Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 July 1941 — Page 17

THURSDAY, JULY 381, 1941

Society—

Local Residents Have Entries Shelbyville

In Horse Show

AMONG INDIANAPOLIS EXHIBITORS at the Shelbyville Horse Show on Sunday will be Mrs. Frederic W. Taylor, whose groom will ride several of her jumpers. The show will be given at 2 p. m. and & p. m. Sunday at the Shelbyville Fair Grounds, preceding a week of races and rodeos during the Shelby County Fair.

From Dr. C. O. Bonham’s Algonquin stables, he and his son, Chester Bonham, will exhibit four or five hunters and jumpers. Miss Sue Reeder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Verne K. Reeder, will ride her prize-winning mount, My Beau, and Mrs. Ronald E. Woodard and Mrs. William E. Munk also will enter horses. Miss Delores Covert’s two horses, the pony Little Buccaneer and her gaited horse Holiday Pleasure, will be two of the horses stabled at Bob Brown's Arlington stables which will be shown at Shelbyville. Miss Covert will exhibit them. Ab Metzger will ride his own mount and Mr. Brown will show P. O. Ferrell's Radium Start. Other exhibitors will be Mrs. Dorothy Thomas; Miss Audrey Pugh, who will show Miss Frances Bloch’s mount; Miss Mary Catherine Lyday, and Bob Mannix and Earl Marple, who will exhibit hackney ponies. Don Hiestand of Muncie and R. C. Hoagland of Franklin will enter several jumpers. Judges announced by Fred Sharp are Mrs. Sue Boyer Fabhendorf, who will judge hunters and jumpers, and Herbie Marks, saddle horses. Both are from Cincinnati, Mr. Marks from Williamsdale Farms.

Vacation Notes

THE SHIFT FROM JULY to August tonight means the beginning of late summer vacation trips for many Indianapolis residents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Bowen and Mr. and Mrs. Elijah B. Martindale started today on a motor trip to Northport Point, Mich., where the Martindales have a summer home. Mr. and Mrs. Thornton W. Sterrett and their daughter, Barbara, will leave tomorrow for Linville, N. C., where they will remain until school opens in Septtmber. . . . Another group leaving tomorrow includes Mr. and Mrs. John E. Messick, their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. H. Hall Cochrane, and a grandson, John Hall Cochrane. They will spend August at the Messick summer home in Pon-she-wa-ing, Mich., and will be joined later by Mr .and Mrs. John E. Messick Jr... . Eldo Wagner is planning to leave tomorrow to join Mrs. Wagner at their summer home in Ludington, Mich. Miss Jane Lucile Strashun, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Strashun, is in Chicago vistiing her aunt, Mrs. Jack Winkler. She will return the first of next week. Miss Strashun’s engagement and approaching marriage Aug. 17 to Maurel Rothbaum of Chicago has been announced. The wedding will be in the home of her parents. With a week-end stop-over in New York intervening, Mrs. Russe H. Hartman of Brendenwood and her daughter, Miss Dorothy Jane Hartman. have returned following a West Indies cruise on the S. S, Kungsholm. Mr. Hartman is home from a fishing trip in Minnesota. . . . Mrs. William P. Anderson III, who has been visiting in New York for several days, was to arrive home today. Mr. and Mrs. John Spann Lynn will leave Saturday for Lake Titus, Malone, N. Y. They will visit Mr. Lynn's mother, Mrs. J. Raymond Lynn, who is spending the summer at her Adirondacks lodge. Mr. Lynn will join them later. . . . Mrs. Walter C. Holmes and her daughters, Harriet Jane and Anne, left today to spend the week-end in Chicago. With or. Holmes and their son. John Holmes, Mrs. Holmes returned yesterday irom a trip to Detroit. Miss Jane Rottger has left for Evanston. Ill, where she will spend the winter with her mother, Mrs. Curtis Rottger. She is the granddaughter of Mrs. Jessie Rottger of the Buckingham Apartments.

