Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1946 — Page 17

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: WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1946

Miss Charlotte. Hofmann Engaged To Be Married to Lewis C. Bose

1 Society—

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DR. AND MRS. WILLIAM Hofmann announce the engagement of their daughter, Charlotte, and Lewis C. Bose. Mr. Bose is the son of Mrs. Jeanne C. Bose. No date has been set for the wedding. Both Miss Hofmann and Mr. Bose are graduates of Swarthmore college. He also is a graduate of the Law

school of Yale university.

The bride-to-be was discharged from the WAVES last month She was stationed in Washington. Mr. Bose was discharged from the navy in April as a lieutenant. He served on a cruiser and a sub-chaser in the Pacific, and later was

with the rank of lieutenant (j. g.).

stationed in Washington.

Party Is Planned

AN INFORMAL gathering Friday night for members of the wedding party and out-of-town guests will precede the wedding of Miss

Eleansr Vale and William R.

Carter on Saturday in: All

2 Saints cathedral.

The party will be in the home of the bride-to-be's parents, Mr. and Mrs George H. Vale Out-of-town guests will inelude Mrs. Ann Carter and Miss Jane Carter, both of Chicago, mother and ‘sister o{ the prospective bridegroom: ahd Mrs. Harriet Vale of Winnipeg, Canada, grandmother of the bride-to-be: Also guests will be Messrs. and Mesdames John Gamble, Arthur Reahage and John Ward, all of Chicago; Mr, and Mrs. Jack Allan of Morris, Ill, and John Vale of Peoria, IIL Attendants at ‘the wedding will be Miss Shirley Vale, sister of the prospective bride, and Mr. Gamble,

Marriage Announced MR. AND MRS. Lee R. Secrest announce the marriage of their daughter, Louise, to E. J Murphy Jr. The wedding was July 6 at Greenfield, and the couple is at home in Indianapolis. y ” i. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Martin will hold open house from 2 to 5 o'clock Sunday afternoon in honor of their son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Harris, who were married July 6 in the Southport Baptist church. Mrs. Harris is the former Miss Betty McAllister of Southport.

Omega Nu Tau

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| ceremony

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4

Stolkin-Frank Ceremony

Is Read

Miss Jacqueline Frank became the bride of Harold H. Stolkin in a at 8:30 p. m. yesterday

at the Rabbi Maurice Goldblatt read the|

VOWS. {

Parents of the couple are Mr. and | Mrs. George E. Frank, 216 E. 49th] st, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stolkin 5810 Washington blvd. Mrs. Sam Smulvan was the bride's matron of honor and Miss Ann Kahn and Miss Dorothy Ruby were bridesmaids. Mrs. Smulyan wore a gown of pink sheer mar- | quiset fashioned with a -dropped shoulder yoke, a fitted bodice and full skirt. The bridesmaids wore pink frosted organdy with: round

| necklines and cap sleeves

Benwho

Flower girls were Marilyn jamin and Marilyn Singer, wore white net dresses. The bride was gowned in sheer nylonette with a round neckline, a bateau yoke caught with seed pearl

|trim, a fitted bodice, long sleeves {and a polonnaise drape. She car-

ried a white satin Bible with a cluster of white orchids, stephanotis and

Broadmoor Country club. ¢

| marks

| 1ssues

white frosted ivy vines. |

The best man was Frank Benjamin and ushers were Mr. Smulyan, Herbert Backer and George Saxe. The couple left on a motor trip to California and will be at home at 6154 Park ave. after Aug. 25. Mrs. Stolkin is a graduate of

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Fur and wool are teamed i

this costume by Brownie.

lack crepe blouse, bow-tied at this model from the Foxbrownie

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Our Political Psychology Is Goofy’

By

MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer NEITHER dignity nor good sense our political system, The |

custom of berating opponents be-| fore primaries and the backing | them vociferously afterward is responsible for the low esteem in|

which public officials are held. It} also makes for the apathetic atti-| tudes among people on political |

All this adds up to disaster in a republic. Although the world is in a desperate condition and our own | nation faces crisis after crisis, you can see people dodging the duty to think. | Some are convinced that what- | ever they do won't matter anyway Complexity’ piles upon complexity They hear so many charges and counter-charges that they'd rather be wrecked eventually than wade through present confusions.

” ” " YET THERE are many thousands

Lambda chapter, Omega Nu Tau! Northwestern university and MTr.|of men and women doing their level

sorority, will meet at 8 p. m. to-|Stolkin attended the University of | pest

morrow in the Columbia club.

