Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1944 — Page 14
PAGE 14 ..
Society—
Marian Sturm Will Be Honor Guest At Patty. Given in Anderson Friday
MISS MARIAN STURM will be the honor guest Friday night at a recipe shower given by Mrs. William “Thomas Walker at her home in Anderson. Miss Sturm, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Sturm, will become the bride of Rodney Ballard Hankins, gon of Mrs. R. C. Hankins, in a July 30 ceremony in the
Broadway Methodist church. Guexts at the party Friday will be Mesdames Sturm, Hankins and Robert Burkholder, Misses Suzanne Masters, Betty Rose Badgley, Bally Steinbaugh and Jeanette Lichtenauer.
Mr. and Mrs. Noble Shepherd to Entertain
MR AND MRS. NOBLE SHEPHERD will entertain at noon Saturday with a luncheon honoring their son, Lt. Noble N. Shepherd Jr, U. 8 M. C, and his fiancee, Miss Betty Miller. Their wedding will be at 2:30 p. m. Sunday in the home of the bride-to-bes mother, Mrs. Rue Miller, Manilla. The guests will be Mrs. E. L. Vickery, Toledo, O.; Mrs. Glen O'Laverty, Bluffton; Pvt. Jack L. Shepherd, Aberdeen proving ground, Md.; Capt. Robert Collett, Evanston, Iil.; Capt. Don Carley, Dayton, O.; Capt. and Mrs. William Barr, Ragine, Wis, and Miss Barbara Demmary.
Dorothy Brabender to Be Wed
THE CEREMONY UNITING Miss Dorothy Mae Brabender and Edward Sherman Carroll will be at 7 p. m. Friday in the home of the bride-to-be's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Brabender. The . Rev. G. H. O'Donnell will officiate. Mrs, Bettye Jane Ford will be her sister's attendant and the fiower git] will be Sandra Lee Ford, niece of the bride-to-be. David Klinger will serve as’ Mr. Cartoll’s best man.
Bihn-Lauber Rite Announced
THE MARRIAGE OF MISS ROSE LAUBER to George Bihn of Ft. Recovery, O. 1s announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lauber. The wedding was at 9 o'clock last Saturday morning in S88. Peter and Paul cathedral. The Rev. Fr. Henry Gardner, the bride's cousin, read the vows. Mr. Bihn is the son of Bylvan Bihn, . » Ft. Recovery. *c. + Njrs. George Murphy was Hovesistits matron of honor and the : flower girls were Janet Clouser and Betty Ann Lauber. Mr, Murphy served as best man. Following the cerémony there was a breakfast at the Homestead and a reception was held Saturday afternoon in the home of Mr. .and Mrs. Murphy. The couple left for a Wedding trip te Celina, O,, and Will be at home, after Aug. 1, in Sharpsburg, O.
Organizations— Mpys. Burke Nicholas to Speak At Garden Club Breakfast; Story-A-Month Club Will Meet
Organization news includes notés on breakfast, luncheon and theater pares as well as regular business meetings. Burke Nicholas, president of the Garden Club of Indiana, will ry the guest speaker at a breakfast meeting of the Irvington Ga club at 9 a. m. Friday. The meeting will be in the home of Mrs. W. W. Woerner, 821 Ni Riley ave. Mrs. George Price and Miss Martha Kincala will assist the] | the Bide-a-Wee Study elub chap-
hostess. 1 THe story Konth club will meet! Mys, Willian Hi t at 7:80 p. m. today i the Rauh Me-|or Tay hapttr, oe Ris
+ inotial library to hear a writerS'| sorority, has returned from Bevermarket report by Mrs. Ralph Bid-|jy Hills, Cal, where she went to ingood. [stall Miss Theodore Jacobson Into Stories written by members will | the chapter. Mrs. Holmes spent six be read and cirticized and a prize | weeks as Miss Jacobson's guest.
