "damask and rich-looking tapestry leffects.

JANE JORDAN

I OFTEN HAVE LETTERS frcm lonely people asking me how

to get acquainted with a view to matrimony.

for the address of some oth r lonely

Frequently they ask one who has written the column.

They want to know why I do not head a “get acquainted” bureau.

A few have entertained the idea themselves and asked my opinion of

of establishing such a bureau the project.

I do not believe that a bureau established for the purpose of introducing people who want to get married, but can't find a

partner, would work. The reason

is that if these lonely people

really were sociable, they would have joined up with other “mixer”

organizations long ago. There are

plenty of churches which make

a point of social clubs for all ages. There are the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A, youth associations

and camps. There are hundreds

neighborhood clubs.

athletic clubs,

of private clubs, school clubs, luncheon clubs and lodges.

People who are genuinely gregarious drift into some of these organizations through the invitations of friends.

" # 8

" #

" THOSE WHO HAVE shied away from clubs and gatherings all

of their lives are people who have in life.

made a poor social adjustment

I cannot see how their difficulties can be solved by joining

a club in search of someone to marry. For one thing, they would meet other people with the same problems, not people who would be any real help in pulling them out of their retreat from social competition. Another drawback to the matrimonial bureau (and no matter how you try to disguise it with other names, that is what it amounts

to) is that it is bound to attract many undesirable people.

I have

mentioned the lonely people who so many times are lonely because

they have no real interest in, or love for, other people.

Worse still

are those who harbor actual hostility toward others. All of us have read about men and woinen who found mates by advertising for them in the papér but who buried them in the back yard later on. These are people who have been instinctively ostracized by others and therefore cannot find partners through the

usual channels.

” = #

THESE ARE EXTREME CASES, of course, but there are men who search for women with incomes to relieve them of the burden

of earning a living.

There are women in search of men to give

them an easy berth in life without demanding anything real in return. Unable to find a sucker among their acquaintances, they

would be among the first to join want to marry.

a club composed of people who

The motives of those who are forced to join a

bureau to find a husband or a wife seldom will bear inspection. In general, people who are capable of good team work will find

whose

cently by Miss Mildred Slattery and | Se : | Bingham, John David and E. Paul

Miss |

their own mates without benefit of bureaus. They are people who have cultivated their contacts since childhood, who are invited to dinners, parties and socials. In other words they get acquainted threcugh ordinary social channels and have no need for such an obvious device as the matrimonial bureau. JANE JORDAN, Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.

Kappa Sigma Party 1s Aug. 28

The Indianapolis Alumni Association. of Kappa Sigma Fraternity will hold a rush party at the Meridian Hills Country Club Aug. 23. Guests will be prospective freshmen at Purdue University, Indiana University and Wabash College, and active members of the fraternity at all three schools will attend. Judge Curtis Shake of the State Supreme Court, an alumnus of the Indiana Chapter, will be principal speaker and there will be talks by representatives of the three chapters of the state, Dan C. Hess will be toastmaster. Virgil W. Simms will be general chairman; Marvin E. Curle, program chairman, Jean Black, George Goodwin, Herbert Evans and Dr. J. N. Garber, alumni contact and reservations; Eugene Cadou and W. Blaine Patton, publicity; James E.

Carson, golf. Other committee members are George R. Jeffrey, O. H. Grant and Robert Talbot, tennis and swimming; Paul R. Summers, chapter and rushee contact, and Richard W. Coons, official photographer and motion pictures.

Shirley Dunton Weds Sept. 21

Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Dunton, LaGrange, Ind. announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter Shirley to Richard DeTar, son of Mr. and Mrs. | C. B. DeTar, 69 N. Layman Ave, Indianapolis. The wedding will take place Sept. 21 in the Presbyterian Church at LaGrange. After a wedding trip, the couple will live in Lafayette, Ind. The bride-to-be is a former student of Indiana University, where she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. The bridegroom-to-be is a graduate of Indiana University and a member of Sigma Nu Fraternity.

