Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1942 — Page 14
PAGE 11
THE INDIAN:
Homemaking—
Economy Tips: Use Stale Breadcrumbs, Leftover Coffee Grounds and Tea Leaves
SINCE NO GOOD AMERICAN WANTS to waste food, Esquire mag- | azine, in its July issue, brings forth some recipes for making savory
Church of God
ociety to Hold
S Convention
The 10th ennual ‘convention of
the National Woman’s Home and
Foreign Missionary society of the {Church of God will be held in the gymnasium-auditorium of Anderson college in Anderson tomorrow and
For the War Bride
dishes out of so-called garbage. In Europe, no one throws bread away. If it is stale, it is turned into breadcrumb flour by toasting it in the oven and then pounding it. Or it can be converted into bread pudding, or
Friday.
Mrs. Nora Hunter of Los Angeles,
croutons for soup or salad. A classic casserole, Esquire points] out, can be made from the remains of a steak-vegetable-potato dinner. | Or a cottage pie might emerge, by | way of this recipe: i Cut cold meat in neat slices; also] slice left-over potatoes. Boil an] onion in salted water, chop fine.| Butter a pie dish and place a layer | of potatoes and some of the onions) on the bettom; season with salt and pepper. Lay slices of meat on top, | then a layer of potatoes, onion, salt | and pepper, and so on. Pour some! : a So melted butter over it. Bake | 020d Is a £00d provider.
DEAR JANE JORDAN—My husWe both
founder and national president, will preside at the opening mass meeting at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening. The convention theme will be “In Christ —a New World.” The Rev. Floyd W. Heinly, missionary to India for 24 years now on furlough, will be the guest speaker, Devotions will be conducted by Mrs. Luella McGuire. “Exalted Christ” has been chosen as the subject for the worship program which will include Mrs. McGuire as liturgist and Miss Darlene Minkler, pianist. Both are members of the national board and are from the North Side Church of God in Indianapolis.
for one hour and a half |are 25. We have been married five i ™ : ree ve clallt will take | EATS and yet my husband very selie Jez : | dom talks to me. I try to talk, but a new lease on life if you serve them | he is always too busy reading. If hg 3 a, A Se LY en he isnt reading, he is at the corner. ing butter over a slow fire, skim- | But here is my real trouble, Every ring it, ing lemon juice, saltand|,. iii: i : : a SAG MOH Jie, Sls ani} time a married couple comes to our paprika. Or a butter mustard sauce
% : house, he and the girl become inus n which mustar z ) . tan ve ah wie i d takes, parable. When I ask him about the place of lemon juice, but the]
Friday will communion service conducted by Archie A. Bolithe and a talk by Mrs. Hunter on the progress made by the organization in the 10 years of its existence.
{will be represented by an exhibit at {the convention.
Featured on the forenoon sessions be an international
| i Every department of the society |
Among them will
. . it he says I am narrow minded and seasoning and method remain the
will wreck our lives. same; Or a cream sauce, made of butter, milk, flour, cream and seasoning. And here are two dishes for leftovers that came out of one of New York's most famous restaurants.
JAPANESE DISASTER Take any left-over meat and chop | it in a meat grinder. (If you don’t| own one the corner butcher help you out). To this add a half | With people all day pound of boiled spinach, a hard obliged to do a lot of talking is worn boiled egg, enough breadcrumbs to out when he gets home at night and make a firm mixture, salt, pepper |does not feel like more of the same. and a little onion chopped very fine. | There is nothing such a person apGrease a pan with butter and preciates so much as a chance to be sprinkle over some bread crumbs. quiet for a while, free from demands Put two tablespoons of tomato sauce on his attention. on top and bake for about half an| A wife, on the other hand, has hour. | been home all day and is eager for AXIS DOWNFALL {news from the outside world. Cut into small pieces one pound |Usually her chit chat centers of left-over cooked meats. Brown !around domestic problems which some onion in fat or butter, add are highly uninteresting to her husthe cut-up meat and fry until brown. | band. Silence is his only defense Now add a glass of white wine, a against a woman who has no comtablespoon of tomato sauce, salt and prehension of his emotional fatigue. pepper, and let it simmer for half| It would be a good thing if you n hour. Boil some rice, drain and got out more during the day and
to put my husband in his place.
feel
understand? HURT DEEPLY. 2 = 2 Answer—IJ can tell you this from
a
put in a dish. Place the meat over | made more opportunities to get con- Rowe, editor of the Young People’s | | Friend and prayer league chairman i {of the N. W. H. M. S,, will preside. : : {husband for news. If vou had more A benediction by the Rev. E. A. honeymoon will be taken during | the duration | experiences of your own you might|Reardon, pastor of the Park Place 2n army or navy man’s week-end ; have something more interesting to| Church of God in Anderson, will | leave at an uncertain date, are [close the convention.
| versation out of your system. You probably are too dependent on your
it, pouring the sauce on top.
