Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 June 1941 — Page 20
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PAGE 20
Housewife Can Stre ch Her Food Do
AS FOOD PRICES ARE INCREASING, the Consumer Division of the Office of Price inistration and Civilian Supply has brought together a list of suggestions of ways to stretch your food dollar without injuring family health and energy. These suggestions are listed under three major rules that should guide each food purchaser: Careful Planning, Wise Buying, No Wasting, “The. ultimate strength of the nation depends on its food buyers,” the Division emphasizes. “Thirty-two per cent of the young men called out by the Selective Service plan have been rejected on grounds of physical unfitness. Malnutrition (pdor and inadequate feeding) has caused many of the rejections. Hence, the problem of malnutrition has been placed on the “must list” of national defense programs. “The food buyer, the consumer at the market place, is the key to that program. Careful planning can buy health and save money. Your food-buying plan will have a better chance for success if the following steps are taken:” i yg 1. Get your information about the nutritive values of food from , reliable sources. (The United States Government will sénd ‘you free + upon request a hooklet: “Diets to Fit the Family Income.” Write to the U. S. Department of Agriculture and ask for Bulletin 1757.) 2. Plan your meals for a week at a time. Write out a seven-day food budget and menu. : ._ «+ 3. If you have adequate refrigeration and storage space, do the biggest part of your food shopping on one or two days a week. In , many sections of the country Thursday and Saturday have become the .. customary food shopping days and many retail stores offer specials =“ (lower prices) on those days. be 4: Shop for your food. Take time to compare prices and to make any changes in your menu plan suggested by especially low prices.
/ Boxholders for ‘Bohemian Girl’ And 'Carmen' Are Announced
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A LIST OF BOXHOLDERS for the Variety Club’s
iss. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ee
llar by Careful Planning, Wise Buying, No Wasting
5. See that each day's food contains all the vital foods necessary to health. , When you make substitutes in your plan at the market place, be sure that your substitutes do not alter the nutrition plan. In other words, a cheaper green vegetable should substitute for another green vegetable, macaroni or rice take the place of another cereal or bread. : : : 6. Plan for variety and try to educdte your family to a liking for a number of different foods. . ” 2 ” NN .» ”
THE BEST NUTRITION PLAN in the world, of course, will not feed your family unless you have the money to buy the food. But a careful and informed consumer can make a limited food budget go further by following a few good shopping rules. 1. Read the labels. When you are buying any packaged or canned foods don’t trust your first impulse. A careful reading of the labels may tell you that one contains more in weight than another or that the bigger package is cheaper and will give you more for your money. 2. Check your weights. A good pair of kitchen scales will save its cost time and time:again. Weigh your purchases at home: Ask for an adjustment every time you are short-weighted. 3. Watch for the quantity offerings. Studies made by retail stores indicate that it costs your grocer less to sell you five or six items at the same time. You will frequently see that you can save money by buying six bars of soap instead of one or by buying 25 pounds of sugar instead of five. 4. Buy graded canned goods (Grades A, B-and C) whenever you can find them. Grade C is perfectly good food and is cheaper in price
Officers of Newly-Organized Club
_than the two higher grades. For use in soups and sauces or stews it is entirely satisfactory. Unless the cans are graded, however, you may get Grade C goods but pay Grade A prices. A number of canners are co-operating with the Government and putting grades on their mer-
chandise. Ask your grocer about getting graded canned goods if you
can’t find them in your neighborhood. ' 5. Buy graded meat when you.can find it. Government grades are prime, choice, good, commercial and utility. The lower priced standard grades are entirely wholesome and nutritious and with ‘proper cooking make excellent dishes. Unless the meat is graded, however, you may be paying premium prices for standard meats. Ask your butcher about the grade of meat you buy. The Government has a book on graded meat which you can get by writing to the Office of Information, Department of Agriculture in Washington, Ask for: leaflet 122, “United States Graded and Stamped Meats.” 6. Use the cheaper cuts of meat; shoulders of pork or lamb, breast of lamb, spare-ribs, stewing beef, stewing chicken, neck, flank, and shank of lamb, ox-tail, hearts, kidneys, beef and pork livers. With proper cooking such meats are as palatable as steaks and chops. 7. Learn to use substitutes that save money and build health. The whole grain cereals that you cook at home are. seasonally cheaper for you than the ready-to-eat, prepared breakfast foods. Cheese and egg dishes can be substituted for meat two or three times a week. Evaporated or dried milk can be used in cooking in place of the more expensive fluid (bottled) milk. . When citrus fruits (oranges and grapefruit) are high, use canned tomatoes, tomato juice, cabbage salad and fresh fruits (except bananas) in the place of citrus fruits. These substitutes contain Vitamin C in