It Pays to Answer Others’ Telephones

LONGMEADOW, Mass, Aug. 5 (U. P.).—Answering other people’s telephone calls can be turned into a profitable business. Mrs. Helen S. Usher got the idea about two years ago, and with a battery of extension telephones at her home she handles after-hours calls for several Springfield fuel oil companies, acts as liaison agent for a Boston manufacturing concerns and routs repair men in the middle of the night for emergency repair jobs. This service, operated on a 24hour basis, is growing rapidly, and Mrs. Usher plans te expand operations to incorporate the functions of waking tired business men by telephone and reminding forgetful patrons in advance of birthdays, wedding anniversaries and important business appointments.

Blueberries Color the Summer Menu

Whether in cake or in muffins, blueberries always color the summer menu to everyone's taste. Served with crisp dry cereals, they waken the breakfast appetite brightly, and for various desserts are full of flavor and intense color.

Maine Blueberry Cake (12 by 8 by 2-inch cake) Two and one-half cups sifted flour, 22 teaspoons combination baking powder, 2 teaspoon salt, 1, cup butter or other shortening, 1 cup sugar, 1 egg, unbeaten, 2 cup milk, 2 cups blueberries. Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder and salt, and sift again. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually, and cream together well. Add egg to mixture and beat very thoroughly. Add flour, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time, beating after each addition until smooth. This makes a stiff batter. Fold in blueberries. Turn into greased 12x8x2inch pan, spreading evenly. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for 45 minutes. Makes 24 2-inch squares.

Spiced Prunes Two cups large prunes, 115 cups water, 1; cup vinegar, 1, cup brown sugar, 1 83-inch stick of cinnamon, 2 whole cloves.

Simmer prunes in 1 cup water for 30 minutes. In the meantime, combine remaining half cup wat r, the vinegar, brown sugar, cinnamon and cloves, and boil gently for 15 min-

prunes are glazed. Lift out prunes

and arrange around veal pot roast.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SOCIETY—

Ella Buskirk Names Aug. 31 as Date For Marriage to David H. Sherwood

Miss Ella Darlene Buskirk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Buskirk, Ft. Wayne, Ind., and David Hartley Sherwood, son ¢f Mr. and Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood, Indianapolis, have chosen Aug. 31 as the date of their wedding. The Rt. Rev. Richard A. Kirchoffer, bishop of the Episcopal diocese of Indianapolis, will perform the ceremony at the Trinity Episcopal Church in Ft. Wayne at 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon. Miss Alida Sherwood, sister of the bridegroom-to-be, will be maid of honor and Samuel F. Sherwood, brother of the bridegroom-to-be, will be best man. Max Buskirk, brother of the bride-to-be will be an usher. The other attendants will be announced at a later date. After the ceremony, there will be a reception at the Buskirk home in Ft. Wayne, and a dinner will be held for the bridal party.

Comings and Goings Miss Anni Zimmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Karl R. Zimmer, is at Lake Wawasee for a week. Next Monday she will go with Mr. and Mrs. Guy Shadinger and their daughter, Mary Jane, to spend three weeks at Kagawong, Manitoulin Island, Ontario, Canada. Karl Zimmer Jr. will return Friday from Plainwell, Mich., where he has been visiting friends. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Burke Slaymaker are in Estes Park, Colo. . . . James Noonan, Charles Nugent, and Edward Berman have returned from a visit with Frank Johnson at Crystal Lake, Mich. Kennard Voyles, also in the group, will remain there a few days longer . . .. Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Smith have returned from a plane trip to Canada . . . Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Rinne and daughter Marcia Ann have returned from a two weeks’ visit at the lakes near Quincy, Mich. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lanahan and Jack Jr. have returned from a vacation at Webster Lake, S. Mrs. Klingholz to Give Garden Tea Miss Mildred Thiesing, who will become the bride of Norman Essex Titus Aug. 29, will be guest of honor with Mrs. Forrest Byron Langston, Memphis, Tenn., at a garden tea to be given Wednesday by Mrs. Langston’s mother, Mrs. E. C. Klingholz, from 4 to 6 p. m, Other guests will be Mrs. L. Merrill Thiesing, mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Clyde E. Titus, mother of the bridegroom-to-be; Mesdames Kenneth Kinnear, L. W. Mohlenkamp, J. N. Greene, J. W, Titus, Nicholas J. Demerath, William Delaney, James Costin, Will Klingholz, James Tipton, William Jackson, Chic Jackson, William Noelke, H. E. Rogers Jr., Harry Springsteen, A. O. Mason, Harold

Bright, Charles D. Finney, of Atlanta, Ga.

