Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1944 — Page 15

| § Mrs. Clarence N., Warren Jr. Manhasset, N. Y.; Earl L. Manville

Clarence N. Warrens Will Entertain + At Dinner for Daughter and Fiance

——

MR. AND MRS. CLARENCE N. WARREN will enn with a rehearsal dinner Friday evening in the tel Lincoln in honor of their daughter, Miss Marcia ville Warren, and her fiance, Robert Marshall Raber, S. N. R. The couple will be married at 3:30 o'clock

turday afternoon in All Souls Unitarian church. The Warrens’ guests will include Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. eiland, Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Sinclair of Detroit, Dr. and Mrs. E. Burdette Backus, Mr. and Mrs, W. T. Bryant, Capt. and

of Genoa City, Wis, and Lt. C. Harvey Bradley Jr., U, S. M. C. R. Others who will attend are Misses Mary Jo Albright, Mary Jane Alford and Helen Marie Madden, Miss Nancy Nash, Ripon, Wis, and Miss Ruth Taylor of Toledo, Pfc. John Beeler, Pfc, Joseph William Sibbitt of Frankfort, Pfc. Richard O'Bryan and Cadet Thomas Carpenter, both of Columbus, Ind.

Miss Goss to Be Entertained

MISS VIRGINIA GOSS will be the honor guest at a miscellaneous shower given tomorrow evening by Miss Dorothy Yates and Miss Lucinda Redwine. The party will be in Miss Yates’ home. Miss Goss will become the bride of Lt. George Allen Emerson in a ceremony at 4:30 o'clock Friday afternoon in the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Edgar K. Goss. The shower guests will be Mrs Goss and Mrs. Frank McIlvaine, Misses Jo Ann Binkley, Joan Goss, Emily Lloyd, Evelyn Gullion, Lura Roberson, Marie Lichtenberg, Elizabeth Lewis and Lorna

Dahistrand, ® 8.» # = = Miss Mary Lee Keith has chosen July 7 at the dage for her marriage to Pvt. Herman W. Kothe Jr. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Keith, New Albany, and Mr. Kothe's parents are Mr, and Mrs. Herman. W, Kothe, Indianapolis. The ceremony will be at 5:30 p. m. in thé Episcopal church in New Brunswick, N. J, before members of the immediate families, There will be no atiendants. The couple will live in New Brunswick. Miss Keith, a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, was graduated this month from Indiana university, Mr. Kothe is a graduate of Park school and attended the University of Michigan and Williams university, Williamstown, Mass, He is stationed at Camp Kilmer, N. J.

Highland Dinner-Dance Saturday

AMONG THE EARLY reservations for the Highland Golf and Country club dinner-dance Saturday evening are those of Messrs, and Mesdames T. F. O'Connell, R. L. Gehrt, Paul Stark, R. W, Mumford and Edward Leahy and Judge and Mrs. John L. McNelis,

There will be a buffet supper at 6:30 p. m. followed by dancing at 9:30 p. m. Ralph Lillard’s orchestra will play, Highland's first luncheon-bridge of the season held today at the club was attended by members and their parties, Mrs. Paul E. Crane's guests included Mesdames R. H. Crane, Alan Sparks and S. D. Munson while Mrs. Karl A. Stegemeier entertained Mesdames Ford Kaufman, Louise Kaufman and J. E. Barley, of DuBois, Pa. Among the guests of Mrs. Fred IL. Mahaffey were Mesdames Thomas Umphrey, Robert Moynahan, Roger Shiel, Walter Shiel, George Dufly, J. Albert Smith and Robert Langsenkamp. Mesdames Larry Polson, Fred Hendricks and F. D. Cheney were the guests of Mrs. H C. Thomas.

