Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1944 — Page 12
© MISS MARIAN STURM,
ecIety— =. Attendants Chosen by Miss Sturm : For Her Marriage to R. B. Hankins
a i
WHO WILL BECOME the
bride of Rodney Ballard Hankins in a ceremony July 30 at the Broadway Methodist church, has chosen her bridal
attendants.
Her matrons of honor will be Mrs. William Thomas Walker of Anderson and Mrs, David O. Craycraft of
Noblesville,
Mrs. Robert C. Burkholder, Miss Suzanne Masters and Miss Jeanette Lichtenauer will be the bridesmaids. Mr. Hankin's best
man will be Robert B. McConnell, Thomas Hall Jenkins, Dr. Robert F.
specialist 1-c, U8. N. R, and Harris, Carl B. Riggs and George
Craycraft, Noblesville, will serve as ushers. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harrison Sturm will entertain their daughter and her fiance at a bridal dinner July 29 in the Indianapolis
Athletic club. Their guests will
include the prospective bridegroom's mother, Mrs. R., C. Hankins, and members of the
bridal party. .
Bridal Dinner -
MISS JOAN CROSS and her fiance, Sgt. James Herbert DeHaven, U, 8. M. C. R, will be honor guests at & bridal dinner Wednesday evening in the Columbia club given by her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Harold Southard Cross. Miss Cross and Mr. DeHaven will be married Thursday in the North Methodist church. The dinner guests will be the wedding at= tendants and members of the immediate families.
"sPre-Nuptial Party
MIS8 CAROL KREUSSER will give a dinner and linen shower tonight hénoring Miss Mary Lou - Westfall,” The party will- be ih the home of her parenis, Mr, and Mrs. O. T. Kreusser, Miss Westfall is the bride-to-be of Pvt. William E. Lake. They will be married Thursday in Rapid City, 8. D.
Miss Kreusser's guests will be Mesdames B. K. Westfall, Kreusser, Arthur Kraeger and Eleanor Cinelli, Misses Virginia Stoddard, Beverly Siniff, Nancy Ragan, Susan Alvis, Ann Shaw, Helen Kemper and Elizabeth Davis.
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Reservations have heen made for the Athenaeum Turners second dinner-dance - tomorrow night at their summer garden. Among those to attend are Messrs. and Mesdames H, PF, Geiger, R. L. Nessler, F. R. Hensel, Charles Poppe, Roy Pile, John Roland, John Pichter, Alex Rice, Tony Foster, James Bradford and Harold Vogel, Messrs, William Lynn, J. C. Dougherty and William Behrman.
Pi Omicron Meeting Mrs, Thomas Selmier was host-
Woman's Viewpoint— Father-Child Separation Is
War Tragedy
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer ONE OF THE tragedies of war is the separation of children from their fathers, Many young men will miss the thrill of watching their firstborn develop. Others have been forced to say goodby to sons and daughters nearing adolescence, who are most in need of parental care. Nations cannot pay either men or, children for these sacrifices, ‘Our babies move inexorably into maturity, leaving us only memories of their infancy. Millions of fathers will not even have those memaories. We can only bow to the inevitable and hope those who return will be more sharply aware of what they have missed. Perhaps they will be better parents because of that awareness. Fathers of today's soldiers took their duties too lightly. They worked hard to provide material comforts and advantages for their children, but spent very. little time with them. If the mothers were also addicted to gadding, the kids grew up in the manner of Topsy. » 2 td MANY PRE-WAR homes were half-dead or empty places, because dad was never there. The sense of family solidarity was missing. Shirk ing domestic responsibility has been developed into an art by a great many parents—and the head of the house cannot deny that he has been one of our most skillful, That is why we pray that the present soul-searing war experience,
ess for a meeting of Kappa Xi chapter, Pi Omicron sorority, last| night in her home near Five Points. | |, Assisting her were Mrs. Alice Mas- |
sie and Misses Bertha Staub, Lou-|
which has separated so many husbands and wives, and so many parents and children, will spotlight for us our past follies. When families are reunited, may it be a spiritual as well as a physical reunion, out of which will come a rebirth of the
* ann Myers and Betty Zimmerman. old-fashioned American home.
