Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1943 — Page 11
WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1043
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 11
Society—
Bridal Dinner to Honor Claire Patten
And Lt.
|
Samuel Stephenson Daily
x / MR. AND MRS. HUGHES PATTEN will give a bridal dinner for their daughter, Claire, and Lt. (j.2.) Samuel Stephenson Daily, U. S. N. R,, at 6:30 p. m. Friday following the wedding rehearsal. The dinner will be in the Harrison room of the Columbia club. Dr. Logan Hall will officiate at the marriage which will be at 5:30.p. m. Saturday in the Propylaeum. y Guests Friday will be Mrs mother of the prospective bridegroom; Dr Emma Gene Tucker. Others will include Mr. and Mrs. William M. Gilbreth, Delmar, N. Y Mrs. Alexander Malcolm McVie Jr, Cambridge, Mass; Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Wattles, South Bend; Thomas W. Irvin, Oxford; Mr. and Mrs. Garrett L. Bergen, Wilmette, Ill, and Mr. and Mrs, William T. Reed, Northbrook, Ill. Also attending will be Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hadley Jr, Highland Park, Ill; Lt. Richard R. Mallory, U. S. N. R., Indian Hiil, incinnati; Mrs, Richard R. Daily, Evanston, and Mrs. George H., Losey, Mitchell. = = = = = = A luncheon at 1 o'clock today was to be given by Mrs. Francis 3 Adams honoring her house guest, Mrs. Robert Tangeman_ Bloomifigion Guests were to be Mesdames Clyde Titus, Lafavette Page, Frank Hunter, O. M. Richard Cross. Frederick G. Appel, W. E, Gillette, H. H. Ambholter, Charles Car<on, Robert Biake, John Crandall and Helen Thomas Martin al Miss Louise Swan.
Oliver Rush Daily, Evanston, Ill, and MYs. Hall and Miss
Jones,
Qa i Jamieson-Parrish Service Read Y MISS ALICE KATHERINE PARRISH became the bride of officer candidate William Jamieson at 8 p. m. yesterday in the All Saints Episcopal cathedral. The bride is the daughter of Capt. end Mrs. John P. Parrish and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Jamieson, New Hartford, N. Y. He is the nephew of i fr. and Mrs. Walter A. Jamieson The bride and bridegroom entered together and approached the pltar which was decorated with white flowers and lighted candelabra. The Rev. J. M. Nelson read the service and John Phillips was the soloist. The organist was Louis R. Spencer, With her white satin and net gown the bride wore a full length ied a white orchid. For the wedding trip to Denver, Colo.. she selected an acua linen suit, white accessories and an orchid corsage Officer Jamieson recently returned from a year's gervice with the medical corps in Hawaii. He is stationed now at the medical administration's cfficer canaidate school, Ft. Barkeley, Tex . Before entering the service he was a student at Butler univergitv. He also attended Purdue university. The bride is a graduate ©f Butler and a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Among the out-of-town guests were Lt. and Mrs. Frank W, Fis sister and brother-in-law of the bride, Ft. Knox, Ky.; Mr. end Mrs. Walter Coppage. Crawfordsville, and Miss Phyllis Grove Jamieson. New Hartford, N. Y.. cousin of the bridegroom
veil and can
candidate
Bride's Brother to Officiate at Nierstheimer-Breedlove Rite; Couple Will Live in Dayton
J
