Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1942 — Page 23

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s Plane Motors

Vireinia Davis |Euncheon to Follow | vipa 5 CIE ~ |Town Hall Lecture ! sew eter son Ween ot of sowed [Bride of | x mein Kirkpatrick, spoutes with a saw edge on one side. Le . . ad | David H..Wood

By MARGUERITE YOUNG. Times Special Writer

NEW YORK, Nov. 12.—“Ace” Marie Isabel Kittell cannot tell you how many Thunderbolts she has powered with starter and generator and other parts — parts wherewith the plane flies better than 400 miles an hour, fights at 40,000 feet and dives at 680 miles an hour. To tell you would tell the foe. But “Ace” knows how many. Ever since last May she has been notching ‘em off in her head, just as once she counted up pictures of herself, in the fashion magazines. when she was a model for evening “Ng glamour clothes. Frank “Sputz” Allagio, the lead man, stood beside Isabel when “her” first Thunderbolt went up. He said, “God help you if it doesn’t fly.” She laughs now, remembering how her heart stopped. However, she says she still gets something terrific out of seeing them go. “Sputz” says they've got to go, and one fast after the other, with a vgrease monkey” like “Ace” behind them. She was the first woman to be placed on the powered engine line in Republic Aviation’s Long Island plant. She comes to work at 7:45 a, m. with her husband, Russell, He goes straight ahead into the general assembly building, where he’s an inspector of tail parts of the ship. She cuts aver to the final assembly building and the final motor assembly line. She is in rough-dried blue denim slacks and a soiled, suede lumber A red bandanna hides all

4 for Town Hall Saturday. morning, 2 She sat down and figured out

will be honor guest at a noon lunche ‘the numbers needed for each as- éon that day at the Columbia club sembly box, assembled the tapes, She will be introduced by Mrs. Olive ~and arranged them inside the hack- oi Tinder oi by Mis. Oline saw bars. ‘Then she took another ; Ph BS hacksaw and tied it over the first Seated at the speakers’ table will

At Noblesville * : : - be Mesdames John 8S. Pearson Jr with the handle at the opposite Nell C. Estal - to two ee. She Leslie 8. Lee, Neil C. Estabrook, Mor=

Times Special ris Lanville Brown, Lawrence B, anchored the .contraption to her| NOBLESVILLE, Ind, Nov. 12.—| Moore, Florence Webster Long and\ work bench by resting the handles| corp. and Mrs. David Harris Wood tae Misses Rosemary Redding, Kathe Si Pasishesrd boxes i ing are on a wedding trip following|ryn Pickett and Laura Miller. . em. hen rune ge pools their. marriage here last night at| Miss Kirkpatrick has been Lone ind Bi r and 1 the home of the bride's mother, |don correspondent for the Chicago A . saw adge th o% ihe apes, Mrs. L. A. Davis, Mrs, Wood was| Daily News since 1939 and is one of Bow En aol oub her Miss Virginia Davis of Indianapolis.|the first two women to be credited SON oq 5 Tn he plants big The double ring ceremony, at officially as war correspondents by a estion” to% Pretty 8:30 o'clock, was read by the Rev. the U, S. army. Her lecture at Town coon designers came around and Lyman Cosand, pastor of the Gray Hell Will be on “The United States ‘worked on Kathryn's tape-si Friends church, before a back-|.0 the Post-War World.” pe-storage- . x

cutting gadget, and put it into use Sword ou greenery bi i by all down the line. Didn’t have to ral tapers in candelabra. Be- B : ook Lectures On Child Care

. change it much, either . . . just|fore the service, the Carmel trio substituted a wooden box for the Played “At Dawning” “Belisve Me"| hacksaw and a steel sawing edge|and “I Love You Truly.” for the clumsy double hacksaw edge. The bride’s only attendant, Mrs. Kathryn got a $25 war bond Herman Nutt, wore a gray sheer and her picture if the plant’s news-| Wool crepe dress with an orchid) Volunteers to assist with an paper. : corsage. Mr. Nutt served as best organized plan “for day care of |employed mothers’ children will attend “home finding” classes this month. A series of four lectures has been arranged by Mrs. John E, Messick, chairman of the day-care

man. for-children committee of the office of civilian defense. . y The lectures will be given by Mrs,’ Alice Smith Nov. 17, 20, 24 and 27 from 9:45 to 11:45 a. m. at the Indiana University Extension bldg. 122 E. Michigan st. They will ine clude instructions for investigating

- > Crisp, Cold Days Are the Cue

For Adding Hot Soups to Menu Ceremony Is Read

NOW THAT CHILLY DAYS are back again, it's time to encourage the good, old-fashioned soup habit. When the sharp air outside brings the family indoors with glowing cheeks, take the cue—bring out the soup -bowls—and fill ‘em up! Soup making isn’t the long and complicated task it was in grandma's day, when there were so many vegetables to buy—and each one to be

