Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1944 — Page 13

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: Weer-Alig Ceremony Read Today;

és for Wedding Trip

THE WEDDING OF MRS. MARJORY STALNAKER ALIG and Paul Wiley Weer was read at noon today in the First Presbyterian church. The Rev. Rus-

sell Galloway officiated. The bride wore a dark

matching accessories, Her flowers were pink roses and pompon asters with ivy leaves.

After the ceremony, the couple ‘Weer is the daughter of Mrs. Frank apartments. :

Miss Martha Janice Eifert has chosen Miss June Ormsby as her only attendant for her marriage to Charles Van O'Brien. The wedding will be Aug. 23 in the home of her parents, the Rev. and Mrs.

William H. Eifert. John O'Brien will be his brothers best man. The ‘prospective.

~ bridegroom is the son of Mrs. B.

M. O’Brien, Danville,

Bridal Dinner Given

MRS, IRENE M. FOX enter-

tained last night at Cifaldi’s with . a bridal dinner honoring her

po.

daughter, Helen, and Lt. Edgar C. McNamara, U. 8. M. C. They will be miarried at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the Little Flower Catholic church. The Rev. Fr. John C. Riedinger will hear the vows. Guests at the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Leo McNamara, Carmel,

- the WBridegroom-to-be's parents; |

CEA]

“am.

Miss Virginia Free, maid of honor; Robert and Leo McNamara Jr. ushers, and Cpl. Frank Fox, Ft. Bliss, Tex., Miss Fox's brother. Following the ceremony tomorrow there will be a breakfast at the Highland Golf and Country club. .

Officers Club Dance

A DANCE WILL BE GIVEN by the Officers Club of Indianapolis from 9 p. m. to midnight tomorrow in the clubrooms in the Clayhotel. Junior hostesses will be on duty at the club. : The committee arranging the event includes Messrs. and Mesdames Ralph Lockwood, Dudley Smith and Paul Matthews, Miss Josephine Madden and Mrs. John Ott who will be in charge of table arrangements. 8 ” J Miss Diana Harvey has returned from Jacksonport, Wis., where she was a house guest at the summer home of Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Jackson and their daughter, Eleanor. ’ o [J . Mrs. Elwood P. Sipole will be the hostess Tuesday evening at a meeting of Phi Tau sorority members, ;

Betty Milliner Is Engaged

The engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Betty Milliner and William PF. Landis is announced by Mrs. John Winter, 5§14 W. 16th st.. sister of the bride-to-be. The wedding will be Aug. 20 in the Roberts Park Methodist church

with the Rev. §. L. Martin officiat- |UPOR all working people.” I suppose | sorte made with a fitted lace bodice.

ing. Mr. Landis is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Landis, 948 N. Graham ave.

Mrs. Winter will be her sister's! matron of honor and Marilyn Win-| ter will be the flower girl. The! bridesmaids wil] be Mrs David Lan- |"

dis gnd Miss Doris Rushton.

Luncheon Monday

A covered dish luncheon will be held at 11:30 a. m. Monday at Ft. Friendly by the Catherine Merrill tent, Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War. The luncheon will be followed by a short business meeting and a book review by Mrs. Marie Bilby.

{why these groups oppose the equal

blue ‘two-piece suit with

left for a wedding trip. Mrs. Douglas Stalnaker of the Winter

y.

Woman's Viewpoint— Writer Favors Action Now on

Equal Rights

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer MY DESK IS piled with letters from readers who belong to the American Association ‘of University

Women and the League of Women Voters, The letters contain reasons

rights amendment to the constitution. I respect the sincerity of these women. I know their =~ arguments are honest conclusions, honestly arrived at. But I also remember that the same » arguments were used in the fight against suffrage {before 1920. . One heard the plaint that th vote would take away all protection from women. We would be polluted and degraded by it, and would lose vastly more than we would gain, And maybe it worked out that way for some women. Nevertheless, [we should feel ourselves a pretty {backward nation right now if we {did not have the vote. | Several powerful feminine organ{izations are fighting the amendment, believing the same ends can be attained through state legisiation. They contend that the passage of the bill would cause great confusion in the courts, by wiping out all protective measures. - » . YET NONE CAN argue that without an amendment millions of women will be deprived for many years of their economic rights, and at a time when they have never done so much to earn them,

a

‘eye with the enemies of the amendiment, Philip Murray of the C. 1. O,,

i

iin a letter to congressmen, puts

|it bluntly. He calls it a dangerous ipiece of legislation and says, “if

Labor union leaders see eye to!

