Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1945 — Page 13
: FRIDAY, ATG. 10, 1945
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&
Societ'—
Mrs. Frank Woolling to Entertain
Thursday
For Bettyjane Mitchell
MISS BETTYJANE MITCHELL will be honored ° next Thursday at a luncheon and handkerchief shower to be given by Mrs. Frank Woolling. The party will be in the Indianapolis Athletic club. Miss Mitchell's engagement to Lt. (j.g.) Roger Thomas Moynahan, U. 8. N. R.,
has been announced.
Guests at the party will be Mrs. Edward V. Mitchell and Mrs. John R.-Moynahan, mothers of the engaged couple; Mcsdames H, P. Roesch, H. M. Trusler, A. E. Losey and 8. A, Minton, Another party will be given Wednesday night for the bride-to-be, Mrs, Frank
Searles will be the hostess and the mother, Mrs. E. H. Arnott.
party will be in the home of her
Her guests will be Mesdames Mitchell, Moynahan, Arnott, Morey Doyle, Edward Harrell, Harry E.
Ent, H.
W. Bogan, Chester Baker and Earl Breech Jr. and Miss Evelyn
Horton.
Jean Kerchevel Will Be Guest
MRS. ROBERT FELKINS and Miss Elizabeth Collins will enter= tain Tuesday night with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Jean Kercheval. Miss Kercheval will become the bride of Donald R. Bowles on Aug. 18 in the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Leonard C.
Kercheval,
The party will be in the home of Mrs. Felkins’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Douglas. Among the guests will be Mrs. Frank Kossman, Mrs, James R. Wagner, Misses Mary Isabelle Benedict, Dorothy Speicher, Betty Jo and Barbara Fark, Ione and Doris Colligan and
Geraldine Seley,
# ” A teh oonarid o party will be held Aug. 21 at the Meridian Hills Country club. - The committee in charge of the event includes
Mrs. Raymond M. Rice, chairman,
C. C. Knox,
Mrs. R. Bruce Fogle and Mrs.
The women's golf club championship will be played Aug. 21 through 23 at the Hillcrest Country club. Mrs. Maurice Johnston is the chairman. Assisting her are Mesdames Cyril Gooding, C. H,
Snider and Lillian Ferenc. awards.
Mrs. Morse to Be Honored
MRS. C. W. MORSE will be honored tomorrow
Mrs. Fritz Morris is in charge of the
at. a luncheon
at the Highland Golf and Country club to be given by a group of her
|" friends.
The guests will be Mesdames Fred Johnson, Eleanor New-
ton, C. N. Harwood, Ned Cage, Russell Thne and Carl Boroughs,
Misses Mary Lou Slusher, Maxine Terrell,
Felicia Head, Mildred
Curry, Ruth Bruder, Ann Hendricks, Marie Christian and Betsy
Harding.
» The Indiana alumnae of Christian college will have a luncheon at 1 p. m. tomorrow in the Columbia club. After the luncheon, there
will be election of officers. preside.
Miss Virginia Wright, Terre Haute, will The ‘luncheon chairman is Miss Norma Oburn,
The Bridal Scene—
Miss Geneva Glenn will Be Wed To Edward Young in the Fall;
Miss Morrison
The bridal news includes the
5 Be Bride
announcements of an engagement
and approaching marriage and a recent wedding. The engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Geneva Glenn
and Edward Young, seaman 1l-c, U. ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Glenn, 707 N. East st.
de son of Mr. and Mrs. T. B.
Baoy Bassinet
By MRS. ANNE CABOT
Make it just as pretty as you can.
| The baby will enjoy its comfort— your admiring friends will appre-
| clate both the good looks of the
baby and the bassinet! A good sized | market basket is the first require- . ment—then use quilted material in | a pretty pastel color for the basket shown. To obtain complete instructions, finishing and trimming directions for. the market basket bassinet (pattern 5015) send 16 cents in coin,
your name, address and the pattern |
number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 8, Wells St., Chicago 1.
S. C. G,, 1s announced by her parMr. Young is Young, 2123 N. Talbot st. The
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Morrison, 941 .|E. Morgan dr. announce the apIoeoachine marriage of their daughter, Patricia, to Pfc. Kenneth L. Boarman, A. A. F, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Boarman, 1817 S. Delaware st. The rite will be at 9 a, m, next Thursday in 8t. Roch’s Catholic church. The Rev. Fr. Omar Bruck will officiate. Miss Rosemund Huck will be the maid of honor and the bridesmaid will be Miss Prances Morrison, the bride-to-be's sister. Jack Brancheau will serve as best man. . .