The Rev Allen Breedlove of Petroleum will read the ceremony tonight uniting Miss Esther Breedlove, and Howard Niersthéimer. The service will be at 7:30 o'clock in the University Heights United Brethren church. > Rev. HL M. Cobb, Hartford City, will assist the Rev. Mr. Rreedlove. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Breedlove, 1045 Hanna ave. are the parents of bride, and the = bridegroom is of Mr. and Friends will attend a reception in| Mr: Paul A. Nierstheimer of Mun- thé bride's parents’ home followcif ing the ceremony. Assisting will be, Palms and white candelabra will | Mesdames Joe Kettery, Clvde Ford, form the background for the serv- Robert Harrison, H. H. Esky and fcé. Entering with her father the Richard Wanglin, Miss Rosetta Dorbride will be in 2 white taffeta gown ton, Muncie, Miss Ruth Elizabeth made with Irish lace edging the Cobb and John Melvin Cobb, high, round neckline and long Hartford City, and Miss Patricia gleeves Almstead. The full skirt extends into a train! For a short wedding trip, the and the bride will have a shoulder bride will wear a white evelet pique’ length veil held in place by orarge With White accessories and a wiite blossoms. She will carry a white orchid corsage. The couple will be Bible topped by a white orchid. at home after July 27 at 4 Shoop st.. 2 Dayton, O. | Niece Is Flower Girl | Mr. and Mrs. Jesse E. Moore will Attending her will be her sister, come from Milton for the service. Mrs. Cobb, matron of honor, and Ine bridegroom is a graduate of
hel Breedlov het sis Indiana Central college and the! Mist Rachel Breedlove, atiol eT SIS= bride also attended the college. ter. Mrs. Omar Breedlove, Minne- es apolis, and Mrs. J. A. Breedlove,
bridesmaids. Elizabeth Ann Breed- Don't Buy Fractions, love, Petroleum, a niece, will be he Qtyretch Meat Points
flower girl. The matron of honor will wear ppake the most of fractions in aqua, the bridesmaids, yellow, and weight of meat purchased. When, the fAower gicl, peach. Elizabeth your butcher is unable to cut ex-| Ann will have a basket of garden ,ctiv to the pound, vou are charged flowers while the others will carry 5 whole point for a fraction of a colonial bouquets of similar flowers, pound. So get a few slices of The Rev. Austin Pellett, Battle- yoady-cooked meats to fili out the piound, will be the best man and point. They're best when sliced the ushers will be Gene Richard, thin and can be stretched in hot
his sister,
v-The
the
the son
! color
Muncie, Pvt. Adolph Walker and
casserole dishes.
Chester Davis. — The bride's mother has selected . a navy blue frock with matching Stewed Onions accessories and a Talisman rose Stew sliced onions with tomatoes, corsage. Also wearing a Talisman thicken with a little flour or stale rose corsage, the bridegroom's bread toasted and broken into mother will be in a light blue print. small pieces.
il
Y.
O. Dance to Be Friday |
|
|
home of Mrs. B. H. Guthrie, 3247|
| |
A record dance will be given from 9 p. m. to midnight Friday in Holy Cross parish hall by members of
the Catholic Youth organization.
On the committee are (left to right! Miss Joan Arszman, Don Curran
and Miss Anna Catherine Dean. Others are Miss Genevieve White, Miss Marjorie Mellen, Jimmy Curran, Joe White, Joe Quinn and Paul MeCaslin,
Or Else!
Fall Fashions Demand A Narvow-Hipped ins} ithonette.
D By MAXINE GARRISON
NEW YORK, July 21 —Clothes designers and 'WPB regulators have put into effect one unwritten but inescapable law for wartime
i fashions—Mrs. America had better
slim those hips, or else!
That was apparent at the
{ special press showings sponsored
bv the New York Dress institute and featuring the works of leading designers. WPB orders restrict the amount
of fabric that may be used in any |
given garment, and the designers
, go them one better by sponsoring | a
silhouette even slimmer than
the law allows. Skirts are for the most
part pleatiess and
| flareless, indicating strenuous ve- | ! ducing measures
all over the country, since the slightest bulge will be something more than prominent, The shows are part of the dress institutes campaign, begun cshortly after the occupation of Paris, to establish New York as the fashion center of the world.