3)

A Former Hoosier Sets Style Pace

By LOUISE FLETCHER. Times Women's Editor FALL'S FASHION story might well be titled “Hoosier Boy Makes *Good.” The Hoosier is designer Norman Norell (born in Noblesville; brought up in Indianapolis), who seems to be setting the. pace “for a large segment of his fashien.

1. NECKLINES HIT HIGH “C” clothes.

In this Herbert Sondheim black wool, a fly-front closing shoots up to a throat-hugging neckline. It's a simple-seeming background for a jeweled fob belt of bright leather. ’ 2. TWEEDS GO “DRESSMAKER” FOR FALL.

New York Dress Institute photos.

for a dramatic effect in daytime

Bruno. went into

a brown study designing this outfit for Spectator Sports. Brazilianbrown tweed is matched by a bow-tied brown jersey blouse, tweed gloves and bow-beret. Dressmaker details are a scalloped jacket

collar and rhinestone studded wood

buttons.

3. THE MIDDY ‘BECOMES GLAMOROUS. The long-torso two-

piece style which traces its ancestry

to the middy appears, in a Capri

Original, “duded” up for afternoon and dinner wear with a necklace of

tumes will be shown at Ayres.)

rhinestones ‘embroidered right on its black crepe. (The three cos-

" world brethren... As designers revealed their collections last week in Manhattan under the sponsorship of the New York Dress institute, it became apparent that the fashion trends sired last season by Norell have been adopted by other designers . . . the middy theme; hipline interest; two-piece effect in onepiece models; the elongated silhouette; an air of casual elegance. =" ® - SOME MIGHT ARGUE that under government-directed fabric limitations, styles would have gone the Norell road anyway, but the fact remains that Mr, Norell “got there fustest with the mostest” so far as style influence. goes, Because his earlier lines were so widely copied, Norell this season refused to give the fashion

Rev. O'Donnell Will Officiate At Ceremony

Miss Dorothy Mae Brabender and Edward Sherman Carroll will be | married at 7 o'clock tonight in the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and { Mrs, Carl W. Brabender, 2427 N. Talbott st. The Rev. G. H. ODonnell will officiate. ‘ Entering with her father, the

|passed, it will bring great hardship

iwhen he uses the word people, he | means men. If we did not face terrible postwar economic adjustments we could ifeel more complacent on this question and perhaps afford to postpone But in spite of the good intentions of those who would put their trust in state. legislatures, we must be prepared for the inevitable flood of bills when the war ends that hwill kick women out of industry.

The only way to prevent that,

as I see it, is to give them equal {rights under the “constitution now. We didn't get suffrage by states; we won't get economié¢ and political equality .that way either.

~

A

or

Saturday Store Hours:

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and Company Will Quickly Answer Your Birthday Anniversary

Traditional Gift Store For Over

Charies Mayer v Company

29 West Washington Street

Relaxing Thought

Stroll Through Charles Mayer

Wedding Gift Problem. The One Hundred Years.

9:30 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.

bride will wear a gown of marqui-

{ Her fingertip veil will fall from a | half hat of flowers. She will carry white roses and gardenias.

