Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1942 — Page 20

Webi Combine Well with Foods

From Main Dishes to Desserts

- DOMESTIC TREE NUTS have been designated by the department of agriculture as the victory food special from Nov. 9 through 21. Their designation is not due entirely to the fact that there is a large supply

of nuts available this year, but because nuts should be used more willely as an integral part of regular menus, thereby helping to make more efficient use of the nation’s total food resources.

Couple Chooses Attendants

Attendants for the wedding of Miss Glenna Lillian Reid and Irvin Lee Gibbs’ have been announced. The ceremony is to take place Nov. 21, at the Christian and Missionary Alliance church, with the Rev. T. E. Thompson officiating. Miss Marcella Gibbs, sister of the

prospective ~ bridegroom, will’ be maid of honor. The brother of the

bride-to-be, William Bradley Reid | &

Jr, will be best man.

GOTHAMS MAKE FINE COTTON HOSIERY

No rua that starts shove can pass the Gold Stripe

In addition to Futuray rayon stockings ma d e by Go tham, smart women in _fashionable * gatherings all “over the nation. wear Gothams "fine cotton, cot- ~~ ton lisle and nov~elty stockings. They are outstanding from t h e Standpoint of style, quality and value. "W a sson's carries all of the Gotham. quality line, and Wasson's sells Gothams with the assurance to its patrons that they're the best buy for the money that you can find. Remember, ‘you can get Gotham hosiery in all weights of sheer, medium and heavier service Futuray rayons. Ask for Gothams tomorrow.

H. P. WASSON '& COMPANY

' Indianapolis, Ind.

oe,

Walnut Sweet Potato Casserole

Since walnuts account for about half the total production of domestic nuts, it will be good news to homemakers to learn that they are one food that’s abundant this year. California came through with a bumper crop.

WALNUT-SWEET POTATO CASSEROLE

4 to 6 sweet potatoes, cooked tender and skinned 1 whole orange, sliced 2; ‘cup dark corn syrup 2 tablespoons butter 4 to 6 marshmallows 1, cup chopped walnut. kernels A few whole kernels for topping

Slice the cooked sweet potatoes into ‘a buttered casserole, arranging them in layers, with . the orange

slices and a ‘sprinkling of the

chopped walnut kernels. Dot each

{layer with ‘butter and season with

salt and ‘pepper. Reserve about 3 orange slices for the top and arrange the marshmallows on these. Pour over the corn syrup and place

in moderate oven 325. degrees F. for

1 hour. Before serving, press a whole walnut kernel into each marshmallow on the topping. Serves

‘4 to 6.

CANDY APPLE WALNUT PIE

4 tart apples, pared, cored and sliced 1 cup firmly packed brown sugar dash of salt 1 cup flour 1 cup chopped walnut kernels 1, cup butter, or -other shortening 15 cup heavy cream, whipped Slice two- apples into: greased pie plate, sprinkle with 2 cup brown sugar and 1 cup chopped walnuts.

salt. For the topping combine the remaining sugar with the flour, cut in the shortening or butter and add the remaining !: cup walnuts. Press this mixture firmly onto the apples, covering all the surface with a thin layer firmly packed. Bake in moderate oven: 350 degrees F. for about 1 hour, or until apples are tender. Serve warm or cold, topped with the whipped cream and whole walnut kernels, Yield: One 8-inch

pie.

1CE AND FUEL C0.

favorite ro

Is a grand new treat “when it's served with Sons any

° Delicious Ritz i is just one of 500 tempting varieties of biscuit identified by the’ red Nabisco seal. Look for it when you buy! is

‘| the speaker.

Slice other apples on top and add| -

~|Rabbi Goldblatt

{To Give Second

IBook Review

' Temple Sisterhood Sponsors Series

The second in a series of four book reviews by Rabbi Maurice Goldblatt will be sponsored Tuesday by the Temple Sisterhood of the Indianapolis Hebrew congregation. Rabbi Goldblatt’s talk on “Living Upstairs” (Francis Meehan) will be given at 10:30 a. m. in the temple auditorium, 10th and Delaware sts. Mrs. Harold Platt will introduce The sisterhood book review committee includes’ Mesdames Sydney Romer, Platt, Arthur Fairbanks, « David Lurvey,, Manuel Freeman and Saul Solomon. Mrs. Samuel Kominers, chairman of ushers, will be assisted by Mesdames Lewis Lurie, Marcus Cohen,

: {Mort Asher, Freeman, Edgar Kiser, :| Fairbanks and Samuel Hahn.