Several reservations were made for the luncheon-bridge today at the Indianapolis Country club. Among those who attended were Mesdames Chester Pike, Paul Glackin, Robert Zeigler, C. W, Weathers, Frank W. Baron, G. R. Redding and Morris Crain. » . . = ~

Miss Joan Henning, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Henning, i i i Fla. . . . Maj. and Mrs. Joseph E. Walsmith and their son Joey | have returned to Camp Pickett, Va. after visiting here with Mrs, Walsmith's mother, Mrs. Gertrude Marlowe,

® Wartime Eating 2y Meta Given

FOR THE AVERAGE FAMILY, a large tin of pineapple can easily be made into two good desserts without skimping in the least on pineapple flavor. Upside-down cake is one of the old-time favorites. Most folks like this cake best when it is just lukewarm. To accentuate its

+ beauty, put a seeded Bing or red cherry in the center of each pineapple

"Grapefruit halves (2 whole grape-

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\

\

\ 3% head of lettuce, salad dress-. Mrs. Denny is

ring, or a fresh strawberry just before serving.

ow =. FRIDAY MENUS Breakfast

Pineapple Upside-Down Cake: tbsps. butter, 3 c. brown sugar, { slices pineapple, 2 eggs, ’: c¢. sugar 1 tbsp. pineapple juice, 23 ¢. sifted cake flour, 1 tsp. baking powder, ly tsp. salt, Melt butter in a 9-inch skillet. Remove from heat. Add brown sugar, blend thoroughly and spread { evenly over bottom. Lay half slices Potato salad (potatoes, eggs, may- of pineapple, arranged in a design, onnaise, sweet pickle, vinegar, in bottom. Beat eggs thoroughly. green pepper, onion, mustard, Add sugar in two portions, beating SURAT. Sait). j¥ia rotary beater after each addi-| Buttered carrots (2 bunches). tion. Add pineapple juice and flour! Cantaloupe (2). sifted with baking powder and salt Beat until well blended. Pour over contents of skillet. Bake 30 minutes Macaroni shrimp: souffle (cook % in moderate aver (350 degrees F.). Ib. macaroni, chill. Make white Remove {from oven, let stand 5 min-

2 3

fruity. Hot oatmeal (brown sugar and top milk), Bauteed ham (6 slices). Toast (8).

Luncheon

Dinner

" gauce, pour over 4 beaten egg utes, loosen around edge, then turn

yolks. Add 1 tsp. salt, i tsp. out on serving plate. Serve warm pepper, 2 c. cooked shrimp and °F cold. Four to six servings. | the macaroni. Fold in 4 stiffly j beaten egg whites. Pour into a DI, and Mrs. Denny { buttered baking dish, place in a pan of hot water and bake in a 820 degree F. oven for 45 mins. or| until it tests done. Serve immediately),

Attend Convention |

Dr. and Mrs. Rov E. Dénny, 971 | West dr, Woodruff Place, are at-| {tending the house of delegates |

Butters fro peas (3 lbs). { meeting of the American Optome-! ucumber salad (1 cucumber, tric association in the Book-!

tomatoes, ‘z lb. cottage cheese, cadillac hotel, Detroit. participating in ing). {the women's auxiliary meetings. | Bread (8 slices). |She was formerly auxiliary secrePineapple upside-down cake (See tary. Dr. Denny is representing! recipe. No. 2%: can sliced pine- the Indiana Association of Optome- | apple. 43 blue pts. Use 3 slices, trists. reserve remainder). | tonight,

| society.

~ Favorable Reports From Overseas About Our...

Candy

28.—Teddy bears, building blocks, tricycles and sandpiles are settled cozily on the very doorstep of Henry J. Kaiser's giant shipyards. Two child service centers at the entrance to the Oregon Shipbuilding Corp. and Kaiser's answer to the Swan island, are Henry Kaiser's answer to the probproblem—of . who will care for their children while they are busy building ships—that has been plaguing mothers. “Today the children of day and swing-shift workers play, learn, take their naps and cod liver oil under the eyes of child care experts, while in the adjoining yards their mothers, free from worry, turn out ships in record-breaking time, = ” » THE IDEA OF the nursery schoois was born last year at an informal dinner given by Henry Kaiser for the supervisory men of his yards, when one of the superintendents asked a question that had been bothering a good many: “Is there any truth in the rumor that we'll be running as high as 40 per cent women in the yards?” “That's not rumor, that’s fact —if we expect to live up to ships’ schedules,” Kaiser told him. The men groaned. “That's terrible, Absenteeism is 50 per cent higher among women than men, and évery time we ask a woman why she's heen absent, it's always the same thing—the gir] who was coming to stay with the kids didn't show up.” “1f the women are worried about the kids,” Kaiser told them, “we'll look after them. We'll build nurseries for them—the finest in the country.” = = ” PERMISSION was received from the maritime commission, and the child centers built, the youngsters found themselves in a world of their own. Equipment is all scaled down to child's size—the yotingsters range in age from 18 months to 6 years. Windows are at his own eye level; window seats are low enough to sit comfortably. Toilets and wash