Miss Roberta Rosebrock has chosen the attendants for her wedding to Sgt. Victor C. Houdek. The service "will be at 9 a. m. Tuesday in St. Roch’s Catholic church. Miss Roseanne Sterrett will be the maid of honor and the junior | bridesmaid will be Miss Mary Agnes Rosebrock, sister of the bride-to-be. Edward Rosebrock Jr. the | bride-to-be’s brother, will serve as {best man, and the ushers will be Robert. and Paul Ratz.
Cheer Guild Units
Schedule Sessions
Units of the Riley Hospital Cheer guild will sew next week at the hospital. They are: Monday—a volunteer; Tuesday—"“Old John Henry.” Wednesday—"Old Friend Never Falls”; Thursday—*“The Brook Song” {and Friday—‘"Sun and Rain.”
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wedding will be in the early fall.| »
AM: RICAN DESIGN
*
ERS: No. 5
Jo Copeland By LOUISE FLETCHER
Times Woman's Editor At 20 JO COPELAND already was a fashion designer. While she still was a school girl she picked that goal and marched directly to.jt. Oddly enough in a world of shifting business relationships, she is with the same: company at which she startéd—Pattullo Modes. There was an interlude of four years during which she ran her own successful manufacturing business, but she has been back at Pattullo for seven years. “Staying put” seems to be a Copeland trait. She was born in New York (the fifth of nine children), and she's still a New Yorker, » ” 8 HER FATHER was a jobber of women's clothing, but it was her early love of art rather than parental influence which led Miss Copeland to designing. As a small girl she was interested in drawing and when she entered Washington Irving high school she concéntrated on a speial arts course. After high school came a course at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts. (Today she serves on the school’s advisory board as a critic for the fashion designing course.) , ” 2 8 LATER, WHEN she worked at commercial fashion illustration, she studied in the evenings with the .Art Students league. For six months she drew fashfons as an employee, saved all her salary, and- opened her own office, In spare moments between drawing other people's ideas she sketched some of her own.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
0 Copeland: 4 Style Creator at 20
The flaring suit jacket,- long French court influence in a fall,
deep purple wool with gold buttons.
New York Dfess Institute photos. a favorite of Jo Copeland, shows 1945, interpretation. Here it's in In two pieces only (no blouse),
it has a gold-sequimned jersey scarf filling the open neckline. : The tricorne pockets carry out the Louis XVI mood and there's a military touch in three gold kid chains in a swag at the dipping back
of the waistline,
These her agent began selling to wholesale dress manufacturers and it wasn’t long until one of these, the Pattullo firm, gave her a job as designer. A lover of her native city and its activities, Miss Copeland's styles are designed with urban life in mind. Her clothes are noted for their sleek, urbane air. 2 n = AS SHE WORKS, she has a “mental model,” the well-groomed young matron of which she herself is an example. (She has a son and a daughter.) Standing before a mirror, she drapes material on her figure and then does a series of sketches until she gets the style she wants.
She works with a sure hand, never hesitating to cut right into expensive materials. She does not make a preliminary muslin model as many designers do. o 2 ” ONE OF HER best-known style contributions has been the two-piece suit," complete without blouse, which can be worn by day or evening. Miss Copeland has a positive fashion creed. “American fashion,” she says, “is a much truer art if it is the outgrowth of the needs of the American woman.” She feels that clothes are good only if theyre consistent with the life a woman leads.
MONDAY: Claire McCardell,
Lack of Fats In Meals May
Cause Hunger
By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Staff Writer IF YOU FIND yourself these days getting hungry sooner after the last meal than usual, it may be because you are not eating as much fat with your meals. This is particularly likely to happen if all the family’s red ration points are saved for the Sunday roast and perhaps other meat during the week. So far as nourishment is concerned, you and your family are probably getting enough fat of the kind scientists term “invisible fat.” This is the fat in meat, eggs, cheese, milk, cereals and bread. Fat, however, does more than any other kind of food substance to satisfy hunger. This is because fat stays in the stomach longer than other food materials. >
o ” ”
FOOD COOKED in fat, rfaturally rich in it, or-to which fat has been added, bread with butter or vegetables with butter, also stays longer in the stomach and thus keeps you from feeling hungry for a longer interval after the meal. For that extra hungry feeling you may be having on wartime diets with less fat in them, between-meal
‘meals,
2 West, Washington Street
| feedings are suggested by Dr. Ruth ! Okey, professor of home economics at the University of California, and |
Miss Edith J. Linford. When you do use fats in family remember that so far” as calories, or fuel value, are concerned, lard and vegetable oils are interchangeable, these home economists point out. Butter and fortified margarine furnish vitamin A in addition to calories and the hunger-satisfying quality of fats. This is important to remember, also, if you are cutting down on table fats to save red points for meat. At such times it would be wise to serve extra amounts of leafy green and yellow vegetables which are good sources of vitamin A.