” » »
Use Rancid Butter AND THEN TAKE our wasted butter! One economizing device is butter with
talk about. A tactful wife would give her husband a chance to relax when he got home and then key her conversation to his interests. She would confine her discussions of domestic problems to other women. Evidently the man welcomes the opportunity to talk to women who {offer fresh interests. If you weren't so disturbed about it perhaps the husbands wouldnt be so upset either. If they continue to resent his attentions to their wives one of them may punch him in the nose someday. This would do more than vou can do to show him his place. Now that he has found out that he can upset vou by devoting himself to other women, the more you say the better he likes it.
to mix two-thirds of one-third of margarine. It's undetectable. Forget your etiquette for the duration and serve butter from one commor utter often remains untouched and so wasted, on ndividual plates. And if it should turm rancid in summer heat, use it for cooking The rancid taste disappears as soon as the butter is browned. Or, if you want to use it for the table, pour cold salted water on it, pound the water well in until it saturates it, and pour the water off. With supplies of coffee and tea fully before you throw out the grounds. After using them once. dry them on a hot stove| Try letting him alone for a while. or th a little fresh Let the angry husbands look after coff ly their own wives. I doubt very much as that they blame you for your hushad. The same thing is true of tea. band’s behavior. He isn't a little Pour the tea off the leaves after child whom you can correct when three or four minutes and preserve he is naughty. If you gain control them for the next day, adding a few over your own jealousy, the situation will improve. JANE JORDAN.
Fairle fairly
air and
all, allQ
in the e added,
oe aromatic ¢
The husbands | become very angry and expect me 1 that these women care nothing for my husband, but really love their own men, but they make a fool of my husband. How can I make him
will | experience: A person who has dealt and been
{be a booth containing articles knitted and crocheted by Mrs. Hunter during the last 10 years to raise funds for the missions. Mrs. Frances Tallen, national treasurer, will | be in charge of this booth. The articles to be exhibited have been lent by the purchasers.
Schedules Panel
At 1:45 p. m. Friday, a panel entitled “We Appreciate Our Present Program in View of Today's Opportunity and the Challenge of the Post-War Conditions” will be presented. Mrs. Tallen, panel chairman, has named Dr. Adam W. Miller, secre-tary-treasurer of the Church of God, as leader of the discussion. He
Mziden, missionary in China for 21 years; Mrs. Lars Olsen, returned missionary from Aalborg, Denmark; A. IL. Forrest, pastor of the Churct of God in Lansing, Mich. and the Rev. Mr. Heinly.
Following the panel, an installa-
| tion service for newly elected offi|cers will be held. Mrs. Ida Byrd|
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Mrs. Close Hostess
The La-Val-Wood Homemakers’ {club will meet with Mrs. Florence Close at Evergreen Acres, at 1 p. m. tomorrow, A demonstration class on | nutrition is scheduled for 2 o'clock.
Auxiliary to Meet
The Marine Corps league auxiljary will meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow
jensemble. It may be an afternoon
Lucky American June bride concessions to wartime.
faille belting ribbon.
¥ L 5
NEW YORK, June 10.—Girls month of June, this year seem to than peace time June brides did.
. . . white wedding gowns, t00,” ‘the bride’s consultant in a Fifth |avenue’s store told me. jon the symbolic color. That's the Inews—that and their haste. | “They almost flabbergast us. {Three days is the average time (they allow for getting everything. Yet we manage.”
Even furlough brides, whose
wearing white wedding gowns. These are selected and fitted, then they hang in the closet, ready to be put on at a moment's notice, whenever the leave begins. Sometimes the girl chooses a formal costume for the wedding, for which she and her one attendant will travel across the country to the fiance’s post.
Advise Informal Weddings
That is all awry—by peacetime
standards. And many consultants and authorities in taste advise an
informal wedding and an informal
dress, streetlength, in filmy lace, rayon or organdie or even pique. Better still, the exquisite suit which will be simply and Ssupremely lovely with a white, frilly hat and flowers, and will become
her unmistakably right traveling costume when she changes her hat. Outstanding designers are doing such clothes in extremely unpretentious manner. One well known house, for instance, proposes cotton crepe wedding suits—corn yellow for the bride, periwinkle for her mother, both with matching draped hats of the same cotton fabric, both pretty, too. But war psychology has a rough way with peacetime conventions and so it looks as if the June bride of 1942 can wear anything that suits her and the bridegroom. Particularly, she can have the formal wedding without every last ceremonious and costly detail observed.