Sister Matron of Honor

Mrs. Bettye Jane Ford, her sister's matron of honor, will wear pale yel-

writers any advance pictures of his new designs . . . a move that earned grudging admiration for

his astuteness (a good, old Hoosfer trait). There is, however, one generally accepted trend in fall styles for which he cannot take a bow. That is the broad, broad shoulder line which does miracles toward making hips look slimmer by contrast. For that Jine, reluctant as they may be to admit it, New York designers must thank Hollywood's Adrian, who has been doing a superb job on shoulder lines ever since his movie-studio days. = ” ” EVEN THOUGH a straight-and-narrow theme prevails in the new season's styles, there are variations that indicate the de-’

signers are thinking ahead to post-war lifting of fabric limitations. Straw in the wind is a “dressmaker” feeling rather than the strictly tailored. It's expressed, too, in flared tunic lines, peplums (as in Adele Simpson's minaret silhouette) and half peplums, conservative now in use of yardage— but wait until after the war. Because skirts still must remain slim there is, by way of contrast, much emphasis on the bosom . . . slanted closings, shirrings, beaded yokes, Edwardian braiding and whatnot.

2 » 2 SLIM AS THEY are, skirts ring in some changes with sarong drapes, Scheherezade. swags and (courtesy of Ben Reig) jabots placed below one hip.

*

Mothers’ Club |

©

Shoulders Are High, Wide and Handsome

Skirts, incidentally, are geiting longer. The influential voice of Hattie Carnegie, dean of New York designers, says so as the hems of her daytime skirts drop almost to mid-calf. Clare Potter says 80, too, just as she’s been saying it for seasons past. - And -as skirts go down, daytime necklines go up, adding still more height to the tall silhouette. 2 2 = ODDS AND ENDS: Color contrasts are big news, featuring rich, Oriental and jewel tones. . . . Long evening dresses are back with a bang, made in sumptuous fabrics such as heavy patterned satins. . . . Period themes that predominate include the Edwardian with its jet, braid, ball fringe and ruching. ... The Renaissance motif, inspired, probably, by the return to New York museums of the old masters’ paintings which had been placed in safe caches against possible bombings, Is another highlight. Footnote for heads: Watch for bigger and better hats to eclipse the postage stamp variety. All the designers like them with their fall clothes.

Committee Chairmen Are Named Sororities—

Included in the list of chairmen| are: Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher and Mrs. ! Delbert Wilmeth, American citizen- | ship; Mrs. Howard T. Griffith, American home; Mrs. J. F. Thorn- | burgh, education; Mrs, Theodore Fleck, Epsilon Sigma Omicron; | Miss Marie Schake] and Mrs. Emil H. Soufflot, student loan. | Mrs. W. H. Pearl, fine arts; Mrs.| Colin Lett, art division; Mrs. Jules

{low organza. Her bouquet will be yellow roses and she will’ wear matching flowers in her hair.

will carry a basket of rose petals. David Klinger will be best man. There will be a dinner at Spencer's following the ceremony. - After Aug. 10, the couple will be at home at 5520 College ave.

‘Sprucing Up’ The Wardrobe

RESPECTING the caprices of fabrics that make your clothes is the best’ way to guarantee a good sprucing up job on summer dresses that are going to need a lot of it. = } Rayons, for instance, are conscientious objectors to a hot iron and like to be pressed on the’ wrong side, so humor them when you tackle wrinkles. Silks can take a hotter iron, but it’s wise to test heat out on an in-

side area before you smack down.

Invincible Protection For Foods!

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Solid colored silks rarely object to damp pressing cloths, but many print patterned silks-do. o » 2 SOME DYE COLORS are apt to run—race into each 4ther and make a mess—when moisture and heat combine to disturb their set ways. "As for spot-cleaning, be careful. Although rayon yarn is dry-clean-able, there are certain constructions and finishes that will protest a daubing with spotting fluids. To avoid the ring hazard, test your cleaner out on the wrong side of a hem or other safe area before you tackle a soiled spot. If all is not well, skip the spot ting and let your dry cleaner take over,

Sour Cream and Liver

perfectly. Dredge liver with flour, sprinkle with salt and pepper and saute in bacon fat. Turn frequently. Add three-fourths of a cup of sour cream and cook until thoroughly heated. Sprinkle with finely chopped parsley.

Shop at Morrisen’s | “Largest Women's Specialty Shop in Indianapolis” 20 W. Washington St,

Sandra Lee Ford, niece of the; bride, will be flower girl. She will wear a short white lace dress and leislation.