Michigan and Indiana university.

cis 4

Eat

THE TIME has come when no one food can be classed as strictly seasonal. A few years ago bread pudding was thought of as strict-

ly a wintertime dessert. Now with 1

refrigeration it is a welcome dessert even if the temperature is pushing the mercury up around 100. » » » CHOCOLATE CHIP BREAD PUDDING (For Saturday dinner) 2 ¢. milk, scalded 1 ¢. fine dry bread.. crumbs % tsp. salt 2 thsps. sugar 3% c¢. honey 2 thsps. butter 2 eggs, beaten slightly 1; ¢. chocolate bits 1 tsp. vanilla Pour milk over bread- crumbs. Stir until thickened, then add salt,

sugar, honey and butter. Stir well.|sary.)

Pour small amount of hot mixture over eggs beating slightly, then combine with remaining hot mix-

ture. Add chocolate bits and vanilla. Stir until chocolate "is almost

melted, leaving a few bits partially melted. Pour into buttered shallow baking dish (four cups capacity or 9-inch glass pie plate). Bake in slow oven (325 degrees F.) from 35 to 40 minutes. Remove from" oven. Center will be slightly soft, but it will complete cooking from heat of pan. Serve with plain cream.

Serves four or five.

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ROAST SHOULDER OF VEAL (For Sunday Dinner) 3% -1b. shoulder of veal Salt tsp. caraway seed slices bacon 14 c. water 1 medium onion, cut in quarters tbsps. flour 1 to 1%; c. water 4 ¢. sour cream Wipe veal with damp cloth. Salt lightly’ all oyer. Place in small roaster. Sprinkle with caraway seed and lay strips of bacon over top. Pour the 4 c. water in bottom of pan. Cover and roast in moderate oven 350 degrees F. for| one hour. (Check once or twice to see that bottom of pan is not dry and scorching — add very small amount of water, 1¢ cup, if neces-

Lift off cover, remove bacon from top of roast and place in bottom of

|

Meta |! Given

pan. Add onion, then cover again | and continue roasting another] hour at 325 degrees F. or until meat | is tender.

Remove roast to platter and keep warm, Do not remove onion or bacon. Place pan over low open flame. Stir flour into pan gravy, add the 1 or 1% cups water and stir briskly until mixture is thick | and bubbly. Add sour cream and beat until well blended. Chop up| bacon slightly beffire serving. Serve with noodles. Makes six servings.

GENUINE ORANGE BLOSSOM WEDDING ENSEMBLES

The exquisite quality of genuine Orange Blossom rings. speaks for itself. We invite you to see ‘ouRf fine selection of Diamond Rings.

Ensembles Priced, $75 Up 29 WEST WASHINGTON STREET

Tis

|

| gandie or linen applique bows—

in public office. Demands made upon senators and congressmen these days are almost intolerable. And who envies President Truman? The truth is that we've all got to work and think if we get through the reconversion and whole. Countries are never saved or ruined ‘by their politicians. Especially ations such as ours where the people still have the right to choose their representatives And after they're chosen how about giving them a little more co-operation and praise? Our political psychology is goofy. We're always telling congressmen how bad they are. Also, mavbe if we gave less thought to ourselves, we could do more to help them save the country.

Story-a-Month

Miss Hortense Powner will preside at the Story-a-Manth club meeting

{at 7:30 p. m. today in the Rauh | Memorial library. .Round table dis-

cussions will include publicity, new | markets and new trends. Original short stories will be read. The meet- |

ing is open to any interested persOnS.

A black. American broadtail plastron contrasts with an off-white wool jacket topping a severely straight black wool skirt. A

period , sound!

n ingenious fashion in signed in

the throat, completes fall collection.

” » ”

THE INDIANAPOLIS. TIMES

Dress-and-jacket with the look of a piece suit is from Samuel Kass' fall collection. cocoa wool, the softly flared jacket has a deep, shaped collar of nutria. h blouse top of nutria-colored crepe banded with cocoa. The buttons and belt are jeweled.

At Fashion Show in New York

By LOUISE

FLETCHER . |

Times Woman's Editor

NEW YORK, July 17 —There must be something in that telepathy

business to account for the prevalence of th shown here this week for U. 8. an Of the first seven high-style de

yesterday and Monday under sponsorship of the New York Dress

institute's couturier group, six placed marked emphasis on medieval and renaissance themes Fortunately, the medieval influence is a benign one, so it isn't

