Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 March 1946 — Page 17
H 13, 1946 Se ouncil
Tea
=F
ck to Speak’ srs’ Group |,
rersity Mothers’ | I
in with a silver M
Sy - .
atrick, - head of au, will talk on thes.” line will be Mrs. 3 f Butler's presi-» beth B. Ward, , Arthur Patterakey, C. P. Curd Charles Josey.
presidents of all nizations. Mrs, § din Hays, presi- | * Women's Pacside at the tea iidents of the {ll be honored.
y in Jordar, hall, I
Wash Its Face
pe
om x ay Rey i ’ an
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1946.
Allowing Furniture to 'Stay Pu y
Cuts Down on n the Repair Jobs Host; Either |
LEAVE FURNITURE PUT, if possible, ‘rio matter how Hpsarang the eternally feminine desire is to switch it around That, along with other cautions from over-worked Carp. will give your furniture a petter chance to survive without repairs. One warning is to stop overloading chest ‘drawers (that's what makes’ their bottoms fall-out). If, in house- cleaning, You must move a bed, | grip the eenter of the foot or head-
finds it next to impossible to buy | board and remember, easy does it. Al ag apr even the sleaziest stockings in- the | Never yank i By a Seferseless or umnac Group stores. But they can be had from Doth more ap over y other sources. From Madame's | surfaces, and don't allow the man Wi | ‘E Spat | hairdresser or dry-cleaner, for in-| of the house to sit astride the back | in fe rtain Fv ) ; of a chair, Keep pillows of an up- ] holstered chair plumped to dis- | | Saleswomen in-the swank dress
tribute filling and to: prevent the matting that untended cushions develop.
| will - entertain | . EE | chapter 1 |
members
| sorority at 2 p. m. recreation room at Butler university. | A panel discussion on. “Teaching [Is a Profession” will be given by | Mrs, Grace Barker, Misses Wallace Montague, Byrl McClure, Florence Schaub, Nila Hornaday, Virginia Cravens, Hazel Bonke, Isabelle | Mossman and Frieda Herbst. Dr.: Bernardine Schmidt of the Indiana State Teachers college will | open the discussion. Hostesses for | the tea following the program will | be Miss Mary Ronk, Miss Frances Holliday and Dr, Jean Sutherland.
WASHING THE face of your furniture is as sound an idea as washing your own, because dirt mixes in with wax and polish to mask fine grain and dim luster. To wash, you needn't be afraid to use suds whipped, up from mild] soap and tepid water, if you'll take care to dry down after you scrub. The washing trick is to dip a soft cloth into suds, wring out, and apply to remove surface soil and to flush sticky wax-and-polish residue ou} Of crevices.
Sorority Mee Hin Alpha chapter of Phi Gamma Sigma sorority will meet at 8 p. m today in the home of Mrs. William
Sigma Beta Group | Will Meet Tonight
Rho chapter, Sigma Beta sorority, will meet at 8 p. m. today at the home of Mrs. Harry Karcher, 5230
Flanary, 355 Congress ave Grandview dr, fem———— = 3 n—— Mrs. Hal Shultz, president, will report on the President's day meeting held recently in Ft. es 0 S Wayne; Mrs. William Balsley, charity chairman, will report and Mrs.
Russell Cox of the national finance
To Relieve Misery ICKS committee will announce the “Rub on Tested | amount® of money spent -for blood - ¥ A “PORUR plasma placement *
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object space. and {over—France's stock goes in majority of cases to the black mar- | ket. {usually go to their families, fand privileged customers.
{can be bought legitimately pair; market is between $35 and $40
By NifA Bervice PARIS, March 13.—The lack of |
stockings is a “dilemma for French- | women, {list of anxieties headed ‘by. lack |of food and heat.
too. It's number 3 on &
A woman with textile coupons
The Indianapolis Alumnae chap-|maker salons also seem to be, able | ter of Pi Lambda Theta sorority [to produce—for -a price—fine silks of Beta land finer nylons for their clientele, | of Delta Kappa Gamma [In hotels “the man with the suit- | Saturday {in the [case” comes around regularly and sells rayons for $7 to $8 a pair, |
For Favored Few stockings are an ideal barter—consuming littie insuring a quick turn-| the
Because of
allocations to retailers friends
Small
Lowest price at which stockings 1s 84 a illegal tor
highest price on the
nylons
|t
hege—s
As for nylons 0 see so many sight
GIs were surprised on Frenchwomen's missing from the
American scene before the boys left
!