"Scotch Party" Planned at Highland

SOCIAL HIGHLIGHT of August at the Highland Golf and Country Club will be a midsummer get-together Saturday, Aug. 9, for old and new members. The dinner-dance will be a “Scotch” party, honoring members of the club of Scottish descent or with names of Scottish derivation. Crosby Bartlett is chairman, assisted by Mrs. C. M. Hammond. Mrs. William Trimble and Mrs. William V. Kingdon are in charge of the lodies’ bridge luncheon on Wednesday, Aug. 13. Women's golfing events during the month include a Guest Day, Aug. 22, with Mrs. Bernhard Olsen as hostess. Qualifying rounds for the club championship play Aug. 27-29 will be held on Tuesday, Aug. 26.

Colby-Hesser Wedding Is Aug. 23

MISS DANAH HESSER, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Reeder Hesser of New Rochelle, N. Y., has set Aug. 23 as the date of her marriage to Ralph Lincoln Colby of Milwaukee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Colby of near Zionsville. Among members of the bridal party will be Harley W, Rhodehamel Jr. and Louis Morrison of Indianapolis. Also at the wedding will be Mr. and Mrs. George Losey of Hannibal, Mo. and their daughter, Linda Colby Losey. Mrs. Losey is a sister of Mr. Colby. Mr. and Mrs. Colby are leaving Friday for a trip to California before returning East. They will go to New Rochelle on Aug. 22. The bride-to-be is a graduate of Principia College and the Katharine Gibbs School in New York. Mr. Colby was graduated from Purdue University, where he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity and Eta Kappa Nu, engineering honorary.

=

Jack Naylors Are on Trip To Smokies

Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Naylor are; leaving today on a wedding trip] through the Smoky Mountains im-| : mediately following a breakfast at]: Catherine's Tearoom. Before their marriage at 9:30 o'clock this morning in the rectory of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, the bride was Miss Loretta Petterson. Father of the bride is Niles A. Petterson, 2341 Kenwood Ave. Mr. Naylor is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Naylor of Greencastle. The double-ring ceremony was read by the Rev. Fr. Thomas Clark. Given in marriage by her father, Miss, Petterson wore a street-length ensemble of aqua crepe romaine, with brown accessories and a white orchid. Her sister, Miss Catherine Petterson, was in a beige sheer suit with beige accessories and a corsage of white roses. Ralph W. Ross stood with Mr. Naylor, his brother-in-law,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Catering to the Appetites of Hospital

BN

Patien ts Is

PAGE 17 Federation Day Held at Winona Lake

Welsh Orator Is On Program

a Real Job

* Times Special

WINONA LAKE, Ind, July 31.— Northern Indiana clubwomen hold= ing their annual Federation Day here today were to hear district presidents and state department chairmen take part in a quiz cone test on National Defense and Gen eral Federation of Clubs history. The 13th District of the Indiana Federation of Clubs, hostess of the day, had invited all federation members in the state to attend. Edward.Clark, fine arts apprecia~ tion lecturer at the University of Miami, was to conduct the quiz, Also on the day's program are ga talk on “The Mirth of the the Na« tions” by Dr. Arthur Walwyn Evans, Welsh orator who is pastor of a church in Rochester, N. Y., and a concert by 100 high school musicians from 12 states attending the Petrie Band Camp here, The camp band is under the direction of Dr. How ard Hanson, director of the East« man School of Music, Rochester, N. Y. Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren of White ing, state president, was to speak at the morning session with other state officers to be presented. Mrs, W. I. Ellison of Warsaw, state press

and publicity chairman, is in charge

as best man. {

6) =

Mr. and Mrs. Naylor will be at] home next week in the Windsor Apartments, 1235 N. Delaware St Mr. Naylor graduated from Butler University and the bride attended school there. In addition to the parents of the bridegroom, Mrs. Mary Hester of Cincinnati, aunt of the bride, was an out-of-town guest.

We, the Women

Women Adjust To Age Better

. Trays are prepared In serving . Mrs. J. W., Miller, head of the . The patient is served.

Even the Colors

To Make Eating Convalescents at

By ROSEMAR

Time was when the patient was offered and liked it or else. ,, , That

Making eating fun for hospital patients is something of a job.

units on each floor, dietary department,

of Food Help Fun for Methodist

Y REDDING

brought a tray. He ate what was was in the old days of institutional

Than Men Do

By RUTH MILLETT

| feeding.

er than men and dread it more!tribute something—like the combin- |

but, once it comes, white hair and with the orange of carrots or adding | all, they seem to have a better a colorful note to a plate with red, time in life than do old men. [ripe tomatoes. The intriguing col- |

Today, the dieticians in hospitals! Among others on her staff are Miss are not only anxious to serve well-|gelen Dennis who arranges the balanced meals, but attractive ones go) meals for the nurses and Mrs. WOMEN MAY fight old age hard- as well. They make even colors con- | Irene Warder who teaches them

before it is actually upon them,|ing of the rich brown of a pot roast supervises t

Miss Margaret Taylor he serving units.