tragic if telepathy labored over- |

time ps the designers sat down at thefr respective drawing boards. =

. " Mme. Ela Holds Lead It's only fair to report that

some ‘sources credit this medieval theme to the recent appearances here of the Old Vie Repertory theater and to Laurence Olivier's film, “Henry V.” On the other hand, one designer whose collection was shown yesterday, Mme. Eta of RenEta, already had a two-season lead on medieval motifs. It was a couple of seasons back that she launched the almonettas or alma bags like those worn by the crusaders, And in her current styles she cashes in on that lead with an entire Jine inspired by collections of old chess sets. The models carry out the theme with swathed cowl necks, tight tapered sleeves (some with flanged tops), swag drapery and museum-type beading and metallic embroidery. In Nettie Rosenstein’'s show which came last night as a climax for the second day of N. Y. D. 1's seventh semi-annual press week, hoods provided the medieval influence—hooded leopard and broadtail capes, cowl hoods that are an integral part of suit blouses, buttoned-on hoods for boxy suit jackets or swinging fulllength coats. » » » ‘Angel Robe’ Shown Also in the same mood were ecclesiastical looking tunics with solid borders of bulge beading: and stole-like lines in two-toned coats, their sleeves and side areas of dark colors while the stole-ef-

bright tones. In the line shown by Samuel Kass, the medieval look was present In a pewter gray evening dress, its shallow off-the-shoulder neckline solidly paved with iridescent beading. Joseph Whitehead, =oted for his tea, hostess and dinner gowns

It's Possibl Appear R

fect “front and back were of |

There's no other way (short of what lawvers call collusion)

e medieval look in fall styles being d Canadian fashion writers signers, whose lines were seen here

and formal dresses, . joined the medieval and renaissance parade, too, just as did Ben Reig and Anthony Blotta in -their collections shown on Monday. One of the Whitehead ideas is a sleeveless brocade coat floating loosely over a hostess gown. An. | other is a kind of “angel robe frequently done in jersey with sequinned - yoke. The full fronts of these are held in by narrow ties, but the gathered backs trail out from shoulder yokes. Brownie, of Fox-Brownie, is the designer who seems, more than the others, to have escaped the medieval revival. For the most part she sticks to & narrow torso line. When this does give way to fullness at a low hipline, the result is Victorian rather than renaissance. » . » Boulevard Suits Noteworthy in her collection is a series of boulevard suits using fur as a definite part of the garment rather than as trimming An example is a plastron front of broadtail for a winter white wool jacket. Other highlights of the five collections seen yesterday: Brownie's “whispering black.” taffeta combined with wool to give the garment a rustle as it moves: her heather beige and black duets; her rich winter peony red and a whole palette of golds and browns. Eta’s woolens woven with metal threads—copper with mist blue. silver with white and metallic blue with black. Nettie Rosenstein's skirts with bishop's miter drapery; her im- | ported laces; her pure silk canton | crepe; her glant-petal evening | skirt and her strapless evening | gowns. | Samuel Kass' dress-and-jacket with the look of a three-piece suit; his extra pair of sheer | sleeves (borrowed from grandma's shoulderette) to wear like mantilla | or scarf over evening and cock- | tall dresses, and his shoulder hag | pocket. This is -a single large draped pouch pocket at the side of suit jackets, with a stitched strap of fabric extending up over the shoulder,

Homemaking—

e to Make Small House oomy and Comfortable

NEW HOUSES NOW BEING

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By MRS. ANNE CABOT

those built in the pre-war years

BUILT are generally smaller than

Labor and materials are higher, and

a foot or two off the end of a room means a substantial saving. This trend toward smaller homes brings the problem of effective

utilization of space by the millions homes during the next few yess. of a few simple rules will make a

comfortable.

Utility, of course, is the prime commonplace. | consideration in selecting furniture rugs for the small home, it should |and equipment. Massive breakfronts| he remembered that a room appears

of families who expect to buy new

But careful planning and observance

(small house appear roomy and needed in the decoration of small

{homes to lift them out

And

of the in selecting

or bookcases are to be avoided, as|jarger when the rug extends close

are “overstuffed” chairs. In the

of space. In the dining room one of the modern compact extension tables, which can be placed at the side

of the room, will create space for a

to the walls, say a foot or less. A

| kitchen, cabinets and other equip-| wide margin around the rug usu{ment should be planned to give the ally makes a room look smaller. maximum service in a minimum|

Miss Mamie Larsh 'Will Preside

| Miss Mamie D. Larsh, president

Inexpensive summer frocks and piano or other extra piece in the of the International Association of | sports togs can be given unique and |dining room. With a little planning|Altrusa: Clubs, will preside at the | personal charm by cleverly adding|the dining room can be made to executive committee meeting in Ra{an applique or two to take it out|serve also as a second living room,| cine, Wis., next week.