Tea Tomorrow Will Honor College Girls
Approximately 125 Methodist college girls who have returned from schools for the summer vacation period will be guests at a tea fomorrow afternoon in the home of Bishop and Mrs. Titus Lowe, 4014
anid v
THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1941
generous quantities and this: vitamin is important in our diets. Oleomargarine is often much cheaper than butter and can be used as a butter substitute, especially in cooking and baking. 8. Buy foods in season. Everyone knows that strawberries are high in December, cheap in June. Nearly all other fresh fruits and vegetables likewise have seasons when they are plentiful and cheaper. Listen to the market reports over your radio and guide your meal planning by the news of what is plentiful and cheap on the market. ” ” 8 ” ” ” ’
“BUILDING A DEFENSE ARMY and the armaments to equip that Army is a national effort that calls on each and every citizen to conserve all the national resources,” the Division says. “When food is wasted today it not only makes each consumer’s food bill higher than it ought to be, but it is a waste of strdtegic defense material.” 1. Check your food storage facilities. Improve them if inadequate, 2. Keep foods well covered in the pantry, refrigerator or ice box, 3. Use left-overs, Plan your meals with left-overs in mind. 4, Be careful to buy exactly what you need, keeping your week's plan in mind. 5. Cook vegetables with as little water as possible, Don't throw away water in which they have been cooked. Many of the vegetable's most important minerals and vitamins are in that cooking water, Save it for soups. 6. Save bones and water in which the meat has been boiled. Use them in soups. 7. Learn how to peel fruits and vegetables carefully. Take time to develop the knack of paper-thin parings. : 8. Follow carefully recipes from reliable sources.
Butler
Sororities—
Delta Theta Chi Rush Party
Tomorrow
An “Indian Tepee” party will be the first in a series of summer rush parties planned by INDIANA NU CHAPTER of DELTA THETA CHI,
sponsorship of the operas, “Bohemian Girl” and “Car-
men,” July 9 and 10 at the State Fair Grounds has been It will be a 6:30 o'clock picnic supe
N. Pennsylvania St.
released. The performances by the ‘North American Opera Company will benefit the Variety Club’s mainten- - ance fund for a blood plasma and serum bank at the
Indiana University Medical Center hospitals.
Boxholders include Homer Capehart, W. E. Kennedy, Frank McKinney, George W. Stark, Ray A. Holcomb, Dr. Carleton B. Mc= Culloch, Dr. Charles W. Myers, Mark Gray, James E. Manley, Wil- . liam A. Hanchett, Arthur R. Baxter, J. Blake Stone, Orville W. Wise,
R. Norman Baxter, Dr. George K. George, H. J.|Secoy, Samuel B. Walker, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Henry F. Dugan, Joseph J. Daniels,
Theodore B. Griffith, Elijah B. Martindale, Edward J. Herrmann, Mrs. Richard Fairbanks and Mrs. N. F. Wetzel. :
Carl Reifstecks to Entertain AMONG FEARTIES planned for the Indianapolis Country Club’s
Golden ‘Jubilee supper dance Saturday night is one for which Mr,
and Mrs. Carl N. Reifsteck will be hosts. Their guests will include Mrs. Thomas J. Scanlon of Merchantsville, N. J., and Messrs. and
Mesdames E. J. Elliott, Fred Lofquist and A. N. Curtiss. Attending the ball with Mr. and Mrs, Clyde E. Lee will be Dr. and Mrs. J. Thayer Waldo, Mr. and Mrs. Clark S. Wheeler and Mr. and Mrs, Harry Reis§er. : An informal party will be given Saturday evening by Judge and Mrs. Herbert E. Wilson: for the group with which they will attend the Lambs Club frolic at the Athenaeum later. In the party will be Messrs. and Mesdames Alan W. Boyd, Hubert Hickam, Alfred Rodecker and Augustus Coburn. . Dr. and Mrs. Wayne L. Ritter will have dinner at their home before the frolic for Dr. and Mrs. Irvine H. Page and Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Kohlstaedt. Mr. and/Mrs, Edson T. Wood Jr. will be at the Athenaeum with Mr. and Mrs. Daniel E. Gleasbn. Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Scheidenhelm will bé with ¢he party of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Starrett whose other guests will include Mr. and Mrs. Ward
Starrett of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. Campbell, Mr. and
Mrs. Kurt F. Pantzer also are among those planning parties to attend the frolic.
