Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 May 1946 — Page 16
listers To Be Maid, | “[atron of Honor
sement of bridal attendants
’s bridal news. s Charlotte Meyer has ansed the attendants for her age to George H. Newman at “5. m. Sunday, June 23, in the Evangelical and Reformed h. Dr. Frederick R. Daries will the vows, 's Alberta Meyer will be her
rd R, Strain Jr, another sis-| will be matron of - honor. smaids will be Mrs. Glenn ian of Ft. Wayne and Miss
wer notes, along with an-||
a recent marriage; highlight] .
's maid of honor and Mrs]:
the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. William Piety, 146 S, Elder the marriage of their daughter,
P. H. Ho photo.” - A ceremony next Sunday in Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Hall,
1513 W. 22d st., announce that
} WT ll Of Women So Hard?’
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON " Beripps-Howard Staff Writer IT DOES NOT necessarily follow that a woman's life is more difficult than a man's just because a Gallup'stpoll shows most people think ,s0. We've been wrong about a good many other things, too. It is startling however to find that a majority of modern men have finally been persuaded to .believe the woeful story. A man's life is more interesting, more colorful] more exciting, more stimulating] than a woman's. But it is also far| more dificult, in my opinion. What the average homemaker, for example, counts as hardship, is often plain boredom. And al-| though the business and profes-! sional woman must do better work
TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1946
amt
¥ lowers Lénd Color. 7 to a Picnic Supper Table
aa Pfaffenberger.
ave., will unite their daughter, Anna Theresa, and Harold Evan
than a man for less pay, she still
' LL Service Set
Arthur Wooden, Marion county | welfare department director, will | discuss “Tricks with Mirrors” at | the meeting of the Governor Oliver Perry Morton chapter, Daughters of [the Union, at 2 p. m. Monday in the Central Christian church. | New officers will be installed by Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, national presi‘dent general. They inglude Mrs. (George E. Dunn, regent; Mesdames {W. I. Hoag, 8, Harry Glendenin and Wooden, vice regents; Mrs. C. E. | Sunthimer and Mrs. Leslie McLean, * | recording and corresponding ‘sec{retaries; Miss Carrie M. Hoag, | treasurer; Mrs. Robert Waterbury, | registrar, Mrs. A, B. Glick, his{torian, and Mrs. Almus McKelvey, | chaplain. Mrs. Rumpler, hostess, will be | assisted by Mesdames William Dodd, |[R. O. McAlexander, Charles Neu, |H. Alden Adams, George W. War- | moth; William R. Burk and Thomas | Demmetly,
+ best man will be Fred Yaires Dorothy Heloise, and Ralph Frey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
ishers will be Ernest H. Meyer,| Benson Mason, son of Mr. and Frey, 1514 Herschell ave., will pcgbles 8 Jecondary postion in the » di = dre bride-to-be’s brother; Mr.| Mrs. M, W. Mason, Oakridge, be tomorrow in the Zion Evan- | expected of her. An outdoor picnic supper for Speedway race quests can add the final fillip to an exciting day— Card Party 2
2 and Mr, Coffman. Tenn. . . bride-to-be will be honor sh gelical and Reformed church ¥.u » particularly if appointments for the picnic table or buffet carry out a holiday mood. Edward F. Nord- | The Sith. mere * St. Philip Ch: Neri Catholic church will sponsor a at a shower to be given WIVES OF rich and successfull pop orecident of the Allied Florists Association of Indianapolis, suggests the Mexican motif pictured fren pe in the school auditorium
a for Miss Meyer June 12 in McDaniel’s home. awn party and miscellaneous r will be given June 16 by 4de-to-be’s aunts, Mrs, ChrisAchgill and Mrs, Charles B. ‘at Mrs. Achgill's ‘home on
rd. n ”
a Schaefer entertained with wer last night for ‘Miss Mary \chgill whose marriage to Paul chner will be at § a. m. In satherine’s Catholic church. yarty was held in the bride3 home, 921 Bradbury ave, rand Mrs. J. Albert Lechner, is of the prospective bride- , gave a dinner party Sun- \ the Homestead for members ¥ bridal party. and Mrs. Harry H. Achgill, 5 of the bride-to-be, will en1 the bridal party Thursday py home, on» loube- -ring ceremony at 8 Friday united Miss Mary E. a1 and Walter W. Derichs. The Valter C. Maas read the vows a Trinity Evangelical Lutheran 1 T Lois Huffer was maid of , and Lowell DaVee was the
ngton followed the ceremon | la bride bride 1 an instructor gt the of the Blind ard Mr.
