Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1946 — Page 14
THF ins TIMES
Rev. Skidmore [Reads Rite In Church
Miss Farrington Becomes Bride
Miss Margaret Louise Farrington | became the bride of Howard L. [Scott June 23 in the Edwin Ray | Methodist church. The Rev, R. G. I 8kidmore, Petersburg, read the | ceremony, assisted by the Rev, D.| IM. Church; pastor of the church. |
id ‘Women's Derby to Be Held Tuesday “At the Indianapolis Country Club
A, THE SECOND ANNUAL WOMEN’S golf derby will . be held Tuesday at the Indianapolis Country club with 16 | 3 foursomes starting play at 9a. m. | “The derby is invitational and members from other A Hy have been invited to participate. Prizes will be awarded to the first five teams. Luncheon will be gerved at the clubhouse. Mrs. G. R. Redding is chairman of women's golf and on her com- The bride 1s thé daughter of Mr. | "mittee are Mesdames David Stone, Hal T. Benham, Herbert Pinnell, | atich Mrs. Melville R. Farrington, a George Enos, Thomas Tussing, Duane Nelles, J. I Cummings, ahd R00. Lexington ave. and the bride] Tames groom's parents are Mr. and Mrs,
Mrs. Gardong to Entertain ' MRS. WILLIAM W. GARSTANG will ‘entertain members of thé
Indianapolis Junior League board .at her summer home, “Summer House,” at Seven Mile Point,
worn by the bride, fashioned with | a fitted bodice, long sleeves and a Her two-tiered veil. of |
long train. ’ : so 4 | Harbor Springs, Mich, Monday |jusion was caught with a braided Woman's Viewp ont through Friday. satin halo. She carried an arm
Guests will include Mesdames william N. Wishard Jr. James D. Peirce Jr., Frederic Anderson, Vincent Robert Kelly, Robert
‘Kiddies Love Rhoads Jr, Howard W. Fieber,
To Visit John M. Moore and John P. Col- ~ Roundhou SC™" “Thumm Sin and. Bab
{ Meeker. Mrs. Collett is spend- £ TA Burt | lake, but. : at Mrs. Ca Stang’: hottie, a . po A
Bridal Dinner Tonight * |’ MRS. FLORENCE GEISLER - will entertain at her home with la bridal dinner honoring her daughter, Miss Mary Barnard, land Paul M. Beaman Jr. at 6 . m, today. Miss Barnard and Mr. Bea{man will be married at 8:30 p. m. | tomorrow in the Centenary Christian church.
p ‘More F ids, | Guests at the dinner will inRecen invited uy, Sindy Sogo a|clude the bride-to-be's father,
moment of high ecstacy! To them J: Paul Barnard; Mr. and Mrs. Salt Required
Paul M. Beaman, parents of the all engineers are fortunate, fabulous | | I S bein. ow this particul is| bridegroom; Mrs. Henry Mon- | Fr ummer x al one toye, Champagne, Ill, Miss
y | Barnard’s sister and matron of > .! honor; Stanley Beaman, St They Will never lurget the Exper man; Miss Jeanne Barnard and ® =» Miss Anne Borden, bridesmaids, " WE ALL LIKE to watch the men and William Garrett, Fred who “put the engines to bed.” The Schmidt, Jack Heskett and Mr. monstrous machines stand waiting Montoye, ushers, ©
Senin Wear
{ bouquet of white Frau Karl Drufki | roses centered with an orchid. { Attendants Miss Ruth Ann . Gossom was {maid of honor and wore a gown of jonquil yellow. Bridesmaids were! Mise - Piarense.Yansienko, sister of the“ bridegroom: Mrs." Louis Young {and Mrs. Floyd E. Waldo, sisters of | ithe. bride... They were gowned in| 3 » roa ‘powelhe Shia ny ander. 3
The best man was Robert Zehmisch, Pittsburgh, and ushers were ‘Hrair Khelokian, Detroit, Stephen | Krasienko and Ralph DeMoss. ;
' roundhouse. enjoy it, although we pretend among ourselves that we only go to please the children. The movements of the giant turn-| table, the purring engines creeping | P into their stalls like tired people | - going to bed, fascinate the boys) and-it is almost impossible to drag! them away.
to New York and Niagra Falls. They will be at home after Sunday by 1209 E. 36th at.
By JANE STAFFORD Soclence Service Staff Writer THE OLD IDEA about hot weather diets used to be that one must avoid meat or other protein * foods. That idea has been debunked in some scientific reports, though many of us are being forced to fol-| — low it to some extent by the difficulty of getting meat.
the next long journey. Every tiny The main difference the weather cog and screw must function as makes in the body's food requiresmoothly as the great wheels. ments, however, is in salt and fluids.
