Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1943 — Page 12
Patriotic Society to Dine Tomorrow: Reservations Made for Club Party
THE INDIANA CHAPTER, Daughters of Founders and Patriots of America, will install its newly elected officers at a 1 p. m. luncheon tomorrow in the Propylaeum. Mrs. Henry C. Ketcham, retiring president, will preside at the luncheon, which will be the chapter’ $ closing event
this season. Mrs. Ernest DeWolfe Wales will take office as president of the organization. Serving under her will be Mrs. Charles Albert Gall, vice president; Mrs. Loren F. Priest of Brookville and Mrs, Charles R. Weiss, corresponding and recording secretaries; Miss Harriet Barker of Danville, treasurer; Mrs. Ralph Ruschhaupt, historian, "and Mrs. LeRoy H. Millikan, registrar,
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Entertaining guests at the opening luncheon-bridge at High- - {and Country club tomorrow will be Mesdames Wilbur Shook, E. M. Curry, Charles E. Rimp, J. B. McGuire, E. O. Marquette, M. R. Clark and Miss Josephine O’Brien, all of whom have made reservations for four persons. : Mrs. Louise J. Bernatz will be hostess to a party of six with © Mrs. William J. Freaney of Somerville, N. J., as the honor guest. Mrs. Freaney is visiting here with her mother, Mrs. Ben Brosnan, and her sister, Mrs. Walter Stuhldreher. Others at her table will be Mesdames Carl Habich, Oscar Barry, Ray L. Reed, Bernard J. Larkin and Clarence Sweeney. :
Shower to Honor Bette Carr
MISS BETTY CRAMER will entertain with a crystal shower for Miss Bette Anne Carr at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Cramer. The hostess will be matron of honor when Miss Carr becomes the bride of Lt. Guy F. Boyd Jr. next month. The bride-to-be’s mother, Mrs. Jack C. Carr, and the ‘mother of the prospective bridegroom, Mrs. Guy F. Boyd, will be among the guests. Mrs. Cramer will assist her daughter at the party. Additional guests will be Mesdames Walter Stone, Joe Goode, Roy Kidd, J. W. Carr, Orville Scott, Herman Leith; Richard Pempletorn and Misses Helen Shumaker, Dorothy Groene, Shirley Snyder, Marignne Lenahan, Judy Aldrich, Mary Catherine Stair, Patricia Reese, Betty Freeman, Shirley St. Pierre and Miss Betty Meguler of Marion. :
. Woman's Club Issues Yearbook
»
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+ © 1920 by the Friends of American
Phere,” Mr. Peat said.
CLUBWOMEN, SUPPOSEDLY ON VACATION for the summer months, already are hard at work planning next season’s programs. Among the first to turn in a yearbook for events scheduled next fall and winter was the Indianapolis Woman's club, headed hy Mrs. Albert L. Rabb. Meetings will be held bi-monthly at 2:30 p. m, Fridays in the Propylaeum clubhouse. The opening party will be a president's day celebration Oct. 1. ‘Mrs. Genevieve Scoville, chairman or arrangements, will be assisted by Mesdames Lucia Holliday Macbeth, Grier M. Shotwell, Archer C. Sinclair and Miss Nora Thomas. Other outstanding events will be guest days, scheduled for Nov. 19 and April 21; election of officers, March 3, and a reception for new members and annual reports at the final meeting, June 2.
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Serving under Mrs. Rabb for the year will be Mrs. Daniel I. Glossbrerinet, vice president; Mrs. Charles F. Meyer Jr. and Mrs. William Mode Taylor, recording and corresponding secretaries, and Mrs: Homer Hamer, treasurer. The executive committee includes Miss Thomas, chairman, assisted by Mesdames Lee Burns, W. Maxwell Coppock, Robert L. Glass and Miss Nancy L. Moore. Members of the rdom committee are Mrs. Shotwell, chairman, and Mesdames Louis H. Haerle, Samuel R. Harrell, Addison J. Parry and Paul Robertson. The personnel of the membership committee, headed by Mrs. Robert B. Failey, includes Mesdames Benjamin D. Hitz, John E. Hollett Jr., George Rose, Harry V. Wade, Guy A. Wainwright and Miss Scoville,
‘Jade Bowl’ Is Picture Featured At Rauh Memorial Library; Will Be on Display Until July 20
The second of a “picture-of-the-month” series from the permanent collection of the John Herron Art museum is now on display at the Rauh Memorial library, 3024 N. Meridian st, Miss Beatrice. Geddes, branch librarian, has announced. The picture, which will be exhibited until July 20, is an oil painting by Dines Carlsen, entitled “Jade Bowl.” This is the first time the museum has lent pictures to a public library, according to Wilbur Peat, museum |§ director. It is part of a museum project to bring about a wider appreciation of fine works of art. 3 In selecting the pictures, Mrs. | 3 James W. Fesler, president of the Art Association of Indianapolis, pointed out that the Indianapolis public library had been so -consistly helpful and generous in its atti-|& tude toward the Indianapolis Art|} association that a sort of lendlease agreement seemed well in order. “The directors of the Art association are happy to share some of its treasures with the Norary,? Mrs. Fesler said.