Bushels of Spinach! Just a glance at Mrs.

dietetics.

Miller’s

Ww. E. Stanifer Will Wed Norma Walters

In a candlelight ceremony tonight at 8 o'clock in St. John’s Evangelical

Marie Walters will become the bride of William E. Stanifer. The Rev. Ernst A. Piepenbrc read the service following a hour program of bridal music by Mrs. Amy Cleary Morrison, organist.

parents are Mr. and Mrs. A. J. | Stanifer of Edgewood. Mr. Walters will give his daughter in marriage. |

| | |

and Reformed Church, Miss Norma |

Amy Miss Walters is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Walters, 1151 Shelby St, and Mr. Stanifer’s|

of the day's activities, which in= clude a 12:30 o'clock luncheon. State officers were honored at a dinner last night in the Westminster Hotel, District 13 officers who are serve

Dried Fruits Can ry ing on the hostess ittee are? Be Preserven 205 °B. 3. Brcentian Locsin

The clever housewife needn't wait president; Mrs. E. A. Carpenter, for the fresh fruit season to re-|Goshen, vice president; Mrs. Fred

: +.q| Hinz, Knox, secretary, and Mrs, plenish her preserve closet. Dried | p21 es Pippenger, North Liberty,

the If ale ; come very soiled, more drastic methods may be needed.

fruits and some canned fruits, such | treasurer. On the registration conr= as pineapple, grapefruit, apples and mittee are Mrs, Fred Hardman and oranges, are available for use When nfs “prank Sanders, Warsaw nd Jam shelves begin to look scanty. | Mrs. H. B. Fonda, Winona Lobe Chopped nuts and crystallized County presidents are members of fruits and unusual spices make pure |tpq reception committee headed by fruit preserves interesting and un-| Mrs. Earl Cochran of Winona Lake. usual. ih Jes, Raion Fifer and Mrs. Grover i | Simms, Warsaw. They are Mrs. C, Divide Table to Make C. Loubden, Elkhart County; Mrs, | Carrie Jones, Fulton: Mrs. Royce Console Tables | Clover, Kosciusko; Mrs, L. Blanche | Francis, LaPorte; Miss Florence De« If you have a small old-fashioned | Mont, Marshall; Mrs. Charles Lun« dining table with pedestal that can din Jr, Starke, and Mrs, S. M, be separated into two parts, you can | Compton, St. Joseph. make dwn quite attractive console — tables suitable for foyer or livin . > room. : * Sweet Milk Keeps Place the flat sides against the wall, Leather Clean Sweet milk is a simple agent to Roast Beef keep light leathers clean and soft, 3 | Saturate a soft, clean cloth in milk, For juicy, tender, medium-rare rub until the surface is clean, then beef, roast in open pan, fat side| wipe with clean dry cloth. up, allowing first 15 minutes in a| Frequent cleaning keeps very hot oven, then reducing oven leather soft and beautiful. to moderate until done—about 20 lowed to be | minutes per pound.

ar

Lorle SYL-O-SLIP

| Semi-Annual

That is especially true of older or schemes have a therapeutic value. | widows, whose husbands have left| As Mrs. J. W. Miller, head dieti- O'der book for one day reveals them a place to {tian at the Methodist Hospital puts items like these: 5 bushels of spin-|

Hoosier Sa lon Association Will Attendants for the couple will be Mrs. Quentin Shockley as matron