& washed, pared, cut up ai via, i . Etiam 0 amet suits 20 Doctor's Time Is Precious, Don’t Waste It

- "onto the grocery shelves—the dehy_drated soup mixes seen today. When it comes to saving the busy house- _ wife both time and energy, the soup Times Special ATLANTA, Ga. Nov. 12—Don’t bother your family doctor—he’s a busy man. Many of his younger

mixes do the trick. Contents of the neat packages may colleagues have been taken into the armed forces, and the rest are

be tumbled ‘into boiling water, with a little butter, perhaps, and simmered while the rest of the meal is going, day by day. x The man who's left to take care

being prepared. In addition, the small packages take up little space in the market bag or on the pantry ‘shelf. Vegetable noodle soup, one of the * most popular of the dehydrated mixes, is a stick-to-the-ribs food suitable for inclusion in the school lunchbox or the defense worker's "kit as well as in the family menus. Another use for soup, particularly the clear varieties, is as a hot beverage. When coffee rationing goes ~~ into effect, or tea supplies are low, a cup of seup can be rushed in to “pinch hit” in rounding out the *. meal.

2 #2 = : . WHEN SHE BEGAN working, it took her three days to do one instrument board. Last week Kathryn did one in eight hours. That's due partly to her invention, but it’s also due to her daily game at her work bench-—beating her own time. Friday nights, she drives to Manhattan with friends, on pooled gas.

Once a week she bowls with other saws in a cellar, I never would have|women. and also she.plays cards.

raised a family.” The president’s praise of women

Reception Follows

Given in marriage by her brother, Dr. John A. Davis, the bride chose a two-piece soldier blue crepe frock and a corsage of white orchids. An informal reception followed the ceremony. Receiving with Mrs. Davis were the bridegroom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Wood of Chicago. - Friends of the bride who assisted at the reception were Mrs. K.

the load he did} in peacetime. So if all you need is sympathy, don’t call the doctor—especially at night. Call a member of your ® family, summon a Dr. Paullin

He calls her “Ace” and she calls him “Spuiz’—but officially they're Marie Isabel Kittell, former fashion model, and Frank Allagio, two mutually admiring colleagues of the assembly line who put the power in airplane motors. .

It's different with Kathryn Braz-

'. 5 zell, 36, inventor. She wants a swift

_\ Filling a Double Bil

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MAKE SPICY CAKES, gingerbread or devils fooZ cakes serve a double purpose. Bake them in "shallow, square or oblong pans, cut

_ into squares, ice or sugar some for

use tomorrow and serve the rest warm for dinner dessert with whipped cream or lemon sauce. Orange sauce would be good on devils food. And here's a tip on flavoring: Save skins of oranges and lemons, store in.covered jar in refrigerator, and grate for flavoring "sauces, cakes and pudding. ” 2 ®

Good Meals for

Good Morale

BREAKFAST—Tomato and grapefruit juice, oatmeal, sausage, corn

muffins, jam, coffee, milk.

LUNCHEON—Creamed eggs on toast, toasted English muffins, assorted cheese, grapes, tea, milk, DINNER—Frult cup, chicken fricasee, dumplings, baked potatoes, baked onions stuffed with greens, cabbage and apple salad, grape and lime gelatin with foamy lemon sauce, coffee, milk. » ” 8

Today's Recipe GROUND BEEF SOUFFLE (Serves 6)

Two cups ground beef, 4 table_spoons butter, 3 tablespoons flour, 1 teaspoon salt, pepper to taste, 1 cup milk, 3 eggs, separated. Brown chopped beef in 2 tablespoons butter; melt remaining but-

. ter in saucepan, blend in flour, add

salt, pepper and milk. Cook over direct heat, stirring constantly until sauce thickens. Stir hot sauce slowly into well beaten egg yolks, add chopped meat and cool slightly. Beat whites stiff; fold into mixture.

Turn into well buttered 1-quart casserole and bake in a moderate

oven (325 degrees F.) for about 1

hour. Serve immediately.

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friend or neighbor if you must. But let the doctor attend to others who are really ailing, or let him get his much-needed sleep. This parcel of advice is contributed by Dr. James E. Paullin of Atlanta. Dr. Paullin is presidentelect of the American College of Physicians. He is also on the directing board of the procurements and assignment service for physicians, dentists and veterinarians under the office of defense, health and welfare. All of which should make him qualify for your attention when he offers a few more authoritative suggestions. R Go to Office If you can possibly make it to your physician's office, says Dr. Paullin, don’t ask him to come up to your house. More office and hospital calls and fewer home calls will mean that a doctor can attend to three or four times as many patients. Women, he suggests, should take courses in home nursing. And as many adult civilians as possible, men and women, alike should enroll in first-aid courses and keep at them until they have mastered the curriculum. Such a course would not only take care of many minor emergencies and free the doctor's rationed time for more serious business. It would also be of great help, Dr. Paullin says, in the event of a largescale disaster. One doctor could direct a score of able and informed layman-assistants in an air raid, for instance, thus caring for many more people, in a situation where quick action is vital.

