Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 July 1941 — Page 15

THURSDAY, JULY 24,

1941

ocle

IV—

Irving, Scott and David Moxley Leave for Lodge in Ontario

THE RETREAT to northern lakes and cool, pine

scented breezes becomes more its arid length into view.

marked as August heaves

Leaving this week for their summer home, Kemah Lodge, near Brockville, Ontario

were Miss Irving Moxley and her brothers, Scott and

David.

Their father, G. Barret Moxley, will leave this week to Join

them. . . . Mrs. Orland A. Church

Amelia Marmon, left early in the week to motor to Fairlee, Vt. where Miss Marmon will spend the month of August at Aloha Camp

and her daughter, Miss Anne

After visiting in the East for two weeks, Mrs. Church will join her husband in New York to drive back. . . . Miss Jane Marie Cox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Harvey Cox, will leave tomorrow for Madison, Wis., to spend the week-end at the summer home of Paul Owsley and his parents. The Owsleys, of Freeport, Ill, have a cottage on one of the lakes near Madison. Miss Cox and Mr. Owsley are fellow students at Swarthmore College.

Miss Agnes Alig, daughter of recently from Leland, Mich., where

Mrs. Clarence Alig, returned she was a guest of Miss Con-

stance Owsley at the summer home of her parents, Col. and Mrs. Alvin M. Owsley. Her brother, Vincent, who was with her, has gone to Burt Lake, Mich., and is visiting at the Evans Woollen Jr.’s home there. Later Mrs. Alig, Agnes and her sisters, Barbara and Martha, will motor to Burt Lake to bring Vincent home with them.

Barbara Bradley and Nancy Stout Are in California

VACATIONING at a California lev and Miss Nancy Stout. Ranch near Victorville on Aug. 11. Bradley Jr. is expected home from August,

ranch are Miss Barbara Brad-

They will return from the C-Bar-G

Barbara's brother, C. Harvey Fresno, Cal, the first week in

After the younger Bradleys arrive home, their parents plan to

go again to their summer cottage at Lake Maxinkuckee.

Mrs.

Bradley's sister, Mrs. George H. Ingram, and her daughter, Mrs. Lawrence Coker Hays Jr.—the former Mary Birch Ingram—still

are at the Maxinkuckee house. ®

Miss Sue Ann Eveleigh is spending the summer at Pentwater, Mick., with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Eveleigh. . . . Next week Miss Miriam Fatout, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray T. Fatout, will go to Dunes Acres on Lake Michigan where she will attend a house party given by Miss Edith Barnard at the summer home of her parents. The girls are roommates. at Western College at Ox-

ford, O.

Mrs. Carl Geupel and Daughter to Go West

WHEN MISS MARJORIE GEUPEL returns from a visit at Culver next week, she will begin packing immediately for a journey

west.

She and her mother, Mrs. Carl M. Geupel, are leaving Aug. 3

for a three weeks’ trip through California.

Miss Louise Glasser, daughter

of Mrs. Julia W. Glasser, is

expected home in mid-August from the University of Wisconsin where she has been attending summer school. Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Hess and their daughter. Mary Jane, will leave the first of August for Walloon Lake, Mich., where they will

spend the month.

Another Aug. 1 departure will be that of Misses Betty Louise, Doris and Marilyn Hosmer, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. George H.

Hosmer,

friends. Marilyn has just returned

They will spend a week or two in Cleveland visiting

from Lake Tippecanoe where

she attended a house party with the S. A. S. Club.

Other Vacation Notes

MR. AND MRS. HOWARD W. FIEBER and Mrs. Fieber’s

mother, Mrs. Harry L. Orlopp, will

leave Aug. 15 for the Fiebers’

summer home at Walloon Lake, Mich. They plan to spend a

month at the lake.

