Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1946 — Page 17
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Elizabeth ‘Taylor, The onal Velvet” Girl, Frank an, and Tom- Drake, “Green Years’ Lad,
ATCH FOR IT! I ——————
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P. H. Ho photo. Mr. and Mrs. Jess M. Tudor, Tipton, announce the engagement of their daughter, Hilda, to Maurice G. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith, Tipton. The wedding will be Aug. 16.
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Auxiliary Plans Convention 1n Terre Haute
The 27th annual convention of the state American Legion auxiliary will be held in Terre Haute Aug. 9
to 11. A pre-convention 8 and 40 march and dinner will be held Aug. 8 in the Hotel Deming with Mrs. Chloe Schoolcraft presiding. Mrs, Margaret Nehf is chairman for the convention. Guest speakers will include the department commander of the American Legion, Henry E. Siebenmark; Gov. Gates; Mrs. Willard L. Morss, Howard, Kas., national vice president of the auxiliary’s central division, and Mrs. Walter G. Craven, national president. Tea Scheduled Registration for the convention will begin at 9 a. m. Aug. 9 in the Terre Haute House, A district president’s tea for all delegates and
FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1946
guests will be held at 5:30 p. m.|
the first day in the Terre Haute Department club. Mrs. Margaret Barr, sixth district president, man. Mrs. William R. Bolen, department president, will give the greetings at the opening session at 7:30 p. m. and Mayor Vernon R. McMillan of Terre Haute will welcome the delegates. ?
Election Aug, 11
is chair-|
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| 1
Reports of department commit-)
tees will highlight the second day session with a Past Presidents parley dinner planned for 7 p. m. in the Terre Haute House. Mrs. Eula McMann will preside. A Pan-American breakfast at 7:45 A. m. will open the Sunday session with Mrs. Alice Zaring presiding. Election and installation of officers will be held that morning.
Beauties’ Hints—
Skin ‘Perks Up’ With Massage
By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer THE OLDER a woman grows, the more her skin needs the stimu-
ting. If she possibly can, she should try to make room in her budget for professional facials. If she can’t
swing those, the next best thing!
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P H. Ho photo A ceremony tomorrow in South Bend will unite Miss Rose Solomon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Solomon, 1416 Roach st., ‘and Paul Mandigh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mile Man. dich of South Bend.
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P. H. Ho photo Miss Helen” Murphy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Murphy Sr., 415 Harlan st. and Louis Edward Eckhart Jr.,
| son of Mr. and Mrs. Eckhart,
959 Bradbury ave. will exchange vows tomorrow in Holy Cross Catholic church,
Photo Reflex photo. Aug. 10 is the date set for the marriage of Miss Mary Elizabeth Lowe, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, V. F. Lowe, 4814 College ave., and Thomas J.
Pierce, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Pierce, 1211 W, 33d st.
. Block photo. An Aud. 16 ceremony in the Clermont Christian church will unite Miss Helen Louise Jacks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, F. Donald Jacks, 5348 Speedway dr., and Myron Keith Eiermann, son of Mrs. Gladys Eiermann, Edgewoad.
Society—
Mr. and Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood Announce Daughter's Engagement
THE ENGAGEMENT OF MISS ALIDA SHERWOOD to Walter Larsen of Morristown, N. J., is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood. The wedding will be in late October. Miss Sherwood left the Public Health Nursing association here to join the army and served three years, two
of them at Nichols General hospital in Louisville.
Mr.
Larsen served in the army finance department three
years. ” - .
Mr. and Mrs. George D. Keever announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Mary Elizabeth, to Charles E. Waddy, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Milo Waddy, Oaklandon.
The wedding will be at 3:30
p. m. Aug. 4 in the Irvington Methodist church parlor. The Rev. Olin Parrett, pastor of the Liberty, Ind. Methodist church, will officiate.