Shower Will Honor
Former Jean Ortel
Miss Lenamae Wiese and Miss Irma Piel will entertain tonight with a miscellaneous shower for Mrs. James K. Berry, The honor guest was Miss Jean Ortel before her mayriage June 22. The, party will be in Miss Piel's home on E. 10th st. Guests will be Mesdames Carlton Carrington, Ben Ortel and LaVerne Kottlowski, Misses Patricia and Maxine Rodebeck, Genevieve Krieger and Luella Schenck. Also Misses Ann Sloan, Betty Boyd, Elizabeth Murr, Mildred Lichtenberg, Velma Ploenges, Constance Huntington, ' Mary Ward, Lorraine and Eleanor Mithoefer, Eileen Piel and Janet Burwell,
Garden Club Session
“August Pointers for Fall Planting” was the topic of a talk by Mrs.
|W. W. Drayer today at a meeting|
lot’ the Golden Glow Garden club. J oe ie ne met arse.” the chances of Bertrand, 101 8 getting dough on the outside rim of
1011 W. 34th
The Hous
Homemaking—
Home-Canned Produtts’Help Fill”
ewife's Pantry Shelf
tial if supplies are to be sufficient women overseas and its allies until nations. Manufacturers report that “lightning” type jars with glass lids, rubber rings and wire bales, and ‘porce-lain-lined zinc caps and rubber rings for glass jars are available this year. The need for zinc in critical war industries, however, has reduced the quantity of zinc caps manufactured and the use of other type closures necessarily has increased. »
” Closure Types GLASS: TOP seal caps and vacuum seal two-piece metal caps are the other types of closures. The methods of using them differ, and instructions packed in each carton of canning supplies must be followed to avoid improper sealing and spoilage. The housewife who carefully follows the instructions avoids waste of materials and food and insures her family a year-round supvly of nourishing home-canned food. ” » ”
Party Clothes SINCE PARTY clothes for children are scarce and high in price, it’s .good thrift technique to give attention to refurbishing for small daughter's dress-up costumes. Pirst do a thorough mending job. Sometimes you can combine two old dresses to make one lovely new one. Another step in your makedo project is to give everything an extra careful laundering. To make white party clothes emerge gleaming and colors look bright, dissolve bluing flakes with your favorite mild soap to build up a two to three-inch standing suds. Iron all dresses on the wrong side first, and then finish off on the right side. Hang small garments on hangers as soon as they are ironed to guard against wrinkles, 2 a =»
Shine It Up TO GIVE YOUR old chintz a crisp, satiny finish that suggests the original glaze, prepare thick starch and dissolve in it two sections of a specially prepared wax-like product. Divide this starch mixture so all pieces get equal stiffening. Squeeze and press. starch carefully through the fabric. This expert technique will give a glossy, dirt-resisting finish and will protect your iron from sticking and pulling difficulties that cause Yea and fabric strain. If possible, hang slip covers on two parallel lines to hasten drying and prevent sagging. Pull’ gently along piping and adjust Pleats. Dry in the shade. 2
Pitcher for Pouring Try pouring uffin waffle batter from SE a ‘a well
HOUSEWIVES WHO RELAXED HOME-CANNING EFFORTS last summer are determined not to be caught short again” They are prepared to stock pantry shelves against food shortages. Victory gardens and food conservation the country over are essen-
to feed this country, its men and food production is restored in all
House F rock
8763 hips aS 36-52 By SUE BURNETT A neat and very attractive house frock that the beginner sewer will enjoy making—pattern includes just four pieces. . Pattern 8763 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38, requires 4'4 yards of 35 or 39-inch material; 3 yards ric-rac for trimming. For this pattern, send 20 cents, in coins, your name, address, size desired, and the pattern number to Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W, Maryland st., Indianapolis 9. Send today for your copy of “Fashion”—it's full of Ideas for summer wardrobe planning. 16 cents.