Mesdames O. N. Allen, Roscoe Carver, T. A. Connor, Harry C. Schroeder, Charles Fant, E. L. Wiggins, Emil Riley, William Miller, Clyde Parsons, O. A. Chillson, Roy Carson, Wallace Hislop, ‘Harry Riddell, Charles Sallee, Thomas Larkin, Fred Likely and Lawrence

Hartman.

Misses Lucile LaBelle, Betty Bright, Eleanor Craig, Marry Ann Crossland, Betty Schroeder, Louise Beechey, Annette Klingholz, Lois

Jeanne Nicolai, Dorothy Spahr, Delaney and Lucy Balch.

Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames Demerath, Greene, Hislop, Titus and the Misses Craig, Bright, Schroeder and Klingholz.

Mattress Ticking to Serve for Draperies, Bedspreads and Slipcovers in Model Farm Home

Perhaps you've always thought that mattress ticking was for mattresses and that wallpaper was for walls. this year you will find out that you are wrong. The model farm house to be on display will sport mattress ticking for draperies, slipcover and bedspread and drapery fabric will replace

wall paper in the living room. The house is to be “Indiana” furnished, too. The furniture will be of Lincoln oak in light sand finish, of Indiana oak, made by an Indiana firm and for an Indiana farmhouse. In style, it will retain the simplicity and charm of early America. Four young women representatives of Indiana's Rural Youth and Young Adult Group will select furniture, floor coverings and accessorjes for the house, under the watchful eyes of Miss May Masten of Purdue University Extension. They are making their selections at L. S. Ayres and Co. with the aid of Mrs. Eleanor Miller, home furnishing stylist of the firm. : Girls who will aid in the selection are Miss Kathryn Smith, New Palestine, Ind., Miss Phyllis Falk, Bluffton, Ind., Miss Marjory McKinney, Newton, Ind, and Miss Rosaleen Koch, Urbana. Ind. They were selected from 300 delegates at the recent Rural Youth and Young Adult Group conference at Purdue University. In addition to this group, Miss Helen Johnson, home demonstra-| tion agent of Richmond, Ind. will direct Wayne County 4-H Club girls in a tuor of Ayres to select furniture and furnishings for’ the girl's bedroom, guest bedroom and living room which will be on display in the Women’s Building during the Fair. Other groups which will aid in the selection of this furniture are 4-H Club girls of Fayette County under the direction of Miss Virginia Brown, home demonstration agent at Connersville, Ind., and Miss Edith Lewis, Liberty, Ind., directing Union County members.

Engagement Announced

John Stevens, Evansville, Ind. announces the engagement of his daughter, Evelyn Anne, to William Robert Craigle Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William Robert Craigle, 22 N. Riley Ave. The wedding will take

Edwin G.

White, James Howerton

Mary Lou Mohlenkamp, Edna

If you go to the State Fair

|

Shower Honors Ruth Glaubke

Mrs. Frank Brown and Mrs. Howard Ross will entertain with a miscellaneous shower Wednesday at

lawn festival Thursday, Friday and on the church grounds.

Assisting with arrangements

— MONDAY, AUG. 5, 1040

cif Cae” NA oe x oN Ce La

St. Patrick's Catholic Church will have its annual

Saturday nights Moran.

St. Patrick’s Church to Hold Lawn Festival

Times Photo.

for the event are (left to right) the Mesdames Joseph Madden,

Robert Oliver and Daniel E.

