Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 May 1943 — Page 12
omemaking— The Lowly Pancake 'Dresses Up' to Help Out With the Meat Shortage
PANCAKES ARE THE NEWEST recruits to war duty. homely flapjacks to effete crepes suzettes, they can be made to stretch your limited meat supply and also add a fillip to wartime menus.
A run-of-the-skillet pancake can be prettied up, and incidentally | by a
given the extra protein value it needs as a meat -#prinkling of ground nuts or grated cheese.
Blind School ‘Graduation Exercises Set |,
A concert and the annual commencement exercises have been planned for the coming week-end at the Indiana School for the Blind. Austin M. Harl, Evansville, and Miss Hazel Johnson, La Grange, will be graduated in the commencement exercises to be held at 8 p .m. Friday in the school auditorium, 7726 College ave. The class address, “How Much , | Do You Weigh,” will be given by the Rev. Alexander Sharp and the Miss Pancake, 1943, dolls up for jhyocation and benediction by the “War service. |Rev. W. E. Gillett of the Broad ’ Ripple Methodist church.
“The Prayer Perfect”
“extender,”
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Extra protéin value also can be
i r 7 - Fen Ww farshy Be Jap 8S. M. Whinery, principal of the 08 -théfn with Jill, IisieR ~ school, will present the diplomas. water, or adding soy bean flour in gies Mary Todoran will sing “The, the proportion of one part to five or ‘Prayer Perfect” (Riley-Stenson).| gix parts of the dry ingredients. Robert Lambert is superintendent | Some ready - to - cook “mixes” 0f the school. . : : in them. and, The concert will begin at 8 p. m, have soy bean flour in : \Thursday in the auditorium. The these save time for the busy War ,japists will be Misses Elizabeth worker. Another way to enrich pan- Butler, Ruth Tull, Patricia Hoffman, cakes is to use flour of the whole Sally Green, Johnson and Doris
From
Army Phila. QM. Depot photo. Military uniform styles change as new wars bring néw needs, and in this war, Uncle Sam is doing right well as a costumer extraordinary for nurses who serve with the armed forces. Army nurses, except those serving in Iceland and such coolish climes, are now pressing up their natty new summer uniform, pietured at left. above. It's of brown-and-white striped seersucker, and, with officer's cap and jacket, is designed for off-duty wear overseas. Under the jacket is worn a one-piecé wrap-around dress which, with matching nurse's cap, is used on duty in overseas field hospitals. Over it can be worn the olive drab cape. Out of the need for practical, “tough-terrain” clothes discovered by nurses at Bataan and Corregidor, the army quartermastér corps evolved the new “battle dress” uniform pictured at right, above. It’s
64 Girls Enlis
wheat, buckwheat or cornmeal with |
the germ left in. Serving the cakes with crisp bacon ‘or a bit of sausage also will make a little meat go a longer way. For a ‘different’ flavor, raisins, currants or blueberries right into the batter.
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Screentime Again—
SPRINGTIME MEANS scréentime ggain. Use paint to £creens that have hibernated
the storeroom all winter. It pre-| : 1 : j/are Miss Anna Marie Jack, voice; | 3 & |
Screen | Miss Olive Kiler, violin, and Miss!
vents rust and corrosion and wil keep them from breaking. patches will take care of those tiny tears.
» 2 ” There are special dirt removers for painted surfaces that have be-| ¢ome dulled or stained, and a gmell remover to do away with the, fumes of re-painting.
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‘New' Awnings— . THERE'S A PAINT that will congeal dirt and stains on your awn-| ings and perk them up generally, | making them water-résistant and| fade-proof at the same time. And| What's left over can be used to @dvantage on deck chairs, convertible car tops and venetian blind : tapes.
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: Before applying a rust-prevénting jpaint. be certain that fixtures are oroughly clean.