In a Personal Vein
MR.-AND MRS. Robert D. Robinson were “up at the crack of dawn” yesterday to see their son, Bobby, off for Camp Arrowhead at Tuxedo, N. C. Their daughter Janice will leave tomorrow for Camp Illahee and Pisgah Pines at Brevard, N. C. Other Indianapolis girls leaving tomorrow by special train for the camp’s opening Saturday will be Misses Margaret and Jane Curle, Margaret Noble, Barbara Evans, Jane Briggs, Elizabeth Thomson, Betsy Goodwin and Mildred Cornelius. The camping period: will end Aug. 23. Mr. and Mrs. Colin Jameson are motoring from Santa Barbara, Cal, where they have spent the winter and will arrive Saturday to visit Mrs. Jameson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Morton L. Gould. After a week’s stay, they will go on to Vermont for the summer. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Tyndall of Zionsville will return -Synday from Hewlett, L. I, where they have been visiting Mr. and Mrs, Frank Mayer. ; : Dr. and Mrs. William P. Hughes will leave tomorrow for Baltimore to attend the wedding of their son, Dr. William F. Hughes Jr., and Miss Wanema Alter Dickey of Carlisle, Pa., on Saturday. ... Mr. and Mrs. James S. Rogan will spend the week-end in Chi- - cago visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jack Allen. : ; Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus returned yesterday from a visit with . her father, Robert Hasler, at Old Westbury, L. I. . . . Mrs. John B. Stokely and Dr. P. O. Bonham will return Sunday from a trip to Huntington, W. Va., where they will attend the horse show today
through Saturday.
The Bridal |Scene— ; Frank B. McKibbins Will Give
new officers. 8» 0»
Parliamentary Practice Club Is
Accepted by G. F. W. C.|
General Federation of Women's Clubs.
And Parliamentarians’ Association
The Parliamentary Practice. Club of Indianapolis, organized April 28 | by Mrs. Walter H. Vinzant, has just received the announcement of its acceptance into the National Association of Parliamentarians and -the At the first executive board meeting held yesterday at Ayres’ committee appointments for the year were
made. Club meetings will be held at 9:45 a. m. the first Thursday of each month from October to May, inclusive. Members, eligible because of their knowledge. of parliamen-
Alpha Delta Pi
Mesdames Noble T. Reed, Daniel Hutchison, Jesse Dill and W. H. Vinzant (left to right) , , ,
Jack Presnall Takes Bride
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Presnall are at home at 1403 Applegate St. Mrs. Presnall was Miss Mary Kidwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Kidwell, before her marriage last Saturday in the Sacred Heart Catholic Chureh. The Rev. Fr. Michael Wernsing, 0. 8S. M,, officiated at the nuptial high mass. The St. Rose Choir sang a program of bridal airs preceding the service and “Ave Maria” during the rite.
The Woman's Society of Christian Service of the Methodist churches in the Indianapolis district will be hostesses.” Mrs. C, A. McPheeters, district secretary of students’ work, is chairman of arrangements, assisted by student
secretaries of the local Methodist |:
churches. Receiving with Mrs. Lowe and
Mrs. McPheeters will ‘be Mesdames |
0. W. Fifer, Guy O. Carpenter and W. C. Hartinger. Mrs. Neal Grider, reception chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. Jess Gammon, Mrs. F. T. Taylor, Misses Betty Reeve, Mildred White, Pearl Richardson and Mary Barnes. Assisting Mrs. ..Logan Hall, refreshments chairman, will be Mesdames W. H. Herbst, William Clark, L. E. Ratcliff, Marion Ramsey, Esther Cline, Howard Ward and Belle Andrews. The musical program will be presented by Miss Jeannine ith, contralto; Mrs. Helen Thomas Martin, pianist, and Miss Frances Irene Loomis, violinist.
