Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1941 — Page 15

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Gift Suggestions to Please The Practicelfinded Bride

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HAVE TO BUY a wedding present for a “fall bride? Take a look at the Mirro Treasure Chest of aluminum done up in a huge white box printed with blue ribbons and holding a choice selection of multiple-

purpose cookery aids, all for $22.50.

Other presents for a practical-minded bride might include a matching set of red pottery with an amusingly shaped teapot at $1.50, a

pitcher at $1.25 and a sugar shaker shaped like a miniature water jug at 40 cents.

Or a wire rack holding four individual pottery bean pots in orange, blue, green and yellow, at 89 cents for the set. Another rack holds three individual covered pottery casseroles in green, blue and yellow for $1. .If the bride-to-be probably will go in for buffet parties, there are pronged chromium racks with rubber feet that hold a roast or ham in firm grip for slicing. They cost $2.50 or $5. A set of individual round wooden planks for planked steaks, etc. would make a hit, too, at a kitchen shower—and would be easy on the pocketbook at 59 cents each. For $1 there is a Chase ice cube crusher built on nutcracker lines. And for 59 cents there is a plastic

- salt and pepper shaker in functional

design neatly joined together and with the pouring holes at the sides. What’s more, they fill at the top instead of requiring expert fumbling with cork plugs at their base. And there are super wastebaskets for bathrooms with vertical mirror panels at $4.95. Also shiny fluted metal ones resembling mirrors at a mere $1.50.

Effect of Space

TO MAKE WINDOWS appear larger, extend the valance eight or 10 inches beyond the window frame on each side, so that the draperies cover the frame but do not fall over the glass. The effect of greater

height can be achieved by placing the valance as high as possible without showing the window frame beneath it. :

Stuffed Peppers

VARY the stuffing for green peppers, and you vary the dish. Choose large, mild, firm peppers and prepare a stuffing made of cooked sweet corn, minced cooked bacon, sauteed onions and seasoning. The peppers may be parboiled in an open pan of boiling salted water for five minutes before stuffing. Drain thoroughly, stuff and bake in oven until done.

# 8 # Today's Recipe FROZEN LEMON PIE (Serves 6 to 8) Three yolks, well beaten, % cup lemon juice, ¥% lemon rind, grated, 14 teaspoon salt, % cup plus 1 tablespoon sugar, 3 egg whites, stiffly beaten, 1 cup heavy cream, whipped, 3% cup crushed vanilla wafers. ' Combine first 5 ingredients, and cook until thick like a custard. Cool. Fold in whipped cream and stiffly beaten egg whites. Sprinkle half the finely crushed vanilla wafers in freezing tray of gas or electric refrigerator. Pour over mixture and cover with remaining crumbs.

Freeze until firm, Serve in fingerlength slices. :

Ag own #

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¢

This old cardinal knows his home building! ° He lives here the year ‘round in a home of his

own.

There is no safer investment than a home in

Indianapolis. There is

nothing that gives you

greater satisfaction and pleasure.

Invest safely, in a home, with the aid of one of the local associations listed below.

You deal directly with

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This Advertisement by Following Members of . . . ,

THE MARION COUNTY

cague BUILDING ¢

LOAN SOCIATIONS

Arsenal Bldg. & Loan Assn. Atkins Sav. & Loan Assn. Celtic Federal Sav. & Loan Assn. Colonial Sav. & Loan Assn. _ First Federal Sav. & Loan Assn. Fletcher Ave. Sav. & Loan Assn. Indiana Sav. & Investment Co. Insurance Sav. & Loan Assn. Peoples Mutual Sav. & Loan Assn. Railroadmen’s Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. Shelby St. Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. Standard Sav. & Loan Assn. Turner Bldg. & Sav. Assn. Union Federal Sav. & Loan Assn.