Mrs. J. P. Scott To Be Hostess

Mrs. Jasper P. Scott, 525 Buckingham Drive, will entertain members of the Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi Sorority with a supper meeting at 6 o'clock tomorrow night. Mrs. Roger Owens, Franklin, Ind, who was elected president of the Delta Province at the recent national convention in Pasadena, Cal, will be a special guest. Miss Dina Barken and Miss Joan Silberman, who were delegates from the Butler Chapter, and Mrs. Ellis B. Hall, Alumnae Club president, and Mrs. Scott will report on the convention activities. Mrs. Dar Robinson, supper chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. Robert Shelhorn and Mrs. William T. Johnson, the Misses Ada Miller, Jeanette McElroy, Jean Van Vorhees, Georgiana Pittman and Marguerite Ulen,

Leaders Named by Auxiliary

Mrs. Roy Pope Sr. is president of the newly organized Ladies’ Auxiliary to Indianapolis Lodge 86, F. 0. P. Other officers elected with Mrs. Pope at a recent meeting include Mrs. Richard W. Etter, first vice president; Mrs. James Hasch, second vice president; Mrs. Leonard Shoemaker, financial secretary;

the Brown home, 6121 College Ave. for Miss Ruth Marie Glaubke, who will become the bride of Paul Edward Grigsby Aug. 11. Guests will be Miss Glaubke and her mother, Mrs. Robert A. Glaubke, Mesdames Alex West, Everett Whitehead, Hessie Gertsley, Morris Conley, Paul Talbott, Charles Eichholtz, David Clark, Charles Lindberg, George Armentrout, Helen Hoffman, Arch DeMars, M. H. Oakes, E. J. Dickman, Homer Olvey, Robert Hensen, Gordon Maple, Blanche Kaylor, Guido Schloot,

Mrs. John Kestler, recording secretary, and Mrs. Dan Smith, treasurer. The board of directors will be Mesdames Harry Kernodle, Emmett Staggs, John Marren, John W, Mullen and E. E. Clary. Joseph T. Wilson, president of Indianapolis Lodge 86, pledged his support and co-operation to the Auxiliary.

Try a Minted

Anna Grande, Freda Weddel, Paul Cooper, Shelbyville, Ind., the Misses Mildred Matson, Esther Glaubke and Ruth Glaubke.

Tuxedo Union to Meet

The Tuxedo Union of the W. C. T. U. will hold a meeting at 1:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at the Wheeler Rescue Mission. Election of officers will be held. Mrs. Cora Duncan will sing. Mrs. Minnie Pettet, president, will conduct the meeting and Mrs, C. W. Ackman, county president, will be a guest.

Tri Delts Entertained

Miss LaVaun Reehling, a member of Delta Delta Delta Sorority at Indiana University recently entertained a group of her sorority sisters with a dinner party at the Canary Cottage. Guests included Miss Jean Gifford, Chicago; Miss Betty Tuck, Louisville, Ky. and

place in Chicago, Aug. 24.

Miss Dorothy Shafer, Indianapolis.

Fresh Maine blueberry cake goes well

Blueberry Muffins

Two cups sifted flour, 2 teaspoons| mixture as quickly as possible, mixutes. Drain prunes and add them|paking powder, 4 teaspoon salt, 4|ing only enough to dampen flour. slowly until liquid is reduced and|tablespoons sugar, 1 cup milk, 3/Fold in blueberries. 1 egg,/ muffin tins 23 full and bake in hot

tablespoons melted butter, beaten, 1 cup blueberries.

Sift dry ingredients. Combine liquid ingredients and add to dry

Fill greased

Cocoa Drink

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX One taste of chocolate makes the whole world kin—or at least a large; part of the thirsty world. These summer drinks with chocolate or cocoa base are just what your family will order. CHOCOLATE HIGHBALL

One-half cup chilled milk, 2 tablespoons chocolate syrup or cocoa syrup, '% cup cold ginger ale, vanilla ice cream. Add milk slowly to syrup, stirring constantly; pour into tall glass. Add ginger ale and stir enough to mix. Add ice cream and serve at once.