During the quarter-hour preceding the review, Miss Helen Louise Quig will present an organ recital. The review is open .to the public without charge.

Scout Leaders

Attend Final Workshop Here

A discussion group on dramatics for Brownie and intermediate Girl Scout leaders yesterday in Central Y. M. C. A. closed the experienced leaders’ workshop sponsored by Indianapolis and Marion county Girl Scouts. More than 130 Girl Scout leaders, including women from Columbus, West Lafayette, Anderson, New Castle and Indianapolis, attended the meetings held on four consecutive Wednesdays since Oct. 14. Mrs.

of the discussion yesterday. At the meeting, Mrs, Bert C. McCammon also gave practical advice to senior leaders on “how to teach people to teach games.” Included in her demonstration of principles of recreational leadership ‘were entertainment for groups of younger and older children.

Committee Assists

Mrs. Thomas J. Blackwell Jr, Girl Scout commissioner, introduced the guest speakers. Arrangements for the workshep were made by Mrs. W. L. Heston, assisted by Mrs. Robert H. White. Mrs. P. Ward Holaday headed service activities and Mrs. Stuart A.

Group leaders in charge were Mrs. H. Verle Wilson, Brownies; Mrs. K.- W. Kistner, intermediates, and Mrs. Harold Stafford, seniors. Mrs. Marvin E. Curle, former commissioner for the scouts, aided in planning the program for the institute.

Beauty—

Many Ankles To Problem

By ALICIA HART Times Special Writer AS SKIRTS get slenderer, playing up legs more decisively than is even the American woman's custom, I get more and more queries

asking what to do about fleshy ankles. Well, what causes them? Several things may cause them, and you’ll need to find out-which is troubling you. If you've always had good ankles and suddenly they're not so good, you may be standing too much . . . may find a perfectly good answer in resting your nkles. Cause of trouble can be simply gravity. The force that makes everything come down to earth makes your blood gravitate to your feet when you stand . .. may make a healthy woman’s ankles swell when suddenly she stands and stands. . # 8 8 THE REMEDY: Remove the strain and stimulate your circulation. Alf Haugen, physical director for the RKO stars in Hollywood, suggests simply lying flat on the floor, feet on.a low chair, muscles relaxed. Or, place an ironing board against the chair and lie on the board, head at the low end. Or, pedal any imaginary bicycle, lying flat on your back. Ankles. which are too fleshy, and have not been suddenly swelled, can be reduced by massage. Simply put some cream on the ankle and go to work, kneading it with small circular motions, then massaging up the leg to the knee. Neither this nor any other technique can be expected to make a great difference overnight or during a week. But faithful massage for a few months will produce results—unless you have some physical disturbance that calls for medical attention. Chronically puffed ankles signal some important ailments, of kidney and of heart for instance. If you find your rest and massage ineffective after faithful use, it would $5.8 £004 isa 1 const 3 phys, an.

Home Ec Club M eets

“Problems of the Consumer” was the topic of Mrs. Ruse Lee Farrell at a meeting of. Home Economics club Hose flo Members

|met at the home of Mrd. James Jay, 3620 Washington blvd. The}

hostess was assisted by Mrs, Lewis Levy and Mrs. H. C. Grossman.

Joseph W. Walden was in charge

Bishop was in charge of exhibits.|in

smart as a size 12.”

Times

Saleswomen avoid it and substitute

selves to rigorous diets.

her life. For 20 years Miss Turner has been styling clothes only for the more corpulent members of her sex. “The new war production board restriction of material and fashion lines has been a blessing to larger women,” declares Miss Turner. “At last, we shall not be tempted any more by all those unnecessary and unbecoming flimflams.”

Keep Waistline Simple

She looks at her own figure, which is decidedly out of the juniormiss class, and confesses that, while. she has never bothered a moment about diets, she has made a science of bringing out the best points of a plump figure. Pauline Turner is her own best demonstrator. “Why not?” she says. “A woman with a larger figure can look just as smart as a size 12. Buf she has to watch her lines. “She should be certain that all her dresses emphasize a simple waistline. This fall, for instance, a stout woman can look the height of fashion in a simple dress and a fingertip coat. Only she must be exceedingly careful about the trinmimings of her coat: No fur collars, particularly a long-haired fur like fox. They tend to shorten the neckline — and plump women usually have short necks anyhow. “The more elaborate dresses should follow the same simple line.