Russian, Chinese Themes
At the Fox-Brownie show rooms, svelte-hipped mannequins paraded a series of suits and dresses emphasizing the influence of Russian and Chinese themes and forecasting a season of clothes obtaining the maximum of elegance and glitter with a minimum of material. Suit jackets were brief and | close-fitted, usually collariess. | Many had the “shrunken” waistline by which the fabric is treated to give the effect of shirring. Skirts were straight as a die and | severely plain. some of them slit at the sides to allow, well, ease in walking. Eve appeal was concentrated at the tops, with bands of startling contrasts, intricate bugle bead or sequin embroidery and applique. and colorful bow-trimmed blouses. Sleeves were long and tight, in contrast to the bracelet types of recent seasons,
Small Hats Brownie, the designer, brought gasps with her introduction of the “babushka” headgear as part of the costume, borrowed from Russian peasant fashions. It's a scarf drawn close across the top of the head, fastened under the chin and
Shown
{| hanging in a loose triangle down | the back.
She showed it first with a black suit fastened with gold clothespins. The babushka was black jersey banded with black Persian
| lamb. Later it appeared in glit-
| tering bugle-beaded fabrics with
short and narrow, |
Women's Division of OCD Seeks 1944 Victory Garden Site For East Section of City
Co-operation of the United States government in providing a large plot of ground on the east side of Indianapolis for 1944 victory gardens now is being sought by the gardens committee of the women's division. Marion countv civilian defense council. According to the recent report made by Mrs. Louis Wolf, committee chairman, before the division's policy committee, two of the four large _— ~~ community gardens already pre- . pared are successful. Vandalism | Tall and Slim was reported at some of the garCi dens, she said, but aid of the local y | police department and the sheriff's office has been assured in combating { this evil. | She said there were more than 25,000 victory gardens in Indianapolis and in addition there were more than 20,000 gardens taken {care of by school children.
800 Families Gardening
{ Bight hundred families are working in groups of five to 50 on smaller | community garden projects, she re{ported—75 per cent of the projects {are completely successful and only {about 15 per cent abandoned or neglected. Mrs. Wolf and her committee, beginning in November, sought the aid of the city schools, the park board {and the Parent-Teacher association. The committee was divided {into groups and each given indi[vidual tasks. ~~ | More than 34 group meetings were < held and in February an office was > established in the World War Memorial building to help prospective gardeners find plots and have them prepared for planting. Also at the policy meeting, Mrs. Edna Christian, member of the Indianapolis zoning board, reported on the citizens’ conference for community planning held in Omaha last week. | On the basis of replies to numer- | ous letters sent to service men, it | was learned, she said, that the majority wanted new homes nroviding ample outdoor recreational facilities. Talks on Housing
Inexpensive homes built of mud and “folding houses” were discussed 'at the conference, she reported, as solutions to the housing problem for the 25 per cent of the American people who are nomadic. Mrs. Christian said that five spots in Indianapolis needed to be torn down and rebuilt and she predicted the future city would include “islands” of parks between neighborhoods. Other reports were given by Mrs Arthur Fairbanks, a member of the spiritual values committee, and Mrs. E. B. Worley, special welfare chair-
|
One of the favorite frocks of the junior set, Soft drapery and slimming midriff, Wonderful for dress-up. | Pattern 8336 is in sizes 11, 13, 15 | 17 and 19. Size 13 takes 33% yards 39-inch material. For this attractive patiern, send | 16 cents in coins, with vour name, | address, pattern number and size! to The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st, Indi-
Sororities—
Delta Theta Chi }
Dinner Will Be Tonight
Sigma Betas Will Be Guests of Mrs. Cox
A dinner will be among the activities of sorority groups meeting this week. » Indiana Nu Chapter, THETA CHI, will meet at 5 o'clock this evening for a dinner at the Canary cottage.
| To Be Bride
™
DELTA |
Mrs. Max Moss will preside at a
short business meeting before the members go to the ration board mailing center to assist there,
Mrs. Forrest Watson will be hostess for a meeting of Rho chapter, SIGMA BETA, tonight at the home of Mrs. Russell Cox, 6103 Indianola ave.
A meeling will be held at 3:30 o'clock this evening by Alpha chapter, PHI THETA DELTA, at the
College ave.
