Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1944 — Page 15
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FRIDAY, AUG. 25, 1944 Lc -
Society— Sire
+ Indianapolis Girls Leave Next Month To Enter Ward-Belmont Junior College
SEVERAL INDIANAPOLIS GIRLS will leave Sept. 11 to enter thé fall semester at Ward-Belmont Junior college in Nashville, Tenn. Those who will return include Miss Martha Jean Clearwater, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D, D. Clearwater; Miss Claribel Martin, daughter of Judge and Mrs. Clarence R. Martin, and Miss Ellen Jane Sagalowsky, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Sagalowsky. Miss Virginia Murray, daughter of the A. D. Murrays, also will leave next month. Miss Mary Ann Pearson, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Lyman R. Pearson, a former student at the college, left today for Bloomington where she will attend Indiana university. y ss 8 = ® 8 » Miss Marjorie Glass, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. F. E. Glass, has.
completed work for her master of arts degree at Northwestern I
university. » » s Among the Indianapolis entries in the Kentucky State Fair horse show are Miss D, owned by Mrs. B. W. Major; Willis E. Kuhn's Tornado; Captain Courageous, owned by J. R. Brant Jr, and Alador and Reject entered by the Bonham stables. The show will be held Monday through Sept. 2 at Churchill Downs. The grand championship event will conclude the show.
Art Preview
A PREVIEW of the Indian~ apolis International Salon of Photography exhibition will be held at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening in the John Herron Art museum, According ‘to - museum authorities, it is the most comprehensive showing of contemporary photographs ever held here. The display includes the work of 181 photographers in this country and abroad. , There are 365 prints.
Organizations— Indiana Poetry Society Plans Party Sunday
Parties and meetings highlight the organization news. Mrs. Martha Bishop, 2201 N. New Jersey st. will be hostess at 2:30 p- m. Sunday for a party of the Indiana Poetry society. Members will read original poems and Mrs. Florence Free McDonald will present a musical program. She will be accompanied by Mrs. Bertha Didway.
Initiation of members of the Alpha Eta chapter, newly organized group of the Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, was held recently in the
ss = 8 Claypool hotel.
Mrs. Lowell 8. Fisher entertained recently with a luncheon and bridge party for Mrs, Harry Dragoo II, Columbus, O. and Mrs. Kenneth. N. Rider, Franklin. Mrs. Dragoo and sons, Douglas and David, are guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Thomas Ackerman = returned yesterday after vacationing in Toledo, O.
Dorothy Pieper, president; Miss Florence Newip, vice president; Miss Dorothy Fuller and Miss Harriet Schuh, recording and corresponding secretaries; Miss Mildred Dishman, treasurer; Miss Elizabeth Piper, program chairman; Miss Martha Keyt, historian, and Miss Gloria Haffner, doorkeeper.
The group was organized by Mrs. Lola Pence. Miss Marie Niebrugge was installing officer and Miss Ruth Pence assisted her,
A meeting of the Ladies auxiliary Success in putting up preserves,iiy, the Induapolis ,— marmalades, jams and relishes, 3" | ment will be held at 2 p. m. Monday pends on the jar as well as the reci- |in Ayres’ auditorium. Mrs. Donald pe. No matter how good the mix- Bushong will preside. ture is as it comes from the kettle, it will represent a loss of valuable! The Lisieux club will hold its fi:ct time, food and money if put into|fall meeting Oct. 3 in the Knights the wrong container so it doesn’t of Columbus auditorium. A card keep Bu Svs weet may befor Nov es' auditorium. Thick spreads. IMrs. J. J. Speaks and Mrs. I. W.
packed in sound, clean, sterile jars . and sealed with paraffin or with Gillespie are co-chairman for the
metal tops having separate rubber,
rings. chill Sugars Add Flavor
Cooked relishes, catsup, sauce and mincemeat should alwa be packed in jars that seal airtight Sprinkle baking powder biscuits If they are simply covered with with orange-sugar, lemon-sugar, or paraffin, they're likely to mold. | cinnamon-sugar before baking. The Use only jars with glass lids for tempting flavor of these sugars goes these acid-products—either light-| {well with cold fresh fruit salads and ning-type jars or those with three- adds that “something warm” to piece tops. luncheon meals.