One person with energetic ideas of how to spend a vacation is George Buschmann, son of Mrs. Dorothy F. Buschmann. He will go to Culver the first week in August to compete in the National Juniors and Boys’ Tennis Championships, Aug. 4 to 9. The tournaments have been held at Culver for several years and entrants must Lave won a district tournament in order to qualify for play. Another Indianapolis boy who will be at Culver for the tournaments is Charles Tichenor, son of Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Tichenor. Last year Charles reached the quarter finals in the tournament. An Indianapolis entrant in the junior tournament will be Donald

Pfeiffer.

Housewives Please Take Note: Army Prepares 4,000,000 Meals A Day at Cost of $700,000

By DICK THORNBURG Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, July 24 —It's a military axiom that an army travels on its stomach, so Uncle Sam is bending every effort to see that his soldiers get good food and plenty of it. Marketing specialists in 30 large centers do the buying, setting up rigid specifications for the food, and seeing that it is promptly delivered

to the Army camps.

Expert dietitians prepare the menus far in advance, and so plan

them that the soldiers in each area

tables in season in that community.

And, at 60 schools throughout the country, classes of 100 men are taking cooking and baking courses to train them to prepare the food in accordance with time-tried recipes. The Army prepares 4,000,000 meals a day at a cost of $700,000. A country-wide grocery order from the War Department on a typical day runs; 500 tons of meat, 300 tons of potatoes, 250 tons of fruit, $50,000 worth of bread, 55 tons of coffee, 67 tons of butter, 700,000 quarts of milk, in addition to fresh vegetables which vary from north to south. At the cooking schools the students take a two-months course studying mess management — purchasing, accounting, etc. — baking, cooking and nutrition. At the head of the dietitians is Miss Mary I. Barber, a food expert of Battle Creek, Mich, borrowed from a large breakfast food company to serve as consultant to Secretary of War Stimson. Each soldier gets 5000 calories a day, better fare than any other Army, and better, Miss Barber says, than 60 per cent of the civilian population. The proof is in the way soldiers put on weight when they join the Army, she adds. The Army spends 44 cents a day on food for each soldier—42 cents’ worth delivered to the camp by the marketing specialists, and 2 cents given to each mess sergeant in cash to buy any special delicacies he thinks his “customers” want. “You may not think much can be done with 2 cents a day per man,” says Miss Barber. “But if

wili get the fresh fruits and vege-

you save that allowance for a few days, you'll be surprised what extras can be bought, especially in such wholesome quantities as we buy.” Typical Menus

The Army buys what Miss Barber calls “good grades” of meats, although they are not the choicest. Beef is “grade B, medium.” The fresh vegetables, fish, meat, and other toods bought in the marketing centers are shipped to the camps daily, shipments planned to arrive early in the morning for that day’s use. The mess sergeants buy milk, eggs and butter locally. A typical week day menu: Breakfast—An orange, individual package of cereal or choice of hot cereal, half a pint of milk, scrambled eggs and bacon (an egg and a half per man), fried potatoes, bread and butter, coffee. Dinner (Midday)—Ham, cabbage, potatoes and red beans, all boiled; tomato and lettuce salad, bread and butter, ice cream, coffee and canned milk, Supper—Lamb pot-pie containing carrots, turnips and onions; creamed corn, sliced onions and cucumbers, bread and butter, apple butter, coffee and canned milk. “Seconds” for all who desire another portion. Desserts are simple, filling dishes —pije, cake, fruit cobblers, rice, bread or banana pudding, fruit and

cookies. Pie is served four to five times a week.

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Fred Terry, Dick Nicholson, Elliott