Homemakers Are Picnicking Today
Meeting for a rehearsal at 9:30 o'clock this morning, the Marion County Homemakers’ Chorus stressed music by Indiana composers. A picnic lunch and business session were to follow the rehearsal at the home of Mrs. Raymond Hoffman, 1526 Fruitdale Ave. Mrs. Albert Gray, chorus president, has invited members of, recently organized homemaker clubs to join the county chorus as a part of the Purdue University Home Economics Extension Division pro-
i Photoreflex Photo. Mrs. Norma Blue Plummer, a member of School 22 faculty, will direct a course on “Manuscript Writing” dufing the annual summer session at Butler University which opens Monday.
W. G. Gingerys To Give Dinner
Mr, and Mrs. Walter G. Gingery will entertain tomorrow night at the Maple House in honor of their daughter, Edith, and her fiance, James Walden. The betrothed couple will be married Saturday night in the Irvington Methodist Church.
Guests will include Mrs. Raymond Mackall, Columbiana, O.;- Mr. Donald Leukhardt, Mrs. Marie Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Kyllo, Miss Vesta Bailey, Miss Mary Manuwal and Leland Banta, Robert Gingery and William Gingery.
Sub-Debs to Visit at Lake
The Misses Eileen Drew, Martha J. Raftery, Mary Slick, Charlotta
per tomorrow evening at the home of Miss Lola McCollum, 1509 N, Ewing St. Mrs. Raymond Jerge, Miss Madge Adams and Miss Mary Beth Roddy are in charge of the party. Guests will be Mrs. Marguerite Jessee, Mrs, Charles Uhler, the Misses Clara Wheatly, Velma Burns, Wilma Mile ler, Betty ‘Cox, Mary Allan, Flore ence Izor, Leah Barker and Marjorie Woods.
Miss Byrl McClure, president of the INDIANAPOLIS ALUMNAE CHAPTER of PI LAMBDA THETA, education honorary, is leaving toe day for Excelsior Springs, Mo., for the 12th biennial National Council meeting this week-end. Other local alumnae who will ace company her are Mesdames O. H, Eller, P. R. Hightower and G. W, Barker, the Misses Maud Dome, Mary Ronk, Frieda Herbst and Gladys Teel of Greenfield. Mrs, Eller is completing a term as nae tional archivist. Mesdames Highetower, Barker and Eller and Miss Herhst are past presidents of the local chapter. :
; Miss June Yvonne Gardner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. B, Gardner, will leave tomorrow for Hot Springs, Va., where she will ate ted the 90th anniversary convention of ALPHA DELTA PI SORORITY, Miss Gardner is the president and delegate of Beta Chapter of the sorority at Lake Forest College. Following the convention she will visit in Williamsburg, Washington and New York. She expects to return here about July 7.
Police Auxiliary to Meet The Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Ine
Bridal Dinner Tomorrow; Elizabeth Averill Is Engaged
A bridal dinner and a garden party are among parties for young
men who are to be married soon. we Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. McKibbin will entertain at dinner tomorrow
tary law, will practice parliamentary procedure and club ethics. Officers will be elected semi-annually. Mrs. Vinzant, director, of the club, is parliamentarian for’ the Seventh District Federation of Clubs and Indiana director for the National Association of Parliamentarians. Other executive board members are Mrs. Floyd W. Doddridge, president;
| Mrs. C. L. Kittle, first vice presi-
dent; Mrs. James Reynolds, second vice president; Mrs. Jesse Dill, recording secretary; Mrs. Daniel Hutchison, = corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Nobie T. Reed, treasurer. Appointive officers are Mrs. William E. Tinney, parliamentarian; Mrs. Joseph Byram, historian, and Mrs. Owen J. McCormick. Mrs. Vinzant is delegate to. the Seventh District Federation and Mrs. Elmer Roe is alternate. The president and the parliamentarian will be delegates to the National Association of Parliamentarians’ convention in Kansas City, Mo., next October. : Committees announced yesterday are: Mrs. Doddridge. and Mrs. Vinzant, program; Mesdames Roe, Joseph M, VanArsdall, Frank Wilson, Irving Soncrant and John Gallagher, contact; Mesdames Kittle, Reed and C. E. Pluess, hospitality; Mrs. James Reynolds and Mrs. Hutchison, registration; Mrs. Ru-
Picnics Tonight
Miss Pauline Rathert will read the last chapter in an .original novel written by the Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Alpha Delta Pi Sorority tonight. A picnic will be held at the home of Mrs. Burl D. Silver, 5228 Riverview Drive. The manuscript will be given a title in a contest to be conducted at the meeting and then sent to the national convention of ‘the sorority which opens Friday in Hot Springs, Va. Active chapter members from Indiana and Illinois colleges will be guests at tonight's meeting. Miss Dornthy Woods will be the assistant hostesssand the committee includes
the Mesdames L. A. Hart, W. Max Foster and F. F. Mills.