Success in Canning Depends on Jars
—
O—you’re going \ to be married!
Then let us assist you in making your selection of patterns in China, Glassware and Sterling Silver,
We will gladly register your pattern selection in each department for your convenience.
» % ' Store Closes 1:00 P. M. Saturday
Chavles Mayer ¥ Company
29 West Washington Street
Al Around the Town. a
It's thes WARM MORNING HEATER For a Cozier Winter!
Extremely economical to operate, th W. MORNING Coal Heaters produce ‘50, a. HEAT than ordinary ier of Sued 7 size. Bring your purase certificate to Polar hil of these heaters is available, , sample pply ICE AND
| EOLAR FUEL €0.
2000 NORTHWESTERN AVE, A 16th St. 1902S. East St.
a
Officers of the group are Miss|"
gardening were (left to right)
troop 12.
The Bridal Scene—
ments of engagements. be at 9 a. m. tomorrow in the St. will be Morris Gambrall.
Mr. and Mrs. William V. Schove, 443 N. Oakland ave, and Mr. Fernkas’ father is Andrew Fernkas, 1329 Lee st. n s 3 A double ring ceremony Aug. 17 in the home of the Rev. Charles M. Kroft, 548 N. Jefferson ave. united Miss Nadine Coffee and Sgt. Ernest Le Masters. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Emily Coffee, 639 N. Jefferson ave. and Mr. Le Masters’ parents are Mr. and Mrs. John Le Masters, 904 Harlan st. A reception was held in the bride's mother’s home following the ceremony.
ss = = Mr. and Mrs. John Petroskey, Traverse City, Mich., announce the marriage of their daughter, Irene,
U.S. N. R. The wedding was Aug. 1 in Traverse City. Mr. Hagan is the son 8 Mr. and Mrs. James Hutson, 527 8. LaClede st. ~ EJ o Mrs. Clara Reeves, 910 Beecher st., announces the engagement and approaching marriage of her daughter, Miss Dorothy Reeves, and Leo Strawmyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Strawmpyer, Brownsburg. The wedding will be Sept. 11. = sn os Miss Genevieve Evans and John Ellet Jr. were married at 4 p. m. Tuesday in Cifaldi’s restaurant. The Rev. John Patterson of the Holy Name Catholic church officiated. Miss Delores Williams was maid of honor, and the bridesmaid was Miss Dorothy Oliver. Arthur Antonow served as best man. Following the ceremony, there was a dinner, and a reception was held in the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Augustine Jones, Beech Grove. The couple left for a short wedding trip and will be at home at 1942 Talbot ave. Mr. Ellet, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Ellet, Coates-
. |ville, attended the Indjana univer-
sity School of Medicine and is a member of Phi Rho Sigma medical fraternity.
Perfect Shortening
Know why lard is the perfect shortening for the perfect pie crust? It has high shortening value, gives just the right amount of flavor to the crust, and makes a flaky pie crust.
Raisin Dumplings Raisin dumplings made with enriched flour and steamed over sweetened green applesauce make a combination that is a real pep tonic. Served plain or with top milk, this dessert makes luscious summer food.
Miss Schove is the dayghter of]
and Charles Hagan, seaman 1-c,'
According to Mrs. Margaret Foster, leader of Girl Scout troop 12, the scouts have had a busy and instructive summer tending their victory garden in Garfield park. Among the girls participating in the
Misses Hazel Williams, Betty Jean Rivers, Esther Grinwald and Mary Lee Eviston. Goodwill Industries, also a community fund agency, is the sponsor of
The. Indianapolis
Catherine Schove Will Be Wed To John A. Fernkas Tomorrow; Miss Nadine Coffee Is Bride
Included in the bridal notes are recent weddings and the announce-
The wedding of Miss Catherine Schove and John A. Fernkas will
Philip Neri Catholic church. Miss
Elma Hock will be the bride-to-be’s only attendant and the best man
Good Grooming Creates Chic And Comfort
Wartimes ring in exceptions to the rule of chic which says you should wear the right clothes in the right place at the right time. But just the same, there are some canons of good taste that survive, and those sticklers* who observe them usually look better and feel better because they do. A black crepe dress, for instance, can be worn on the street when you start out at 9 a. m., if you're not going to go home and change {for a tea date. But this kind of gress is for after-lunch sprucing up, and it's nice to preserve its special functions. If you're going on after you wind {up your work, you're better dressed and will feel and look better in an all-purpose suit, Formal evening gowns, bound for the concert, the opera, the canteen dance, travel on any kind of wheels these days, because of the gasoline shortage. But long skirts] take a lot of punishment and a It} of cleaning.