Mrs. R. W. Holmstedt
Presents Resolution
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The bride-to-be is a graduate of the Indiana university Schocl of Nursing and is a member of Sigma Theta Tau sorority. Mrs. Chalmer Waddy, Oaklan-
A resolution endorsing appoint-| “4. entertained recently with a ment of women to city boards and| ;ccejlaneous shower for Miss commissions was presented by MIS.| geever A personal shower was R. W. Holmstedt, Bloomington, to| the Municipal League convention | lation of facial massage and pat-! which opened here Wednesday.
| Mrs. Holmstedt is a former state president of the American Association of University Women and the)
i
only woman member of a city coun- |
cil in Indiana.
|
given last night by Miss Jean Coffin and Miss Louise Reed in Miss Coffin’s home.
Wedding Sept. 7 THE APPROACHING marriage of Miss Frances Nadine Swinney to Donovan V. Pearson,
Miss Shirley Walker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, William F. Walker, 1134 N. Mount st., and John W. Ewing will be married next month. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon H. Ewing,
Leavenworth, Ind.
A recent survey conducted by Al A. U. W., showed that only 20 ap-|
son of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Pearson, Martinsville, is announced
to do is to get a reliable cosmetic! consultant to prescribe the creams
needed and to ask the specialist|Pointive positions of 900 in the| by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. state were held by women. Mrs. Frank Swinney, also of Martins-
to demonstrate how thege, should be applied. ville. The wedding ceremony will be read Sept. 7 in the St. Martin Catholic church in Martinsville. ~
Holmstedt's resolution included the * x = | stipintion that mayors and comWHERE application is concerned, mon councils of Indiana cities put | care should be, exercised .in avoid-| into practice the appointment of | ing harmful pulling and. stretching Women, as well as men, to city
» » of the skin, boards and commissions. Mr. and Mrs, John Burkhard
Three minutes of creaming a face Meeting Monday -
wel] every night will yield infinitely | 4 better results than a long-drawn-|
once a week,
irri
ithe Broadway Baptist church.
DELICIOUS WEEK-END “TREAT
C-O-O-K-I-E-S
That's enough said right there—but you might also like to know that there is a whole pound and eight ounces in the box, and the cookies contain such fine ingredients as wheat flour—sugar—invert sugar—eggs ~shortenihg—cocoanut flavor—cocoa—pure butter— extract flavor—lemon oil—pure chocolate chips—artificial vanilla—caramel and butterscotch flavor—nuts ~—leavening and salt. 7
New England Food Pantry Mail Orders Carefully Filled
CHARLES MAYER & COMPANY
29 West Washington Street
o
{ The Braca Philathea City union out orgy of slapping on the stufl|will meet at 7:30 p. m. Monday in
will hold open house from 2 to 5 p. m. Sunday in honor of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John Burkhard Jr. Before her marriage April 27 in St. Joseph's church, Bracknell, Berkshire, England, Mrs, Burkhard Jr. was Miss Beryl Rosina Clarke of Bracknell.
Playsuit
Summer days are still here and play clothes are in order. Marjorie Hollenbeck wears a
The extended shoulder. serves as a sleeve. A Broad Ripple high school studenf, Marjorie is a member of the Tri-C club.
(Strauss’) a
Kindred photo. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Neimeyer, 950 E. 42d sf. announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Louise, and Raymond Edward jSalbeck, son of Max Salbeck Sr., 1740 Brookside ave. The wedding date has not been set.
Block photo | Miss Muriel Newton is the V bride-to-be of Frederick F. | Schilling. Their marriage will
be Sept. 14 in Sacred Heart Catholic church. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Harry J. Newton, 322 Caven st, and Mr. and Mrs, Edward Schilling Sr., S. Sherman dr.
Miss Alma Jean Starks and Kennard Earl Brizendine will be married tomorrow in St. Roch's Catholic church. Parents of the couple are Mr, and Mrs, Wayne Starks, 3601 S. Harding st., and Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Brizendine, Clermént.
Bretzman photo. Mr. and Mrs. Francis X. Adams, 402 N. Meridian st. announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Jo Ellen Burroughs, and Carl Patten Duke, son of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Duke, Ellenton, Fla. The wedding will be Sept. 7.
Rogers photo
Mrs. Mildred Payton, 7300 Madison ave., announces that the marriage of her daughter, Patricia Ann, and Robert L. Deer will be Aug. 31. The prospective bridegroom's parents are Mr, and Mrs. Howard F. Deer Sr. 332 E. Raymond st.