Mrs, Furman Danner, 3309 Brookside pkwy., South dr., will entertain Alpha chapter, OMEGA KAPPA, at a social meeting at 8 o'clock toaight.
BETA SIGMA PHI'S Beta Phi chapter will have a dinner p. m. Friday at Catherine's restaurant,
Luncheon Booked
Mesdames George Newton, R. C. Griswold, Otis Carmichael and Curtis Burke will entertain the Chil-
{dren's Sunshine Club, Inc, with a sold at luncheon-bridge at 12:30 p. m, to- | cuts; then use the bones for soup|their mothers, Mrs. S. O. Brewer sep-
at the Colonial Pennsylvania st.
morrow 1433 N.
tearoom,
Blouse
A sheer cotton blous
organdy look
frills, Washes
8is8y
beautifully.
blue, green and black
Blouses, T
L. A
32 to 38.
YRES
B "
—Kindred photo. The engagement of Miss Jean | Frazier to Cadet George D. Finkbiner Jr. is announced by her par- | ents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Frazier, | Brazil. Cadet Finkbiner is the son | of Mr. and Mrs. George D. Finkbiner. The wedding will be in the bride’s parents’ home, Saturday.
|
‘Seeing Red More
‘Days Per Week
See red ration stamps through
more meat meals, (1) In
wery
‘The Bridal Scene— ‘Anne Herzig's Marriage
Is Announced
| Heil-Hopkins Service Will be Read Aug. 7
The marriage of Miss Margaret Anne Herzig to Lt. John Duncan | Worcester, son of Mr. and Mrs. |Henry Worcester, Winchester, Mass., is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl O. Herzig, 619 E. 20th st. The wedding was June 14 at the Indianapolis Athletic club, with Dr. Logan Hall officiating. Mrs. C. C. Cooper was her niece's matron of honor and Henry Worcester, brothler of the bridegroom, was best man, | The couple is at home in Valpa|riso, Fla. n n ” Aug. 7 has been set by Miss Har=riette Ellen Hopkins as the date of |her marriage to Vernon Heil, son of |Mr. and Mrs. William Heil, 2815 N. {Denny st. Mr. and Mrs. Gil Owen of Lafayette announced their daughter's engagement. A reception at the home of the bridegroom's parents will follow the ceremony. After a short trip, the
| | | |
week's menus, include at leas* one couple will be at home at 722 E.
spareribs, lamb breast, veal breast,
' shanks, variety meats,
neckbones
at 6 low-point meat such as short ribs, 34th st.
A miscellaneous shower for Mrs. Harry J. Myers Jr, the former Miss
”
backbones, pork hocks, or oxtaills. garhara Jane Johnson, was given
(2)
jarge cut which will supply
overs for at least two other neals. at are Park ave, boned |
which than
| (3) Buy bone-in cuts, lower points
|stock and the boned mea
arately.
Dainty Print
3.
a0
e with an
. that is fresh and fetching in its appeal. Light
and airy, it's naively done with
and
irons
White
grounds with lavender, yellow,
prints,
hird Flocr
Each week plan to buy one recently left- Brewer and Miss Barbara Hudelson
anapolis 9, Ind. Dogs your summer wardrobe need | first aid? Send for the summer issue of Fashion, our complete pattern catalog and sewing guide, which is just out. Shows over 100 new patterns, contains many help- | ful fashion suggestions; 26 cents
man. The latfer talked on the “Hoosier Mom” group of which she is founder. Mrs. C. R. Gutermuth, home division chairman, and Miss Gertrude Brown, chairman of the community planning division, were in charge of the program. Mrs. Sheldon Sayles,
i“
become a
Ih 1775 Benjamin Foambllin wrobo:
« + +» our honor as a people has matter, of the utmost consequence to be taken care of.
by Miss Mary Catherine
the home of the former, 5155
The hostesses were assisted by
and Mrs. W, L. Hudelson. Mrs,
Myers’ marriage was June 27.