embarrassed and annoyed. So, a switch to a short-skirted glamour gown, if you can't be a Cinderella who rides in a carriage, is more practical and makes you look more appropriately dressed.
A Cover-Up For Blushes .
YOU PROBABLY won't want, really, to be a blushing bride—so here’s how to look cool, calm and collected on your wedding day. Ivory-pale make-up is the ‘answer, a hridal consultant says. But if blushes are going to be kept safely under cover, according to the expert, you'll need to use a non-transparent type of make-up base, either a cream or a lotion. Powder over it, and be sure to-use a bit of cheek rouge, or youll look as white as though you'd met your rival standing at the altar,
” = = ABOUT BEADS of perspiration that also pop up on a face under the stress of excitement, the best prevention of that is to use a shinesubduing liquid, which also controls moisture, before you apply your make-up.
Rice ‘Extends’ Meat
For extending meat, try unpollashed rice, a new special grade of rice between the brown and polished rice. It has good nutritive value as
well as extra flavor.
Looking Up’
—By Dodds
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Scouts Tend Victory Garden
In Wartime
i | chanics, etc. I contend that the
. ’ ’
Mothers Are ‘Real Heroines’
“ Women Need . Help at Home
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Seripps-Howard Staff Writer
WACs and WAVES, our women welders, riveters, bus drivers, me-
real heroines of this war are our young mothers, who without help, overtime or public notice, are bearing and bringing up babies. For instance, the women you saw yesterday in the grocery store who had two small children with her while she hunted wearily for groceries. Marketing is not a chore but an enterprise these days, especially for those whose salary has been frozen while prices went up. At every sunrise she confronts the back-breaking jobs of her household — the ever-mpunting piles of laundry, the dirty dishes, the constant cooking. “Between times she binds up a c@t on her son’s foot, or rescues his little sister from her precarious perch on a table top, or forces the baby to disgorge some indigestible item he has popped into his mouth. The ceaseless round of feeding, diapering, putting down and getting up from| naps, piled on top of the normal] household routines, with perhaps
_ [the discomforts of pregnancy add=
ed, makes her work harder’ than that of anyone save possibly the soldier at the battlefront. 2 8 = MANY OF THESE young women truly need help. Yet they can't afford to pay the price now aske
producing—the mothers. Every community ought to devise a way tor supplying them with part-time assistance at wages they can afford, as we now furnish city health nurses for charity cases. We keep up community funds for the unfortunate and indigent; surely were smart enough to find means of lending local aid to those citi~ zens who want help only in emergencies and are willing to pay something for it. If -we value our homes, there {must be growing community -concern about those who work in them.
For Comfort
The girl who wears them is often | ;
New idea in maternity clothes— a pretty outfit with a young, fresh look. Make the eye-catching blouse
fabric will give you all the fullness you need without bulk. Soft jersey or rayons are most suitable, Pattern 8594 comes in sizes 2, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 blouse (long sleeves requires 2! yards of 39-inch material; short sleeves, 2% yards; skirt requires 2% yards.) [ For this pattern, send 20 cents, in coins, your name, address, size desired, and the pattern number to The Indianapolis Times Pattern |service, 214 W.. Maryland st., Indianapolis 9. The new fall and winter issue cf “Fashion” is now ready—32 pages. It's a complete guide to your fall and winter wardrobe. Send for your copy. Price 16 cents.