Picture Was Gift
“Jade Bowl” was presented to the John Herron Art institute in
+The blue-green “Jade Bowl” in the foreground of Dines Carlsen’s picture, now on display at the Rauh Memorial library, contrasts with the larger objects of gold and green. The artist, born in 1901, is one of the foremost painters of the United States.
No Food, No Stains
Shortages of food are relieving shortages of textiles, for restaurateurs have reported a decrease of “from 20 to 30 per cent” in the fre-
quency of stains from fruits and juices since these foods appear less ‘often upon the tables.
Fotar See
Art, an Indianapolis organization. The painting is about 30 by 35 inches. An American painter of DanishAmerican descent, Mr. Carlsen has specialized in still life subjects, compositions of earthenware and metal objects from foreign lands. “His pictures convey an extraordinary feeling of surface textures of objects and subtle harmonies of ceclors, combined with an appealing effect of light and atmos“They are both literal and imaginative.”
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The approaching marriage of
‘Will Be Wed Thursday 4
Wright is announced by her mother, Mrs. Harlen Crouch. The marriage will be at 8:30 p. m. Thursday in the Irvington Presbyterian church. Mr. Wright is the son of Mrs. Gertrude Wright.
Miss Vivian Crouch to Donald F.
’
antless home.
their products for the post-war market. This producer of plate and windshield glass doesn’t intend to make the appliances itself, but it modestly suggests a new kind of stove, a new kind of refrigerator, new cabinets, a new layout all around.
Naturally the company offers a lot of glass—a transparent refrigerator, an oven mostly glass, cabinets with doors of fluted glass, dining table with glass surface, walls of decorated glass, .ceiling of glass fiber. It's not the glass house, but the next thing to it.
Designers Impressed
A dozen or more designers who are busy on end-of-the-war products for American manufacturers have visited Toledo to look at this kitchen-for-better-days, and they are said to have been impressed. They have themselves been sketching up modéls of practically everything. Like Libbey-Owens-Ford, they and their employers are counting on new design to lift the country past the slump that could follow the end of the initial buying wave after the war. The new kitchen is largely the work of H. Creston Doner, head of L-O-F’s department of design. His wife also contributed ideas, and modified some of his. All the equipment is designed to be closed when not in use, and hence the room is all but unrecognizable as a kitchen. The sink and the stove — except for a separate oven—have plywood covers which fold down and these convert them into counters flush with other counters or work surfaces which run around the room. The aim is to give the room usefulness as a game or study room or extra living space when meals are not in preparation.
Refrigerator ‘New’
The refrigerator has been turned on its side, using an idea borrowed from the meat-market display cabinets, and like these, it has glass doors. But its base has been lifted off the floor a foot, and like all other equipment in the room, the space beneath is clear. Its top is at the. same height as the work surfaces which run around the room, except that a portion of it is taken up by a glass cabinet for glassware and dishes. Within, the separate compartments of the refrigerator have controlled temperatures for each. The cooking unit is intended to be eleetric, though gas may be used. Like the other devices, it is built in
_ | —attached to the wall without legs.
Its depth is 12 inches and its area is only about a third that of the ordinary stove, but the use of square cooking vessels gives it the usual capacity. Everything in View
Heat-resisting glass covers enable the cook to see what's happening in a pot without raising its cover. The same thing is possible in the combiA hood like that on a steam table, but made of curved and insulated heattempered glass, permits a full view of the roast. The inner covers over the cooking unit and the sink and dishwasher are of opaque glass. The outer covers are of the same plywood with which the work tables along the wall are surfaced. Everything in .the wall cabinets
‘| and refrigerator is open to view.
