Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 December 1946 — Page 18

‘And ance at a Bridal Dinner Friday

“ROLLIN W. SPIEGEL will honor jer, Anm; and her fiance, Edwin P. McCarty Jr, ridal dinner. at 6:30 o'clock Friday night in the Columbia clubs ~~ = "The dinner will follow the wedding rehearsal in St. Joan of Arc Catholic church, where the couple will be jed at 11 o'clock Saturday morning: . wy ‘at the dinner prospective egroom’s ait Mr er Hypa uly and members of the bridal

Donald Clemmer of Ft. Wayne will be Mr. McCarty's best man, and ushers will be Robert Kearney of Ft. Wayne; Gus Spentzos of Huntington, and Robert Weedon.

Dinner Reservations MANY INDIANAPOLIS fam{lies will have “turkey and trimmings” today at local clubs and hotels. Christmas dinner reservations at the Indianapolis Athletic club have been made by G. W. Spring, Reginald Sullivan, Joe Yoke, Earl Breech, Tom Garland, Bert McCammon, George Tate and Ed Dunnington, Mrs. W. M. Hall and Mrs. W. M. Safer. Reservations for dinner at the Propylaeum have been made by Mesdames C. B. Coleman, John J Bibler, Ethel M. Rathert, Ralph Vonnegut, Herbert 8S. Wood, Vajen Collins, Grace L. Brown, Belle N. Dean, J. R. Carr and Robert McMurray, Misses Elizabeth Chipman, Cerene Ohr and Ella G. Marthens,

Family Parties FAMILY PARTY reservations at the Marott hotel have been made by Messrs. and Mesdames T. A. Hendricks, C. W. McCarty, John H. Chambers, James Lesh, W. R. Cooper, Burton Canaday,

TS

Resolutions For Health

By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Stat Writer . IF YOU FOLLOW the tradition of making good resolutions on New Year's day, you will surely include a few that will promote nealth. Maybe you need to do a jittle stock taking before you can make your health resolution. Checkups with dentist and physician will show any special conditions that fie correcting to make you fully t. | You know, yourself, whether you been growing lax about folthe proper diet, allowing time for sufficient sleep and relaxaition, and taking regular outdoor

‘safety measures at work and at

You hope you and your family ‘will avoid serious illness during the ‘coming year, but have you taken available precautions? Protec-

‘tion against smallpox can be had by vaccination. The children can against diphtheria, measles, tetanus and whooping cough by similar measures. ‘. ® . KEEPING YOUR home and clean and free from rats, flies and mosquitoes

Max M. Farb and C. F. Roberts of Carmel, Cummins, Dorothy Buschmann, George Newton and William Hapgood, the Rev. Orien W. Fifer, Morris Crane, Mansur B. Oakes, W. E. Hale, A. C. Henry and A. S. Shephard.

Mesdames George Samuel C. Carey,

0 £

-

| Norway Club Plans

‘Smorgasbord ; A smorgasbord will be held by i club at its Christmas | party at 6: m. Saturday in the : D: A. R. chapter house,

A

: Carl Scheidker and Miss Betty Lou ! Bergeron, accompanied by Mrs. George Megorden, will sing Christmas songs and Major Tom R. Ga-

5 + GC.

} Dickie : ‘Card Party Set

‘by the Mothers and

company, :

ENGAGEMENT gagement to Joe L. Blakeslee Mrs. lan H. Small, 5732 Broadway terrace. is the son of Dr. and Mrs, C. B. Blakeslee, 5758 Wildwood ave. No

date has been set for their wedding. M y Day— vid ‘Peace on Earth and Good Will

ANNOUNCED—M iss Jessie Lou Smalls enis announced by her parents, Mr. and The bridegroom-to-be

Will Come Through Tolerance and Understanding’.

By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT

HYDE PARK, Dec. 25.—Now we come to the second Christmas since the end of ‘the war. All over the world there still are signs that peace | returns slowly after an orgy of hate. Yet this is the season when in! { all hearts there is rejoicing. People may celebrate simply the non-religious Christmas, which jolly old St. Nick presides, or they may believe that the specia

significance of the season was car-| ried by the angels to shepherds, as, they watched their flocks, and that today we still rejoice at the coming to our earth of the Saviour of men. It is the season of good will and the season of giving. And if the spirit of giving could extend itself so that the hearts and the minds of men were chiefly concerned with what they could give and not with what they could receive, we would soon, I believe, see a change in the atmesphere of the world in which we live.

Block phota. MARRIED — A ceremony read Saturday night .in the First Methodist ‘church in Mooresville united Miss Mary Ellen Coster and Duncan Randall. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rees Coster, Mooresville, and Mr. Randall is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Ran-

: brielsen will sing Norwegian songs. Mrs, A. M. Feist will tell about Christmas in Norway and there will | exchange of gifts. Mrs. J. is in charge of the smorgasbord and Mrs, George C. Dickinson and Mrs. Emil Unger will

* A public card party wil) pe held

dall, Brooklyn, N.Y.