‘New Classes To Be Opened By Red Cross
Men and women may enroll in a ‘15-hour water safety instructors’ course to begin at 7 p. m. next Monday at the Y. W. C. A. and run through May 28. Gilliom Gettys, national Red Cross field director, will be the instruétor. Water safety instructors whose certificates have expired may take the gourse for reappointment providing their training dates since 1938. ” 2 2 Miss Lois Swoboda of the Indiana university medieal center will leave today for active duty in the navy nurse corps at the naval training gtation at Memphis, Tenn. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis 8woboda, 1606 Woodlawn ave.
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‘ The Red Cross nutrition food demonstrations committee will have #& canning school during the sumfier at the chapter house, 1126 N. Meridian st. Women who are interested may register there. Requests for food demonstrations, free to groups of 15 or more, should
be addressed or telephoned to the,
‘ ¢hapter house. According to Mrs. | Aneta Vogler, director, in each demonstration the food is actually prepared and either cooked or canned. These projects are to help
stir| during the processional. | phone solo will be given by Mr, Harl
'Clevenger and Erskine Muller. Glee Club te Sing
Miss Catharina Martin, organist, will accompany the mixed - chorus A saxo-
accompanied by Miss Johnson and a violin solo by Miss Betty Wright. Also participating in the program will be the Girls’ Glee club and the isehool orchestra.
| piano instructor. Serving with her
Harriet Cromie, organ.
500 Expected To Attend
Convention
The first annual convention of the central district Lutheran Women’s Missionary league will be held Thursday at the Claypool hotel
|Five hundred delegates and guests]
from Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia are expected. The principal speaker will be the Rev. Fred Wambsganss, Ft. Wayne, who will talk on “Working the Plan” during the afternoon session. Registration of delegates and guests at 9 a. m. will be followed by a devotional period conducted by the Rev. R. G. Trautmann, convention chaplain. Mrs. Sadie Fulk Roehrs, Ft. Wayne, league president, will be in charge of business sessions. A luncheon will be served at 12:30 p. m.
Election Set
On the agenda for the sessions are election of officers and naming of delegates to the general convention next August in Ft. Wayne. Miss Mildred Reimer and Irving Polkening will sing, accorhpanied by Mrs. Otto H. Lawrenz. The Rev. Walter PF. Lichtsinn, Hammond, president of the central district, Evangelical Lutheran church, Missouri synod, will sérve as counsellor at the sessions.
Chairmen Named
Committee chairmen are Mrs. Arthur Brenn, registration; Mrs. William F. Kaiser, general; Mrs. Carl C. Koepper, reception; Mrs. Edward H. Meyer, housing; Mrs. G. F. Lichtsinn, vprograin and publicity, and Mrs. J. F. Mussmann, arrangements. Local women's societies belonging to the league and serving as hestesses are those affiliated with the Edgewood Calvary, Emmaus, Grace, St. Jghn's of Five Points, St. Paul's, St. Peter's, Trinity and Zion of New Palestine churches. .
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{ Mothers’ Club to
Install Officers
housewives in planning wartime ameals and in canning victory garden Produce.
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Two new classes gtaff assistance work have been announced by Mrs. Royer K. Brown, «ghairman. A night class will open #May 26 on the 9th floor, Indian- < &polis Athletic club. %' The meetings will be held on esday, Wednesday and Thursay nights for three weeks. Regisration for the class may be made “at the chapter house, -1126 N. MeSridian st. Ng The final class of the spring seaSon was held yesterday in the World “War Memorial building.
=
3 {rogram at Church
The Mothers’ Service club of the § Washington Street Methodist church will meet Thursday evening ‘at the church. The program will “include a speaker and special music.
in Red Cross|
Officers will. be installed by the ‘Little Shepherd Kindergarten | Mothers’ club at 7:30 p. m. today lin the home of Mrs. Gene Barr, 814 Kappes st. Mrs. Bennie Ford will be in charge of the ceremony which is to be followed by a business session. The officers are Mrs. Barr, president; Mrs. Roy Stout, viee president; Mrs. Ford, second vice president; Mrs. Harriet Conroy and Mrs. Willard Willoughby, reeording and corresponding secretaries, and Mrs. Dale Oliver, treasurer. Mrs. Stout is in charge of transportation and Mrs. William = H. Shepherd is program chairman. The group’s study theme next year will be “Child Care.” t :
To Give Card Party
The Ladies’ auxiliary to the South Side Turners will give a card party at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Turners hall, 306 Prospect st.