, ; | De ery ns fee awarded 0) tye Jolly Stitehers 1-H chub met i recently in the home of the leader, A party honoring members of In-| Mrs. Bertha Minnich. diana Nu chapter, Delta Theta C hi
sorority, will be held at 8 p. m. tore Tea Strainers Make
in the home of Mrs. V. A. Bernier ‘Soap Shakers
5211 B. 10th st. Assisting the host- | ess will be Mrs. Henry Poling an nd | Mrs. Gertrude Long. | To take the place of soap shakers inPlans for rush parties will be] that ae RoW unchaingbuk, akin made at a meeting today of Chi Benious homemakers’ are making
Sigta Phi sorority in the home of their own by fastening together hi wv r Masiingete, 2321 Pros- two non-priority tea strainer "pect § ere will be a social hour | The odds and ends that follow ing the business Meeting. | migirt ey be is 3 soap niceMrs. Robert Wilhoite, 1701 N. 1. V into this homemade gadget, and nois st., will be hostess at an 8 p, m.| WHIP up into grand suds in the meeting today of Alpha chapter, 3iShpan. The strainers can be fastBeta Chi Theta. AIO} ity. ! ened together with a bit of picture Mrs. Charles Wishmeier and Mrs, ¥.7e or With cord. Margaret Tidd were in charge of | the monthly luncheon of the Wayne Club to Meet Township War Mothers club day in the Wayne post hall, > yg The On-Ea-Ota club will meet Washington st. ‘at 1 p. m. tomorrow in the home fof Mrs, Robert Frame, Beech An anniversary dinner and thea- Grove, for a luncheon and bridge ter party were given last night by party.
-
Jocelrn Amy Ashley Corbett, whe
8. J. Woolf.
3 By 8. J.
thicker than water, the call across the Atlantic did not go unheard. Senior Commander ~ Corbett has
on an American one with two silver bars on her shoulders, and as & WAC now sings “My Country "Tis of Thee” to the tune of “God Save the King.” As she sat posing the other =r she compared the two countries,
rieh Bhe expressed a longing to see
again her native land, wondered if 49ifth avenue was as marvelous as ¢ver and hoped that before long she would be able to have her offipeer husband visit America With her] “Britain,” she $id, “has always Sen; sa man’s country. Here the
First Woman 10 Join British Auxiliary Territorial Service Becomes an American WAC
NEA Sal Writer LONDON. July 10 —Her name is Joselva ‘Any Ashley Corbett. ‘She Is the daughter of one Englishman and the wife of another. the first woman in Britain to join the Auxiliary Territorial Service, which corresponds £6 our WACS, and was the poster girl on its first fappeal for recruits. But she was born in Flushing, L. I, ard although blood may be
doffed her British uniform and put}.
'1 ford this, with the result that many
transferred from the British
ATS to the American WAG, sketched by NEA artist-correspondent
me INDIANAPOLIS Goo Will Emissary
Ruth To Be Wed to Earl Koskey
Rev. E, Arnold Clegg Will Read Ceremony
The Rev. E. Arnold Clegg will read the ceremony tonight uniting Miss Ruth McDaniel and Pvt. Bar] Koskey. The wedding will be at. 8:30 o'clock in the Capitol Avenue Methodist church, Miss MeDattlel fs the daughter of Mrs. William McDaniel, 3434 Graceland ave, and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Margaret Kdskey, 4606 N. Keystone ave. The bride, Sven in marriage Bb her brother, Frahcls NMeDaniel, — chosen a white satin fioek eribosséd with a floral pattern. Her tiered veil of English illusion is edged with Chantilly lace and falls from a tiara of orange . She will carry a bouquet of white “roses and gardenias, Bride's Attendants
Mrs. Vaughn Akard, her sister, will be matron of honor. She will wear sunshine yellow chiffon with
bishop sleeves, e and full princess skirt. The Bb Miss Dorothy
O'Neill, will wear & lilac chiffon gown styled like the matron of honor's. Both will wear matching Hower half hats and carry Johanna Hill