|of hon

\

Revise Rules On Competition,

Gallery to Open Sept. 15

A committee of Indiana artists was assured yesterday hy officials, of the Hoosier Salon Patrons Association that rules governing the an-| nual competition and other matters will be given a vigorous overhauling. Meeting in the Wm. H. Block Co. auditorium, the Salon officials and chicago, rev the artists talked over plans now | cedure. completed to move the Salon's annual preview from Chicago to Indianapolis. The permanent studios will be established here in the State! Life Building instead of Chicago. Mrs. Leonidas Smith, association | secretary, said that the present | practice of all owing patrons to borrow as high as '2 pictures in a | vear would be stopped and that only three a vear can be horrowed. Any patron who keeps a pic- | ture for longer than 60 days will be | billed for the sale price of the pic- | ture. The artists recommended ! that there no longer be a popu-| larity prize but that that money] be put into other types of prizes, | and a proposal to make up a trav- | eling exhibit of 50 selected pictures | from the Hoosier Salon was con- | | sidered. The exhibit would be| available to Middle Western gal-| leries. | Samuel B. Walker, controller of the Block company, assured both] the artists and the Association that | the store will not try to interfere) in policies governing the show} which will be first hung at Block’s.| He also said that the commissions on sale already have been reduced | from those which have been in| force in the past at Marshall Field | & Co. in Chicago. | After its first showing here in| January, the show will move *=|

Clothes Basket

Convenient working equipment is of utmost Importance to the housewife who does her own laundry. A new, roomy basket, strongly woven, has a detachable folding stand that

raises the basket to an easy working height. Rollers on the stand enable her to whee] it from laundry te drying room or yard.

ersing the. past proA committee of artists is {to draw up new rules for com- | petition, and the studio here will open on a full time basis Sept. 15.

Bride

Lines on Linen

Fine linen deserves excellent care. When laundering, avoid strong bleaches, strenuous wringing (wring by hand, and gently, please), dampen evenly, iron with a hot, but not scorching iron, and air thoroughly before storing.

Garnish for Interest

For added attractiveness and flavor, serve soups with interesting. Ramos-Porter Photo. garnishes. A sprinkling of mixed

shredded vegetabl ir roe of Mrs. Ervin Tucker was Miss es, a thin slice of | lemon, finely chopped Wanda Blumenauer, daughter of

slivers of ] ey or Mr. and Mrs. Ray Blumenawer,

cooked mushrooms are suitable for clear soups." before her marriage on June 29,

| | = ! 3

‘of a chore on top of taking care (of a large family. And they love

live and an ade- it: “Diet in the hospital is not a! quate income. mere matter of serving meals but There is a group is a part of the treatment.” of them in every It is Mrs. Miller's job to make community — food so attractive to eat that the and they do patient eats it for the sheer joy of have fun living. eating—not because “it's good for So many of you.” As she points out, unless

an active man’s interests — like outdoor sports— are too strenuous to be pursued into old age, but the things in which women are interested in their busy years continue to interest

: h are old and no! et ir |doesn’t have to eat it. Instead he

Take the well-fixed elderly widows, can order what he wants in much you know, for example. They like | the same manner as he orders from clothes and are just as good cus- @& card in a resturant. tomers of Whe Reauy Shops 2 he | Patient Can Order ever were. eir white hair is 4 Te waved smartly, their nails are lac-| Before a meal, a patient is visited | quered a soft pink, and their skin by 2 b shows that they still believe in face him with a menu. y | cream. ; |cannot stand the meat on the day S They like parties even better than menu he can say flatly “I don't like they did in their younger days, |It” and ask for something that ap-

when entertaining was something Peals to him. If it is within rea-

| |

human satisfaction they go half eaten, And Mrs. Miller should know for she is serving 2600 meals per day during the summer months and 3000 during the winter season. About 1600 of them are designed to please the patients. Others are served to nurses, internes, visitors, ete. Today, if the patient in 000 doesn’t like liver on the dinner menu he

Ruth Millett

trary to doctor's orders, ete.) it will be prepared for him. And if the patient is one of those adults born before children were taught to like spinach, he can object to a serving of it and substitute something else. Two substitutions, sometimes more, are permitted. Three cooks are kept busy just filling these orders, The behind the scenes operation to please the patient is an interesting one. The menus are planned a week in advance. Four regular diets are prepared: Regular, light, soft and liquid. Besides these there are between 40 and 50 special diets served each day and around 18 special ones for diabetics.