A number of gadgets have also been added—several adaptations of fluorescent lamps under the lids and hoods, an automatic toaster built into the stove, a built-in mixer, built-in waffle iron, the motordriven spit in the oven-barbecue, and a shelved turntable in the refrigerator. The kitchen windows are of a double glass with insulating space between.
Has Storage Room Mr. Doner expects | some of the
acincent sorage. room
‘Kitchen of Tomorrow’ Is Made For the Servantless Home; It’s Revolutionary in Design
By JOHN W. LOVE Times Special Writer TOLEDO, June 29.—Jobs will be so plentiful in the world of tomorrow that few women will want to do housework for wages. This is the bet on which the “kitchen of tomorrow” has been designed—for the serv-
The Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Co. is showing here its conception of what the makers of kitchen equipment ought to shoot for in restyling
with deep-freeze units for vegetables, and even a vault for fur storage. The spun-glass ceiling material was recently developed by the Owens-Corning Glass Co., which has no connection with L-O-F. The aim of the new kitchen is obviously to sell glass, but it suggests so many restylings of existing equipment as to make it clear that designers will be able, with little trou-
ble, to make the pre-war kitchen obsolete.
Literana Group Sets Party for Founders’ Day
The Literana club will hold its annual founders’ day dinner at 7 p. m. tomorrow in the Colonial tearoom. Following, members will play bridge. The dinner-bridge will be the club’s closing meeting this season. The club was founded five years ago by a group of friends for the purpose of self-expression, effective speech and appreciation of the arts. Standing committees include Mrs. M. J. Fitzgerald and Mrs. Joseph Schmidt, art and sculpture; Mrs. George Green and Mrs. Harold Stricklin, books; Mrs. Fred Garrett and Mrs. Glen Fately, current events; Mrs. Bernard Blinn and Mrs. Viola Brewer, music; Mrs. A. E. Bloemaker and Mrs. R. D. Gunderman, plays and movies, and Mrs. Bernice Mudge, poetry. Newly elected officers are Mrs. Fitzgerald, president; Mrs. Green, vice president; Mrs. Brewer, secretary, and Mrs. Gunderman, treasurer.
Attend Meeting
Members of Catherine Merrill tent 9, Daughters of Union Veterans of the civil war, met yesterday at Ft. Friendly.
Bride
Bretzman photo.
Mrs. Walter H. Bodem was Miss Esther Gallatin before her marriage June 3 in the First Presbyterian church. She is the daugh-
Committeés
-| tion for the blind—Mrs. William E.
‘Mrs. Grosskopf and Mrs. W. D.
"| Keenan, C. J. Finch, Frederick G.
Named by Federation
Mrs. Alvin Johnson Lists Appointments
of the seventh district, Indiana Federation of Clubs, has appointed additional committees for the organization's coming season. The committees and their personnel include the youth co-opera-tion division—Mrs. Virgil A. Sly, chairman, Mrs. J. W. Atherton and | Mrs. Ross M. Halgren; physical handfcaps—Mrs. L. E.' Gausepohl, chairman, and Mrs. Paul V, Calet, vice chairman; Radium Committee, Inc.—Mrs. John F. Engelke, chairman, Mrs. A. J. Hueber, treasurer, and Mrs. Johnson, secretary; car service department—Mrs. T. C. Philpott, chairman; Americanization division—Miss Frances Mazur; agriculture division—Mrs. Calvin Perdue, Acton; blood donors — Mrs. Hiram E. Cunningham, chairman, Mrs. Royer Knode Brown, and Mrs. J. E. Barcus, and conservation of war material and salvage—Mrs. Clinton R. Gutermuth. Others are consumer problems— Mrs. H. H. Arnholter; first aid— Mrs. Thomas Hindman Jr.; gardens —Mrs. Louis Wolf, chairman, Mrs. Merritt E. Woolf, vice chairman; housing division—Mrs. Walter E. Wolf; industry division—Mrs. J. Francis Huffman, chairman, ‘Mrs. Izona Shirley, personnel, Mrs. Ida Broo, C. P. A, Miss Eunice Johnson, personnel, and Mrs. Forrest Dell Hackley; library division—Mrs. H. K. Fatout, chairman, and Mrs. Charles Seidensticker, vice chairman; nursing division, Mrs. Charles H. Smith; nutrition division—MTrs, Paul Stokes, chairman, and Mrs. O. F. Wadleigh, vice chairman; recreation division—Mrs. Earl C. Moomaw, chairman, ' Mrs. William E. MecGuire, vice chairman, Mesdames Paul W. Oren, Ben Robinson, Grow and Fred L. Pettijohn; Save The Children federation representative —Murs. C. F. Schmidt; stamps and bonds division—Mrs. Myron Spring,
Mrs. Alvin C. Johnson, president |
Card Party and
Conway, Miss Ann Conway, Glen Bixler, Fred Gladen, John Bergman, J. A. Patterson, Ernest Bureton, James Horning, Anthony Uphaus, P. A. Clements and Charles Bloom, The festival will open Thursday, July 8, with a card party at 1:45 p. m. All games will be played. Mrs. Gilbert Kahn is general chairman for the party. A spaghetti and meat ball dinner will be served from 5 to 7:30 p. m.