ome. The reason ‘the girls were
wearing nylons, of course, is that an average of 12,000 pairs a month are manufactured here.
duced by
t
allocations stocking
C
them, buy They
. - >, AA I I A i ala al a a ditt
A . 8 oS X ¢ he , a oa d '\S oN < $ 3 »- ~ IN 3 & 2 WN. ed v Pl
Officially, nylon thread is proa single factory and disribution is state-controlled. Small are made to leading manufacturers. Smaller however, manage to make too, ever! if they have to thread on the black marke are assured of -a handsome profit, even at the official price of £5 a pair,
outfits,
Plenty for All The French stocking industry, according to recent reports, is now up to 95 per cent of its pre-war output. Little is ‘exported. In the Troyes district, where 70 per cent of the country’s cetween 35,000 and 40,000 pairs of osiery go to the dye=works each month. At this rate, every Frenchwoman should have been able to buy at least one pair of stockings at official prices in exchange for tw extile coupons. Unfortunately
, this is not the case
Miss Anna Carson * To Address Guild
Miss Anna Carson. a former mis- tritional standpoint, because sweet onion until bacon is delicately sionary in the Philippines who Potatoes on all counts add up to an browned. spent mote than three vears in a €ven more valuable food. Blend in the flour thoroughly Japanes e prison camp, will speak! The hot salad appearing today is-Add water and fruit juices graduat the meeting of the Women's especially good. when the meat ally, then add sugar and salt. Heat ouild of the First Evangelical and course is either pk or chicken. to boiling stirring constantly and Reformed church at 1 p. m, tomor- re cook for two minutes until smooth | . row. HOT SWEET POTATO SALAD and thickened, Add orange rind, The guild board members will o ; Ibs. sweet. potatoe cucumber and potatoes, Stir gentmeet at 11 a, m. Luncheon Will'y —..c bacon 3 =) ly to coat with sauce, Heat therbe served at noon. Mrs. Bert Ever-/ . | 4 oo oughly and serve at once while | nart is hostess chairman 1 2 one Pheu Spon still. warm. Four servings. . bsp. flour 2 C. waier CHICKEN IN STUFFING Me etin g T onight . 2 C, orange juice For Sunday dinner) The city council of Epsilon Sigma ‘us c¢. lemon juice $+ lb. roasting chicken Alnha sorority will- meet in the & tsps. sugar Seasoning tonight. tsp. sait } tbsps. butter or margarine
auh building
A Dainty
output is produced, |
Rrreratre Trove omen, N. A a. ono T uesday ih Right to Loaf
Mrs. Florence Wooley (left) ar the officers of the National Assoc
will be installed Tuesday at a dinner meeting in the Hotel Washington
Bamboo room. Mrs. Wooley is sect
ner, assistant secretary and treasurer, »
u" ou a
Mus.
To Speak at Dinner
Mrs. Fern E. Norris, courts, will be the speaker of Women holds a dinner and u room of the Hotel Washington,
reporter fc
Dr. J. Vidya Lindsay, supreme N. A. W. council’ president, will install the officers and present -a charter to the Indianapolis chapter 1 of the association Those to be installed are Mrs Inez Crowley, president; Miss Rosa Wetter and Mrs. Florence Wpoley, first and second vice presidents; Mrs. Clara Christopher “and Miss Naomi Jarvis, recording and coire-
sponding secretaries, and Miss Ruby E. R. Bebout, chaplain, and Mrs. pe that Mr. Murray inadvertently Thomas, treasurer. Mamie E. Hurt, program chairman, has started a dangerous trend in Others. are. Miss Ethel Gardner, who will introduce the speaker. public thinking. Suppose his latest |] x assistant secretary and treasurer, Mrs. Ruth Young and Mrs. Mat- idea took firm hold on the fém- Oe 4 ' and Miss Jarvis, historian and edi- tie Joe Hackley are the publicity inine mind. What if mother detor. chairmen. . S—————————— ————— oy Boy
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES © aT il
| | Fern E. Norris Scheduled | spirit moved them was most im- |
yr the stale supreme and appellate Tuesday night when the National Association |tle town where I was brought up. 1stallation meet ing in the They sunned themselves on the
" : JJ ae