~ Diver -and--sour cream harmonize |

G. Zinter, literature; Mrs, A, L.

|Duncan and Mrs. Albert Gray, mu-

sic; Mrs. Leonidas Smith, Hoosier salon; Mrs. C. J. Ancker, interna-| tional relations; Mrs. F. G. Balz, |

Committee Heads

Mrs. E. H. Niles and Mrs. John Engelke, public welfare; Mrs. A, L. Marshall, health; Mrs. Maurice Eppert, safety; Mrs. Virgil Sly, youth co-operation; Dr. Ada Schweitzer, nursing home inspection; Mrs. L. E. Gausepohl, physical handicaps; Mrs. Engelke, radium; Mrs. T. O. Philpott, war service; Mrs. Frances Mazur, Americanization. Mrs. Calvin Perdue, agriculture; Mrs. Harry Koss, aviation; Mrs. H. E. Cunningham, blood donors; Mrs. Frank Clapp and Mrs. Howard Nyhart, conservation 6f war materials; Mrs. Harold H, Arnholter, consumer

.iproblems; Mrs. Thomas Hindman,

first aid; Mrs. Louis Wolf, gardens; Mrs. W. E. Wolf, housing; Mrs. J. Francis Huffman, industry.

Additional Chairmen

Mrs. H. K. Fatous, library; Mrs. C. H. Smith, nursing; Mrs. Paul Stokes, nutrition; Mrs. Ear] C. Moomaw, recreation: Mrs. E. F. Neill, Save the Children federation; Mrs. Myron J. Spring, war stamps and bonds; Mrs. Seward Baker, war service recruiting. Mrs. Paul Oren, Clubwoman magazine; Mrs. W, E, McGuire, cooperation for the blind; Mrs. Walter Lehmann, conservaiton of natural resources; Mrs. E. A. Kelly, federation pin; Mrs. W. D. Keenan, forums, Mrs. Baker, juniors; Mrs. E. L. Burnett, motion pictures; Mrs. Brandt Downey, post-war planning; Mrs. Royer K, Brown, radio; Mrs. Louis A. Kirch, reciprocity: Mrs. J. W. Byram, auditor; Mrs. Soufflot, book memorial and tribute books; Mrs. Pearl, budget; Mrs. George A. Bowen, constitution and by-laws; Mrs. W. C. Bartholomew and Mrs. J. C. Reynolds, directory,

Officers Listed

Mrs. Elmer Johnson, advertising; Mrs. E. C. Rumpler and Mrs. Keenan, history; Mrs, C. J. Finch, tory sales; Mrs. O. M. Richardson, and decorations; Mrs. E. and Mrs, Baker, membership; Mrs. Paul Calet, Mrs, Thomas Ackerman, pages and

Committee and department chairmen who will serve the seventh | district, Indiana Federation of Clubs, during the coming season are announced by Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge, the incoming president. Accompanying the announcement is the news that the district] directors recently voted $50 to the Flower Mission center of the City party and a business meeting. hospital in honor of Mrs. Alvin C. Johnson, retiring president.

Baker, first through third vice presidents; Mrs. James Kittle and Mrs. Reynolds, recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. Douglas H. White, treasurer; Mesdames John W. Atherton, Alvin C. Barbour and Hancock, directors; Mrs. | Walter H. Vinzant, parliamen-| tarian: Mrs. Spring, publicity, and Mrs. Rumpler, chaplain,

Bright Sun Harms Eyes

A PALE, goggly look around the eyes of a sun-stanned face may not be a mark of beauty but it proves that you have mighty ‘good sense. Using that same geod sense; you can apply tan make-up to the eye area and match it to the rest of your face. - But not all women pay eyes the respect of shielding them with glasses when they settle in the sun to invite a tan. Anxious to achieve

and even stare at the sun. Very unwise, that practice. Eyes subjected to heavy doses of sunlight are affected very much as is a sensitive skin which becomes reddened or burned, and serious visual strain can result. 2 s o IT'S NOT SMART to “eye” the sun, even with your lids closed. Lids | —perhaps the most delicate skin of any part of your body—are not sufficiently opaque to serve as blinds for these windows of your soul So, put on those profective specs when you tan your face which, for safety’'s sake, should have a pale, goggly look around the eyes until you can settle down with your make-up box.