Soap vs. Poison Ivy
The best remedy r po on ivy is to avoid it; next best,” wash any exposed areas promptly with a strong soap solution so that the irritating oil from the leaves will be flushed from the skin before it has a chance to make trouble.
|W. C. T. U. Meeting
Members of the Sarah A. Swain W. C..T. U. will meet at. 10:30 a, m. Tuesday in the Edwin Ray Methodist church. Officers will be].
san
Rev. McGuire To Read Vows | Tonight
Sgt. Ward wil WedBarbara Demmary
A double- -ring ceremony at 8:30 o'clock tonight in the First Baptist | church will unite Miss Barbara | Demmary and Sgt. Jack B. Ward. | The Rev, Clive McGuire will offi ciate, Miss Demmary is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Demmary, Williamsport, Ind., and tHe bridegroom's mother is Mrs. J, B. Ward, Little Rock, Ark. Entering with her father, the] bride will wear a white marquisette | gown fashioned with a romance neckline accented with lace, fitted basque, long sleeves edged with a lace frill and a bouffant skirt extending into a long train. Her tiered veil of illusion will cascade from a heart-shaped tiara of tucked tulle accented with orange blossoms. She will carry white roses.
Flower Girl ©
Mrs. Glenn O’Laverty, Bluffton, will serve~as matron of honor. Her frock will be of shasta yellow. The
ter-length sléeves and a ‘gathered marquisette skirt. -She will .have a bouquet of purple asters. The flower girl will be Marilyn Marshall, Brazil. She will wear a white dotted Swiss dress fashioned with a basque waist and a long full | skirt. She will wear yellow flowers | in her hair, and she will carry a| basket of rose petals. Serving -as best man will.bhe Pvt. Edwin Johnston, Ft. Harrison, and the ushers will be Kenneth Marshall, Brazil, and James R. Wilson. | After a reception in the church, the couple will leave for a wedding] trip. The bride attended Indiana university. She is-a member of the Delta Delta Delta sorority. The bridegroom recently returned from 15 months in the European theater.
Woman's Viewpoint— Let's Examine Political ‘Nostrums’
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer I'M GLAD Lord Halifax said it. He reminded us that a United Nations Charter would not guarantee world peace. Too many people are in the mood to think so. Those who ase quick to point out that isolationism failed, jump to the conclusion that an opposite course is certain to succeed. Yet sober thinking tells us it also can fail, unless we use discretion and wisdom during the peace interval. We Americans are extremists. We have often put qur faith in nostrums. The political kind are sometimes more dangerous than the medicinal. And right now a great many people express the belief that government control is the right remedy for our economic ills. ” ® " I THINK this needs a bit of looking into. For power vested in the hands of the state has fooled a great many people in a great many places. All the dictatorships we've been fighting had their origin in the idea that workers would be better off if the government instead of individual employers provided their ‘jobs. They lived to regret acceptance of the doctrine. Mussolini, let us remind ourselves often, was a ranting radical “before he became a sawdust Caesar. Hitler gained his power by offering prosperity .to everybody. The Russian revolution in 1917 began as a mild democratic-so-cialism which was later overthrown by the more rigorous doctrines ‘of the totalitarian state. ” » o oo BEFORE WE hand over all the liberties our ‘fathers won for us the hard way, hadn't we better examine more carefully the lollipop substitutes which are to be handed us in their stead? Some of them drip with too much sirup. Even though these suggestions are often made by individuals and groups we. know to be well meaning and sincere, they should not be accepted for that reason alone. It is easy to start revolutions, and hard to stop them. And sometimes freedoms given away never are regained. “All * change is not progress” might be a good motto for postwar United States.
Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Virginia Lee Henderson and Sgt. Ralph E. Bossingham, The wedding date has not been set, Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Henderson, Louisa, Ky., and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R.
Miss Frieda Mildred Rust and Alvin L. Garsnett, radioman 3-¢, U. 8. N., were married July 12 in Olive Branch Christian church, The Rev. Benton B. Miller offi«’ ciated, The bride is the daughe« ter of Norman Rust and Mrs, Walter B. Heisel, and Mr. Garsnett's parents are Mr. and Mrs, Henry Garsnett, Springfield.
dress has a lace basque, three-quar-|
potatoes.
Bossingham of Indianapolis.
| Wartime Eating , 2 Meta Given
LYONNAISE POTATOES ARE
But there’ is no law against starting with raw potatoes. | fact, we think the product is superior when raw potatoes are used.