skirt can be draped with fullness in front or.on the side, but it is extremely important that the folds be stitched down to give a slenderizing effect. V-Necklines “Very important, too, is the neckline. which somehow. detracts from the fullness of the face. “Who thinks nowadays that a plump woman can’t be glamorous?” asks Miss Turner defiantly. “Of

high backed and long-sleeved dress for formal occasions.” Though admitting their potential glamour, she has a lot of complaints to make about her sisters-in-weight. “Large woman ought to be careful of the smallest details. They

necklace at the back of their necks; it. produces a - hunchback effect.

an ‘outstanding part. - “The best jewels: for a ‘plump woman are. pins, worn high on the above the sleeve of the dress.”

weakest side of her special clientele is hats—Ilarge ones.

—and so are the berets. Nothing is

are - taboo. Veils should be short, just over the eyes, and nothing fancy either.” :

First Aiders fo Meet

‘First Ald district 47 will meet Saturday at 7 p. mm. in the Brot.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES She’s Stout—And Proud of It

All trimmings on the waist part of: the dress, none on the skirt. The,

I always advise a low-cut Vf

course she can, if she’ll only wear a |}

should never. wear the clasp of a

Pull it to the side, make the clasp

shoulder. Bracelets should be high, bi According to Miss Turner, the.

“On a fat woman they are a sin’

more becoming than a small frivol={f ous hat, although extremes and} = those fancy heights in the crown |}

oN

Pauline Turner (right) is shown in the process of proving 10a smiling customer that “a woman with a larger fights ¢ can look Just

The Woman With a Large F igure Can Look Just as Smart as A Size 12, Stylist Declares

Special

NEW YORK, Nov. 5.—In the dress shops, “stout” is a horrid word.

flattering adjectives. The large size

clients describe themselves as plump, or _matronly, and subject them-

All of this seems like nonsense to Pauline Turner, a militant dis-. senter who dares to call a stout a stout, and who never counted a calory

Clean Attics Are Safe

After you've turned in scrap from attic and cellar thoroughly clean these places, prevent spontaneous combustion. Rubbish aids the Tth colunin, “the carelessness that destroys lives and materials.

‘| Frank Cox,

Party Is Arranged For Bride-to-Be Miss Bonnie Mae Hughey of At-

lanta, Ga., will arrive in Indianapolis Saturday night to be maid of

* honor at the wedding of her cousin,

Miss Thelma May Hughey, to David ‘| Foster Martin Tuesday. Other attendants for the wedding will be Miss Betty Steinbruegge, another cousin of the bride-to-be;

“|Miss' Grace Martin, sister of the

prospective bridegroom; and the Misses Mary Lou Mitchell, Mildred

-| Woempner and Phyllis Matzke, all . | bridesmaids, and Beverly Adams “land | Elaine Steinbruegge,

flower girls. Thomas E. Sefton will be Mr. Martin’s best man and ushers will include Oliver R., Paul B. and Albert L. Hughey, all brothers of the

bride-to-be, Fred I. Doebber and

Everett Adams. Among the guests at a miscellaneous shower given by Mrs. Glen

'|H. Graham, Mrs. James F. Martin,

Miss Mary Lou Graham and Miss Grace Martin Saturday night will be the bride-to-be’s mother, Mrs. George F. Hughey. The party will be at the Graham residence, 4635 Rookwood ave. Also at the party: will be Mesdames S. E. Elliott, T. A. Sefton, Robert Morlatt, -W." H. Landreth, W. W. Bobb, Elmer Miller, Clyde Brown, W. O. Clingler, H. E. King, Val Miller, L. Roy Heller, Harry Miller, Charles Miller and Mrs. Henry Votava of Chicago.

Chorus to Sing

1 (The ‘Messiah’

The 11th.annual production of | Handel's “Messiah” will be presented by the. Irvington community

“Ichorus Dec. 6 at 3 p.-m. in the

Thomas Carr Howe high school. The performance will “be’ sponsored by the Irvington ' Union of Clubs, according to Mrs. Charles D. Vawter, union president. Special plans are being made sO that choirs of the six: Irvington churches may participate this year. The chorus, directed by J. Russell

Paxton, “also will include those in

the community who have sung each year and any other persons who wish to sing. Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson is general chairman for the event. She has served several years in that capacity. Rehearsals will begin Nov. 11 and continue weekly. a

Business Session

A business session will be held at

|8 o'clock this evening by Phi chap-

ter, Delta Chi Sigma sorority. Mrs. D. W. Cottingham will be hostess to the group at her home, 4304 E. 10th st. .