4-H Club Plans Picnic
Plans for a picnic at Westlake next Wednesday were completed by Maywood 4-H Club members yesterday morning when they met at the home of Miss Jeannine Richardson, Maywood. Demonstrations on food preparation and baking were
tions and a long veil falling from a tiara of orange blossoms. A tiny
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evening in their home, 401 E. 56th St., for. their daughter Jean and John H. Elam, who will be married Saturday afternoon in the McKibbin gardens. Among the dinner guests will be: Mr. and Mrs. Harvey J. Elam,
arents of Mr. Elam. B Also at the dinner will be Mrs. E.
Howard Roorbach of Washington, who is to be bridesmaid on Saturday, and Mr.’ Roorbach; Mr. and Mrs. Davidson McKibbin, to be an ‘usher and the matron of honor, re- _ spectively; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Mc- - Kibbin, Mrs. Paul Yull, Mrs. Gra Clark and Miss May McKibbin, all of Lansing, Mich.; the Misses Alberta, Marie and Louisa Elam and . David Elam of Xenia, O.; Richard Dickson Jr., to be an usher, and Mrs. Dickson; James J. Elam, who will be his brother’s best man; William Rehm, Howard Young Jr. and Charles Smith. = » 2
An old-fashioned garden party _and a reception Sunday will honor “Miss Pharis Mildred Frazee, whose ‘marriage to Raymond Frederic Allen ‘of New York will take place Satur-
‘day, July 12, in the Second Prespyterian ‘Church. Mrs. Robert Fos.“ter, 2329 E. Riverside Drive, will be “hostess, assisted by Mrs. Mae Ferree Frazee, mother of the bride-to-be, and Miss Eileen Zimmern. Among ‘the 80 guests will ber Mr. and Mrs. iCecil Gentry of Plainfield and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Seibel of Ft. Wayne. @ . ! Another party for Miss Frazee ‘will be given by Mrs. Loren Hufford t her cquntry home near Browns‘burg on July 9. She will be assisted by Mrs. George Wall.
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% July 11 has been set as the date “for the wedding of Miss Elizabeth “Averill of Indianapolis to Henry J. Kowal, aise of Indianapolis. The ceremony will be at the Ogunquit, © Me, summer home of the bride-to-be’s mother, Mrs. Walter Averill of Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Mr. Kowal is , the son of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Kowal “of Utica, N. Y. - The bride-to-be’s sister, Miss ~ Katharine Averill, will be maid of honor and the prospective bride-
groom’s brother, S. J. Kowal, will be best man. Miss Averill is a physiotherapist with the Division of Services for Crippled Children, State Public Welfare Department. She attended Putnam Hall School for Girls and is a graduate of St. Agnes School and Skidmore College. A graduate of Colgate University, Mr. Kowal is a member of Phi Delta Theta and Beta Kappa Epsilon Fraternities, Maroon Key and Gorgon’s Head, honorary societies. He is a former New York state golf champion and holder of the Indiana golf championship in 1939 and last week won the Indianapolis District Golf Association tournament. » ” ” Miss Clara Schmidt, who will be married to Harold Roberts on Sunday in the Lawrence Methodist Church, was guest of honor at a surprise .shower last night at the home of Miss Lois Ruth Liljeblad, 3846 Park Ave. Assisting hostesses were Miss Betty Sullivan and Miss Betty Rhiel. There were 35 guests. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Schmidt, Shadeland Drive, and Mr. Roberts’ parents are Mr. and Mrs. Bert Roberts of Castleton. = ow a = Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Joseph Kabacker are at home at 1717 N. New Jersey St. following their marriage Saturday evening in Chicago. The bride was formerly Mrs. Perle Frand, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Levi of Elwood. Rabbi Louis Mann of Sinai Temple in Chicago officiated at the wedding ceremony. Mr. Kabacker is the son of Mrs. Sarah Kabacker of Chicago.