|of the run-of-the-mill class. dv very desirable situation for a) | beach boleros of dark linen or cot- | ton are given distinction by the

addition of a crimson butterfly, rose spray or a cluster of gingham] strawberries. A paste] cotton dregs welcomes a row of big white or-

white tabric purses.can be®pleasantly enlivened by a spray of leaves in delicate or strong colors. Gift underwear, beach ensembles, chil« dren’s frocks, luncheon mats, guest towels can be personalized by a applique. To obtain seven applique motifs (pattern 5627) color suggestions, finishing directions, send 16 cents in coin, your name, address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The

small home. ~

'Roomier’ Look

DECORATION of floors and walls 7 in the small home can actually increase the appearance of roominess. Dark walls seem to- fall into the room, and should be avoided. Light wall paper containing sprays which convey a “looking through” illusion makes rooms feel larger. Too dark rugs also are to be avoided. The soft, warm colors found in Oriental rugs are especially desirable in small homes. "Always in good - taste,/ they go well with all types of furniture. Such rugs create an air of luxury

The four-day conference will open Tuesday night with a* informal gathering, and will close July | 26 with the selection of a city for | the 1947 convention, which will be

since before the war,

Isaac Walton Group

The Indianapolis chapter of the Isaac Walton league will meet at 4 p. m Saturday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Holmes, 8200 E. 82d st. . '

Luncheon Tomorrow The dining room committee of the

Indiandpolis Times, 530 8. Wells st. Chicago 7."

,

and comfortable living, going a long way in providing the atmosphers ht » . . /

ALC

ered dish luncheon at 12:30 p. m.

e cocoa skirt has a

: | | Medieval and Renaissance Themes I: E. 0. Club

Are Shown by Six Designers |

the first international convention

Sahara Grotto will meet for a cov-|

rm PAGE Marian Coll Will Offer

Music Course’

The Gregorian Institute of Amer ica will open its five-day summer session at Marian college, Cold Spring rd, Monday. Registration will be held, from 8:30 to 11 a. m. ' Classes in Gregorian chant, chant accompaniment liturgy, polyphony and choral technique will be offered from 0:30 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. Faculty members will include Dr. Eugene Lapierre, head of the music department of the University of Montreal; the Rev. Ethelbert Thibaylt, prcfessor of Gregorian chant at the Sulpician seminary of Mon- . treal; Dom Ermin Vitry, director of music at St. Mary's Institute, O'Fallon, Mo., and Dr, Clifford A. Bennett, Toldeo, director of the course anc national director of the Gregorian institute.

®

Pledges of Sorority To Entertain .

The pledges of 'heta chapter, Phi | Delta _Pi sorority, will entertain active members at a dinner at 7:30 p. m. today in the home of Mrs. Coburne Tarpenning, 399 Evergreen ave. The chapter will sponsor a card party at 1:30 p. m. Friday in the Food Craft shop. Mrs. Leon Sack~ ett is chairman.

Nettie Rosenstein's fall and vinter line includes this hooded monk's coat. Of full-swinging black wool, the coat has a medieval hood of royal blue wool anchored with knot buttons. The blue cuffs button back.

three.

De-

Lawn Social

The H. E. O. club met for lunch-| The Wednesday Thrifty club will eon at noon today in the home of | have a lawn social at 8 p. m. today Mrs. L. J. Kuperschmidt, 256 N.[at the home of Mrs. Clarence Scott, |

Pershing ave. 1303 E. Ohio st

STRAUSS SAYS:

TRYING TO KEEP COOL?

The fashion magazines—this month—devoted quite a“bit of space to keeping cool and looking cool—{at least cooler)— and gave a lot of advice for these humid mid-summer days— and mighty good advice, too.

Strauss Women's Specialty Shop can furnish plenty of cool PLAY CLOIHES, SHEER DRESSES SV/IM SUITS, PALM BEACH: SUITS and such—to help you follow that advice. (There are still some fine clearsces on summer wearables, too.)

And to make your bath more refreshing there are many

for which the Specialty Shep has long been noted—including

CHANEL MEN

YARDLEY MARY DUNHILL

and many others—soaps with ceol refreshing fragrance—{we might mention, too, the many special gift soaps in dainty moulds for thank-you and hostess gifts).

And you'll find a nice variety of cooling

COLOGNES TOILET WATER BATH CRYSTALS DUSTING POWDER

as well as summer-light make-up from the best-loved makers—all of which promise to make the torrid

today at 4107 E. ‘Washington.

days seem cooler—and you feel and look cooler, : : “© THE WOMEN'S §HOP, THRD FLOOR it - ~ x fe Ty 3 2 ee i + ; Iv : wien cl wih we