Rabbi Goldblatt To Give Review

“Paul Revere” (Esther Forbes) will be reviewed by Rabbi Maurice Goldblatt Tuesday morning at 10:30 o'clock as the third of a series of four public book reviews sponsored

by the Temple Sisterhood of the Indianapolis Hebrew congregation. Mrs. Samuel Kominers will introduce Rabbi Goldblatt. Ushers for the morning are to include Mesdames George Frank, Lucia Friedland, Harry Cooler, H. Joseph Hyman, Louis Segar, Jack Kammins, Edgar Fassburg and Saul Solomon. Miss Helen Louise Quig will give an organ program preceding the review at the temple, 10th and Delaware sts.

Mrs. Lemons

To Be Speaker

Mrs. Kenneth Lemons will review “The Robe” (Lloyd Douglas) on the program of the Mary Conkle circle, Third Christian church, Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Catherine Wilding, 3217 Rader st. Luncheon, served at 12:30 p. m, will be followed by a business session at which Mrs. Edward Donaldson will preside. Mrs. George Leonard will lead devotions. Assisting Mrs. Wilding will be Mesdames John C. Kreber, H. C. Briles, Carrie Cliffétd, A.D. Bossen, J. C. Carrington, R. D. Barnes, H.K. Thatcher, Harry Mounts and C. C. Clark. .

Dedicate Rooms at Camp Atterbury

The Cheer Broadcasters, Inc. yesterday became the first of the 184 organizations affiliated with the Indianapolis Council of Women to furnish a day room at Camp Atterbury. Delta Delta club was the second to donate furnishings. The rooms were dedicated yesterday in an Armistice day observance at the camp. Mrs. Cecile T. Vestal, president, and Mesdames Wolf Sussman, Oran C. Wilson and E. H. Niles represented the Cheer Broadcasters at

the dedication ceremonies. Mrs. William Steck, president of

{Delta Delta, and Mesdames Albert

Falge, William Tudor, Max Homer and J. Francis Huffman were at the camp for the opening of their room.

Garden Club to Meet

“Scenes from Brown County” will be the subject of Mrs. C. A. Breece tomorrow at a 2 p. m. meeting of

jacket. but an inch of her honey colored hair. She has bright blue eyes, is fair skinned, ruddy cheeked. She wears lipstick emphatically, no other makeup. Her hands look—well, like a mechanic's. 2 8 8 SHE EATS LUNCH, from her lunch box which she has filled, along with Russell's, under electric light at home, 16 miles away by bus. The 6:30 quitting whistle starts her and Russell home. Isabel has a nine room house. two children, no servant. The house is a leftover from different days, when Isabel merely ran the home that Russell, a successful young lawyer, built. Russell’s health broke a few years ago. Isabel opened a small shop specializing in maternity and baby clothes. That was fine until war shortages, especially of rubber things like baby pants, came along. She sold out, used her money to keep the family going while she and Russell trained for war jobs. “Model again? That's shot, too, now. Even young girls are having a tough time. And I'm 38. Besides, in a war plant you get a chance to be somebody!”

On Friday night Isabel stops on the way to pick up Gloria, eight, and Rusty, six, at their boarding school. The kids help with the week's cleaning and shopping on Saturday. Isabel still wears her slacks because it saves time and this is the day she washes all the overalls and the children’s good clothes, and prepares for company. The guests are “friends from Manhattan and long ago—plenty of them, and we have one big time,” she says. On Sunday they take the children to the movies and back to school. Gloria and Rusty have no use for boarding school and slacks— and neither does Isabel, really. So she means it when she says she’ll be back in her home and baby

victory, for she’s Irish and fighting mad politically; but personally she’d hate to have her job fold up. Fact is, she hated it when the plant adjusted schedule to women working by cutting hours from 55 to 50 a week. “I was an isolationist,” Kathryn said. She's very quick, intelligent looking, articulate. “I was a big

She decided to get all the right war workers made her feel mighty spools for each assembly box to-!good. But he will have to undergether in the right place, at her stand when Kathryn says the best elbow. Just then she spied her thing of all about her job is that hacksaw, with its strong steel bars it has made her a hero to her own a few inches apart, its sharp edge! family. and handle at one end. “Strangest thing,” she said hapSuspend the right spools inside|pily, “my family really’ thinks I'm those bars, she thought, and they|building these Thunderbolts all by will pull out and snap off on the|myself.”