To Leland Keys

3645 N. Illinois St. Mr. Keys is the

Presbyterian Church. Miss Orr has chosen Miss Marie Ruske to be her only attendant. C. S. Sale of Danville will stand with Mr. Keyes as best man and ushers will be George Lyle Keys of Anderson, a brother, and J. Leslie Muesing. A personal shower for the bride-to-be will be given by Miss Ruske tomorrow evening at her home, 4421 E. Washington St. Guests will be Mesdames Frank Bond, William Hunter, Edward Erler and Josephine Robertson, Miss Charlyn Murray and Miss Martha Louise Boyd. Mrs. Boyd, an aunt of Miss Orr, entertained for her recently with a linen shower in her home, 55 W, 36th St. Among the guests were Mesdames Erler, John Orr, Harold Prunty, William Hunter, Elmer Schloot, Charles Harton, John Hanson and Florence K. Thacker, the Misses Boyd, Ruske, Betty Eakin, Mary Xllen Bridges and Maxine Quinn. 2 ® Miss Nelle Tangeman, whose marriage to Sergt. Charles T. Williams will take place Sunday at Rattle Creek, Mich. was guest of honor at a dinner and personal shower last night at Feeser’s Tearoom. Hostesses were Miss Mae McDaniel and Miss Katie Busenbark. Guests at the party included Mesdames Rodney Drane, Herman Knochenmus, Fred Miller, Huston Bolander, William Hendren, Lecn Goodman, Frank Krause, Myron Miller, Cecil Key, Charles Stockcamp, Roscoe Brown, Charles Everson, Frank Sargeant, Lewis Duncan, Phil Jenkins, Russell Richwine, Elsie Crawford, Velma Riggs and Mary Hart. . Also on the guest list were the Misses Lillian Sprecher, Hazel Williams, Loraine Jackson, Leona Highstreet, Mildred Lawrence, Margaret Kyte, Madelyn Caldwell, Ruby Fuller, Alice O’Brien, Claudia Brown, Judy Taube, Bernice Goss, Mary Carter, Adelaide Clingenpeel, Betty Greene, Degarmo Spear and Eva Woddell.

= ” 2

Wedding plans for Miss Betty {Limp have been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur V. Limp, 817 N. DeQuincey St. She will become the bride of Harold T. Stoehr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar W. Stoehr, 327 Grand Ave. on Aug. 24 in the St. John's Evangelical and Reformed Church in Cumberland. Mrs. Carl Keyler, the bride-to-be’s aunt, was hostess at a miscellaneous shower in her honor last night. Other guests were Mesdames Limp, Stoehr, Charles Stoehr, Virgil Johnson, Thomas Elliott, Peter Emmons, Frank Branson, V. R. Teter, Edward Klier, Herman Prange, William Steinkuhler and Paul Kottlowski, the Misses Rosemary Keyler, Alice Wibble, Julianna Thorman, Edna and Hattie Becker.

Miss Betty Noggle and Miss Blanche Leonard entertained last night at the Maple House in Irvington with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Wanda Joseph, 5230 E. Washington St.,, whose engagement to Dilver Hunter is announced. Their wedding will take place at $:30 p. m. Aug. 9 in the Unity Methodist Church. Among special guests were Mrs. | Thelma Joseph and Mrs. Arthur | Lentz, mother of the prospective | bridegroom, 1827 Koehne St.

Altrusa Club To Dine

Indianapolis Altrusa Club members will meet tomorrow at 7:15 p. m. for a garden party and dinner at the Athenaeum. A musical program will be given. The Misses Edith Dickover, Laura Holden and Mamie Bass will report on the International Altrusa biennial convention which they attended as local delegates July 9 to 12 in Roanoke, Va. At convention sessions, Miss Mamie D. Larsh of Indianapolis was named international first vice president of the organization.

Miss Fuqua Hostess

Gamma Chapter of Phi Gamma Sigma Sorority will meet tonight at

8 o'clock in the home of Miss Mahala Fuqua, 143¢ N. Delaware St

Jose and Jack Minneman,

Harriett Orr's Engagement

Announced;

Dinner Fetes Nelle Tangeman

Summer wedding dates are announced by several young women who are being entertained at dinners and showers. The approaching marriage of Miss Harriett E. Orr to Leland T. Keys, 4317 B. Washington St., is announced by her brother, John Lawrence Orr,

son of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Keys of

Anderson. With the Rev. Sidney Blair Harry officiating, the wedding will take place at 8 o'clock Sunday evening, Aug. 3, in the Meridian Heights