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The Bridal Scene— Miss Hankins To Be Wed In California,
The announcements of an engagement and recent marriage highlight the bridal news, Mr, and Mrs. Frank P. Hankins, 2609 E. 11th st., announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Mary Alice, and Skt. Delmar H. Binsbacher, U. 8. M, C, formerly of St. Louis. The wedding ‘will’ be this month in San
Attendants for the couple will be Sgt. and Mrs. Carl Burnett, San Diego, formerly of Indianapolis. Miss Betty Yeaman and Miss Peggy Foltz will be hostesses at a 1:15 p. m. luncheon .tomorrow in the hunt room of Sheffield inn, honoring the bride-to-be, Guests will be Mesdames Hankins, Harry Sanderson, Howard Garns, Jack B. Boyd and Charles Alvery, Misses Funice Brown, Virginia Griffin, Georgianna Tackey, Dorothy Winter, Betty Cunningham and Dorothy Barthel.
} ¥ 2 =» The marriage of Miss Pauline Camilla Morgan and Keith Lloyd Nance is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Barney Morgan, Fish- . The wedding ... Ro was July 1 in the ! rectory of St. Pat. | j rick's Catholic ° church. i Miss Jane Elizabeth Morgan was ® the bride's only attendant and the best man was Harold Hay. The couple is at home in In-
dianapolis. Mr, Diggs Biola, Nance is the son Nance (of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Nance, | Fishers.
» » ” Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Rosemeyer, Indianapolis, will honor their
flance, Roy Ellsworth Stricker, at a buffet dinner tomorrow night in their home. The couple will be married at.2:30 p. m., Sunday in Zion Evangelical church. The Rev. F. R: Daries will officiate.
Scotch tartan plaid wool in red, black and white makes this peplum jacket and skirt designed by New York's Claire McCardell foif Townley. A red airplane cloth blouse worn beneath the jacket carries the little neck bow tie showing at the throat,
McCardell's designs are
entered its final day. Miss McCardell, turning out
court to the young in spirit (and shape). Neither of the shows seen this morning by U. S. fashion reporters (here for their semi-annual preview of coming styles) had much appeal for anyone headed toward the brittle artery stage. Take Miss McCardell's “leg sweaters” for example. They sound like a great idea for grandma's chillblains—but inducing grandma to stick her “limbs” into their brightly striped or polka dotted lengths would be something else again. These long stockings are meant for the- slim-shanked young, to wear with matching striped or polka dot turtle-necked blouses and jumpers. Then there are the designer's “pedal-pushers” — tapered shorts that wind up below the knee and are teamed with Dutch boy boleros + «.. definitely not something to intrigue Aunt Mehitabel’s fancy. But whimsical as Miss McCardell is, she is never impractical. It's she -, who has been plugging matched wardrobes for seasons past and for this fall she presents more of the interchangeable sets.
Matching Wardrobes
ONE IS OF red, white and black 8cotch tartan plaid. (Woven in the bluegrass state, it's the first Kentucky Scotch). The set has a pert peplum jacket, a slim skirt with deep center pleat, tapering slacks and a red cotton blouse. Another set in gray and brown striped surah combines a high, bow-necked, roll-your-own-sleeves blouse, tapered slacks, a bouffant evening skirt and a halter top. With almost all her costumes McCardell shows some new footwork: ballet slippers of plaid, polka dotted or plain bright wool to match the ottfits. @
3
® 8 =
| Leg Sweaters and Pedal Pushers Make Their Appearance At Claire M’Cardell Style Show
‘Times Special . NEW YORK, July 14—The young idea in fashions, represented by designer Claire McCardell and Capri Frocks, had its inning this morning as the New York Dress Institute's national press week
models for Townley Frocks, never
has had any truck with staid styles and the House of Capri, too, pays
outfit a jacket with tuxedo collar of ermine goes with a dress whose blouse top is covered with bugle beads. Several dressmaker suits are trimmed with mink or ermine tails. Date dresses so Important in the young scheme of things include cap-sleeved and low-necked dinner dresses that are short of skirt but long on glitter—by" way of metallic bands, all-over swirls of sequins or bejeweled necklace necklines. Glitter also appears in the jet embroidery on a white flannel bolero shown with a long black crepe dress.