WHEN

® These children of swing shift Portland, Ore.! are ships. Windows, lockers, basins,

nursery are all built to pre-school

basins are built to his size, so that he finds he can tend himself without adult help. Safe in his playroom, a child can see through the big windows things as magical as those in his picture hook—big, real ships tied to the dock, cars streaming by, construction work in progress, even the sight 6f cranes, like giants, in the distance,

= ” ” DIRECTION OF the centers is in the hands of authorities in the field of early childhood education. At the suggestion of fed-

3

Omega Nu Tau Will Hold

Annual Picnic

Beta Chi Theta Sets Business Meeting |

A picnic, business meeting and a luncheon appear in organization news. Sry The annual picnic. of Lamba chapter, Omega Nu Tau sororily,| will be at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow in| the shelter house at Riverside park. |

Miss Marguerite Griffey, 2842 N. Gale st., will be hostess for a business meeting of Alpha chapter, Beta Chi Theta sorority, at 8 p. m. today.

The Ladies Federal club willl meet tomorrow in the home of Mrs. | M. F. Higgins, 936 N. Oxford st.| Mrs, H. S. Gudgel and Mrs. L. D. Wadsworth form the entertainment committee. ~

The members of the Inter Nos| club met today with Mrs. Frank L.| Fisher, 350 N. Bolton ave. Lunch-| eon was served and a program was] conducted by Mesdames Clarence White, Harry L. Orlopp and Bruce]

i Ix = 4 |1, Kershner. |

aise! lant i 4 workers at the K 1 pau. A The Spencer club met yesterday

Miss Barbara Fulton

Miss Barbara Fulton, formerly of Indianapolis, has arrived in

{ Ttaly to serve as an American

Red Cross secretary. Until her Red Cross appointment, she was a musical director and receptionist

| for radio station WIRE and pre-

viously was employed by the NBC station WBBM in Chicago, She attended the Millersburg, Ky. college and Loretto academy Kendall college, Chicago.

and |

A. C. Wilson, Miss Miller

Beech Grove Church To Be Scene of Rite

The Rev. Kenneth Vandeventer will read the double-ring ceremony uniting Miss Betty Jane Miller and Alva C. Wilson at 8:30 o'clock tonight in the Beech Grove Methodist church,

| Miss Miller is the daughter of i Mr, and Mrs. Frank J. Miller, and | Mr. Wilson's parents are Mr. nd | Mrs. Clarence R. Wilson, all o | Beech Grove. The bride will wear a pale blue | dress with matching accessories and i will carry a bouquet of white roses, carnations, baby's breath and stephanotis. « Mrs. Harry Gibbs, her only atitendant, will wear a yellow jersey {frock with white accessories. She {will carry a colonial bouquet of Jo{hanna Hill roses and blue baby’s { breath. : The best man will be Archie Hill- { man. |" A reception for close friends and Irelatives will be held at the home

kept busy and happy while their mothers build

tables and chairs of this model

size.

training centers across the coun- |

try brought out young women to make up the new staff. The nursery school schedule is adjusted to shipbuilding hours, and run at a very nominal cost to the parent. If a mother must come to work early, the center is open to receive her children. If

she stays an hour or so overtime, |

she knows they are safe. A home situation is duplicated as much as possible. ” = » SWING SHIFT children, after their dinners at the center and a story hour, are put to bed until the mother calls for her child and

7 { in the home of Mrs. D. A. ese July 4 Dance Is Set

{4738 N. Pennsylvania st. Assisting! At Riviera Club { her was Mrs. A. L. Ballinger. i

of the bride's parents following the ceremony. After a short wedding trip, the couple will be at home at 66 N. 14th st., Beech Grove.