Ellis-Henson Rite Is Sunday

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Henson, 707 E. Morris St., announce the approaching marriage of their daughter Emma May to Howard Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Ellis, 403 E. Morris St. The wedding will take place Sunday ‘afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the Morris Street Methodist Church. ” Attendants for Miss Henson will be Miss Betty Ann Martin, maid of honor, and Miss Rosemary Snyder and Miss Geraldine Tabor, bridesmaids. Kenneth Cowan will be best man and ushers will be John Boyle and Kenneth Drake. Mrs. Ellis gave a recent shower for Miss Henson, who will also be

given by Mrs. Alfred Lyons, 402 Sanders St. Another recent shower was given by Miss Snyder.

Shower Fetes

Lee Lacy

Miss Lee Lacy, who will become the bride of Edward W. Schurman on Aug. 9 at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, is being entertained tomorrow evening at the Columbia

Club with a crystal shower and bridge party given by Mrs. Gaylord Disher, Miss Virginia Freeman and Miss Margaret Hanrahan. Among the guests will be Mrs. Helen Lacy, mother of the bride-to-be, and Mrs. Edward J. Schurman, mother of the prospective bridegroom. Other guests will be Mesdames John King, William Martz, Wilmer 0. Finch, Warren D. Freeman, Raymond Schnorr and Giles Kelley, the Misses Jean Sanford, Mary Habijch, Helen Bosler, Mary Ann Kibler, Eileen and Peggy Sweeney, Helen Waller, Virginia Keene, Judy and Margaret Peelle.

Emera Club to Picnic

The Emera Club will have a picnic supper at Christian Park tomorrow night at 6 p. m.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Young Actors Rehearse for Pioneer

honor guest tomorrow at a party|p

i 2 wt

PAGE 15

Four of the 76 children who will present a Pioneer Pageant at the Acorn Camp near Carmel Sunday are shown before the log cabin which the young campers built for the pageant.

They are (left to right)

Riviera Plans For Swimming Championships

Women’s Committee

Will Assist

Plans for the National Swimming Championships to be held at the Riviera Club Aug. 22 and 23 will be made at a dinner Tuesday at the club. J. Edwin Aspinall, tournament chairman, will meet with club officials, representatives of the Junior Chamber of Commerce, sponsor of the event, and a special women’s club committee headed by Mrs. Dorothy Hook Carlisle. Other members of the women’s committee are Mesdames Rollin French, O. K. Polson, Paul Schaffner and Miss Virginia Schakel. They will collect prizes donated by local organizations and individuals for the championship events. Miss Elsie Martin and Charles McCormick Jr, members of the Junior State Casting Team, will give casting demonstrations and instruction to Riviera Casting Club members at the group's second meeting Tuesday. W. Mager Dickson, sports committee chairman, has announced a club tournament to be held in August. It will be open to all fishing enthusiasts among Riviera memers. Another breakfast-swim will be held Sunday at 9 a. m. with Mr. and Mrs. Francis Joy in charge. The pool will be open before and following breakfast. Reservations should be made by Saturday night.

Democratic Club Will Meet Saturday

The monthly meeting of the Perry Township Woman's Democratic Club will be held at 2 p. m. Saturday in the home of Mrs. Sam Peters, Southport Road west of Madison Ave, Assisting hostesses will be Mesdames Greble McFarland, Alvie Hamilton, Furman Moore, John Brewer, Claude Isenhower and H. Z. Dietz.

Broiled Steak

Have a porterhouse, club or sirloin steak cut at least one inch thick. Set oven regulator at high. Place steak on rack so that there is a distance of about three inches

between top of steak and source of heat. If this distance must be less, reduce the temperature accordingly. When one side is nicely browned, season with salt and pepper, turn and finish cooking on the second side. Season the second side and serve immediately. Steaks cut one inch thick require fifteen to twenty

minutes for broiling.

collar and ican moti

for transferring and embroidering

a hat, a coat, sweater or.dress The red, white and blue of

Embroider American Eagle

By MRS. ANNE CABOT

Our favorite emblem these days! eagle puts snap into a vacation sports costume. fSavelope purse are all embroidered with a 100 per cent Amer-