& COMPANY _
per copy. acting director of the division, pre-
the short formal suit which is exsided.
| pected to replace the floor-sweep- | ing evening gown of yore. | The models wore tip-tilted little hats designed by Bragaard. | These jutted forward from one eyebrow in miniature crushed stovepipe effect, with bumper brims. There were also tiny little cones of hats, also bumperbrimmed, worn on the crown of the head. allowing full play for the high-swept pompadours that were still much in evidence. The hats were often trimmed with one | or two jeweled clips. With the cocktail or formal
suit, Brownie showed Chinese-in-"Your Salad Oil Is
spired headpieces of glittering embroidery worn smack across the ‘Shortening, Too |
If we tamely give up our rights in this contest, a century to come will not restore us in the opinion of the world; we shall be stamped with the character of dastards, poltroons and fools; and be despised and trampled upon, not by this haughty, insolent nation only, but by all mankind. Present inconven= iences are therefore to be borne with fortitude, and better times expected.”
PLEASE BE PATIENT!
With the United States postal service being hard hit by wartime burdens, and with summer pattern mail breaking all records, there has been some delay in the delivery of some patterns. Naturally, we regret this—and we want our readers to know that everything possible is being done to expedite pattern delivery,
League Board Meets Monday
Mrs. B. Lamar Johnson, vice pres- | ident of the Missouri League of Women Voters, will speak before ithe executive committee of the Indiana league at its meeting Monday in the Columbia club. Mrs. Johnson, wife of the dean of Stephens college, Columbia, Mo., {has just returned from a training {meeting in St. Louis conducted by the national league. The purpose of the meeting was to prepare lead- ‘ ers to awaken public interest in the | There's more to your bottle Ol! United States foreign policy. salad oil than meets the eye these Prior to her trip to Indiana, Mrs.
red-point rationing days. As al-| johnson has opened campaigns in ways, it makes a treat of the vita- | peo nsas and Nebraska.
i ‘Enameled Ware Best min salads you serve but a good Tne Indianapolis league will be
‘For Making Sauces Se g quality salad oil like mazola can yonresented at Monday's session by When cake is too dry to Serve make your muffins, cakes, hot | \fesdames Robert Loomis. William |alone, make a custard or lemon preads and biscuits besides. |Snethen, Clarence Merrell, John
| mind io PY k eh Whenever your recipe calls for Fuller, C. B. Durham, Frank Cox, mind, however, that sauces are “melted shortening” use mazola, a F. B. Johnson, Thomas Sheerin, | fully prepared. | | use a lain enameled utensil, | Saute shorten, season and make 5 : ares Extend Foods | should be simmered or cooked slowly P"*" | Besides, the sanitary enamel finish is a time-saver for it's already | These days, when we are faced ‘safeguards flavor. Enameled uten- melted, easy to measure, and it's all with the necessity of “extending” ( porous and cannot, therefore, readily water. It's easy and safe to strain and good economy to keep an taint food flavors. (for using again, too, for it may be especially generous supply of soda | They are always fresh, crisp and Sausage in biscuits is sausage ¢), y ready to be rolled into crumbs and | eat baked right into the biscuit On M ak mg Custards | Custards are best prepared in ents to the “extending” process re-
Prophetic words—they apply with equal significance to our conduct in the press ent conflict, Historica! letters record for us the convictions and emotions of great persons of the past. Yet letters have never been more important than they are today! Often they are the single span across empty distance, the one comforting link with those we love. So write often, write cheerfully, writel
front of the pompadour, some of | them reaching down to the eye- | brow.
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cately flavored and must be care- | eal war-time friend that can fry, Leonard Smith and Lester Smith. | Experts a that anything which | dressing—all for only five points a is best prepared in enameled ware.| For home-made quick breads, it! With Crackers leils are non-absorbent and non- shortening — contains no air or so many foods, it is both wisdom : : | strained while cold. |erackers on hand at ali times. In Biscuits | to add their energy-giving ingredior cooked and served as shortcake