[Bonnie Hughey | {To Be Cousins Maid of Honor |

Dickey Suit 4

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I iii; lL 171]

11] Ed

“<:Wiingjj I~

This collarless jacket has’ the softness, the, loose lines, the simplicity which make a garment comfortable -and gracious to wear. At the same time a snug belt fits it firmly at the waist. The skirt is pleated across the front. The removable dickey has long, rolling lapels . to outline the deep cut of the jacket. Pattern 8277 is in sizes 12, 14, 186, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 16 suit, 34 sleeves, 3% yards 39-inch material, 8% yard contrast for dickey. For this attractive pattern, send \6 cents in coin, your name, address; »attern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service, 214 W, Maryland st. See the fall fashion book’s wide

O Keefe Tacke Ceremony Read This Morning ¢

Miss Doris Eileen Tacke this morning became the bride of Laws rence O'Keefe Jr. ‘The ‘Rev: Fr, Clement Bosler performed the cere=. mony: at 9 o'clock in St. Joan Arc Catholic church. Miss Margie Tacke, sister of the bride and maid of honor, wore a romance blue dress with a chiffon skirt and shirred velveteen bodice, She carried a small colonial bouquet. A pompadour hat of ostrich tips and veiling completed her cose tume. Karl Traylor was best man. The bride chose a gown of whibe

-| taffeta fashioned with a fitted bo=

dice accented with a shoulder ‘yoke of English net and petit collar, The long sleeves tapered to points over the wrists and the boutfapt: skirt fell into a train. Her veil of bridal: illusion wis ate tached to a tulle halo accented with orange blossoms. She carried a white

prayer book to which an orchid; way attached. ; :

Out-of-Town Guests A wedding breakfast at the Mae rott hotel following the ceremony

was for the family and close friends of the couple. Out-of-town guests

here for the wedding included. Miss

Frances Alyward, Wichita, Kas.

.| Miss Helen Mackey, Marshall, Mich #

Miss Pat Marshall, Chicago, and Miss

Betty Beh, Des Moines, Iowa.

Mrs. O'Keefe Jr, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. E..Tacke, 3853 N. Delaware st., and the parents of the bridegroom dre Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence O'Keefe, 2350 N. Dears born st. The bride abiended Butler. unt versity and St. Mary of the Lake college. Mr. O'Keefe attended: the College of the Holy Cross, Wore cester, Mass. After Nov. 12, the [couple will be at home ab 926 H. 52d st.

War Mothers | Meet Tuesday

| Mrs. Nellie W. Savage, presiden§

of the Marion county chapter of American War Mothers, will pres side at a meeting to be held by the organization at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday in the World War Memorial ‘build.

variety of smart patterns—before ing

you wind up your fall sewing campaign. Send for your copy today, 16 cents. Order it with a 16-cent pattern for 26 cents.

Leaves for West

Mrs. George E. Tobias, 5305 Pleasant Run pkwy., South dr., has left for Phoenix, Ariz, where she will be a bridesmaid for Miss Elizabeth Clark at her wedding to Stephen F. Furedy of Los Angeles, Sunday afternoon in the First Presbyterian church in Phoenix. Following the wedding, Mrs. Tobias will go to ‘California, returning to In-

THE HOME OWNED FAMILY SHOE STORE

dianapolis early in December.

* Paradise Creations—if

velvety, “soft

—all the beauty—the - ariginal style — the glamorous fashion

that is

Ladies’ Dept.~First Floor. '|

"PARADISE SHOES

The state chapler of Armevicans War Mothers of 1917-18 recently voted to award the national ore ganization’s gold medal to. Gen, Douglas MacArthur in recognition of his services to the country. In a letter to Gen. MacArthur, signed by Mrs. Mae Edwards, Lo« gansport, state president, the chape ter expressed its faith in “his abilie ty, steadfastness and courage to fight the greatest battle of all bat« tles against a most vicious enemy.” The medal, designed by Mrs. H, May Hahn, bears the symbolical / laurel wreath, oak leaf, torches, American ~ eagle and the Wag

Paradise these exclusive patterns. dentally—comfort i is a big feature in Paradise.

Mothers’ seal.

-._." cen

lovely, as a kitten" suede

is yours in

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