A visit of pufe pleasure for the . little boys becomes for us a re-| . minder of what vast efforts go on + behind the, scenes of our railway) systems. Without these humble ' working men doing their tasks in| ~ sooty yards and buildings, and doing them well, the trains couldn't! run. I always come away from such,
{In hot weather you perspire more |because this is one mechanism for {keeping cool. The extra water lost {in this way should be made up by {drinking more. With perspiration, | salt as well as water is lost from the | | body. If perspiration is very heavy, it is |advisable to make up the salt loss! * |also. This may be done by taking
{ { |
| Albert L. Scott, 3340 E. Vermont st.| | A gown of white lace and net was | 3
The couple is on a wedding trip| :
The Bridal Scene— Peggy Thomas Becomes Bride
In Christ Episcopal Church
[Miss Frenzel Sets July 25
Principals in Bridal News
For Wedding "Miss Eleanor Dickson Frenzel has
set July 25 4 the date for her marriage to Charles Andrew Book-
at 5:30 p. m. in All Saints Episcopal cathedral, Miss Frenzel is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otte N. Frenzel Jr. of Carmel, and the prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bookwalter, . The bride-to-be has chosen Miss Sallle Eaglesfield to be maid of honor, and bridesmaids will be Miss Phyllis Ann Reed, New York; Mrs. John Hubbard Holliday, Mrs. Lorne Creighton Reynolds Jr. and Miss Mary Gladding Johnson, / Mr. Bookwalter will be attended by his father as best man, and ushers will be Willlam C. Griffith
Mooreneid photo. A May: 4 cerémony united Miss Dorothy Matkovich, daugh-
Fodor photo
Miss Pauline. Mary Wells and Andrew J. Mato exchanged
vows June 9 in Detroit. Their ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph a. Otto N. Frenzel 11, brother of parents are Mr, and Mis. Matkovich, 968 N. Arnolda |; 0 bride-to-be: Robert Doeppers, Homer Wells, 1519 Fletcher ave. and Jerome A. Hellmann, | paid Moxley, Ellas ©. Atkins Jr.,
son of MF. and Mrs. J. H. Hell. man, % Tipton.
| John Spalding, John Frenzel Mil(ler and John Hubbard Holliday.
ave., and Mr, and Mrs. Andrew Mato, Detroit,
walter II. The ceremony will be
”
VEGETABLE casserole uses up left-overs and provides a wonderful dish for an evening meal. It is wholesome - and delicious. UOsing green onions now adds a freshness of flavor ‘and mushrooms give the luxurious touch in both flavor and appesTanee, »
¥ VEGETABLE CASSEROLE (For Monday Luncheon) 3 ¢. (% 1b) sliced mushrooms. 10 green onions, all but one inch of tops removed. % c. butter or margarine. . 2 c. celery, chopped. 2c. cooked pens ( 12-08. package frozen). 1 c. finely grated 1 raw carrot. to 6 hard-cooked eggs, quartered engine. ¢. hot thick white sauce. wp. melted butter.
2 1 14 tsp. finely chopped garlic. %e ey bread crumbs.
Saute mushrooms and onions in butter about five minutes over low heat. Remove to shallow baking dish about .six-cup capacity. Saute celery in remaining butter until soft but not brown. Turn _ inte baking dish, - Place remaining vegetables and eggs In separate heaps in baking dish with mushrooms,” onions and celery. Sprinkle over cream sauce. Bake in moderate oven (350 debs F) 20 to 30 minutes. Makes four to five servings.
Use Long Wall
A long wall's bare space is used to advantage by placing a long sofa or day bed against it and lining up two-coffee tables in front. End tables with matching 'amps set off § the picture. Pramed pictures above i each cushion help the ensemble,
. §
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PHL A eh
SATURDAY at 1 P.M.
Monday Through Friday
wf WE - es UA ap. y Ea : : 3 % ‘ ” ‘ Ap doy Aemrpinrachnr ura po Br opp eg - ' » hc city — » . “ < - Hp - Ro 5 vein iE on
P. H. Ho phot
Block photo. |
Mr. and Mrs, Otto W. Arn- Miss Letitia Harrah, daugh- | holt, Columbus, Ind., announce ter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. the marriage of their daughter, Harrah, 1221 Hiatt st, and
Thomas E. Ford Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Ford, Thorntown, will | ~_be married July 12 in the West | Morris Street Christian church. |
LaVerne, and Ben W. Forster, son of Mrs. Louis Forster, also of Columbus. The wedding ceremony was June 15.