fo is Be at the school. i} . fron Lists
sraduates ha
_mencement exercises of the Migerron Art school will be folhaiby a tea and the opening of Prnual students’ exhibition at Sunday, June 9. thay M. Mattison will give the intuction, and the address will of £7 by Dr. Henry Hope, Bloom-
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“th year graduates Include Harter, Middletown; Eunice nan, South Bend; Miles R. , Anderson; Lois Peterson, ; Johanne Redman, Paris, uniogh Jean Schneider,
uates include destruction" ~anfield; Paul W.
through their cor and Louis misused that power. Bitter though the i. * the Lewises they still mu the people must always co.
be greater than the amb, bosses. jpe,
(CONGRESS i is dealing wit: danger as great, as th should enact now, without <
Florence Wilson Wolff's Engagement To Thomas W. Binford Is Announced
” 5 Elreda M. Achgill and Miss}
a0. A dinner in the Ho n
«+ « that the government he
THE ENGAGEMENT AND APPROACHING MARRIAGE of Miss Florence Wilson Wolff to Thomas W yatt Binford has been announced by her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Herman C. Wolff of Golden Hill. The prospective
bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Binford. The ceremony will be read at 4:30 p. m. Thursday,
June 20, in the home of the bride-to-be’s parents, ‘with the immediate families attending. Miss Wolff was graduated from Tudor Hall school, attended Smith college and studied music in Boston and Indianapolis. She is a member of the Indianapolis Junior league, the Christamore Aid society, The Players and the Dramatic clubs. Mr. Binford, a graduate of Park school and Phillips Exeter academy, is now at Princeton university after three years’ service with the army in Japan and the Philippine Islands. He is a member of Tiger Inn. » » » * u » ” Miss . Alice Dorsey Riegner will be the honor guest at several parties before her marriage to Herbert Ellis Skillman June 15 in the Second Presbyterian church. Miss Susanah Milner will enter tain in Miss Riegner's honor Saturday. in her home. ~ “Ms. Albert Seaton will be hostess for a luncheon-bridge and miscellaneous shower June 5 in the Propylaeum and Mrs. Frank Linton will entertain with a dinner at Hollyhock Hil next Tuesday. A bridal dinner will be given by Miss Riegner's “parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe E. Riegner, June 14 at the Marott hotel.
Smith Club Officers Named
MRS. EDWARD HARRIS JR. has been elected president of the Indianapolis Smith College club. Other new officers are Mrs. Edward
» Mitchell, vice president; Mrs. Theodore Wohlgemuth, treasurer, and
Miss Elizabeth Haerle, secretary. The officers were named at the annual tea for prospective students and their parents held recently in the Propylaeum, sg 8 ” ” ” » ; Fisk Landers is the new president of the Dramatic club. Other officers elected Saturday at the club's dinner-dance in the Woodstock club are John E. Hollett Jr, vice president; John C. Appel, secretary, and D. L. Chambers Jr, treasurer. New board members are Lyman S. Ayres, Austin H. Brown and Dr. Frederic Taylor. ” Fd ” ” n - Newly elected officers of the Civic theater are LeRoy G. Gordner, president; John D, Welch, retiring president, and Herbert E. Wilson, first and second vice presidents; Robert Sweeney, treasurer, and Harry V. Wade, secretary. New members of the board of directors are Mr. Welch, Mrs. Kurt F. Pantzer, Fred Luker, Miss Sara Lauter and Norman Green. n 5 on ” » ” New members of the Junior auxiliary to the Indianapolis Day Nursery were guests at a tea this afternoon in the home of Mrs. Robert Wacker,
In a Personal Vein : MESDAMES G. H. A. CLOWES, Bowman Elder and Herman C, Wolff have returned from Swampscott, Mass., and Boston where they attended the annual meeting of the Garden Club of America—the first held since the outbreak of the war. Mrs. Clowes, president of the Indianapolis Garden club, was made a national director of the Garden Club of America. ; » » rv » » s Miss Esther Connard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. H, Connard, Cumberland, has been pledged to Phi Mu sorority at Purdue university. " - » » s ” Miss Laura Lindley, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Stacey B. Lindley, is a new pledge to Delta Omicron sorority, national music honorary organization for women, at Denison university.