Rules Relaxed
There'll be precious little comment, this year, if the invitations and announcements are handwritten instead of engraved, if the second envelope is missing, if she marries at church formally but merely pauses at the steps and greets her friends instead of having a reception.
if any. Mary Lewis designed this costume.
“A far greater proportion of them insist]
of 1942, with carte blanche from
Uncle Sam on goods for her traditional bridal gown, makes two She wears a short veil and a short train,
Dress is organdie; jacket,
Shorter Veils and Trains Are Concessions In War Time
By MARGUERITE YOUNG Times Special Writer
who plan to wed in the marrying want to look even more like angels
Maybe the reason is just that they know they’ll have to keep their v : . He feet on the ground and be self-reliant wives, in wartime. will be assisted by Miss Daisy jt js the traditional wedding gown is what they're wearing.
Whatever
las some of the prettiest new ones are. There is, for example, a blue organdie gown for a garden wedding—cascades of ruffles down side of skirt, coronet of organdie holding the bride’s veil, and organdie
streamers from the bouquet of garden flowers. The dress would be a summertime dancing dress for
|
| Shorter veils and shorter trains are outstanding characteristics of New York creations for the traditional wedding. The princess line
silhouette, the basque bodice, the
elongated torso and the bouffant skirt make them memorable. Mousseline, dotted swiss, net and lace are favored materials, made to be used for general wear after the wedding day. A great many girls are choosing to economize by selecting a simple, inexpensive bridal dress to wear and nut away, and in this group the fabric of the moment seems to be a rayon sheer with raised floral de-
|'sign.
Mary Conkle Circle
Lunches Tuesday
Mrs. L. A, VonStaden and her daughters, Mrs. Saul Bernat and Mrs. Nelle Epler, will entertain the Mary Conkle circle of the Third Christian church at a covered dish Iuncheorr Tuesday in their home, 5155 N. Central ave. Students of the Bernat studios who will appear on the program are Burton Randolf, Miss Mary Smyrins and Miss Veda Young, violinists; Miss Anna Bell Sneethen and Miss Rebecca Millhound, readers, and the Misses Joane Bernat, Barbara and Florence Mae Wallace, Alice Jane Smith and Juda Sprat, dancers. Mrs. VonStaden is program chairman. Assisting Mrs, P. B. Smith, luncheon chairman, will be Mesdames George Davis, William Davis, Clyde Deputy, Fred Ranney, Mary L. Conkle, I.. C. Campbell, O. M, Anderson, Roy Whistman, J. M. Milner, E. B. Palmer, E. E. Perkins and Margaret Schrader.
Mrs. Roy Hostess
Mrs. Curtis Roy will entertain the S. C. club at 1:30 p. m. tomor-
Double-duty bridal gowns are very popular. There are more practical when they are in color,
For the PRACTICAL Bride
‘tion makes foods taste it is the most economical
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D. A. R. Group Plans Flag Day
Program
A Flag day program Saturday at the home of Mrs. Bernays Kennedy, 5335 N. Meridian st., will close the season of the Cornelia Cole Fairbanks chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. Annual reports. will be presented and state conference delegates elected. Members of the program committee who will serve as assistants for the meeting are Mesdames Orville Shattuck, Charles B. Dyer, F. Elbert Glass, John E. Hollett and Miss Deborah Duane Moore.
Rev. Kuebler To Read Rite
Friedens Evangelical and Reformed church will be the scene of the marriage of Miss Edmonia Musick to Vernon Elbrecht at 7:30 o'clock this evening. The Rev. R. C. Kuebler will read the ceremony. The church will be decorated with greenery and standards of spring flowers. Mrs. Alberta Unversaw, organist, will play a medley of bridal airs and Walter Hoffman will sing “Because” and “One Alone.” Miss Musick, who will be given in marriage by her uncle, W. H. Murphy, will be gowned in ivory
bridal satin fashioned with a shirred bodice, romance neckline and fitted sleeves tapering to wrist points over the hands. Her dress also will have a train. The bride’s two-tiered veil of illusion wiil fall from a tiara of seed pearls and she will carry a bouquet of white bridal roses and baby breath. Mrs. Jackie Thornton, matron of honor, will wear a gown of forget-me-not blue marquisette. The bishop sleeves will be trimmed with scallops of Val lace as will the bouffant skirt and sweetheart neckline, Her bouquet will be red roses. Fern green, daffodil yellow and petal rose dresses, fashioned similar to the matron’s gown, will be worn by the bridesmaids. They will be Mrs. Winkie Rairdon and Miss Birdie Musick of Columbus, sisters of the bride, and Miss Edith Gibson. Their bouquets will be mixed summer flowers and roses. Mr. Elbrecht’s best man will bé Norman Phelps and ushers will be Sam Jack Musick, brother of the bride, Carl Rieck, Robert Baase and Otto and Carl Hoffman. Following the ceremony, a reception will be held at the church. Mrs. Freda Hoffman will assist at the reception. The couple will take a trip south with the bride traveling in a navy blue California cloth suit with blue and white accessories and a corsage of roses. At a later dave they will be at home at 338 Terrace ave. Mrs. Alma Sabel of Winamae will attend the wedding.