Let's 4
Eat
Meta Given
FRANKFURTER and vegetable
salad, a whole meal in itself, is appropriate for either hot or balmy days
in July. Try adding crisp
| parsley to your greens in this salad. {It shouldn't be long before the fam-
ily will be asking for repeat performances of this dish on
your |
Plunge frankfurters into poiling| water and cook until plump (about|
5 minutes).
half inch lengths.
bite-size pieces.
P. H. Ho photo. Mrs. Gertrude G. Schultz, 1472 W. 32d st, announces that the marriage of her daughter, Ann, and Thomas Kafoure, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ned Kafoure, 2062 Bellefontaine st. will be Aug. 10.
Block pheio
Ray S. Hickman, 1004 Castle ave. announces the engagement of his daughter, Miriam, and John O. Donahue, son of Mrs. Stella Donahue, 1230 Olive st. The wedding will be Aug. 17 in the Victory Me. morial Methodist church.
Now Woolens May Be Laundered
Without Fear of
|
of American closets this fall—thanks
The long-awaited dresses—with a guarantee of less than 5 per cent
| shrinkage under prescribed washing {fashion for American women of|
all ages,
dirty city. And inexpensive woolens acquire through the non-shrinking process {ing a body worthy of fancier {weaves. (It's removable with another process for wools that have | enough of their own, thank you.) Lanaset Does It | Lanasét—trade name of a melamine synthetic resin developed by {the American Cyanamid Co.—is the stuff that does the trick. It is. {Being used by a limited number of mills supplying both inexpensive and quality woolens to a still com{paratively small number of dress | houses. | The limitation is strictly me- | chanical—there aren't enough ma{chines to give the cloth its chemi{cal bath. As soon as equipment is available there'll be more. | Each garment of Lanaset-treated | woolen bears a blue and silver tag
Way Down to Lilliputian Size
NEW YORK, July 26 «U. P.)—~Woolen dresses that will withstand a washing machine beatifig without shrinking will be a reality in thousands
| White and pastel woolens are no |woglens in back-to-school dresses, longer an impractical purchase for|{he firm did some school, sandpile or shopping in a press.
Block photo. ‘
Aug. 25 is the date set for ga Ida, Mekiau), 3 hter “the marriage of Miss Sylvia © Mr. Edna 5el, Florence Madiel and Leon Pin- Norwalk, Conn,, wil : the bride of © Zainey, sker. ‘Parents of the couple ‘are (01 of Mr. and Mrs. A. F.
Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Madiel, 3001 Park ave., and Mrs. Anna Pinsker, Sioux City, lowa.
Zainey, 605 N, LaSalle st., in a Sept. 9 ceremony in South Norwalk.
Novelist Tells The Secreg Of Success
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Stall Writer HELEN TOPPING MILLER, successful novelist, laughs at her lown story of housecleaning, when |she threw away five bushels of ref |jections, She lives near Knoxville, i |Tenn, and besides turning out sal{able fiction, .runs a tobacco farm. In 30 years she has written 314 short stories, 29 books dozen serials — and is still going strong. She is unpretentious, gay {and comfortable to be with-—which {is not to be said for all our celebMiss Pauline Noe's engage- |rities. ment to Marshall P. Bourne Jr. . nn is announced by her parents, | IN OUR TOWN at the moment on Mr. and Mrs. Carroll R. Noe, | immemorial feminine business 5017 E. lowa st. The wedding |WAiling the advent of a grandchild will be Aug. 25. Mr. Bourne | *h® responds willingly to questions
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. {about her career.