Copyright, 1940, A. V. Grindle, Indianapolis, Indians

Social Study Club Schedules Book Reviews

“Current Events in South America” were to be reviewed at the Social Study Club’s first meeting of the year today at the home of Mrs. Glenn Graham, 4635 Rookwood Ave. Other programs announced in the club’s yearbook, just released, will be presented at monthly meetings and will consist of book re-

views and music. Mrs. Graham is president of the club for 1941-42. Other new officers are Mrs. Gert Iverson, vice president; Mrs. J. N. Cross, secretary; Mrs. Firman Sims, treasurer; Mrs. S. C. Ging, historian; Mrs. S. E. Elliott and Mrs. James F. Price, delegate and alternate to the Indianapolis Council of Women; Mrs. Floyd Trusty and Mrs. Thomas A. Sefton, delegate and alternate to the Seventh District Federation. “Lands of the Andes and the Desert” - (Frank Carpenter) will be reviewed by Mrs. Elliott on Sept. 23 when the club meets at the home of Mrs. Walter George. Mrs. George will review “Born in Paradise” (Armine von Tempski) at Mrs. Thomas M. Staver’s home, Oct. 14, and Mrs. Graham will discuss “East Coast of South America” (Sydney Clarke) Oct. 28 when Mrs. Trusty is hostess.

November Program

November - meetings will include one Nov. 11 at Mrs. Iverson's home, featuring Mrs. A. M. Christian’s review of “Come Wind—Come Weather” (Daphne DuMaurier), and Mrs. Thomas A. Sefton’s entertainment of the club on Nov. 25, when Mrs. Oscar Wadsworth will talk on “Bight Republics in Search of a Future” (Rosita Forbes). Hostesses for the Christmas luncheon Dec. 16 will be Mesdames Iverson, Jeannette Blake and Kate Rigsbee. At the first 1942 meeting Jan. 13 in Mrs. R. H. Ayers’ home, Mrs. Price will report on “Winston Churchill” (Rene Kraus). Ludwig Bemelman’s “The Donkey Inside” will be Mrs. Iverson's book to review on Jan. 27 at Mrs. Rigsbee’s home. Paul Gallico’s book, “The Snow Goose,” will be discussed by Mrs. Rigsbee on Feb. 10, when Mrs. Price is hostess, and “Random Harvest” (Hilton) will be the subject of Mrs. Ayers’ review on Feb. 24 at the home of Mrs. Elliott. Mrs. Sefton will talk on “Orphans of the Pacific” (Florence Horn) in Mrs. Christian's home March 10. .

South American Program

A selected South American program will be given by Mrs. Cross at the March 24 meeting when the club will be entertained by Mrs. Thomas M. Staver. In April, Mrs. Sims will review “An American Doctor's Odyssey” (Victor Heiser) at Mrs. Graham’s home April 7 and Mrs. Josephine Sacre will analyze “I Like Brazil” (Jack Harding) April 21 when Mrs. Cross is hostess. Mrs. Trusty will present a. Music Week program on May 12 in the home of Mrs. Sims, followed by Mrs. Btraver’s review of “Kabloona” (Goutran de Poncius) when the club meets with Mrs. Sacre May 26. Final

' {meeting of the year will be a Rose

breakfast, June 9, at Mrs. Wadsworth’s home. - Mrs. Ging will give original readings.

FOOD

By Mrs. Gaynor Maddox

ANOTHER MONTH calls for some new vegetables recipes, and every day, according to the official yardstick of nutrition, calls for liberal amounts of green and yellow vegetables in the diet. Try these for September good eating and good health.

STUFFED CUCUMBERS AU GRATIN

(Serves 6)

Three large cucumbers, 1% cups medium white sauce, % cup grated cheese, 1%. cups flaked cooked fish, pepper and salt, 2. cup dry bread crumbs, 1 tablespoon melted butter. Cut cucumbers in half lengthwise, scoop out centers but do not pare, Parboil 10 minutes. Mix white sauce, cheese and fish, add seasonings and fill cucumbers. Toss crumbs in melted butter and sprinkle over top of stuffed cucumbers. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for 30 minutes,

BAKED STUFFED SQUASH (Serves 6)

One large patty pan squash, % pound ground boiled ham, % clove garlic chopped fine, 2 tablespoons olive oil, % cupdry bread crumbs, salt and pepper. ‘

out center. Rarboil shell in boiling salted water. Mix pulp from center, discarding seeds if large, with ground ham, garlie, olive oil and % cup bread crumbs. Season with salt and pepper. Refill shell with this mixture and top with remaining crumbs. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) until tender, about 40 minutes.