Vacation Accidents
An accident may ruin a vacation. Floors, stairs and outside walks of a summer cottage should be kept as
| safe as at home. Flashlights should
be available for guidance on unfamiliar stairs at night.
Fire Extinguisher
mer home is as important to prevent burns as it is to preserve property. It may save some member of the family from trying to put out a small fire with bare hands.
Save Meat Bones
Save that bone from:the roast! Put it in cold water to cover, add salt, an onion, a carrot, a bay leaf, and a bit of parsley and simmer for a couple of hours to get fine stock for soup or scalloped dishes. -
Summer Desserts
Add summer fruits fo your cheese
IngeSTACier dessert tray to give it)
WITH DUE RESPECT to our’
in a gay print The ‘skirt of a dak]
A fire extinguisher in the sum- |].
+1. Mrs. Robert D. Marshall before her marriage Aug. 8 ‘was iss Ruth Alley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Alley of Waldron. The bridegroom, Lt. Marshall, army air corps, is the son’ of Mr. and Mrs, Harry Marshall of Jeffersonville. (P. H. Ho photo.) 2. Ensign ‘and Mrs, Henry Montoye are. at home in Virginia Beach, Va., following their marriage June 10 in the Centenary Christian church. Mrs. Montoye was Miss Betty Bernard, daugh-
ter of Mrs. Steve Geisler. Mr. Montoye is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Henry J. Montoye of Chicago. ‘(Nu-Art photo.) 3. A ceremony May 2 united ~Miss-Ruth-L:-Heylmann and Pfc." Hubert W. Adams Jr. The wed-.
Physical Trim
PAGE 15
Is Defined for Medical Group Names Secrets L Of Physical Fitness
By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Staff Writer R YOU PROBABLY have your own notion of good physical trim though you may never have tried to put it into words or a dictionary defini-
Medical association in Chicago, W. P. Jacobs, chairman of the federal security agency's committee on physical fitness in industry and
Clinton, 8. C., défined it as follows: “Physical fitness is a condition which results in a minimum of disability from sickness. It will insure performance of tasks efficiently and well. It will result in rapid recov ery from fatigue and exhaustion. It will produce a high degree of health and vffor and a rugged endurance. It will facilitate strong self-disci= Rina the avoidap€® of soft living, eased’pride in physical vigor; it wil®encourage self-direction and inher determination.” ® 8 = “THE SE@RET OF physical fit-
ding was in the home of the
bride's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Fred Heylmann, 642 N. Rural st. Mr. Adams’ parents are Mr. and Mrs. Hubert W. Adams, 540 Tomlinson st.
Wartime Eating 2 Meta Given
fine dessert for summertime.
Charm Judged By Behavior |
BEST CRITERION of a young girl's charm and adult behavior is her attitude toward older people. From a practical angle, it's a good thing to be charming, because older people give out jobs, hand out college grades, make recommendations. So, let's conduct a quiz to see what your charm-rating is. Questions—to which you can honestly say “yes” and if you can't, will do something about it—are compiled, by the faculty of the John Powers School where girls’ attitudes are coached. 8 = s DO YOU STAND up when an older person enters the room? Are you an interested listener when an older person talks of the past? Do you suggest bridge and inactive games when there are older people present? Do you steer conversation to topics that interest ‘older people, too?
Delegates to Leave
For Convention
Mrs. Walter Rottler, 1226 Churchman cve., and Mrs. Minnie Goerke, 1909 Howard st., will leave tomorrow to attend the National Hairdressers and Cosmetclogists association convention and trade show Sunday through Tuesday in Chicago. They are the Indianapolis delegates. Mrs. Rottler is secretary and Mrs. ‘Goerke, treasurer, of the state unit. Also attending the convention will be Mesdames Roy‘ Brenton, Murt Craig, James Porter, Mabel Thoms, Harry Trowbridge and Bee Pohlman and Miss Irma Zook.
A CHEESE CAKE THAT FALLS INTO THE ICE BOX CLASS is a The suggested crust is zwieback, but stale cake crumbs, plain or chocolate, may be used instead. The cake in today’s recipe, like all icebox cakes, should be eaten at its prime, when it has just become thoroughly chilled. After 24 hours of chilling there is a rapid deterioration in appearance and flavor.