Mrs. Horner To Visit Here

Mrs. Errol O. Horner, Washington, chief of the national organizations

war finance women's division, will be the honor guest next Thursday at a luncheoh in the Columbia club. She will be here to confer with members of the advisory council and

committee's women’s division. Reservations for the 1 p. m. luncheon may be made through Tuesday by calling the state women’s division office in the Illinois

: building. Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren,

Whiting, is the division chairman.

| Meeting Tuesday’

‘The Marion county chapter of American World War Mothers will imeet at 9:30 a. m. Tuesday in the

Officers with Mrs. Ridge are Mes-

a uniform tan, they remove glasses

unit of the treasury department's]

chairmen of the state war finance}.

For I F. C. Seventh District; Rush Party Board Honors Past President To Be Held

At Purdue

Sorority events include a rush

Gamma at Purdue university, The

Mount Vernon, social;

Kokomo, refreshments. td td =

: TOOMS. Mrs. Marie | sponsor, gave a travel review on hi

in Loveland, Colo. . - Ed f J

tertainment.

8

At Butler

ary.

committees in charge in- ; clude Miss Margaret Sigler, invita- Orange juice or sliced. peaches (6 .onter Cover and simmer for 10 ° tions: Miss Martha Lee Riggs. | Miss Jane Smith, West Unity, O., decorations; | Miss Mary Lou Schiltz, Chicago, | programs, and Miss Ruth Ann Job, Tuna

Members of Alpha Lambda chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha, made

recent trip to national headquarters

“Hollywood celebrity party” for, members of Kappa chapter, Delta Sigma Kappa. Mrs. Russell Mount| yay pe brought to the table for|into individual molds. Chill and is general chairman and Mrs. Vic-|serving. Scrape carrots and sim-|serve on leaf lettuce and top with

mer whole in just enough water to|a spoonful of mayonnaise and a

tor Adams will be in charge of en- | Add the meat !dash of paprika.

BUY MORE AND BOND BooTH, STH

a

Sets Meeting

Officers Ariticanced

News of women's organizations includes a picnic and the report of a recent election. The Delta Tau Delta Mothers’

rclub will meet from 1 to 4 p. m. | Tuesday in Jordan hall at the uni-

versity to work on surgical dressings. A short business session will

precede the meeting. |

Mrs. Dale White is the recently elected president of the Indianapolis post 4 unit, American Legion auxilOther new officers are Mrs. Fred Ludtke and Mrs. Corey 8S. Acra, first and second vice presidents; Mrs. Frances Sinex and Mrs. Karl Galbraith, recording and corresponding secretaries, and Mrs. | Matthew Winters, treasurer. Mrs. Charles Holton will serve as ichaplain; Mrs. Claude Record as i historian and Mrs. Ralph McLeod as sergeant at arms. Mrs. White | and Mrs. Sinex will be council delegates with Mrs. Garrett Olds and Mrs. Agatha Ward as alternates. Mesdames Everett Baum, J. T. Couchman and W. J. Overmire were elected to the executive board.

By Legion Auxiliary | 3

: Kindred. photo, Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Pyle announce the marriage, last Sept. 21, of their daughter, Evelyn, to Lt. A. J. Everett, army signal corps. The couple is at home in Warrenton, -Va., where Lt. Everelt is stationed.

Y. W. Lists Summer Activities

Dr. Stith Thompson of Indiana

| A picnic and meeting are being | held this afternoon and evening in Christian park by the Woodside W. C. T. U. A basket supper will be served at 6 p. m. and Mrs. Charles Grant, county president, and Mrs. Oscar White, county evangelistic leader, will speak.