» ®
WOOLF
Bhe was
husband is master of the house, It is Baviite row with its smart tailors Which Thade the Englishman the fashion plate of the World. In order for an English woman to be well dressed she had to go to Frénch coutouriers. Few could af-
of them looked dowdy. “In America even the cheap tlothes have a certain style to them, $0 that shop girls and ethers who tan spend comparatively little all fook well dressed. & ‘ “Another thing that has always struck me over here is that for some reason or other the women
Mary Dyar's Marriage To Be Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Otis I. Pyar announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Mary Margaret, to Jack Edward Thompson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edghill Thompson, 916 S. Randolph st. The céréemony will be at 3:30 p. m. Sunday in the Dyar home, 974 N. Audubon rd. Miss Harriette Baughn Will be her cousin's maid of hohner. Bhe will entertain tonight at the Canary cottage with a dinner and shower for the bride-to-be. Guests with the mothers of the engaged couple will be Mesdames Charles \Baughn Sr, Herbegh Heflin, ‘Miles Hession, Walter Hodsdorfer, Christopher Al-| ley and Joseph Burchétte, Misses Mary Jo Bender, Iréné Brown, Mary Helen Bailey and Agnes Gillespie. Miss Dyar is a DePauw university graduate and a member of Alpha Chi Omega and Mu Phi Ep-
Have never léarnéd the art of makeup. They eithér use too little or too much. “But,” shé continued, “I have péen speaking only of externals. The real test of anyone is personality, and What these women have done in this war proves what they really are, } “I have heen a member of the ATS since October, 1938, and I have seen women from all classes pitch in and do their bit. They have become cooks, bakers, chauffeurs, typists, mechanics, telephonists and faboratory workers. In fact, outside of actual fighting, they are doing everything a man can do to win the war.”
Fosters Good Relations
A tall, lithe, young woman With ‘brown hair which she dresses. demurely when in uniform, with snappy eves and sparkling teeth, she is a typical American gir] in appearance, For this reason it souhds strange to hear her use the broad A and at times employ a British intonktion in her speech, But after al she has been living here for 15 years,
silon sororities. The prospective bridegroom attended Purdue university,
. ou we. |
Ear Catchers
The wedding of Miss Dorothy |
Mae Patterson and Ensign Homer G. Smitha, U. 8. N. R., will be at | 2 o'clock Sunday aftérnoon in the trips to Europe. {Roberts Park Methodist church. | Miss Patterson is the daughter of | children of her own, she joined the [Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Patterson, 72 ATS as soon as it was | IN. Belle Vieu pl, and the prospec- Our war department asked her to {tive bridegroom is the son of Mrs. transfer to the WAGE. Now she is |Georgia O. Binitha, 131 BE. Michi- looking forward to her Work with igan st.
2 2 » Miss. Leah Zappin’s marriage to
Smart sterling gilt
some set off by
earrings — simulated stones "e=others by rhinestones. They range from dra-
Lend an
dainty to matic. ear to this. de- . lightful beje w-
eled array!
MAIN FLOOR
All Prices Include 20% Tas
Ghariis Mayer ail Co.
BW. Waskingion St. ®
Phone LI-5501
be Sgt. Jerome F. Slutgky i% announced by her brother, Jack Zappin, Dayton, O. Bhe is a séaman 2-c, SPARS. The wedding was | June 9 in Nash¥ille, Tenn. Sgt. Slutzky is the son of Mrs | Gabe Clutzky, 4910 Park ave.
th. cette sie eaten cn
2. Prevents under-arm odor. Hel less vanishing cream.
right after shaving.”
Atrid regularly,
derstand each other, they wil] go a long way towards drawing those countries closer together.”