gether to bring them ease, fine clothes and pleasure. It is absurd to say that such women have difficult lives. Their group is a small one, of course, but unfortunately it sets the standard for other groups. . Nurtured on Hollywood fairy stories and society page enthusiasms the average girl in the United States aspires to the same life of ease. She hopes to grab off a husband with money and settle down in cotton wool for the rest of her days. This ambition accounts for a good many of the dissatisfactions that mar the happiness of the home bodies who are forced to leok after their children and cook for their families. ” o n IT IS NOT always the job they dislike; it is the odious mental com. parisons, offered by visions of Mrs. Plush’ and her round of social triumphs, and their own drab existence in a small kitchen, Work itself is of little consequence in this issue. It is our attitudes toward work that is important. People who dislike their jobs are sure to find them hard. ’
Peasant Style
[eISEat
Meta Wo
CURRIED EGGS (For Thursday luncheon) 4 hard-cooked eggs 2 tbhsps. margarine 1 tbsp. minced onion 2 tbhsps. flour 1 e. stock or 1 beef bouillon cube 1 ¢. hot water 1 tsp. curry powder 1% tsp. salt 3 ec. cooked rice Separate the yolks from the whites of the eggs. Chop the whites, sieve the egg yolks. Melt margarine, add minced onion and saute for a minute; blend in flour, add stock or bouillon cube plus hot water, and cook with ‘constant stirring until mixture thickens. Add curry powder, salt, rice and egg whites. Pour piping hot over hot cooked noodles or into pastry shells and top with riced egg yolks. Makes
four servings. x 8 2
PINEAPPLE MOLDED SALAD
(For Friday dinner) 4 tsps. plain gelatin 14 ec. water 2 ¢. pineapple juice 3% tsp. salt 1 tbsp. sugar 1 pint fresh hulled strawberries 1 ¢, cottage cheese Combine gelatin and water and let stand five minutes, then place over hot water until dissolved. Pour it into mixture ef pineapple juice, salt and sugar and stir thoroughly to blend. Then cool until mixture is sirup. Wash strawberries quickly by dipping them through cool water. Hull, cut them in halves and fold into pineapple mixture. Then fold in cottage cheese and turn mixture into a dish (10 by 64 by 2 inches). Chill three or more hours. Serve on crisp lettuce leaves. Makes six servings.
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St. Agnes Graduates ./To Be Honored at Tea
the ident has asked to ¢
mly,
Sunday at the academy.
academy alumnae from 3 to 5 p. m.
All graduates are invited to the, The 71 members of this year's event at which alumnae officers! graduating class will be honor will receive and Miss Mary Cain guests at | a tea given by St Agnes land Mrs. Julia Zeller will pour.
A!
ny
FAMOUS INDISPENSABLE!
To Give the Graduate
A picnic's under way and Faye Pinkerton is Fry for | sandwich business in her twopiece peasant style white cotton. The blouse has full sleeves and a low neckline and the full |
is a senior at Lawrence Central high school and belongs to the G. 0.0. P: S. Block's.)
skirt is trimmed with embroid- | ery and peasant braid. Faye |
Thought of
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Worry You?
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