—for Every Occasion . . .
Gay LY,
Buy U. S. War Bonds
we
J The ALLIED
in advanced combat zones.
winter uniform of dark olive drab and gloves,
a two-piece herringbone twill suit, worn with steel helmet and leggings
In addition to these outfits, army nurses have the familiar dress uniform of dark blue, piped with medical corps maroon; a smart new
wool, with khaki shirt and necktie,
shoulder-strap handbag and shoes of tobacto brown.
rejuvenate| Miss Mabel C. Leive is the head . in of the music departmicnt and the)
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| been married 16 years and have two. lovely children. My husband al-| ways seemed so proud of me but! eight years ago my best friend asked | him for a date. She, too, was married. He went with her a couple of times and felt ashamed. Then another woman, also supposed to be my friend, asked him to go out with her. This continued for six years. Then the third came along and he played around with her for two years. All this without my knowledge. I had been a good . wife and mother and I have proof of that. His conscience bothered him so much that he laid the whole story before me a couple of months ago. He said he was sorry but the very next week he went with the third woman again. I know she is completely out of his system but I will never be able to trust him again. I am going to get revenge on these women. Somehow they will suffer as I have suffered. One, I will get at through her son. This is one way I can get even. The other will receive a nice surprise. She will not be able to show her face again. It is all planned. Then the end for me. That is my own decision. I have joined a onewoman suicide squad. These people deserve punishment just as surely as the Japs or Germans because they are doing the same thing. They are killing people, because you can't live with a broken heart. I hope this letter will wake up a few of these saboteurs here at home. My husband had suffered. He said it nauseates him now to think that he could have had any thing to do with people so low and common, but that doesn’t help matters now. It is too late. “Ii I can get revenge today, My life I'll gladly give, Because once my broken heart stops beating, I know that I shall live.” ANONYMOUS. ” ” ” Answer — What about the two lovely children? Do they deserve to have their lives ruined because their mother is
Woman's Party
Council Is Formed
GREENWICH, Conn., May 18 (U. P.).—Mrs. Nora Stanton Barney, granddaughter of thé woman suffrage pioneer, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, announced today thé forming of an advisory council to thé National Woman's party. Mrs. Barney will be chairman of the council. Other members will be Dr. Mary E. Woolley, president emeritus of Mount Holyoke college; Miss Annie W. Goodrich, former head of the Yale School of Nursing; Fannie Hurst, author; Mary Pickford, actress and producer; Mrs. Josepha Whitney, New Haven, fors mer state and national officer of the League of Women .Voters; Mrs. Thomas N. Hepburn, Hartford, for mer president of the Connecticut Woman Suffrage association, noted birth control advocate and mother of Movie Actress Katharine Hepburn, and Fladys Swarthout, the singer.
Mrs. James Monical To Entertain Club
The Liberty Garden Homemakers’ club will have an all-day meeting
| enlisted in the Altrusa 4-H ‘junior
In Victory Canning Corps
With a total of 64 girls, Franklin township is the first in the coun-
4-H victory canning corps being sponsored by the Indianapolis Altrusa club and the Marion county extension service. The girls will do home canning
try to turn in enlispments in the| &
can foods. . “ The Franklin township 4-H ghls will co-opératé with women of the township and hold two canning demonstration meetings this month.
the Franklin Oenter school next Tuesday, and the second will be at the Acton school on May 26. Miss Janice M. Bérlin, home demonstration agent with the Purdue university éxtension division, will give the demonstrations.