CHOCOLATE PINEAPPLE FLOAT

Three-fourths cup chilled milk, 2 tablespoons chocolate syrup or cocoa syrup, % cup crushed canned pineapple and juice, chocolate ice cream or vanilla ice cream. Add milk slowly to syrup, stirving constantly; add pineapple, and beat or shake ivell. Pour into tall glasses. Add ice cream and serve nt once. MINTED CHOCOLATE

One cup chilled milk, 2 tablespoons chocolate syrup or cocoa syrup, 2 to 3 drops peppermint extract, 2 tablespoons whipped cream. Add milk slowly to syrup, stirring constantly. Add flavorings, and beat or shake well. Pour into tall glass. Top with cream; garnish with sprig of mint, if desired. CHOCOLATE SYRUP Five squares unsweetened chocolate, 1 cup sugar, 33 cup hot water, 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten. Melt chocolate over hot water; rool to lukewarm. Add sugar to water, stirring until sugar is dissolved; cool to lukewarm. Add syrup to egg yolks, about one-fourth at a time, beating well after each addition; add chocolate in the same way. Then continue beating mixture 1 minute, or until slightly thickened. Turn into jar, cover tightly, and place in refrigerator. Syrup can be kept for several days. Use 2 tablespoons chocolate syrup for 1 cup milk. Makes 2 cups syrup.

Octoettes at Park

Members of the Octoettes Sub Deb Club are spending this week at Bethany Park. They are the Misses Joanne Green, Virginia Becker, Helen Heid, Anna Lamb, Joan Melle, Rosemary Morris, Betty Smith and Martha KirkhofT. Guests include the Misses Helen McCormick, Dorothy Green and Mary Lou Green. Mrs. George Green is chaperon.

Sorority to Picnic Husbands of members and friends were invited to the Kappa Gamma Alpha Sorority annual picnic yesterday at Forest Park, Noblesville,

oven (400 degrees F.) for 25 minutes.

A

Ind,

Breakfast-Bridge-Swim Party Will Be Held Next Monday Around Pool at I. A. C.

The final party in a series of breakfast-bridge-swim events for women at the Indianapolis Athletic Club will be held next Monday about the pool at the club. The party is planned for members’ wives, daughters and their guests. The club swimming pool will be open for swimming at 9 a. m. and

QUESTION BOX

Q—My husband is a mechanic and his hand are cracked and sore from removing the grease and dirt with gasoline. How can he keep his hands in good condition? A—At the end of the day he should rub his hands well with pure lard, working it well into the skin. Then remove the grease with very warm water and soap. Rinse in clear, warm water and massage well with toilet lanolin. Wipe off the excess grease with paper or a soft cloth.

Q—Name the most popular frozen fruits and vegetables.

A—Strawberries are the most popular fruit, and green peas the most popular vegetable. Blueberries are second choice and cherries third among the fruits, with peaches rapidly gaining popularity. Of the vegetables, lima beans stand second with broccoli, spinach, and asparagus running close.

Q—What kinds of leather have the best water repellent qualities? A—The water repellent property of leather depends to a large extent upon the finishing treatment. Calf, kid, cow and many other types of upper leathers may be treated with waxes, oils, and greases to make them more resistant to water penetration. Firm sole leather, cut from the back portion of the hide, will resist water penetration better than soles cut from the shoulder, neck or belly portion of the hide.

Q—Are balloons good toys to give to small children? A—Yes. A child may learn new things from balloons. He finds he must handle them gently or they will break. He also learns about things that go up in the air.

Q—How soon after roasting does the aromatic flavor of coffee begin to decrease in strength?

A—After 24 hours there is a noticeable decrease and after the first two or three days, deterioration proceeds at about the same rate, whether the coffee is kept in an ordinary can, an opened vacuumpack can, or a bag. When coffee is cooked every day it should be purchased freshly roasted twice a week to have a good flavor,

Q—What can be used to remove grease from a steel top stove? A—Use a strong solution of soda and water, and rub with a good abrasive. Once or twice a week the stove should be gone over with a cloth moistened with stove oil, rubbing it thoroughly until clean and bright.