NEW...q CREAM DEODORANT
which Safely helps
STOP underrn PERSPIRATION
1. Does not irritate skin. Does not rot dresses and Sea's shirts,
3. A pure, white, antiseptic, stain4, No waiting to dry. Can be used
8. Arrid has been awarded the Approval Seal of the American Institute of Laundering for Being harmless to fabric. Use
Her maiden name was pass and her father's brother is the head of /the Cunard line in New York. Al: [though she attended & Fushing school and later went to Bt. Marys lacademy in Peekskill, éver since she was a child her family made yearly
Married to an army man, with no
[ them. “Perhaps,” she said, “in addition to my other jobs I cAh dp a little ih bringing a better understanding between the women of thé United States and Great Britain, and when the women of the two countnies un-
Springfield, Mo, where they will attend the ‘Wedding of Capt. David M. Pert, Madelyn Brown of Springfield. The | wedding will be at noon Friday in! the First and Calvary Presbyterian Shupen. Miss Pert will be a brides-
Missouri. State Teachers’ college and Capt. Pert was graduated from Purdue university. He is stationed at Peterson field, Colorado Springs, Colo. .
roses tied with yellow and orchid bows. : Reception Follows.
oe similar fo these of the other at-
rose petals, - iy Ernest Koskey, brother of the bridegroom, will be best man a ushers will be Mr, Akard and Do
be a reception in the church after
which the couple Will leave for a short wedding trip.
Mrs. D. J. Pert To Attend ' NEF i Son's Wedding Mrs. David J. Pert, 4908 Guifford ave, and hér daughter, Elizabeth, left today for a visit with Mrs. | Pert's son and daughter-in-law, | Lt. and Mrs. Willian M. Pert, St.
Louis. The four will leave tomorrow for
another son, and Miss
The bride-to-be, is a graduate of
-
Teenager Moccasin Typé Shoa
feDaniel
Judith Kay ig the bride's | i Lorts,
niece, ‘and Mary Ann the flower girls, will Wear | and peach respectively, Their will
tendants’ They will carry baskets of |
‘{or cornstarch, and enough to per-
“Mysterious Departure” (Giorgio de Chirico) is one of four modern paintings from private collections now on view at the John Herron Art bse. Considered the first surrealist, Chirico, an Ttalian educated in Greece and France, is noted for his ‘metaphysical paintings, his horses, his still lifes, landscapes and portraits. Examples of his work are in many outstanding collections of modern art in America. His far perspective, produced by a succession of arches on long buildings, the scaling down of
“Mysterious Departure” by Giorgio de Chirive.
Is Elected
EVERY FAMILY SHOULD BE SERVED a ‘blackberry pie or cob-
the pie is made correctly.
Minnis, brothers-in=1aw of the bride. Tal er at least once each season, provided the cost of the fruit is within Following the ceremony, there wi | Feason. It is one of the pleasantest gastronomic experiences, provided
There are two schools of thought on the making of the perfect
berty pie. One is to use ho thickening and give the bottom crust a
good chance t6 be soaked through with the luscious lip-painting juice. The other school of cooks insists on using thickening—tapioca, flour
mit just the slightest flow of juice when the Wedges are cut. CC ss 2 2 FRIDAY MENUS Breakfast Grapefruit (2). | Ready-to-eat cereal (4 servings). { Broiled bacon (2 1b.). Cinnamon toast (8 slices).
Luncheon
Poached eggs in spinach nests (1% Ibs. spinach, 4 eggs). Carrot sticks (4 carrots). Corn meal muffins. Fresh red plums (8). Spice bars (remainder).
Dinner
Beef patties with onion gravy (1 lb, beef). Riced_ potatoes a4 Ibs. potatoes). Buttered beets (1 bunch, fresh). Molded salad (1 pkg. lemon gelatine, 1 c. finely shredded cabbage,
-
F.) for 15 mins. then bake in Stow oven (325 degrees PF.) for 20 mins. or until done. Cool about one hour
-jor until lukewarm before serving.
A tbsp. of sugar sprinkled over the hot pie gives it &n Attractive appearance.
Business Session A business. meeting will be held at 8 p. m. today by Phi Delta Pt sorority's Delta chapter in room 2321 Lemcke building.
1 ¢. grated carrot, 2 tbsps. green
ps stop perspirasion safely.