Erwin Cox of this city and Mrs. William A. Kruge, Mrs. Ray Pickel, Misses Katherine Pfeffer, Georgiann Hayes and Marjorie Deutscher, all of Indianapolis. ' Cétp. Wood will be stationed at the Ft. Monmouth officers” training school at Red Bank, N. J, and Mrs. Wood will be at home in Indian-

fered for child care.

OCD headquarters,

Stayton,

apolis.

assistants.

and supervising private homes ofe

Volunteers will be registered from, 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. tomorrow at World War Memorial bldg, by Mrs. Chester chairman of the OCD training class committee, and her

shop when the war’s done,

If OPA Carries

How will the OPA do necessary to ration the goods she has hoarded. This is no idle threat. It has already been done. In order to obtain ration books for sugar, gasoline or heating oil, Mrs. Gotrocks had to state how many pounds or gallons she already had and that amount was subtracted from her quota, But, again, if she gets away with it and keeps it a dead secret that her cellar is full of hoarded foods (and she’ll have a hard time keeping it a secret) the chances are she'll meet with disaster.

So She Threw It Out

Like the woman whose husband urged her to turn in the 100 pounds or sugar she had bought prior to rationing. Finally one day he telephoned her from downtown and, disguising his voice, told her he was a government inspector and that he would be out shortly to confiscate the sugar. ed home that d him of the

down the drain.” Then there is the s

in her cellar. The cellar was flooded and all the labels on the cans came off. Now dinner is always a surprise. She never knows until she opens a can whether she is having corned beef hash, orange juice, green olives or spaghetti with sauce for dinner. And if she opens three different cans she may find herself supping on three different brands of chocolate sauce.

Millers Don’t Hoard

Even flour mills never keep more than a 15-day supply of flour on hand. They have ideal conditions in which to keep it but still it spoils. So if Mrs. Gotrocks thinks she is smart by hoarding hundreds of pounds of flour, the chances are that every bag will be maggot-infested and good only for the garbage col-

girl in the first war and I thought this was the same thing over again. Couldn’t understand why my brother, an officer at West Point, wanted us in. Well, Pearl Harbor changed my mind. I wanted to get in myself. I wanted to—I had to—help get things moving. Besides, I'd had a great plenty of housework for my taste, having raised a daughter to 12, a son to 10.” ) ” i ® SHE HAD BEEN the family breadwinner, also—a chain store food demonstrator. Her elderly mother lived with them and helped

a bit, but Kathryn was responsible ||

and did everything, even installed the storm windows. They put her to work on “the heart of the plane.” She points by a glance at the Thunderbolt’s instrument board. Kathryn's job is to attach each of scores of wires to its right place. : Each assembly box in the board has different kinds of wires, and each may vary from one instrument board to the next. So it's necessary to follow a diagram and to identify each wire by wrapping it with a numbered cellophane identification tape. : Tapes used to be kept on spools, like scotch tape, in metal cabinets about 50 yards from Kathryn's bench. She had to walk and hunt for them in the cabinet, many times a day. She had to cut up the sticky stuff with searched-for scissors or screwdriver or hacksaw, and lay them out handy, before going on with her work. “Golly, she thought, “if I wasted that many steps in a kitchen or that much time with scissors and

Hoarding Foodstuffs Won't Pay

Out Plans

By ANN FRANCE WILSON Times Special Writer .

WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.—Hoarding seldom pays—and it will pay even less in the future if the office of price administration carries through on its determination to prevent Mrs. ple who don’t have the ready cash to salt away cellar hoards. it? By telling Mrs. Rich that whatever she

hoards will be deducted from her ration if the time comes when it’s

Rich from taking advantage of peo-

And silk and nylon hose which have been lying idle in a drawer will probably go to pieces the first time worn. So hoarding is a bad proposition. all around, reports to the OPA prove, and there is many a repentant housewife who wishes she had never received an “inside tip” on what the next rationed item was going to be. .

dt

Art Students Plan Luncheon

The Art Students league will have its annual luncheon, in cone nection with tne art show of the club, in Block's Terrace tearoom tomorrow. Mrs. Ethel Dawson is in charge

of arrangements. As a special feature of the occasion, each person will receive a 5 by 7 painting done by one of the members of the club. Each member has painted at least one work fo be used as a. favor. Following the lunchéon, guests and members will visit the exhibition of paintings by the club on display in Block's auditorium. Special guests will be Miss Jane Messick and Simon Baus who were judges this year for the show, and Edward Sitzman, instructor of the group. ‘

Dr. Segar to Lead

Panel Discussion

'A round-table discussion op “The Essentials of a Victorious Peace,” planned by the Indianapolis alumnae of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority for Monday evening in the Woman's Department club, will fea-

ture Dr. Louis Segar as discussion |

leader. ic The event is to be the only evening session of the year, and mem-

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