Tailored to a ‘T”
METICULOUS ATTENTION to tailoring is a standard characteristic of any Hansén Bang collection, and so it is in his fall line shown yesterday afternoon. He is showing coats which introduce a trend away from bulkiness at the throat—by using a Medici collar (fur or fabric) standing up behind the neckline . + or a built-up neckline which merges into miniature upstanding revers. Many of his coats get together with related frocks. Important in a series of slim and feminine cocktail suits are those of polka dotted upholstery satin. He uses silk braid, giving it the look of New Orleans grillwork . . . interlaced on a huge red pocket placed over one hip of a black wool coat,’ or encrusted on the boleros of cocktail suits. One-piece dresses feature easyfitting Cossack bloused tops and an afternoon dress has ruffles - placed low at each side of a slim skirt. Lo
‘Little’ Suits HATTIE CARNEGIE started
stantly—will not rub off on clothing. Pro. vides
film.
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accent a fireplace, a tea table, or a dressing table, They're lifesavers for heavy traffic spots.
There's something about the sturdy, dependable cotton rugs that says:
to admire. This is a home yoti can live in.”
Gardeners Become ‘Bug Conscious’
a backyard patch to the farmer with a thousand who are raising the country's food| supply- are becoming scious.” Unless curbed, insects could | destroy all the fruits 8 this patrio- | tic labor.
given at 6:15 p.m. Wednesday in the Y. W..C. A. by the Tri Kappa Sith. Hostessps will be Mrs, Don.
Shumm,
Guests will include Mrs. Carl Stricker, Reedsburg, Wis., mother of the prospective bridegroom, Messrs. ahd Mesdames Harold Rodden, Alva E. Stoneburner, Mallory Bransford, Walter Schulz, and the Rev. and Mrs, Daries and daughter, Mariann. Other guests - will be Misses Blanche Wertz, Dorothy Watson, Irene Nendel and Jean Carter, Edward Rosemayer and John Hopkins.
Gay Cotton Rugs Accent Decoration
Add glamour to your home with gay cotton rugs. You can set the decorative scheme of your room with a pastel or solid colored over-all
floral design will give brightness and cheer to a dull room. They'll
Cotton rugs can “take it, too.
‘This is a home to enjoy, not just
From the victory gardener with
McCardell masterpieces: Sidebuttoned surplice and tunie bodices . . . side-wrapped skirts . short capes to go with skirts and (believe it or not) with slacks . .. high color jersey slashed with black or vice versa . , . long sleeves with dark upper halves and pastel nether ends . . . date dresses in bright gabardines . . . ditto in crepe yarn jersey with off-or-one the-shoulder drawstring necks . . . satin damask leunging slacks with green satin bush jackets.
Capri Collection
BOX JACKETS WALK oft with honors in the Capri fall line. They are paired with one-piece dresses as well as with skirts and overblouses, Some are fur-trimmed, with ermine, nutria or Persian lamb; some have fur linings. In one
wr
|
BN Engaged ,
Here is a spot where soap serves
the nation in a little-known way,| for - thousands of pounds of it are used annually in the manufacture of insecticides, Soap in the liquid sprays helps insecticides to spread over a greater area, and it helps kill the bugs, too, 2
Dinner-Bridge Party
A dinner and bridge party will be
n and Mrs. Alvin ¥
“bug - con= | :
acres, all those ii
© - Ramos-Porter photo, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Ortstadt announce the engagement of their daughter, Martha Louise, to Pvt, Clarence H. Beineke, Scott field, In; son of Mr. and Mrs, Clarence J, No
Indianapolis.
her show out with a series of “little” suits whose neutral or combined pastel backgrounds were spiked with silver-embroidered crests or jewel buttons, Cocktail suits at this house also go in for gay color combinations in striped wool, one with a skirt sprinkled with jet beads and a sleeveless jersey top. A bat-wing effect adds a new look throughout the Carnegie collection. It's done’ by continuing the sleeves into the dress proper, Another Carnegie fall trick is the little boy's collar. on wool frocks with crepe sleeves. An alternate to the floor-sweep-ing evening gown is Hattie's “minue¢” dress which is a betwixt-and-between length that floats out gracefully in dancing.