Personals

Miss Agnes Lauck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Lauck, 1458 S. Meridian St., will visit a classmate of St. Mary's College, Notre Dame, Miss Kay Moran, for the next few days in Chicago. From there she

will go to Butte, Mont.,, where she will visit another classmate, Miss Rita Curtis. She will return home a week before she enters her junior year this fall at St. Mary's.

Walter E. Rinehart, former resident of Edinburg, Ind., has returned to Indianapolis from a week-end at Lake Shafer.

Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Einbinder, 4057 Graceland Ave., have returned home from a week's visit in South Haven, Mich. Their daughter Thelma is touring the New England states. She will visit friends and relatives in Boston, Mass™and in New York and will also attend the New York World's Fair.

The Rev. and Mrs. Robert Andry are in Daytona, Fla.

Miss Helen Lowell will return tomorrow from a vacation spent in New York.

Miss Betty Jane Fouts, 1710 Ruckle St., and Miss Alethea L. Ried, 4039 College Ave., have returned from a two weeks’ visit to New York.

!

&

bridge play will follow the breake fast which is to be served at tables arranged along the pool edge at 10 a. m, Table decorations will be ine dividual table prizes and summer flowers. Mrs. Raymond C. Fox is chairman of the hostess group which includes Mesdames Harry E. Scott, Russell Gordon, Joseph W. Stickney, Frederick J. Wurster, Glenn Lord, Jose eph J. Cole, A. E. Baker, Herbert S. King, H. F. Sweeney, L. G. An=derson, Jack Carroll, Philip G, Rohan, Bruce Fogle, Maxwell Droke, Howard Kemper, Tom Neale, Fred Hoffman, Arthur S. Overbay, and William F. Shook. Another women’s summer active ity in the I. A. C. is the progressive mile swim being conducted in the pool by members of the Dolphins Club which is a women’s innerclub swimming organization. Mrs, Castineau, president of the group, is leading in the competition, and Mrs. H. F. Sweeney and Mrs. Riche ard Holmes are in second and third place. The Dolphin’s 1940-41 season, with weekly swimming and monthly luncheons, will open Oct. 15.

Dorothy Reich Is Married

Miss Dorothy Reich and Thurman Emminger were married Saturday

in a ceremony performed at the Englewood Christian Church by the Rev. H. H. Webster. Mrs. Emminger is the daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Reich and Mr. Eme minger is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Emminger. The couple will be at home in Ine dianapolis on their return from a wedding trip. Miss Thelma Mendenhall was the bride’s only attendant. Joseph Eme minger was his brother’s best man, Robert Reich, brother of the bride, and James Mendenhall were the ushers. A reception at the Emminger home followed the service.

Virginia Kelley Becomes Bride |

Mr. and Mrs. William W. Van Matre Jr. will be at home in Indian apolis at the Ambassador Aparte ments after their return from a wedding trip to Chicago, Ill. Mrs. Van Matre was Miss Virginia Kelley, daughter of Dr. and Mrs, Arthur Henry Kelley of St. Joseph, Mo., before her marriage Saturday in the North Methodist Church. Mr. Van Matre is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William W. Van Matre of Mexico, Mo. The Rev. C. A. McPheeters pere formed the ceremony. Miss Aline Laws and George Fruit were tha couple's attendants. Mrs. Van Matre attended the University of Missouri and is a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority. Mr. Van Matre was graduated from the Missouri Law School.

Mrs. Hess Chairman

Mrs. Charles Hess was chairman of the public card party given yese terday by the members of the Liede

erkranz Ladies Society at their hall, 1421 E. Washington St. Mrs. Otis Becker assisted Mrs. Hess.

New Under-arm

Cream Deodorant : safely |

Stops Perspiration

1. Does not rot dresses, does not irritate skin, 2. Nowaitingto dry.Canbeused right after shaving, 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Removes odoe from perspiration. 4. Apure,white,greaseless, stain. less vanishing cream, 8. Arrid has been awarded the Approval Seal of the American Institute of Laundering for being harmless to fabrics. 28 MILLION jars of Arrid have been sold. Try ajartodayl

ry ve od