Mrs. Russell Eden Entertains Parents

‘Thelma Toms, Reiny Scheer “ {the program. | To Be Wed | There will be no noon nner

dinner will be served from 6 to 8:30 | Miss Thelma Toms, daughter of P-m. The reservations list will be {Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Underwood. closed at 8 p.m. Monday. {2706 W. 16th st. will become the wu : h st. od Pere ) ; bride of Reiny Scheer in a cere- Cd Party Planned |}. Mr. and Mrs. Park Dooley of mony at 6:30 o'clock this evening| The Altar society of the Assump- Montezuma, Mr. and Mrs. Harold in the parsonage of Friedens Evan- tion Catholic church will give a|Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Morris gelical church. The Rev. N. H. card party at 8:15 p.m, tomorrow Brown, all of Bloomingdale, and

|

The July 4 schedule at the | Riviera club will open with a swim- | ming party at 9 a.m, followed by a | breakfast at 10:30, and a dance at 11 o'clock. Reservations will be accepted until noon Monday { Riviera Boosters club is planning

~ The

Mrs. Russell Eden entertained recently for her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 0. V. Woodard, 319 N. DeQuincy st., in honor of their 37th wedding (anniversary. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs, Wilmer Platter of Rock-

eral agencies and children’s bureaus in Washington, Edgar Kaiser asked Dr. Lois Stolz, an outstanding figure in the field, to head the project. A long distance call to Washington brought James Hymes, former editor of Progressive Education .and the Frontiers of Democracy, to Oregon to take on the job of directing the two centers. Wires to nursery

- | Schultz will officiate. wraps him in a blanket for the A reception in the Saenger-Chor

trip home by car. Day shift chil- {hall will follow the ceremony. The dren are given a mid-morning 'hrigegroom is the son of Mrs. Lvdi: and mid-aftergoon snack as well Scheer and Edward Scheer, Indian as lunch. apolis. Another plan is now being for- | The bride will wear a light blue/ mulated by which mothers, com= | sheer, street-length dress with white | ing off shift, can pick up pre- |accessories and a corsage of sweet- | cooked meals to take home tO | heart roses. their families. | Mrs. Fred Behrens will be ma- |

Conréil Offers Kathryn Snyder and Lt. Forrest

Rules for

‘Garden Safety

The use of a few common sense utions will keep you from beng a ‘gardening casualty, acing to the Chamber of Commerce safety council's home safety division. Mrs. Burke Nicholas, president of the Garden Club of Indiana and a member of the home safety divistdp, suggests these precautions: “Do not throw hoe or rake down carelessly with sharp edges up.” “Watch for stakes used to support plants when cultivating the flower bed, else you may receive an

eye injury.

preca cor

{

“Many ‘of the larger stakes used

for tomatoes and pole beans are rough and unless handled carefully may leave splinters in your fingers. Another precaution is to wear gloves and long sleeves when pruning climbing rosebushes.” “During the hot summer days it is so easy to remain in the garden too long. Over-exertion may keep vou away from your garden for several weeks.”

Miss Lois Ely Will Speak Miss Lois Ann Ely will speak on

feature programs of the Y. W. C. A. Summer Club House at 7:30 p. m. today in the Y. W. Miss Ely is director of adult work, department of missionary education, with United Christian Missionary She went to China as a missionary in 1919. She was interned in a Japanese prison camp

{in 1943 and was repatriated on the

Gripsholm last December. Miss Gail Burtt is in charge of the program.

The club for Young Professional |

Women at the Y. W. will meet to-

| morrow at the Indiana university medical center. A tour of the center

will be at 6 p. m. followed by a 7 p. m. dinner. A program on “Nursing as a Profession” will be presented. Hostesses

The convention will end will be Miss Mary Peacock and Miss: { Marian Roberts.