The big red, white and blue Hat, slesve sailor

This combination set of patterns contains a pattern for making the good-looking, big underarm purse (112 by 5 inches) eargle motif

on the purse; two extra transfers

for eagle and star emblem, four extra transfers that you can use on pocket. the embroidery looks equally well on a white linen sailor dress, on navy blue cotton costumes. Makes a grand decoration for school or college costumes, too. The purse is suitable for any season and for all occasions! . To obtain pattern for purse, two extra eagle transfers, 4 extra stars and 2 chevrons (Pattern No. 5115) send 10 cents in coin, your name and address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 106 Seventh Ave, New York City.

at

Releases Season's

mer activities. Other officers of the club for next year are Mrs. H. A. Bordner, vice president; Miss Lida Orth, recording secretary; Mrs. George P. Steinmetz, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. A. J. Barnes, treasurer. Mrs. Flora Beck is the delegate to the Seventh District Federation of Clubs with Mrs. Bordner serving as alternate. Indianapolis Council of Women delegate and alternate are Mrs. C. W. Cole and Mrs. R. P. Bell. The program for the year has been planned by a committee composed of Mesdames Bordner, A. F. Henley and D. A. Bowen. On the social committee are Mesdames Thaddeus R.Clarke, R. P. Bell and Bertha E. Brooks. Mesdames C. V. Montgomery, M. C. Moore and B. C. Wright make up the music committee. Mrs. Kate Conder and Mrs. Bowen will be hostesses for the first regular meeting of the year on Oct. 24, which will feature a paper on “Woman’s Role in the Nation of Today” given by Mrs. G. H. Healey. Mrs. Moore will present a musical nrogram. Following a Guest Day on Nov. 14, the club will meet on Nov. 28 wita Mrs. S. G. Gifford and Mrs.

noon,” to be given by Mrs A. G. Small. The December meeting will be a Christmas luncheon arranged by Mesdames Moore, J. L. Jackson, G. P. Gioss, Isaac Carter and Elizabeth Spahr. Mrs. Spahr will read “The Night Before Christmas” and Mrs. Bowen will tell “A Christmas Story,” preceding music and a gift exchange.

Demonstration On Art

“What Indianapolis is Doing for Children” will be Mrs. J. F. Hufstetler’s subject at the opening 1942 meeting Jan. 9, with Mrs. Clarke and Mrs. Small as hostesses. Mrs. Ira Campbell will discuss Indianapolis re:reational facilities. Another January meeting with Mrs. Charles Cherdron, Mrs. Barnes and Miss Orth as hostesses on Jan. 23 will include a “Demonstration in Art” by Mrs. G. P. Steinmetz and a discussion of current reading. A patriotic program on Feb. 13 will be given at Mrs. Ebert’s home, with Mrs. Beck assisting, Mrs. Cherdron will talk on “Charming Ladies” and Miss Orth on “Gallant Gentlemen.” Mrs. Clarke will present a book review at the Feb. 27 meeting with Mrs. Hufstetler and Mrs. Wright as hostesses. Mrs. Wright will be in charge of entertainment at a “Carry-in-Luncheon” March 13 and Mrs. T. F. Schlaegel and Mrs. E. W. Stockdale will serve as hostesses. A religious program on March 27, presided over by Mrs. Campbell and Mrs. Montgomery, will include Mrs. Brooks’ talk on “The Power of Faith” and Mrs. Barnes’ paper on “Women of Faith.”