chairman, Mesdames E. L. Burnett, Charles Efroymson and Louis I. Bland, and war service recruiting— Mrs, Seward Baker, chairman, Mrs. Thomas Kimberlin Jr., vice chairman, Mrs.. H. H. Arnholter, consult-
Mrs. Fred Wagoner, WAAC recruiting, Mrs. Richard Smith and Mrs. James E. Allen, WAVES and SPARs recruiting, Mrs. James E. Allen, Mrs, Hueber, and Miss Thelma Hawthorne, nurse recruiting,
Special Committees
Federation special committees include: Clubwoman magazine—Mrs. W. D. Keenan, chairman; co-opera-
McGuire, chairman, Mrs. William E. Lincoln, vice chairman, Mesdames H. Henry Talbott, O. C. Dorrah, M. B. McDonald, J. M.
Whitehead, Fritz Wuelfing, Walter Woerner, A. J. Clark and Wilbur Washburn; federation pin—Mrs. E. A. Kelly, chairman; forum—Mrs. Clayton Ridge; junior clubwomen— Mrs. Seward Baker; motion pictures—Mrs. E. L. Burnett, chairman, Mrs. Emma Kominers, vice chairman, Mesdames Thomas Demmerly, Grosskopf, Louis Markun, J. Francis Huffman and Frederick G. Balz. Press and publicity—Mrs. R. F. Grosskopf, chairman; radio—Mrs. Brown," chairman, Mrs. Carl J. Weinhardt, vice chairman, Mrs. Joseph F. Hancock and Mrs. Baker; reciprocity—Mrs. Louis A. Kirch, chairman, Mrs, Edward L. Pedlow, vice chairman.
Additional Committees
Also appointed were, book memorial and tribute books—Mrs. Emil Soufflot, chairman, Mrs. Tilden F. Greer, vice chairman; budget—MTrs. William Hyde Pearl, chairman, Mesdames R. C. Hiller, A. C. Barbour and Joseph F. Hancock; constitution and by-laws—Mrs. Clarence Kittle, chairman, Mesdames A. C. Barbour, A. J. Hueber, and James C. Reynolds, Mrs. Walter H. Vinzant, parliamentary adviser; directory—Mrs. Maurice Eppert, chairman, and Mrs. Elmer Johnson, ads vertising chairman; and history—
Keenan. Hospitality committee Mrs. David Ross, chairman, Mesdames Grosskopf, Frank A. Symmes, W. D.
Balz, R. O. McAlexander, George M. Cornelius, H. K. Fatout, C. T. Austin, John T. Wheeler, John Downing Johnson, Ralph Kennington, Rumpler and McWhirter and club presidents; luncheon, platform and decorations committee—Mrs. O. M. Richardson, chairman, Mrs. Lloyd Pottenger, vice chairman, Mesdames Walter Stayton and George W. Horst; membership committee—Mrs. Hyde Pearl, chairman, Mrs. Seward Baker, co-chairman, Mesdames Grosskopf, Thornburgh and Pettijohn, and nominating committee—Mrs. Earl FP. Neill, chairman, Mesdames J. D. Johnson, Baker, A. C. Barbour and R. C. Downey. Final appointments are pages and door committee — Mrs. Gustav Dongue, chairman, Mrs. E. A. Kelly, vice chairman, Mrs. Robert H. Pyle; programs and departments—Mrs. Leonard Murchison, chairman, and department chairman; registration committee—Mrs. Roy E. Denny, chairman, Mesdames R. B. Malloch, J. H. Lombard and D. S. MacLoed; resolutions committee—Mrs. Murchison, chairman, Mesdames Balz, J. D. Johnson, Frank Symmes, George A. Van Dyke and R. O. McAlexander, and telephone committee—Mrs. Joseph F. Hancock, chairman,. members of the executive committee and department chairmen.