Takes 10 Regular Cooks

to be invited out because they have lots of time in which to get ready at a leisurely pace, and they have time to wonder about the party beforehand and think about it afterwards. n AS FOR two of the average woman’s favorite forms of amusement. community gossip and bridge. age doesn't dull her interest in either. In fact, age only heightens her interest in the former, since she has more time than ever to think about the comings, goings, doings, and carryings-on of other people. So the woman who has enough to live on and no pressing fear of future poverty usually enjoys her old age. If you don't believe it, get acquainted with a few and youll find out. They enjoy their independence, their leisure, and their right to sit back and watch, without envy, young people struggling to rear their families. But you can’t say the same thing for old men. For the most part they are a rather forlorn lot. They are too old for the jobs that have { up most of their time and interest in life, too old for the sports they once played at so hard, and too old to find some new interest to take their place. For all that women dread old age, they usually make better use of it, So far as their own enjoyment is concerned, than do men.

Salt in Ieing Try adding a pinch of salt to the icing for cakes,

» 2

kitchen by 10 cooks and then trans ported on large electrically heated trucks to serving units on each of the 15 floors. There the “service aids,” assisted by maids, take over and prepare the trays. The nurses carry them into the patients. Incidentally, small servings appeal more to the eye. Patients are then given second servings on the main dishes if they want them. There is a deluxe menu service too where steak and chicken ap-

esks for it.

mer and Mrs. Elizabeth Heubi. spend their full time on the special diets and ones for diabetics. The diabetics are taught the diets before they leave the hospital so that they may be carried on at home.

Mrs. Miller does the administra-

it smooth and fine tex-| 3 tive work (ordering, menus, etc.).

cream.

provide the dietary department with | its moments. much of a “bang” out of surprising {the patient on his birthday with a meals have in them the element of [cake as the patient gets.

to-be was brought to the hospital for an appendectomy.

fiancee and he were a little superstitious and hated to put off the

son (in stock, in season, not con-|,

The food is prepared in a large

pear just as often as the patient Two dieticians, Miss Lucille Zil-|

ach, 16 watermelons, 100 pounds of tomatoes, and 15 gallons of ice]

Even the little vignettes of life

They get almost as

Not so long ago, a bridegroom-

Both his

wedding. So the ceremony took place right there in the hospital. To which Mrs. Miller said: “If two people want to get married that bad, I guess the staff can do its part.” So up from the kitchen went a specially made wedding cake. A somewhat similar case happened only last week.

or and Donald Stanifer as his brother's best man. Mr. Shockley! and Robert Minnick will be ushers. | For the ceremony the bride will] wear a white linen street-length| frock with white accessories and an| orchid corsage. Mrs. Shockley will | be in blue linen, with white acces- | sories and a corsage of pifk roses and delphinium. Following a recéption at the Walters home, the couple will leave on a wedding trip to Chicago and will be at home next week with the bride’s parents. Miss Walters attended Indiana University.

BEAUTY By Alicia Hart

THAT BRIGHT YOUNG 1941 graduate who got a job recently has

Menace to Rugs

An uneven floor, a round electric

“service aid” who presents Cord, or any article which makes| If he simply Your rug bulge will cause it to wear wave do

rapidly at that spot.

Wed

Recently

special requests and §&

Porter Photo. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Toner are at home at the Commodore Apartments. Mrs. Toner was Miss Josephine Russo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Russo, before her marriage June 30.

|laid down a few rules for herself. |Among them are:

I won't try to make my fingerjust one more day. I will {have my hair washed and waved | immediately after office hours on the same, day each week or else I will set aside one evening a week and do it myself. I will not try to get three day’s wear out of a white blouse, knowing as I do that no white blouse will look really fresh after two days in an office. I will wash white gloves and white collars and cuffs after one

} (day's use. I will not wear my skirts too |

short or too tight across the hipline, I will save plunging necklines and peek-a-boo blouses for out-of-the-office wear.

that my slip shows. I will make sure that it doesn’t before I leave for work. I will brush my hat and polish my shoes before I put them on in the morning. s 8 »

I WILL REMEMBER to straighten seams of my stockings each time I go to the washroom to put on lipst.ck. I will cleanse my face and neck thoroughly and apply fresh makeup before lunch and again during the middle of the afternoon, if possible. I will not powder my nose, comb my hair or rouge my lips at my desk. I will sit straight when taking dictation, and I will stand tall and straight before the files or in front of the president's desk or wherever it is I have to stand. I know that nobody will thihk I am up-and-coming unless I look up-and-coming. I will try to look reasonably goodnatured—if not actually pleasant— when I am asked to stay overtime or to do a thankless or boring little

Nobody ever will have to tell me |

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