USUALLY PREPARED from cooked In
The name is rather high sounding, but the preparation is simple and the ingredients are just commonplace sliced potatoes, sliced onions;
top to add a tart refreshing flavor. | Today’s recipe uses uncooked potatoes.
. x -
MONDAY MENUS Breakfast
Fresh grapefruit juice. Ready-to-eat cereal. Baking powder biscuits and jam.
Luncheon French onion soup. Chicken salad sandwiches. Fruit platter. Brownies. Dinner
Pan frida liver.
Lyonnaise potatoes (see recipe). Buttered green beans. Stuffed tomato salad. Beet pickles, Bread. Peach mousse, Milk to drink: Three c¢. for each child; 1 ec. for each adult. Ration points: Two red; 0 blue. 2 » 8
Lyonnaise Potatoes: One and three-fourths lbs, potatoes, 3 tbsps. shortening, 1 tsp. salt, pepper, 1 ¢. chopped onion. Pare potatoes and cut into % inch cubes.
and have a crispy crust.
add 2 to 4 thsps. of vinegar drizzled over the top, if desired, » » »
Free Leaflet FREE: Meta Given's recipes for cool, refreshing, easy-to-eat, easy-to-make “Frozen Desserts.” send a large, 3-cent stamped, self-
in care of The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland st., Indianapolis 9.
Add to heated shortening, sprinkle with -seasoning, cover and cook over medium heat for 20 mins. Turn potatoes occasionally, Add onion and mix lightly. Cover and cook over low heat for about 15 mins. or until vegetables are done A short while before potatoes finish cooking
Just
addressed envelope to Meta Given,
seasoned and fried in shallow fat, and a little vinegar drizzled over the
Beauties’ Hints— . Solvent Makes Thick Polish Silk-Smooth
By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer DOES POLISH peel off like rube ber or buckle on slicked-up nails? Chances are youre guilty of what a lot of women confess to, and what the nail-polish people groaningly call a crime, and tha is thinning out thickened polish . with a polish remover. This combination, it seems, pro= duces a mixture of incompatible | ingredients which absolutely re=
‘fuse to work together. Polish is specifically made to ad= =
here to nails. Remover, given just the opposite job to do, pries off polish at the touch of a cottone soaked swab. ~ » Y ¥ SO, STOP siting the two together. When polish gets gummy, the trick of making it flow is to shake or stir the bottle like mad, If this agitation doesn't loosen i§ up, pared thinner—a few drops of which, stirred into a bottle of enamel to dilute it, makes it flow like liquid silk onto your brush. Dip your polish-clogged brush into a bath of this solvent now and then, and you'll be able to put slicker coats on your nails and achieve a smooth manicure,
No Seconds
A large restaurant chain is now rationing orange juice-——one small . glass per customer with no seconds,
White is grand for every. day clothes because it is so easy to wash. A little Roman Cleanser in washing water saves all the hard rubbing. See iabel for stain-removing directions.
Annual Horse Show Riders Are Named
Twenty-four girls will ride in the annual Camp, Fire ‘Girls’ horse show at 2 p. m, Saturday, Jhe event will be at Camp Delight. Judges will be Verne Reeder and Miss Sue Reeder. The girls in the show will be Misses Judy Morrison, Barbara and Florence Redding, Dee Meeker, Carolyn Hood, Lucia Funk, Pat Hewitt, Phyllis Baumgart, Janet Booth, Carolyn Favre, Anne Driftmeyer and Alice Emhardt. Also Misses Barbara Poirier, Rosllyn James, Peggy Fisher, Judy Baker, Barbara Beldon, Beverly Benedict, Nancy Pritchard, Margie Dravis, Dorothy Behrman, Sylvia Merrill, Diane Polk and Carol Cochran, >
Group to Have Picnic The Marion county chapter, American War Mothers, will have a picnic at noon Tuesday in Brookside park.
Mrs. Hill Hostess Mrs. Richard Hill, 769 Wallace st., will be ‘hostess ‘at 8:30 p. m. Tuesday for a meeting of the Beta chap~ ter, Omega Phi Alpha sorority.
molded “crushed ICE.
and easy to make. -
directions.
Sorority Session
slootud) sue Mss, Russel 3; Taps
Beta Sigma Phi sorority, was : ‘the eubroomn,
“A meeting of Beta Eta chapter,| as pela
Highlight hot-weather meals with crisp, cold vegetables served in a bowl made of
Ever so attractive Phone us at TAlbot
2451 and we'll gladly give you the simple
ICE AND IS ruts co. VENUE SR
use a solvent—specially pre- .