Corps Members
The Franklin township girls enlisted in the corps are: . Acton—Margaret Adcock, Virginia Caughey, Margaret Downtain, Jean Marie Maze, Margie Jean McDonald, Margaret A. Miller, Ruby Milner, Busan Moore, Joah Nichols, Jean Reasoner, Patty Showalter, Annette Smith, Exene Tucker, Patty A. Weidman and Virginia Windhorst. Bunker Hill—Alice Bragg, Edith | M. Dinger, Donna Green, Dora | Belle Harris, Ruth Milner, Dottie L. Rains, Peggy Rockey, Shirley Russéll, Mareella Tipton, Betty White, Geneva White, Barbara Wilson, Erma Wilson, Malgery Wolcott and Lois Wulf. Emerson and Churchman Aves.— Icke Vanderbaan, Francés Vanderbaan, Betty Hall, Wynona Hubble, Ozora Mae Jones, Ruth Lame, Marille Risher, Bonihielou Risher, Virginia Ross. New Bethel—Rosalee Adock, Joan M. Becker, Wilma Boyer, Charlene Ann Brooks, Patty Brown, Zoretta Mae Byfield, Marjorie Cook, Clarice Clunie, Patricia Cunningham, Gloria Bvérett, Margaret Everett, Barbara Hendricks, Joan Hurléy, Ethel Huston, Marjorie Koopman, Doris Kroéning, Bellada Michael, Lois Ramsey, Norma Robertson, Peggy Sexson, Dorothy Taylor, Ruth Thomas, Jean Toon, Helen Wilkins and Ann Woosley. Mrs. Mildred Lawrence, vocational home economics teacher in the township, has charge of the canning program. Miss Margery Wolcott, In« diana canning champion in 1942, is leadership corps and will assist girls | in solving their canning problems.
School Arranges May Day Program
A May day musical program will bé presented at school 7 at 2 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. Grace Heard will direct the musical selections, and Miss Eva Y. Wiles, principal, will speak on “Acegepting Our Wartime Responsibil-
this summer, releasing commercial- | ly eanned food for the armed forces, | lerid léasé and civillang unablé to
The first will bé in New Bethel at |
|gate, E. E. Owens and Ada Nichol-
Cpl. Albert Hodges 8 4 8
List Hostesses For W.C. TU. Tea Friday
One of a group of Ft. Benjamin Harrison service men who will appeat Friday afternoon at the military tea to be sponsored by the Central W. 0. T. U. in Ayres’ auditorium will be Cpl. Albert Hodges, a member of the circus family, the Hodginis. Cpl. Hodges also has done radio speeialty work. He and other soldiers will present
tiey, m. 'D. Terry, George Tizzer,
Blanche Bland, Rudolph Johnson, E. V. Jones, George Little, B. A. Tobey, Charles Muir and Alice Wood. Also Mesdames Roy Carter, C. H. Burgess, B. V, Canfield, A. B. Carr, Iona Conover, G. V, Carrier, Harry Stitle, Burton Knight, Guy O. Carpenter, Nettie Lewark, W. H. Link, F. N. Daniels, Harold Harley, Reedy, J. F, Cottingham, E. A. Sherman, J. H. Frest, Ethel Hislop, Robert McKay, M. D. Willey, H, L. Russell, V. H. Funke, C. G. Eicher, T. R. Ratcliff and Elmer Stewart. Additional reservations are those of Mesdames John Sink, Roy Heishman, H. D. O'Brien, J. G. Watkins, | Hobert Wilson, E. W, Munson, Carl {Croas, F. F. Hutchins, R. H. Hun-
jon. Misses Rosemary Little, Ann Anderson, Senora B. Pruden, Grace L. Dollens, Emma C. Ronecker, Jean Coffin, Jean Kirlin, Alta Hansel, Mary Alice Free and Adele Storck.