Favored Black
ANN SBADOWSKY is another designer who sticks to town costumes, for both day and evening, In her show yesterday, black was the favored shade for any hour of the day, but it frequently sparkles with color and brilliant embroidery. Bands of beading get into the picture at the hemlines of narrow slashed evening dresses, and on the jackets of dinner suits. On both dresses and suits, she frequently uses velvet bows posed to give a bustle effect,
Lipstick Marks | Easily Removable
Long notorious for leaving telltale lipstick marks on the boy=friend's handkerchief, the modern chicks of today no longer fear the
‘| lipstick ‘stain, Time was when re
moving lipstick by a sour milk solution was a knuckle-wearing process, consistently unsatisfactory. Researth experts have proved
most lipstick smears is 5 suds and 4 rinsings in water with regulated temperatures, ranging from 00 degrees to 175 degrees, a formula used
exclusively by your professional A 2. Siti
that the best formula for removing}:
»
, ER Re New York Dress Institute photos. A two-piece costume by Brownie gets its three-piece effect in a shirtwaist front of coral-toned wool with black crepe sleeves and back, attached to a black wool skirt. Coral scrolls place emphasis below, rather than on, the shoulders of the jacket. Block's will have the outfit seen early this week in a New York style show,
English Women Demand. Pay Equal to Men's
By ROSETTE HARGROVE NEA Staff Writer LONDON, July 14—With “equal pay for equal work” their slogan, 300 working women representing 300,000 of their fellow workers in every type of industry, minced no words in stating their war and postwar demands at & meeting organized here by the Transport .and General Workers’ union. Every delegate’ who spoke raised her voice against sex discrimination in industry and opposed retention of women workers at lower wages than those paid to men. Ask More Nurseries Other demands included the principle of adult status at 18, where adult work is being done; full mobilization of all classes of industry,
page of luxury production, more nurseries for children, improved
ter transportation service to and! from work. Resolutions called for better] canteen arrangements,’ = special leave with full pay for' married women when their children are il}, supplementary coupons for household linen and an extra soap ration for doing dirty work. At the present, it is estimated that well over 300,000 British women will want to remain in industry after the war, About 40 industries have already met the “equal pay for equal work" demand —some after putting the women on probation for from six to nine months, others on the condition that women are able to perform the work of the men they replace without additional supervision or assistance. Post-War Jobs “We shall never go back to the old-fashioned idea that woman's place is in the home. I am convinced that women will remain in industry after the war,” declared Arthur Deakin, acting general secretary of the union. : : “Men in the armed forces naturally have first claim on jobs,” Dorothy Coulthard, London factory worker, said. She pointed out, however, that “there will be room for women in industry after the war because we shall need so many new things for the home and shall have to help
call-up of women of 45 and 50, stop-| &
sanitary and working conditions, bet! |
v
Of Alpha Phi Will Meet
Mrs. J. Mason King Will Be Hostess
The Indianapolis Alumnae of Alpha Phi sorority will discuss the pro-
for committee work at a 10:30 a. m. meeting Tuesday in the home of
+ Mesdames King, Neal Grider and Theodore Scott, the scholarship com+ mittee, will report on a proposed plan of scholarship awards to be made to the collegiate chapter at DePauw university, Special guests will be Miss: Marjorie Grindle, collegiate member at the University of Arizona, Misses Mary Dale Metzger, Marian Osborne and Dorisjeanne Speiss, of the DePauw chapter, > Recently elected officers of the alumnae group are Mrs, Robert Seastrom, president; Mrs. E. O. Price, vice president; Mrs. Ruth Sugg Mintzer, secretary; Miss Lou Ellen Trimble, treasurer; Mrs. Richard J. Boatman, quarterly correspondent, and Mrs. James Ruddle and Mrs. Robert Horn, Panhellenic delegates. Committees 8s announced by Mrs. Seastrom are Mrs. Elvin Seaton, rush; Mrs. King, publicity; Mesdames T. O, Philpott, Mary Hooker Otte, Price and Boatman, program; Mrs. Seaton,"money raising projects, and Mesdames Willis Tomlinson, Wallace Scea and J, C. Bullock and Miss Alice Hankins, telephone,
Lambda Sigma Sigma Will Hold Pienie - The members of Lambda Sigma Sigma sorqrity will have a wiener roast at 6:30 p. m: today in Garfield park. Mrs, Mary Wilson will be hostess. ’ Following the picnic, the group will meet at the home of Miss Nina McClintock, 1152 BE. Gimber at., for a business meeting and election of officers.