To Remove Ink Stain
When attempting to remove an ink stain, the first thing to remember is “Don’t Use Milk.” It cannot do much good and may “set” the stain. Safest aid to use is com-
ant, Mrs. Charles Efroymson and|
by the women of the church, headed by Mrs. William Arnold. Women of Holy Rosary church will prepare the food. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Robert Mobley, 3856 Arthington blvd.
‘Will Entertain | During the dinner hours, Miss Georgia Marie Neargarder, accordianist, will ‘play and members of the Daughters of Isabella Glee club will sing. Miss Frances Riney, president of the C. Y. O. group at St, Francis de Sales, and other young women of the parish will sell war bonds and stamps at a booth during the festival. Additional chairmen and their booths will include Mrs. Joseph Schenkel® and Mrs. Lawrence Mueller, linen; Mrs. J. A. Patterson, lunch; Mrs. Kahn, fish and game, and Mrs. Frank Gumbel and
r Miss Regina Kramer, miscellaneous.
Also serving will be Mrs. Sweeney
and Mrs. Charles Yeager, country store; Mrs. Frank Watts, cake and cookies, and Messrs. and Mesdames Mobley, John Hynes and William Wade, outdoor dancing. The secretarial committee far the event includes Misses Ernestine and Florence Fuss and Elizabeth Marks, and the publicity committee, Misses Marjorie Dever, Mary Ann Mueller | and Mary Ann Boyer.
Plans for booths at the annual festival of St. Francis de Sales church are being made by Mesdames Frank Watts, James G. Sweeney and J. A. Patterson. Mrs. Watts will be in charge of cake and cookies; Mrs. Sweeney, country store, and Mrs. Patterson, lunch. The festival will be July 8-10 at 22d st. and Avondale pl.
Preparations Made for Festival At St. Francis de Sales Church;
Extensive preparations are under way for the annual outdoor, summer festival of St. Francis de Sales church, directed by the Rev. Fr. Joseph Clancy, pastor, and the Rev. Fr. Joseph Vollmer, assistant pastor. The festival will be held July 8-10 at 22d st. and Avondale pl. James Sweeney, M. J. Morton and Mrs. P. A. Clements are general chairman for the event. Assisting them will be Edward Madden, William
Miss Nan Cl Holds Office 1 Y. W. Council
Home From Session With Other Leaders ™®
Miss Nan Clark, 2246 Nowland ave., recently was elected treasurer of the National Business and Professional council of the Y. W. C. A.
and has just returned from New York where she conferred with other national leaders of the business girls’ department of the Y. W. Miss Clark's election as national treasurer follows several years of active service in th Central Y. W. C A. here in Indi- Block photo, anapolis. At one Miss Clark time she was president of the Qu club. In 1941-42, she held the position of chairman of the heal education council in the education department. !
Last winter, Miss Clark acted As
adviser to a group of : business girls and helped them 4 organize an active club. She is
member of the Y. W. nominating committee, the members of which are elected each year by the Y. W. electoral membership at the annual meeting of the Indianapolis association,
Dinner Planned
Was Representative x In addition to her responsibilities in Indianapolis, Miss Clark served several years ago as chairman of the Southern Indiana Business Girls’ conference and was former chairman of the business and professional council of the east cen tral area including Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin, For the past two years, she has been a member of the National Business and Professional council of the Y. W. C. A, representing this Middle West region.
Personnel Solution
By inserting notices that jobs are available in its monthly statements to charge account customers, a St. Louis department store is solving its part-time help need.
No Extra Gas
No additional gasoline for vacations this summer! Present supplies will not justify it, Price Administrator Brown declares.
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