flcided to stand upon ior late to! Radio “Skit 7 refrain from working unless she got The we : co a larger household allowance? Im- at 10:30 a. m. today in agine the wild outcries that would a arise if the beds were unmade,| °° Presbyterian dishes were unwashed and the meals | covered dish luncheon, oun state president, |
uncooked | Halladay, 1 everybody taked up the iol ‘A Cure for the Ills of the Day, By MRS. WALTER F ERGUSON land it does have universal appeal—| A radio skit was presented by Scripps-Howard Staff Writer {we may have to add a new right to Mesdames Elbert Moore, Grace News PHILIP MURRAY, C. I, O. presi- the many _we now claim as Ameri-| by and Martha Best. Mrs, Mare | dent, made®a startling statement can citizens, The right to sit Sowa jorie Bowles gave the devotions and the other day over the radio. In as- and starve, Miss Catherine Walters was soloist,
| sailing the administration for one| {of its labor-industry peace propo- | sals, Mr. Murray declared Wey were | “aimed at the curtailment of the | right’ of free men to refrain from working when they choose to do | 50." ~~ See how one thing leads to an- | otiter, Free men have the right to | work. This was the initial prpposal { which most of us accepted. It fol{low naturally they also must | have the right to refrain from | working if they like—although ft} strains our brain to figure out why a few men should be able to order
‘Can Be Right To Starve’
PARAGON SHOP Fourth Floor
Wd Miss Ethel Gardner are among | coyera| million others to refrain tation of Women, chapter 1, whe |... working whether they want ‘to or not
nd vice president and Miss Gard- I've known quite a number of
men who stood on their rights as free citizens of a repubMc—and the right to quit work whenever the
” un "
| portant, "#2 8 THERE WERE at least half a dozen of these logiclans in the lit-
Meeting
Bamhoo mimes coi—— ne } Miss Hazel Emens, chairman of | dinner hostesses, will be assisted by Miss Wetter, Mrs. Edward B, Oss- | man and Mrs. Zona Essick. On the hospitality committee with Mrs. Delta Albers, chairman, are Mrs, Pearl Jones, Miss Pearl Shockley and Mrs. Irma E. Lasle. Also appearing on the program will be Mrs. Ruth Day, soloist; Miss Alma Groover, accompanist; Mrs.
curbstones, chewing tobacco, whittling and relating their tribulations to one another—while their wives took in washing or kept boarders They had a lot to say about thelr| government, too. It never suited! them. Nothing ever suited them. | They ‘held firmly to their ight to loaf while. wamen slaved tg keep | them supplied with bread, plug : . tobacco and whisky. Angl speaking of women, it may
To Oud
Just in and just beautiful, this smart little pump ties in with this year's dandified fashions. With open heel and toe, it comes ifi red calf, black calf or patent leather,
1.16
Let 8.7 on EqQt # A Glven
Cu Novy wie,
IT IS JUST a salad with sweet vith white ones
logical to make a potatoes as it 1s And anytime that we can put sweet potatoes into the meal instead of the white, we are making a very fine deal from a nu-
A fternoon Frock
| 3 tbsps. chopped parsley 1 tsp. salt | * A BY aiceful and distinguished (114 tsps. poultry seasoning | ’ afternoon frock for the slightly] i. » finely chr . { 4 silghtl] « ¢. finely chopped onion PLA TIC LENSES ! y fionure Note the intv . Pie { ater Hg . No oi Saint *12 10':-0z. tans condensed mush- | M A X M i M V | S u N, S callop trim ‘an soft shoulder ‘ room soup shirring Pattern includes ip or 11; c. water P 0 L A Rk 0 t D G 0 G G L E S b 2 rt op lpoves 2 y (y= § y ~ 1 {three quarter sleeves. A go-every Cut cleaned chicken into serving where charmer for your spring pieces. Season lightly with salt and 1 00 wardrobe HW : pepper, Use a large skillet or . Pattern 8976 is for sizes 36, 38 Dutch oven “and brown chicken 40, 42.44, 46, 48. 50 and 52. SiZe ¢owlv on all sides in | r arSLi SIoEVes S55 CHI Of BOC te ee Ser or. nal You get two sets of lenses, clear for dull light, green for bright - 20, CE J's Yaras J9-in gar 3 Jem ‘nr g > > terial garine. Remove chicken and turn light, quickly interchangeable! They're set in a rubber frame material. bread cubes into skillet.