Forrest P. Jones, deputy state attorney general, spoke last night at a meeting of the Service Men's Mothers club in the West Washing‘ton Methodist church. | ‘Supper Booked

The Ladies’ auxiliary to the Mickleyville volunteer fire depart-

ment will give a chicken supper | and card party at 5:30 p. m. | {Thursday in the fire station at 817 Mrs. Cecil VanArsdale is chairman of the refreshMrs. Harris |

Ingomar ave.

ments committee and

university will talk on “Hoosier {Folk Lore” at 8 p. m. Wednesday in ithe Y. W. C. A. The meeting will mark the opening of the second half of the Y. W.s “summer clubhouse” program for employed women. A period of square dancing, led by Herbert Fledderjohn, will follow the talk. Mrs. Fledderjohn will be the "accompanist. ¢ will be the Indianapolis hosteling {groups and the Wheelman's club.

‘® = =

Registrations are being accepted at the Y. W. for new classes in tennis beginning Thursday in Riverside park. a Beginners will meet from 6 to d 45 p. m. and will receive instruction in fundamental strokes, simple court play and scoring. Intermediate classes will follow those for beginners. Individual coaching, special plays and tourneys will be featured in the

Mondary is in charge of the card |class for advanced players at 7:15 party.

|p. m.

Wartime Eating

Meta Given

THE EASIEST WAY TO LEARN how to become a good cook of beautiful vegetables is by using your imagination and being careful in every thing you do. Visualize first how- good. looking your dish might be, then in every step of preparation, work toward your goal. One must start by choosing vegetables that are fresh and then mak|ing use of them while they are still fresh. Washing them until they are

| preserve the clean, natura] color.

spotless is necessary if you want to

extract paste and stir until well

Trimming, paring, or scrapingplended. Cut the onions including

= 2 = MONDAY MENUS Breakfast

oranges). Puffy omelet (6 eggs).

. Luncheon mold (see recipe). |Chard with tomato sauce. | Whole wheat toast (8 slices). | Fresh apricots (8). : Dinner | Pan-fried liver (1 lb. sliced).

plans for their summer activities, vegetable ragout (see recipe). at a meeting last night in the clubNiebrugge,

| Lettuce salad. French bread (8 slices). er | Raspberry charlotte (remainder from Sunday).

2 2 8 . Vegetable Ragout: 8 medium size

| Toast and homemade jam (8 slices). |

A formal rush party with a yacht must be done sparingly and in a their tops into 3-inch lengths, and club motif will be given tomorrow manner to retain the natural shape. add to the carrots.

night by Beta Iota chapter of Delta

Place the cucumber slices on top, around the edge. Divide tomato into several sections, cutting only part way down and place in the

to 12 mins. or until vegetables are (tender. . 5 Add a little water to the corm{starch to make a paste and add | gradually. Simmer until sauce is {thickened and clear. Serve immediately. Four servings. 3

= 2 2 Tuna Mold: Soften 1 tbsp. un|flavored gelatine in % c. cold water. Mix 2 slightly beaten egg yolks with 1" tsp. salt and 1 tsp. prepared mustard. Add 3% c. milk and 2 tbsps. butter. Cook over boiling water, stirring constantly until mixture

d thickens. Add the gelatine and stir

lcarrots, 1 c. water, 1 tsp. meat ex- until it is dissolved.

Mrs. Walter Askren, Michigan rd, tract paste, 2 bunches green onions, | will be hostess Monday night at a'/12 slices cucumber (cut 3% inch {tuna fish and add to the cooked thick), 1 very large tomato, peeled, | mixture. Add % c. finely diced

2 tsps. cornstarch. Use a casserole or skillet whic

cover, for 10 mins.

DON’T FORGET — WASSON’S Will Close SATURDAY

1:00

Monday—12:15 P. M. to 8:45 P. M. Tuesday through Fri

5:15

Saturday—9:30 A. M. to 1:00 P. M.

ORE WAR:

Separate into flakes, 1 Ib. can of

celery, 2 finely diced sweet pickles hand 2 tbsps. mild vinegar. Tum

at

P.M.

Summer Store Hours:

iday—9:45 A. M. to P.M. 5

8A SIME

» 2

Special guests