=

N

To Be Honored a

| | Porter-Baecher Rite Announced

| { i

church. The bride-to-be's father,

t | |

Price Survey |

|

Is Planned |

The American Women's Volun-| tary Services will meet tonight in! tie Columbia club to complete plans for the first personal survey of prices charged by Indianapolis dry cleaning and laundry industries. | The survey will be one of a series conducted in various lines of business by volunteers operating under sponsorship of the Marion county war price board. Toner M. Overley, chairman of the board, has appointed as members of the dry cleaning and laundry advisory committee, William E. Dismore, Swiss Cleaners, chairman; Carl Dean, Forest Cleaners; Clarepce Mackey, Ayres’, and Frederick {Mueller and Charles Walker, repre- | | senting wholesale cleaners. | Members of the A. W. V, S appointed to assist with the survey |are Misses Jeanette Arnold, Eldean (Thompson, Margaret McFarland, |Luciti Maze and Virginia Wakelam,

|

“New China” at the second of the Ms. H. O. Fisher

Will Visit Here Mrs. Herbert O. Fisher will arrive Saturday from Buffalo, N.Y. for a 10-day visit with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Serban, 11629 N. Rural st. Mrs. Pisher is the former Miss Emily Yucknat of this city. Her husband is in the China-Burma-'India area on a special assignment for the Curtiss-Wright Corp. !

. ; Sorority Meeting The members of Kappa Beta Chi sorority will hold a business meeting at 8 p.m. today in the home of Mrs. John Richards, 2229 Greenbrier lane. |

Miss Kathryn Snyder has chosen the attendants for her wedding ding trip and bh rela will to Lt. William M. Forrest at 8 p. m. Friday in the First United Brethren be at home at 2609 Southeastern

tron of honor and the bridesmaid will be Miss Dorothy Lansing. Th will wear frocks in similar shades of *blue with white accessories Their corsages will be of Talisman roses. Frank Scheer will be his brother's best man and Mr. Behrens will | ve the usher. | The couple will leave for a wed-

t Bridal Dinner;

Dr. George F. Snyder, will read the vows. i Mrs. Austin Wininger will be matron of honor. Bridesmaids will be Misses Cathleen Foreman, Betty McGuire, Martha Dennis and Gerry Pl P: Motley. Miss Marilyn Jo Miller will . ans arty be the flower girl. ‘ Dr. and Mrs. Snyder will honor| A skating party will be held from their daughter and her fiance at|7 to 9p. m. tomorrow by intermedia bridal dinner tomorrow night in|ate Girl Scout troop 35. Arrangethe Louis XIV room of the Claypool ments have been made for blocking hotel. Guests will be; Mr, and Mrs. 98th st. between Washington blvd. William Forrest, Elkhart, the pro- and Delaware st. for the event. spective bridegroom's parents; Bish-| Committees for the party are op and Mrs. H. H. Fout, Mrs, Her- Misses Janet Brucker, Betty Jo shell Duncan and the bridal at- Lawrence ard Margaret Allsworth, tendants. | arrangements; Misses Margaret

J . .__|Appel, Barbara Redding, Janet pr . illiam Mostite ad Mis | Kem, Jo Anne Dunham, Cynthia aze agner wil en n "| Pittenger, Nellie Beckerer, Sharon Snyder with a miscellaneous shower pv ond Jane Helms, publicity at ite church Somorrow ight Also Misses Jane Collins, Margaret Members of the church will be r4cey Edna Mae Ongles, Brucker, thelr guests. . { Shirley Polsen, Jane Whinrey and ] _ {Carol Jane Clift, refreshment, and The rectory of St. Clara's Catholic Misses Redding, Kemp, Appel, Ju-|

ave.

Scout Troop

church in Chicago was the scene lianne and Ruth Farris, Lawrence

Satur of the wedding of Miss and Robin McCullough, games.

Kay Baecher, daughter of Mr. and Vu we o ooiaoe MS. Herman Hostess Mrs. Ralph Baecher, 602 Cottage Mrs. Ella Herman, 1326 Parker

ave. and John L. Porter, Chicago. lave, will review “The Cleric’s Following the ceremony, a recep- Secret” by Warwick Deeping at a tion was held at the home of Mr.| meeting of the Inter-Libtos Book and Mrs. A. J. Kaeppel, Elmwood | Review club at 8 p.m. tomorrow in | } {her home. Park, Ill fo After a two-week honeymoon, the @ couple will be at home in Chicago. | ’

dav

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