= os 8 MONDAY MENUS Breakfast Sliced Peaches and berries (4 peaches, 12 pt. berries, top milk). Poached eggs (4 eggs). | Toast (8 slices). Luncheon Fried eggplant (1 to 1% plant). Pan fried bacon. Sliced tomatoes. Hard whole wheat rolls (8 bought). Fresh chilled pears (4 pears). Dinner Giblets and meat balls (12 1b. ground beef; chicken saved from Sunday, 1 ¢. chopped onion, seasonings). Creamed parsley potatoes. Buttered crookneck® squash (2-1b. squash). Sliced cucumbers, onions and to-
-1b. egg-:
matoes (1 cucumber, 4 tomatoes,
1 sweet onion, vinegar dressing). Enriched white bread (8 slices). Refrigerator cheese cake (see recipe). } = s = Refrigerator cheese cake: To make crust roll 1 5-oz. box of zwieback fine and add % c. sugar, 1 tsp. cinnamon and % c. melted butter, mixing well. Pack firmly in thin layer on bottom and sides of 8-inch spring
mold. Bake at 400 degrees F. for 15
minutes. ‘ Filling: 1 lb. cottage cheese, 3 eggs separated, % c. sugar, 1 tbsp. cornstarch, 3 tbsps. lemon juice, 1] tsp. lemon rind. Force cottage cheese through medium strainer into top of double boiler. Add egg] yolks. Mix together sugar and cornstarch and add to cottage cheese. Add lemon juice and rind and cook over boiling water for 30 minutes, until thickened. Remove from heat, fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into mold and place in refrigerator for two hours.
Fitting the Budget
Headboard beds—once a decorator's item—are now designed to fit the average budget.
|food, proper sleep, regular exercise.
balance. of the daily habits, and above all else it involves patriotic’ determination of the individual to keep fit.” | If you don't feel that you measure up to that definition, it would be a good idea to consult your docfor to find what is keeping you from being fit and what can be done about it. You may find, when you do con=sult him, that besides giving you a eareful physical examination, he will question you about problems at {home or at work that may be worrying you, about how you get along with members of your family and friends, or about other conditions that may affect your health without your knowing it. The close relation between mind and emotions and body functions or disorders is getting more and more attention from doctors. these days. Psychosomatic, mind and body, is the term they use for this kind of medical practice. One physician, Dr. Jack R. Ewalt, of Galveston, Tex., told the meeting that in his opjnion all human beings are psycnosomatic problems.
Bright Polish Warning
YOU SEE GIRLS going barefoot on the beach or wearing sandals on the street whose toenails are bright red advertisements of their ill-assorted lengths and - shapes. This brings us up to the point of the piece, which is: “Don’t wear polish shades of eye-flagging red if your toes are like that.” Faults are much more apt to pass unnoticed if nails are jacketed in a colorless polish or in a shade of pink too shy to signal attention.
zs =n KEEPING TOENAILS scrupulously clean, cut as. short as it's {safe to pare, and bleached with peroxide to look paper-white are ‘also a help in ‘minimizing faults. So will a cuticle-control routine of {gently probing around rims of nails
with a towel every time you dry .
{your bath-wet feet. |
If pans are very greasy -or have dough adhering to the bottom, they can be wiped out first with a piece of paper. If this is done as soon as cakes are taken from the pan, the pans are much easier to wash.
Furniture Needs Care For good looks and long life, kitchen furniture and other sturdy painted or enameled pieces need little more care than frequent mopping with a damp soapy cloth.
DON’T FORGET — WASSON’S Will Close
SATURDAY at
1:00 P. M.
Summer Store Hours:
¢
‘Monday—12:15 P. M. to 345 P. M.
Tuesday through Friday—9 45 A M.to
5:15 P,
BUY MORE AND MORE WAR BONDS—
qr Ls Saturday—9:30, A. M. to 1:00 P. M 4 :
tion. At a meeting of the American
president of Presbyterian college at
ness,” he adds, “may be said to be {adequate medical care, fresh air and {sunshine, balanced relaxation, good
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