BROILED VEGETABLE CASSEROLE

(Serves 4)

One cup string beans, 1 cup peas, 4 small white onions, 2 cubed potatoes, 1 diced carrot, 1 cup water

or tomato juice, salt and pepper, 4 slices bacon. Cook vegetables in boiling salted water until tender. Put in 4 shallow baking dishes, adding a little vegetable water to each dish. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Top with 1 or 2 slices of bacon. Place dishes on broiling rack and

for 10 minutes, or until bacon is well browned. Leftover cooked yogeiables, may be used for this

Mrs. Ross to Preside

The regular business meeting of Gamma Delta Chapter, Kappa

Lincoln. Mrs. Marion Ross will preside.

Y. A. M. Club to Meet

The Y. A. M. Club will meet tonight at the home of Miss Jane Palmer, 3251 Broadway. A covereddish supper will precede the business meeting.

To Open Season

Lambda Chi Delta will have lis first fall meeting at 8 p. m. today

Cut off top of squash and scoop|i

for campus. fasteners.

| We, the Women—

. |asked for a day off besides her

i |swer fo the polite inquiry, “How

= | for advice).

: | getting my clothes fitted.

# {and listen to a rambling, interi | minable, one-sided conversation.

Brisk young dress with action-blouse and a skirt cut for striding to 8 o'clock classes . . . as smart for travel and week-end wear as it is Note the big pleated pockets and the tricky metal

in which vegetables were cooked,)

broil ‘about 3 inches under flame|f

Delta Phi Sorority, will be held to-| night in Parlor H of the Hote}|'

BOST

Motifs for Quilting

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Pt Seas

By MRS. ANNE CABOT :

TOOTH PASTE

HAND quilting on the plain blocks of your pieced or applique quilt will give it additional charm! : It is one of the oldest types of fine handwork and a skilled “qulilter” was very proud to show her designs and work to envying friends. These lovely quilting motifs—the Princess Feather circle (8 inches across), the Spider Web (5% inches), Water Lily motif (61% inches) can’ be used on the plain color blocks of a quilt, on an all-white quilt or for separate pillows for living room couch, or for fancy decorative pillows for the bedroom. : To obtain four Quilting Motifs (Pattern No. 5183), exact methods of using on quilts, lingerie cases, pillows, complete sewing instructions send 10 cents in coin, your name and address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 106 Seventh Ave., New York.

Smart Daytime Casual

You won't feel “dressed up,” but you will feel equal to any and every occasion in this comfortably fitting, back-buttoning dress. You'll like the

way the yoke top lies flat over your shoulders and. across the front, the

way the easy bodice emphasizes your bosom line, the wide belt which ties firmly in back and the full dirndl-type skirt. Make it now, as a standby for your future college life. . Pattern No. 8941 is in uneven sizes 11 to 19. Size 13 requires 3% yards 35-inch material. For this attractive pattern, send

- 15 cents in coin, your name, address,

pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Today's Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland St. Complete preview of fall styles in the new Fashion Book, just out.’ Send for your copy today. Pattern 15 cents, Pattern Book 15 cents; one Pattern and Pattern Book ordered together, 25 cents.

You Will Rave About These

Reminders for A Haphazard Talker

By RUTH MILLETT CUT OUT the following reminder. Stick it in your dressing table mirror. Read it every time you take a'last look at yourself before going

out for an afternoon or evening where you will have a chance to make conversation.