Talk on Current Developments

Five minute talks on current developments will feature the April meeting, with Mrs. F. M. Mont-

gomery and Mrs. Steinmetz as hostesses. Topics will be “Radio,” Mrs. C. V. Montgomery; *Flowers,” Mrs. Bell; “Medicine,” Mrs. Jackson; “Florida,” Mrs. Conder, and “Travel,” Mrs. Cole. On April 24 Mrs. Cole and Mrs. Bordner will entertain the group for a program on “Grandmother's Herb Garden” by Mrs. Beck and a paper on ‘George Washington Carver,” given by Mrs. Stockdale. “Mothers of Americans” will be the topic for the May 8 meeting with Mrs. Bell and Mrs. Brooks serving ‘as hostesses, The Americans to be discussed are Admiral Byrd, Mrs. Gifford; Gen. Grant, Mrs. F. M. Montgomery; Gen. Sherman, Mrs. C. W. Sommers; Gen. Lee, Mrs. Gross, and William Henry Harrison, Mrs. Bordner. The final May meeting will be a Stephen Foster program presented by Mrs. Schlagel. Mrs. Henley and Mrs. Sommers will be hostesses. The club's year will close with the annual outing on June 12.

Light Beach Chairs

Handy for a day at the beach or in the country is a pair of folding chairs of lightweight aluminum that fit compactly into a sailcloth carrying case. The legs are curved near the bottom so that they sink into the sand only a few inches and then remain firm. Seats and backs are of colored sailcloth; the aluminum frame is said to be

highly resistant to on as well as to smudge and er marks,

Mrs. Lena Ebert Is President

Programs released by the Friday Afternoon Reading Club for 194142 list as the year’s first meeting the annual President's Day luncheon to be held on Oct. 10. The new president, Mrs. Lena B. Ebert, will extend greetings preceding a musical program and a discussion of sum-

Program;

Personals

Healey for a paper, “One After-| Mr

be ready to chill your coffee deli-

Miss Dorothea Gally, 213 E. 50th St., and Mrs. H. F. McNutt, 53 W. 49th St., will return Aug. 1 after a vacation tour through the Canadian Rockies and to Alaska.

A joint birthday celebration was held recently by Richard Voight, W. 10th St., and Joe Anna for relatives, friends and neighbors, at West Lake Beach.

Mrs. A. L. Butterworth and her son, Charles Edward, have returned to their home in Dayton, O., after spending a few days with Mrs. Butterworth’s mother, Mrs, Charles Byfield, 3923 Byram Ave.

Alpha Omicron Alpha Sets Founders’ Day

Alpha, Omicron Alpha Chapters in Indiana will have a Founders’ Day celebration Aug. 10 at the

Horse Shoe Lodge in Noblesville, 8s. L. C. True is the arrangements chairman.

Coffee Cubes

Freeze your regular brew of coffee in ice cube trays. Then they'll

Pageant at Acorn Camp

Hibben Photos

An Indian tepee and a clay oven which will provide atmosphere for the pageant here form the background for four of the girl campers who will have roles in Sunday's event. to right) Mary Garstang, Ann Albershardt and Mary Driscoll as they prepare to do a little baking.

Friday Afternoon Reading Club

Anne Rust (left) watches (left

New Red Cross Sewing Center Opens

Mrs. Wolf Sussman, chairman of the industrial area for the Indian= apolis Chapter of the American Red Cross, will open a sewing unit in Room 213 of the Occidental Bldg. at 10 a. m. today for the making of woolen garments. The shop is open to the publie and is designed for the convenience of women shopping downtown who wish to drop in and contribute work and girls working in factories and offices. The center will be open from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. daily. _ On Mrs. Sussman’s committee are the Mesdames Frank Dowd. Mary Alexander, W. D. Keenan, James I. Veach, H. P. Willwerth, E. C. Rumpler, Walter H. Geisel, J. P, Smith, E. L. Beeler, Helen Munger and the Misses Mary Thatcher, Lillian S. Rankin and Eunice Johnson.

A Different Slaw

Shredded cabbage, drained and shredded pineapple and just a taste of grated raw onion mixed with mayonnaise which has been thinned with a little sweet cream makes a delicious slaw.

Give Your Old Discarded Aluminum to Uncle Sam

FOR DEFENSE NEEDS

ously without diluting it.

L. S. AYRES & (C0.

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* Ayres’ Lingerie—Fourth Floor