Clarence McIntire
Of Dr.
Miss Peggy Thomas became the bride of Dr. Clarence R McIntire at 2 o'clock today in Christ Episcopal church, The Rev. E. Ainger Powell officiated.
The bride lives at 1205 N. Alabama st, and is the daughter of Mr.
9:45 A. M. to 3:15 P. M.
Saturdays Only
9:45 A. M. to 1:00 P. M..
On Saturdays Shop "til ONE
in Air-Cooled Comfort at Wasson'’s!
’
q——
places with a new sense of admira-| tion for all the millions of people who ‘do the unspectacular work of!
salt tablets under a physician's di-| and Mrs. Tom D. B. Thomas of Bloomfield. Dr. McIntire is the son |
| rection. Some persons make a prac-| of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. McIntire, 262 N. Mount st. {tice of sprinkling a little salt into’ — The bride entered in a gown of
about them | often, yet without their conscien- | no faithfulness what would hap-|
|Home economists of the agriculture | department suggest serving salted |
| their drinking water in hot weather. Pretty and Cool
i vegetables as salad. This, they point | ICY en {out, was the original meaning of the As one child put it. “Look at the | | | word salad. “rs 7 nice dirty men. I like them.” | ’ nu Pgh i - - REMEMBER that even on. the . AN “i >. iy . hottest, steaming days of midsum- n: & tr Beauties’ Hints 'mer when appetites and the cook's Bh be. > S ih | spirits flag, nourishing, balanced »y) ~ | ears Remove | meals must be eaten. Salads, fruits BB v |
and vegetables are summer favor: Ss lites which is good because these | ry 4 | foods furnish vitamins and min-| wo X erals. P ZN § Rr \ | If you build your lunch or dinner | AA \ around a salad, however, be sure | [to add cheese or eggs or some other | {source of protein—meat when you| % {can get it, and poultry and fish. Nuts and beans also contribute | protein’ to meals, though of aj | slightly different kinds" z
Dirt From Eye
By ALICIA HART NEA Stalt Writer TO FLOAT OUT that ‘something in your eye,” which can spoil your fun in a rumble seat or opentopped car, try grasping the iE
~—Norma Bennett wears a twopiece Emily Wilkens beach coat and it in a bright patterned material. The beach coat has a hood attached to keep off the sun's rays. Norma will be | a senior at Washington this fall.
{ 3 | A lovely beach-comber, this |
| of the upper lid and pulling it out - and down. The trick is to float out
Don't let iced beverages crowd | oe de Lo veling war. Bloc 's} _ out your quota of milk. In hot] | ter d into ad 4 . | weather, you will probably be : Top Tug store and ask Stripes Good Closet | thirsty enough to drink both, and| the trained druggist to render first | cold milk and buttermilk are iy ald. ‘Brightener |
’ » Pe Git J Hoos |freshing drinks. Those who prefer THE ONLY kind of aid he should ppermint candy stripes in plas-|not to drink it can eat it in cooked administer is this: He turns back! tic-coated fabrics are the, newest| dishes, cheese and ice cream. { the upper lid to see if the foreign 8aY additién to the list of closet- a body has lodged there. If it has, brighteners. Macaroni F lavors 1% he can probably usher it out very. To help vou keep: your closet neat S ] ds | & gently with a cotton-wrapped swab. and attractive and your clothes in|“ Salads . But if the little invader has set- tip-top shape, youll find a double] One thrifty, satisfying friend, tied on the eyeball, your move.is hook, metal frame, zippered gar- macaroni, whose protein virtues rate to hie yourself to a doctor. He is| ment bag: a similar smaller blouse high on the good health scale, takes | the only person qualified to re-'or sweater bag: a six-pair shoe/on a dress as gay as summer move it, case; a double hatbox and extra- flowers when added to tasty tossed
| | |
|
‘I soms
,| chose a yellow rayon crepe dress
|and-she wore long white gloves.
* Intire, sister of the bridegroom, and {Miss Lucy | frocks of rose and aqua, respec.ively,
{and Dr. Clifford Jannasch.
{here
Kappa Phi Del ta
{deep shoulder cov ers.
Mrs. Earl Otey and Miss Norma Battle Jacket
Rennegarbe will entertain members
salads.