School Study Group
To Close Season
The sixth and final meeting this year of the school 84 study group will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow at
the school. The discussion topic will be “This New World—Is It Brave?” Speakers will be Mesdames! Arthur H. Lacey, Alexander Mc-! Millan and Arthur L. McCullough! and Miss Elizabeth H. Scott, school: prineipal. Mrs. Bert McCaminon is the chairman. |
Spring Formal
\ sd 5
Is Announced
+ A spring formal dance of the Irvington assembly will be given at Cifaldi's Dream Barn from 9 p. m. te midnight Saturday, Heading the hostesses for the evening will be Mrs. Charles D. Vawter, president of the Irvington Union of Clubs, which sponsors the dances. Others will be Mrs. C. Darragh Bayly and Mrs. F. P. Backer, éochairmen ot the dance ecommitteé: Mrs. A. E. Walker, treasurer, and Mesdames M. L. Payne, A. C. Van Arendonk, M. G. Miller, Virgil Sly, William T. Rose and R. A, Ooryé. Dorothy Davaul and her erchestra will provide thé music for the party which will bé the last this season, Admittance will be by membership tickets and by guest tickets obtained through Mrs. Backer.
we
Superfluous Hair
on the face, throat, arms, le ra pant of the body where a ha 2 No th unwanted can be permisnen: nd painlessly removed th modern a sult r
very little cost to you, without charge and restits g Prices moderate. of INDIANAPOLIS, Iie. MA-7965 202 BIG FOUR BLDG. Meridian at Maryland Fiftéenth Year in fndidnapeils
ion eed.
a musical program with Sgt. Carl|
Baker as master of ceremonies. Chaplain A. G. Myrice will give the invocation when the program begins at 2 o'clock and Col. James M. Churchill, commanding officer at the fort, will be introduced by Mrs. W. W. Reedy, Central W.C.T.U. president. Capt, Elmer L. Sherwood of the public relations committee at Ft. Harrison, will introduce Sgt. Baker. Mrs. Paul Halliday, North Manchester, state W.C.T.U. president, will be a special guest at the tea, Other state officers expected to attend are Mrs. S. C. Stimson, Terre Haute, treasurer, and Mrs. Mary Bly, Modod, trustee, Reserve Tables
Numerous table reservations have been made for the tea—among them those of Mesdames 8. M. Weir, D. O. Taylor, C. W. Ackman, E. D.F. James, Burt 8. Taylor, R, T. Shaffer, C. M. Cannaday, Emogene Canaday, Orval Jeffers, Stella Cotton, Henry Berger, Florence Greene, F. P. McOoy, R. H. White, James Gil-
(liland, Sarah Ernst, Frank Herman,
Lora B. Hughes, William C. Hartinger, V. W, Tevis, Julia Birk, Wells V. Bishop, Howard J, Baumgartel and F. A. Durnell. Others who will be hostesses are Mesdames T. B. Eaton, Roy Egbert, Harry Cooper,” Charles W, Field, F. C. Utterback, Robert M. Bland, O. W. Fifer, William Forney, A. A. Honeywell, A. B. Henderson, Samuel Ashby, Felix T. McWhirter, A. A. Hess, Titus Lowe, Lela M. Lee, E. 8. Eberhardt, J, H. Westbay, Margaret
Thursday at the home of Mrs. James N :
Monical, Independence rd. A busi-
ness session at 10:30 a. m. will be| i
followed by a covered-dish lunchs eon at noon. : The group will work on its war project in the afternoon and will sew toy animals for the Riley Cheer guild. Mrs. Roxie Moody and Mrs. Robert Maples are assistant host©SSES.
woman's son? Does he deserve punishment for what his mother has done? I'm afraid that you aren't a wise enough woman to take justice in your own hands. I suggest that you give up planning revenge on the women whom you hate and concentrate on taking care of your children whom you love. In other words, let love win out over hate. You can't destroy your enemies without also destroying the peace and happiness of your children. Which is more important to you? JANE JORDAN
our problems in a letter to Jane
uhhappy?
And what about the other
coast" to the
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FLORISTS ASS'N.
Put Torann whe will answer your questions in this column daily.
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