I. F. C. Board Sets Meeting for Fall
The Indiana Federation of Clubs will hold its next board meeting Nov. 14-15 in Indianapolis.
The Epsilon sigma Omicron department of the federation met yesterday in the Claypool hotel, and Mrs. Prank H. Sheehan of Gary and Mrs. W. D. Keenan were appointed to draft an institute—the sorority’s form of constitution,
Local Alumnae )
gram for the coming year and plans|
Mrs. J. Mason King, 7010 Park ave.
Bretsman photo, Geisler will be
Miss Carol Lee married to Dr. John OC. Vanatta III, Eloise, Mich. in a July 30 ceremony in the First United
Lutheran church. She Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Geisler, Indianapolis, and Dr, Vanatta is the son of John 0, Vanatta II, Brookston.
Red Cross Urges Nurse
Recruitment
The. national headquarters of the American: Red Cross has notified Mrs. G. D. French, nurse recruite ment chairman for the Indianapolis area, that recruiting efforts must be catried on vigorously in order to fill the army. quotas of "10,000 for next year, ; : . With casualties increasing on all fronts, the need for nurses inecreases daily. During the first 10 days of the Saipan batfle there were 8000 casusities and every available nurse must be given a chance to serve with the armed forces. A nurse procurement service has been set up by the war manpower commission classifying all nurses nog essential to the home front as 1-A. It is these women whom the Red Cross hopes to recruit. The Red Cross is urging every
at
‘|nurse in this classification to rege
ister, stating when she is available for service, or to arrange for a physe ical examination so that those with physical disabilities may be listed and the quotas still be met, Nurses who serve with the armed forces are classified as reserve nurses
\agree to serve six months.
Wartime E ating 2 Meta Given
Oxalic acid is not changed into
serve it in creamed form or to drink milk when it is served as in today's recipe. s a @ MONDAWMENUS Breakfast Stewed prunes (% Ib.) Ready-to-eat-cereal (4 servings), Soft-cooked eggs (4). Toast (8 slices).
Luncheon Cheese soup (% Ib, ‘brick cheese— 1 red pt). . Cucumber sandwiches (1 cucumber sliced, mayonnaise, lettuce), Carrot sticks (10 carrots), Ambrosia (3 bananas sliced, 3 oranges diced, sugar to taste, grated coconut), .
Dinner Lamb hash (2 ¢, diced leftover lamb, onion, boiled potatoes), Spinach with bacon-egg sauce. (Bee recipe). Buttered fresh corn (8 ears; scrape kernels from cobs).
the women in occupied countries.”
- BUY MORE AND MORE W ‘BOND BOOTH, STREET FLOOR
Sliced tomatoes (3 to 8).
DON’T FORGET —- WASSON’S Will Close SATURDAY at
THERE IS NO NUTRITIONAL ERROR made when the cooking water of spinach is drained off and thrown away. Pouring off the water eliminates a considerable amount of oxalic acid, and this is desirable, it seems from recent research,
alkaline substances as are the acids
from citrus and other fruits, This indicates that it is advisable te
Bread (8 slices), Chilled watermelon. a = Spinach with Bacon-Egg Sauces 1% lbs. spinach, 2 ¢. boiling water, 1 tap. salt, 4 slices bacon, 1-3 a, bacon drippings, 3 tbspa finely minced onion, 4 taps, flour, 3 tsps, sugar, 1 tsp. salt, % c, water, 3 thaps. vinegar, 3 hard-cooked eggs, Trim off damaged Igaves and roots from spinach, | leaves; thoroughly wash., Add 3 ¢, {boiling water and the % tsp. salt and cook for § minutes. Drain well and serve with a sauce made by pan-frying the bacon until of desired doneness.’ Remove bacon and extra _dripe pings, if -any. - Lightly brown the onion in the fat. Add the flour, sugar, salt and blend, Add the water and vinegar and bring to a boil and simmer 3 mins. . With a kitchen shears cut the bacon in smal] pieces and add with the eggs, finely diced, to the sauce. Serve hot over the cooked spinagh,
100 P.M
Summer Store Hours:
Monday—12:15 P. M, to 8:45 P. M. Tuesday through Friday—9:45 A. M. te.
! 8:18 P.
Saturday—9:30 A. M. to 1:00
BONDS = °
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MECCA “CHARLIE CHA «388. Newell |