Boys’ and Girls’
All Ages Walk Proudly in
Buster Brown Shoes
Here is style to put a sparkle in a young girl's syss .. .%n
bright new Buster Brown shoes.
standards for fit, for health .
ttyle importance of grown-up shoes.
a. .
any girl or boy, toddler to teener, will step out’ proudly in these Shoes made to the strictest
. and for wear . +» with all the
© WASSON'S' SHOE CENTER,
Brown Elk Moccasin Oxfords 8Y/; to e
fact,
THIRD FLOOR :
vegetable mixture of garden-fresh aspiragus tips -and colorful carrot rounds in smooth white sauce. This delicious luncheon or dinner ene
Meat Juice in Gravy
Juice in the pan from spareribs j aes gravy just right for potatoes lor grits.
>
; By B.P. \ \ otal * | Ann |. Biennial Convention Winner: Closes in New York 19 have fe NEW YORK, July 19.<The elbde ; HOB agent : tion of ah Indianapolis weman-- township Miss" Sally Butler—to the first vies test, whil presidency of the National Federa- ‘winners 5. tion of Business. ; maker, Wi Clubs, Toc, caine yest lin, Wash day at the closing ‘of the Winners p Hons © convention were Miss {which opened here night. Rebecca T Miss Butler has served #8 reid. Augustine, ifig seerétary of the federation for Murphy, ] ol re In the Background, - Etoted President were Miss and shade 8 breaking Bl Miss Margaret A. Hickey, OA. + Washingtc the composition, &i® desighed to Louis, chaiiman’ of the women's Decatur, give a feeling of the isolation ex- |policy committee of the war mans neman an perienced only in the diam world. power commission, was the une berry, Wa Alo in the exhibit at the mu- candidate for president. + Thr seum are “Composition, Music” by ther officers chosen yesterday ceived by Pablo Ruis Picassé and “Red |were Mrs. Mae Schafer, Wooster, Muilets” and “Compote of Figs” |O, Second vice president; Mrs, by Georges Braque. Hazel V. Peterson, Pierre, 8. Dj, The four examples of contéth- |third vice president; Miss Florence porary artists’ work will réinain oft |Cartwright, Shawnee, Okia., record display throughout the summeér. |ing secretary, and Miss Ruth Lee The museum Be open from 9 a. m. |Koch, Louisville, Ky., treasurer. to 5p. m.»Tuesdays through Sat-. ba : urdays and from 1 to 6 p, m. on Equhl Right Miavivea Sundays. At the closing meeting, the cofle vention delegates approved a resoe lution to be sent to John W. Mee N Cormick, chairman of the Dero # 1 ¥Y tee, at the Democratic national cone . qQyr 1 e : vention in Chicago. The resolution urged, that a plank : Met Giv ’ be Dlaced In Jb Demotiatis hija 2Y cia Given indorsing the equal - righth iy igor : : a naib rn Cemventlon Spekkers The speakers at yesterday's sese sions included Dr. Donald VanSiyka, president of the American Bureau A for Medical Aid to China, and Gen, th Robert K. 8. Lim. m Dr. Minnie L. Maffett, the fede ig retiring président, was & pepper, % ec. celery, 2 thsps. diced| Made an honorary president. sweet pickle, 1 tsp. sugar, 1 thep.| AR vitation that the organiza. vingar, 1 tsp. salt. tion hold ita 198 convention in Blackberry ple (see recipe). Cleveland Was extended by that city, » ” a Blackberry pie: Wash 1 gt. Bltek- on Rison berries, drain in sieve or colander Top Bacon Biscuits a | and remove hulls. Line = $nch With Vegetables pie plate with rolled less than % inch thick. il pie piate| Ada % Sb Sid bacon to 1a with berries, Piro flour mixture for & standard biscuit ! rd Mix % c. sugar, and 2 tsps. femon |recipe. Cht or tub in shortening juice and pour ¥ over the berries.|and add ile. Roll biscuit dough Lay on top crust, gathed to aliow|i-inch thick And cut with 3-inch for escape of steam. Brush edges |cutter. Bake bhoon biscuits on un. of lower crust with water or milk greased baking sheets in moderately and press to keep in juice. hot oven (425 degrees F'.) 15 minutes, Bake in & hot oven (425 degréps| Top biscuits with a cooked