The subtle flavor of macaroni,
lgives it an honorary place with all salads—add it to a tossed vege-
A bright plaid-front battle jacket table salad, a creamy sea food salad,
i (>
|
lof the I,
fashioned with. a] sweetheart neckline, fitted bodice, accented with front shirring, long tight sleeves and a billowing skirt | and train. Mother's Veil Her veil was worn by her mother
antique satin
Pa [J d/ “a vl / i
when she was married in Calcutta. | “loor-length, it is edged with 12inch bands of heirloom Indian lace It fell from a halo of orange blosalso worn by the bride's mother. The bride carried an orchid-! centered spray of white roses. Miss Betty Thomas, Bloomfield, was her sister's maid of honor. She
with basque waist and flowing skirt. The off-shoulder neckline was accented with white eyelet ruffling,
Bridesmaids were Miss Betty Mc-|
Townsend. They wore made like the maid of honor’s. Mr. Mclntire was his son's best man, and ushers were David Thomas of Bloomfield, brother of the bride,
Reception at Home A reception at the bride's home followed the ceremony, and the couple left on a week's trip to Saugatuck, Mich. They will be at home at 1726 N. Meridian st. The bride is a graduate of Indiana university and is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Dr. McIntire lis a graduate of Indiana and also U.. Medical school. He 1s {a member of Phi Rho Sigma, medi-| cal fraternity, and now is Taterning at the Methodist hospital, v
and pledges of Kappa Phi Delta with plain back, collar and waist- or a tart fruit salad and it ensorority with a picnic supper at 7 band combine with matching plain hances the flavor goodness of the] P. m. Monday in the home of Mrs. shofts to make Junior's fashion! other foods as well as makes a little Otey, 1329, N - Oxford =. news pretty special food go a long tasty way.
SUMMER FURNITURE
RL te ph
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SOFA AND TWO, . MATCHING CHAIRS
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Shown on Our Famous Fourth Floor
LES MAYER & COMPANY _
x \Can- -Opener Cook PA Now A Boast
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They know that fruits and vegeBy SUE BURNETT [tables that come to them in cans "Are. you longing for a really be-!retain a very high percentage of coming afternoon dress these warm their original nutritive values, They | {days? Then here's. vour answer—a like the way canned foods eliminate | graceful, figure-molding style: that [the seasons from their menus, for
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oy there's a soft feminine look to| pW ————————————— ‘Note Invisible Spot
the shouldef gathering. Use a sheer | floral print and frost with unusual | On Clothing 80 that liquid you spilled has
novelty buttons. | Pattern 8023 is designed for sizes | {14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42 and 44. Size | miraculously failed to spot your 16, 3% yards of 35 or 39-inch fabric, | very best suit? Better make a menFor this pattern, send 25 cents, in tal note of the area affected and coins, your name, address, size-de- | | point it out to your cleaner when sired, and the pattern number. to| yoy ‘leave clothes for their regular Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis cprycing-up.
[for your copy of this 52-page book |
|of ideas and patterns for all home | ‘White te Cross Units
sewers . . . ‘suggestions by nation- | ally known fashion editors White Cross -guild units of the
special patterns by topflight Amer- | Methodist hospital will meet next ican designers . .. contest El week in the service center. Monday
by America’s talented juniors . , ,|—Third Christian and Broadway free shoulder pad pattern printed | Baptist; Tuesday—Grace Methodist, in book, Calvary Baptist and Bellaire; * | Wednesday — Broadway ‘Methodist, Save Walls
Perry Township and Music; ThursYou won't, crack plaster in driv-| {Gardens and Ben Davis; PFriday—
i
Times Pattern Service, 214 W.| Heat used in pressing frequently Maryland st, Indianapolis 9. | brings out “invisible” stains and New, exciting, different, the sum- leaves them almost impossible to mer issue of fashion. Send 25 cents yomove.
day—Temple Sisterhood, Municipal ling nails for picture hanging if you Tabernacle. Gardens, Meridian st, =, the mail into hot water or " Beta Sigma Phi and Wes-
Lied Daratfi beforehand.
leva.
“for July and August
on
NEW Ton HOURS
MAROTT'S CLOSE SATURDAY AT | P.M.
Monday Through Friday 9:30 A. M. to 5:15 P. M.
Saturdays Only 9:30 A. M. to | P. M.
A
"This we will do.
——
18 E. Washington st. | “Buy Shoes. at a SHOE STORE"
Marott's will continue to hold down prices. We will fight to'preserve the purchasing power of our customers. It is our firm belief the best way to maintain our standard of living and avoid runaway prices is to voluntarily hold the line.
| FRIDA
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