NOBODY IS INTERESTED IN:

Whether or not I slept last night. A detailed account of my health during the last month. The) food fancies of my family. What a trial my husband's family is to me. What I told my maid when she

regular Thursday afternoon. A list of my food allergies. My reducing diet. More ‘ than one cute remark of any of my children.

NOBODY CARES ABOUT:

The various places where we stopped for meals on our vacation last year, and the price of dinner or lunch at each place. My re-hash of a book he hasn’t read or a movie he hasn't seen. My troubles. Proof of what a busy person I am, : A detailed and accurate an-

are you?” : The trouble I'm having with my hair or finger nails. “If I were you . . .” (unasked-

OR WANTS TO HEAR ABOUT:

My dreams. : My relatives—or my husband’s. My last operation—or any of my operations, for that matter. How smart Junior is at his studies. My personal dislikes. My childhood. What a difficult time I have

And no one wants to be a mere audience. No one wants to sit

Askin- Johnson Service Read

Corp. and Mrs. Max Askin are on a wedding trip following their marriage at 11:30 a. m. Sunday in the Southport Methodist Church. Mrs. Askin was Miss Ruth Winifred Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Johnson, Southport. Corp. Askin, who is stationed at Ft. Lee, Va., is the son of Mrs. Charles Askin, Southport. The Rev. R. H. Lindstrom performed the ceremony; Francis Dinkelman sang and Mrs. Elsa Adams, organist, played a program of bridal airs. Mr. Johnson gave his daughter in marriage. She wore a white satin gown made on princess lines with seed pearls trimming the neckline. Her veil fell from a halo of orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of white roses, stephanotis and baby’s breath. The bride's aunt and maid of honor, Miss Gladys Taylor, was gowned in a blue taffeta dress with a delft blue velvet jacket. Miss Rosemary Miller and Miss Elizabeth Dinkelman, bridesmaids, wore dresses of rose taffeta and blue chiffon respectively. The women at-

of the summer’s seven classes.

World War Memorial.

man, has appointed Mrs. J. T. Day head of a special committee to recruit volunteer instructors for other home nursing classes to be started during the fall. The committee will try te. enlist Indianapolis

ing profession for this service. Red Cross home nursing instructors are

87 Women Will

graduation exercises tomorrow: at 3 William Fortune, chapter chair-

women formerly active in the nurs-

required to be graduate nurses. . National Red Cross headquarters have asked local chapters throughout the country to train more women in home nursing, to meet the needs created by the national emergency. The classes teach mothers and homemakers the fundamental facts about health and sickness so they may be able to meet the situations which arise in their own homes. They are given free of charge in home-like surroundings. Practical instruction is given in the care of infants and small children, home and community hygiene, problems arising from failure to maintain health and other subjects relating - to personal and family health. Each class meets two. hours each week and is limited to 20 per-

Schedule of Meetings

Mrs. Grace Burger, local director of home nursing, has announced the early fall schedule’s first meetings: Today, 2:30 p. m. Silence Room, 8th floor, William H. Block Co.; tomorrow, 10 a. m., Kirshbaum Community Center; Monday, 2:30

and 6:30 p. m., Red Cross teaching center, Chamber of Commerce Bldg.; next Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Flanner House; Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1 p.m, Y. W. C. A. Kirshbaum classes will be at 9:30 a. m. and 1:30 p. m. after this week. Other. classes will be organized as requests are received. Summer sessions were held at Ayres’, Block's and the Northeast Community Center, in addition to Red Cross headquarters.

Eileen Foley Fetes Lucille Ittenbach

Miss Eileen Foley will entertain tonight with a kitchen shower in honor of Miss Lucille Ittenbach, who will be married to Walter C. Kennedy Saturday. Guests will include the bride-to-be’s mother, Mrs. William Ittenbach, and the Mesdames E. C. Karibo, Mary Sheehan, D. J. Foley, William Dunn, D. W. Miller, Earl

McDonald, Bernard Barnes, John Feeney, Edward Foley, Queisser, F. E. Smith and the Misses Ruth Ittenbach, Katherine McKibbon, Mary Griffin, Elizabeth