a | “I was a very good story-teller Bourne, 4727 Brookville rd. las a child” she ‘sald, “and. my
mother, a writer herself, thought I should be trained to use my talents. It's been easy for me to spin plots—maybe one is born with that gift—but the secret of success is still hard work. I've met hundreds of young people who aspired to write, and who had extraordinary talent but lacked stick-to-it-iveness. They couldn't buck the rejections and sometimes they wanted to begin at the top.” to a 100-year-old chemical formula, a wie “THERE'S NO accounting for an . editor's reactions. Once I sent a !story to McCall's. It was returned. I started it on the rounds and back it came 38 times. Then I sat washing for the | down and read it over. It's not a Identical white jersey dresses were | Dos oN Whip Cy .4 and dumped into a U. 8. bureau of accepted immediately. And so it standards agitator type washing |... The uncertainty is part of the | machine for a 30-minute pummel- | Jing game, and sometimes you Ing. "i ; | rave to have other ways of eating, They weren't identical when they | it once you have gained a marcame out. They looked like cet you're set.” mother and daughter Sombisiayion. | A thousand words a day is Mrs. In addition to shrinking, the un-|\,n... overage output except when treated garment had acquired orn | there's a deadline to be met, when
heavy matting of a well worn woolen sock. The treated dress 3 cart 1be Upped to eight or ten
held .its shape and texture through the beating. No More Stretching What's more, the manufacturer says, the treatment will keep the jersey in shape dry as well as wet -—no more stretching out of shape in wearing or)on the hanger. Melamine, parent, resin of Lanaset, was first synthesized in 1834, laid aside as of no apparent value. The melamine formula, basically composed of lime, coke and nitro-
Ramos-Porter photo
Their Shrinking
conditions—open a new rainbow of
dress houses using Lanaset-treated
Emergency Bed
An extra bed without an extra bedroom is no trick at all these days. A rollaway cot plus several yards of durable fabric and some pillows or bolsters will make an attractive slipcovered lounge for daytime use and a comfortable bed for emergencies. It can be placed on the sun porch or almost any other room in the house for double
and two -
Cool in cooking water. | Pee] and slice cross-wise in to oneHeap in center
Combine French|Inc. one of the moderate-price
with its guarantee, a sample of the dress fabric which has been washed {five times, and directions for laundering—by hand in mild soap suds. The manufacturers don’t recommend washing machine treatment
gen, has been developed for use as a solid plastic, as a strengthening treatment for paper, paints and enamels, a tanning chemical for leather. m In the textile field, it is a stabili-
of large salad bowl. Circle with ; vegetables placed in groups, then | —but they've proved it can be done. (zer of fibers, will be used for new outline with lettuce. broken into! 10 Co-operation with Crestlee, miracles of finish, for water and
s'ain proofing.
duty convenience.
Sorority Session
Mrs. - Arthur Close and Miss Jeanne Hubbard will be the hostesses at a social meeting to be held by Phi Delta Beta sorority at 8 {p. m. Tuesday in the Hotel Lincoln.
table. '
dressing and sour cream, drizzle
two-piece sharkskin rayon playsuit ih a small, ‘pin-like oe i
» ”n ” FRANKFURTER AND VEGETABLE SALAD {For Monday Luncheon) 1; 1b, frankfurters (about 4) 2 c. cooked, ciibed potatoes 1 c. cooked new peas 1 c. cooked green beans, cut in oneinch lengths 1 c. cooked, sliced new beets 1 c. chopped celery
= | % c. sliced green onions
2 medium tomatoes, cut in eighths 1 head romaine or lettuce % c. French dressing 4 ¢. sour cream
over salad. Toss lightly and quick- | ly. Serve with French bread, toasted. | | Makes four to six servings,
Vitamins Are Lbst
There's a scientific reason why)
vegetables should be washed and refrigerated immediately. When kept at room temperature, some vegetables lose anywhere from 10 to 47 per cent of their vitamin C in only 48 hours; in spinach, green beans and peas, 30 to 50 per cent of the vitamin C vanishes in two days, and all of it in & week.
reasonable.
317 W. 16th St. ©
Fry
yn . % Ti -
TFobar Sce
Immediate Delivery on Fine, Big Commercial ICE Refrigerators
Grocers, meat dealers, vegetable vendors . . . are showing a number of these splendid, big COMMERCIAL ICE REFRIGERATORS in various types and sizes suited to YOUR business. Prices are very See them NOW in our showrooms— or phone TAlbot 2451 for information.
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Monday Through Friday
9:43 A. M. to 3:13 P. M.
Saturdays Only
9:43 A. M. to 1:00 PP. M.
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On Saturdays Shop *til ONE Air-Cooled Comfort at Wasson's!
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