Gives Paper-on Riley Mrs. E. C. Mathews read a paper on “James Whitcomb Riley” at the Zetathea Club's meeting yesterday
lin thi home of Mrs. C. A. Sammis, 266 &, Ave,
dolph Grosskopf and Mrs. Paul V. Calet, publicity, and Mrs. Theodore Caldwell, housing.
presented by Miss Mildred McCollum and Miss Velma Mattingly and the hostess gave a sewing demenstration. :
gram. The county executive committee consists of Mesdames Gray, Frances Ooley,
The bride wore a gown of white chiffon trimmed with lace inser-
Janice. M. Berlin, county. home
bolquet of white roses with stream- demonstration agent
ers topped her mother-of-pearl
Hay, Robert Burkhardt and Pauleen Wallen and Miss
Armilla Zix, Ruth Graham and Dorothy Mumford, members of the D-D Sub-Deb Club, will go to Ideal Beach at Shafer Lake Sunday for a week's camping trip.
dianapolis Police Dept. will hold its June business meeting at 2 p. m, Monday in Ayres’ auditorium. Mrs, Clifford Richter, president, will be in charge.
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prayerbook, a gift of the bridegroom, Miss Marjorie Kidwell was her sister's maid of honor. She wore a gown of turquoise organdy, trimmed with lace, and a tiara of roses. Her shower bouquet was of pink roses and baby’s breath. Edward Holman | was Mr, Presnall’'s best man and Lawrence ' and Willard . Kidwell, brothers of the bride, ushered. A breakfast at Hillcrest Country Club and a reception at the.home of the bride's parents followed. The couple has returned from a wedding trip. to Cincinnati.
Rev. Crutchlow Is W. C.T. U. Speaker.
The Rev. Franklin Crutchlow, pastor of the Crooked Creek Baptist Church, will speak at the annual Flower Mission program given by the Marion County W. C. T. U. from 3 to 4 p. m. Friday in the Altenheim Home, 2007 N. Capitol Ave. Mrs. Paul Durant will be the leader and Mrs. Martha Arnold will conduct the devotions. Mrs. Mattie Hansen is the Flower Mission . director. Members will bring flowers to the meeting. Mrs. Elbert Moore, president, will be in
W. P. Mortons To Entertain
Informal receptions from 7 to 10:30 o'clock this evening and tomorrow evening will be held by Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Morton, 4012 Central Ave., in honor of their daughter, Lois Marie, and Olven McCammon Bowe of Evansville. Miss Morton’s marriage to Mr. Bowe will be at 4:30 p. m. Sunday in the Second Presbyterian Church. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Maj. Dennis J. Bowe of Salem, Ore.
Block’s Announces Bridge Winners
Winners in Block’s recent bridge forum have been announced by Mrs, Dorothy. Ellis, director of bridge: Section 1: North and south, Mrs, Elmer Ittenbach and Miss Marie Koontz, first; Mrs. L. D. Aschoft and Mrs. C. J. Rusie, second; east and west, Mrs. F. A. Mulbarger and Mrs, William Gerrard, first; Mrs. Merritt Thompson and Mrs. Arthur Pratt, second. Section 2: North and south, Mrs. C. E. Maudlin and Mrs. C. L. MecClain, first; Mrs. J. P. Dockter and Mrs. Lida Rikhoff, second; east and west, Miss Nettie H, Kistner and Miss Pearl A. Plante, first; Mrs. A. W. McDaniel and Mrs. E. D. Forets, second. Section 3: North and south, Mrs. William S, Peele and Mrs. A. A. Thayer, first; Mrs. William F. Krieg and Mrs. T. A. Stewart, second; east and west, Mrs. Vernon Warner and’ Mrs. 8. R.' Richardson, first;
Save 10% —Buy the Family Size
CKOTEX 1.00
Regular size napkins only. 66 in. the box. BLOCK’S~—Notions, ~ Street Floor.
Mrs. Hanson Grifford and Mrs. Fred Mitch; second, bi 3
charge of the program..’, -
KLEENEX
Package of 500
2-55 i
Make sure you have plenty of these soft, absorbent tissues. White, peach, green or orchid. BLOCK'S—Toiletries, Street Floor
Mail and Phone (Riley 8421) Orders Filled
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Other Blocette Budget Sheers, 69¢c and 89c. \
BLOCKS
Hosiery Shop—Street Floor