Gives Shower For
Kathryn Kiernan
Miss Kathryn Kiernan will be guest of honor at a bridal shower given by Miss Betty Jo Michaelis, 807 N. LaSalle st, this evening. Miss Kiernan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kiernan, will be married to Robert Michaelis, June 20, at St. Anthony’s Catholic church. The bride-to-be has chosen her sister, Mrs. A. J. Ryan, to be matron of honor. Another sister, Miss Peggy Kiernan, and Miss Michaelis will be bridesmaids. Rose Marie Haney will be flower girl. Edward Michaelis will be his brother's best man and William Kiernan, brother of the bride-to-be, and Robert Yount will serve as ushers.
Sponsors Card Party
A public card party will be sponsored by the St. Mary’s Study club at 7 p. m. tomorrow in the Citizens’ Gas & Coke Utility.
=r
Service Study Club Will Picnic Tomorrow in Allisonville; Thursday Lyceum Ends Season
Several clubs are closing their season’s activities with picnics tomors
row afternoon and evening.
The SERVICE STUDY club will
"hold its covered dish picnic tomore
row at the summer home of Mrs, G. E. Bomberger in Allisonville, Mes dames Fred Kepner, Austin J. Kassler and Jules G. Zinter are in charge of arrangements and Mesdames George Dorn, Karl Theilig and O. M,
Smead will serve as hostesses,
CHAPTER P, P. E. O. sisterhood, will honor one of its members, Mrs. Minnie IL. Collidge, with a tea in honor of her 80th birthday tomorrow. The tea will be held from 3 to 5 o'clock in the home of Mrs. B. W. Lodwick, 4456 Central ave. ’
Mrs. Harry Plummer will appear on the closing program of the THURSDAY LYCEUM club tomorrow. She will review “Mission to the North.” Members will meet with Mrs. O. W. Cross, 6208 Washington blvd, for a dessert luncheon preceding the program.
A picnic at noon tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Ralph Renfrew, 429 N. Bosart ave, will end the season’s activities for the BETA DELPHIAN club. Mrs. J. A. Matthews, chairman of the advisory board, is in charge of arrangements. Mrs. Renfrew is president of the organization.
Mrs. Miles W. Penrod, 1829 Thompson rd. will entertain the INDIANAPOLIS CURRENT EVENTS club with a picnis party at her home tomorrow. This will be the final meeting of the current year. Miss Blanche E. Penrod will discuss music and flowers.
Members of the CURRENT DISCUSSION club will have a picnic tomorrow at the home of Mrs. C. Alfred Campbell in New Augusta.
The PIERIAN STUDY club will celebrate its last meeting of the current year with a family picnic at Riverside park near 26th st. Mrs. Wilson Carey, chairman for the party tomorrow, is being assisted by Mrs. Fred Kurz and Mrs. Victor Brown.
This week's meeting of the 1908 club has been canceled. The club will close its season with a picnic at Forest Park in Noblesville on
June 25.
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Women’s Guild To See Playlet
A playlet entitled “God Bless America” will be presented at a meeting of the Women’s guild of First Church, Evangelical and Ree formed, tomorrow. Members of the cast will be Mesdames Harold Hut son, Linn Gray, Richard Pier, Henry Unger and Miss Marjorie Pluess. An executive board meeting a¥ 10:30 a. m. in the church will be followed by a noon luncheon. Mrs, Caroline Gebhardt is chairman of luncheon hostesses. .Mrs. C. J. Russom will be in charge of devotions and the affere noon program at 1 p. m. The play let will be presented at this time and Miss Phyllis Wear will play the piano.
Mrs. A. H. Backus
To Entertain
A guest meeting will be held by the North End Garden club Frie day in the rose garden at the home of Mrs. A. H. Backus, 5530 Broad way. Mrs. A. S. Thomas will dis« cuss the plant life in Mexico and Mexican songs will be sung by Faustino Rico. Mr. Rico will be in« troduced by Mrs. Glenn Diddel. Assisting the hostess will be Mes« dames Arthur G. Wilson, H. BH. Rasmussen, John B. Schramm and Herbert Asperger. A social hour will follow the program.
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BROWN COUNTY
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