For this pattern | coins, your nar sired, and the j Sue B The | Times ‘Pattern service, 2 {land st., Indianapolis 9. { Just off the press!
address, size ftern numb@r tc
Indianapolis
The
‘For Gray Ladies - Volunteers to serve as Gray chapter, American
dianapolis | the Veter
| Cross, pital.
to serve at Mrs. R. | man of cofps, ‘ Accepted applicants will be a 20-hour training courst be asked to serve at
the giver
least one
send 20 cents. mn e de-
. | a, 5. Tuck chicken inte top of dressing. | a ki 14 W. Mary- | Cover and bake in a moderately hot oe s |
new spring and summer issue of Fashion.
Colorful, smart—and a free pattern) -— {printed in the book. Sixteen cents. | Volunteers Needed
La- WR dies are being recruited by the In- x Red ans’ hosC. Becherer is chair-
and will day '|
a week at the hospital upon comple{ion of the course. | For information Appi ants shoul call the registration desk at the Rec
grated orange rind c. diced cucumber Boll potatoes unpeeled ‘until just tender, then peel and cut into slices. Cut bacon into half-inch lengths with kitchen shears, and saute with
s sp
bread cut and toasted
into ‘i:-inch|
ig Sik
cubes
which hugs your face, with an adjustable head strap for comfort and security, They're ideal fof : DRIVERS CYCLISTS ANGLERS RAILROADERS STONE CUTTERS oven (350 degrees F.) for about 1’; | METAL GRINDERS SAND BLASTERS hours until chicken is very -tender.
Four servings. . .
parsley, salt and | ‘add onion, soup | lightly to mix
Sprinkle with poultry seasoning,
) and water. Toss
SPORTS ACCESSORIES
IN THE ANNEX
sini
FOR QUICK, RESTFUL SLEEP
out tonight!
WishI'ddiscovered wonderful TING sooner! All this time my poor, burning feet have kept me from going out after standing all day at work. Things are different now! I just
| spread on cooling, soothing TING | Antiseptic Medicated Cream. Never | tried anything that made my feet | sing so with happy foot comfort and { refreshment! So let’s go dancing thanks to pleasant, wonder-working
1 |
|
1 | TING! 50¢ at your druggist.
[Cross chapter house, S Too Q y “pp | "EASTER 1S JUST AROUND Miss Stapp Speaker = § | 5 Ti CoRR The Clifton Kindergarten Moth- ¢ | Are foing ta be ers’ club and the Riverside Kinder- $l SMuAITASSNC B garten Mothers’ club will have a cSuperfluous Hair 2 joint meeting at 1:15 p. m. tomor- . 3 : & Ww HOSPITAL BILLS row in the, Clifton Kindergarien $ Rony pe tu fege 4 ith 8 dis Ath ‘A WHEN Miss Ruby Stapp, superintendent | : tan be PERMANENTLY and ACCIDENT . of the Indianapolis Free Kindergur- « t' conswit ‘regarding. VOUT OR y societ r § ak. K case curs no obligation SICKNESS lin society, will spea | A STRIKES ¥ ;: = . ’ F Bad Cases Our Specialty 3 . . Sq! - % p [nitiation for Fou 5 MWhiitl tan i } Alpha chapter, Kappa Beta Chi ¢f| oh uile I~ rit) wi ihitiate Mesdames jo! i 1 Soper. X a hits j Mose a ll 206 Kresge Bldg. > Z OPrEZ = Alice Laughlin, Mary Je ark, bw omis Hours. ¥ to 8 ' : 2 g 0 3339 Zz B Jane valentine and Mary Baile; at 4 Yours v tndianapotie ks - 7 $3 6: § 8 p. m. today in the home f Mrs imac asl i i] | 1 =%E% 3 § Rose Hermann, 1116.N. Capitol ave. KOE ® bi: 2 Fri I rr a e “2buc 3 . | Pz 73 52 8 1! A Complete Optical Service ¥ oo} 0.8 = Z i tor “the “entire family. Evening office E g $= a0 nours Monday and Friday til) 8:30 p. m Zs | g3 E22) | iz: So 72 @& ! Eves Examined, Glasses Fitted { | Q Q | 0 3 — - y i534 | 28 FZ 0 I! for Those Who Need Thein i} 8 | oo { } bE EF) Il COLD MILK FOR A BRACER z29 . @ 0 1%: sel DR. H. C. FAHRBACH | i A > on 8 Optometrist 0 £ . ULB ae 1 mer Jo2"hanp AO HOT MILK FOR o 1 z 5 I : oy ; Meridian at Washington X Lo i m : Sk 3 : L 1 | Sa Evenings hy Appointment MA-0662
‘q-