Lt

Arthur

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Receive Diplomas In Red Cross. Home Nursing

Course Tomorrow Afternoon

New home nursing classes conducted by the Indianapolis Chapter of the American Red Cross will begin this week following completion Mrs. C. Dolly Gray, home nursing chairman for the chapter, will present certificates, to 87 women at

p. m. in the West Room of the

Clubs—

Meetings tomorrow opening 194le 42 seasons for several Indianapolis

clubs include an officers’ luncheon and preliminary study programs. THE MINERVA CLUB will hold a 1 o'clock luncheon tomorrow in the Northwood Christian Church parlors preceding an officers’ day program, Mrs. George Wood will lead a symposium on “Americans All,” to open the year’s study of “This Amazing America.” Hostesses for the day will be members of the program committee, Mesdames Wood, Ralph E. Bishop and E. S. Cummings. Honor guests will include Mesdames Cummings, George E. Maxwell, K. V. Ammer man, Bishop, C. F. McDaniel and Edwin E. Shelton, officers. Special music will be on the afternoon’s program.

Responses at the WOMAN'S ADe VANCE (CLUB'S President's Day meeting tomorrow will be on “Since We Met.” Mrs. W. S. S. Johnson, retiring president, will present the gavel of office to Mrs. C. M. Bohne stadt, 1941-42 president of the club,

Mrs. John W. Thornburgh will talk on the Panama Canal Zone to= morrow morning at the first fall meeting of RIO DE JANEIRO CHAPTER, THE INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY CLUB. The host« ess, Mrs. Ernest B. Foster, 940 Brunswick Ave. will be assisted by Mrs. Loyce Lasiter, and Mrs. Philip Hulskamp. Mrs. Harvey Gluesene kamp will preside. a

Following a 1 o'clock dessert luncheon tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Edwin E. Lay, 5861 Kingsley Drive, NORMANDY CHAPTER members of the INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY CLUB will hear & talk on “Panama, the Youngest Ine depent State in the Americas” by Miss Bernice VanSickle. Mrs, Maurice D. Lindley will assist the hostess.

SARAH A. SWAIN UNIT of the W. C. T. U. was to meet at 11 o'clock: this morning with Mrs. Martina Wamsley, 1460 Lexington Ave. Of= ficers to. be installed were Mrs. Cora Higanbotham, president; Mrs, Wamsley, vice president; Miss Bertha Sample, secretary, and Mrs. Myrtle Dent, treasurer.

Sorority to Meet Psi Chapter of Alpha Omicron Alpha Sorority will hold a business meeting tomorrow following a 1 o'clock luncheon at the Canary

McAllen and Christine Nienaber.

tendants carried shower bouquets of | g=

pink roses. Floyd Heaton was Corp. Askin’s best. man and Glen Ryker, Robert

Hacker, Charles Emmons and Nore

man Clark ushered.

A dinner at Buckley’s Restaurant in Cumberland followed the service. |:

Catholic Club Plans

President’s Day

The Irvington Catholic Women's Study Club will have a President’s Day luuricheon at 12:30 p. m. Sept. 18 at Whispering Winds. Mrs.

George W. Faulstich is the retiring |; president and Mrs. Roy Babcock is |}

the incorning club head. - Among| the guests will be the Rt.

Rev. Msgr. Michael Lyons and the |? Rev. Fr. James W. Moore. Speak- |}

ers will include Mrs. Roland A. Turner, Greensburg, diocesan district president, and Mrs. R. W. Achatz, | Lawrenceburg, diocesan chairman of study clubs.

Wedding Is Sept. 28

Mrs. Laura Newhart announces the engagement of her cousin, Miss Josephine, Paulley, to Theodore Geraghty. The wedding will be Sept. 28 in the First Congregational Church. .

Sorority to Meet

Beta Chapter of Phi Theta Delta Sorority will be éntertained at 8 p. m. today in the home of Miss Carolyn Williams, 611 N. Chester St.

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