I am always interested to see how pleased some people apparently are to take things away from other people, whether it is their worldly goods or such intangibles as their characters or their reputations. It seems to be almost inherent in human nature to glory in destruction rather than in building up, and yet everywhere at this season, we are reminded that once upon a time the managed to live through the ages— that there must be peace on earth and good will to men. i] After an orgy of cruelty and hate such as has gone on in Europe and | Asia, it is harder than ever to bring people back to the spirit which | animated the whole life of Christ, but that is what I believe we will have to achieve if we are going to build an atmosphere in which peace and good will can grow. ” s ” 1 THINK I can truthfully say

that I have no feeling of real animosity against any man, but I be-!

|

\ Women Workers

live that a negative feeling is not enough to accomplish that oe | must be accomplished in the world

|

The most recent data available in the course of the next few years. |

eral, are for July, 1943. women employees

| for women employed in non-school | We must consciously wipe out of | government units, other than fed-|our hearts the fears which permit At that{our drifting totaled | ward our neighbors and eventually

into animosities to-

384,000 or 21 per cent of the 1,861,000] into war. 3

persons employed by all such units,

‘Ceramic Workers

“Love thy neighbor as thyself” is not a very easy commandment to |obey, because there are times when {one loves oneself very little indeed!

The many women absorbed in In- On the whole, however, we are

| |

ughters |of fine dinnerware make a valuable Benefit club at 1:45 p. m. tomor- contribution to the ceramic indus- | Yow in the Citizens Gas & Utility [try because of their steady, delicate | velop a sense of tolerance and un(hands and their artistic skills.

eS

A PE EAU S RAIA

Transfer of

Trophy

Wine Coolers Sterling Silver Bowl

problem.

Presentation Gifts

For Retiring Executives

Gold Pen & Pencil Sets Pocket Watches

Advancement in Organization

and Staff Members

Wine Bottle Sets Wrist Watches Dress Sets

|dustries devoted to the manufacture | kinder to ourselves than we are to!

our neighbors most of the time,|

| and it would be well, I think, to de-

derstand i ; a erstanding toward humanity as of the recently organized Indian-|jecrees F.) for 30 minutes. Serve

a whole. ] | =| I hope. that before the third post- | =| war Christmas comes around, we| = | will see a measurable improvement |

= | through the medium of individuals f| who work together and who gain | confidence which they can impart | to their fellow countrymen. So let us highly resolve on ‘this | Christmas day that each one of 2 |us will do his part, trying to build a bridge of understanding toward | every individual from another land | with whom we come. in contact. | may differ but we can understand i cach other. And if we do, the "| Kingdom of God will be nearer to realization, and the Christ Child | will not have come to earth in vain.

‘New England Woman ‘Rings the Bells’

Ste seit oe

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

over | women save their origina

Ko A Ret

Women Can't Cook Well, Chef Says

‘All Their Originality Goes Only Into Hats’

By CLAIRE COX United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Dec. 26—If mamma prepared dinner today in the same frame of mind she uses when buying an Easter bonnet, a lot of American families would enjoy their Chrisimas turkey more, Chef Guido |Morri sald yesterday. But Morri said the chances were slim. Mamma probably doesn’t know how to cook a turkey properly. “In fact, at least 65 per cent of the American women don't know how to cook anything properly,” he sald. “They never use enough seasoning.” Morri, chef at the Pump Room, a hotel dining room that specializes in serving food in flames, said the only American women who' knew beans about cooking came to the U. 8. from France, Italy and Germany. © “I came from Italy myself,” he said. “There the women work hard over their cooking. They regard it as an art. “But American women cook in too much of a hurry, and their hus|bands regard eating as something {you do to stay alive, instead of en-

To

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A EE A Rh sant vr

joying it.” Morri said his biggest criticism of U. S. cookery is the absence of proper seasoning. Nearly any dish should be garnished with a bit of

pepper, he said.

about garlic,” he added. “I don’t

“No Originality”

cookihg schools in the wouldn't improve U. 8. cooking.

|you can run up in no [little material. Easy style has ample | |pockets to heip you with your

Mh {chores. garlic, and quantities of salt and | pitchen showers or bazaars?

“But the Americans are sO social | 14 16, 18, 20, 42 and 44. Size 16, minded they sacrifice good eating|ion apron, 1; yards of 35 or 39for what their best friends think inch fabric: bottom apron, 21 yards.

Morri said all the cook books and world

“It takes originality to turn out even good hash, but American pashion is brim full of smart ideas lity for for every woman who plies a needle. at 8 p. m. Friday.

a gh WRN Ag NS adi ur

«

Times Pattern Servi

- ag

8088

By SUE BURNETT

Why not make several for |

Pattern 8088 is designed for sizes

For this pattern, send 25 cents, in

|sired, and the pattern number to] |Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis |1and st., Indianapolis 9. The fall and winter

issue of | Guilford ave.

1|their hats,” he explained. Morri said he cooks turkeys in|gesigns by America’s top flight dethe same way as nearly everybody|gigners . . else, but he uses a lot of seasoning essories . . . —both inside and outside the bird.|in pook. Price 25 cents.

He makes his dressing with bread, mushrooms, chicken livers or chestnut—and garlic. He garnishes sweet potatoes wil. | bananas, oranges, apples and cherries. | “That's originality for you,” he said. “Any housewive ought to be able to concoct something as good.” Morri said even his own wife wasn’t a very original cook. «I like my own cooking better,” he said, “and so does she.”

| Easy-to-make styles

. special

By MRS. ANNE CABOT Dress up an ordinary cotton bedspread by embroidering a shimmer-ingly-hued peacock in the center of it. Embroidery is done in quick, Pretty and very practical aprons|easy stitchery. The flower motifs time, and with !can be spaced to fit the corners of | your spread and are to be done in

Cabot, The

Times Pattern service, 214 W. Mary-| Party Planned Miss Mary Lou Wilkerson, 4414 will entertain the

| Babes Alumnae ‘club and guests The theme of

the party will be “The New Year.”

IN A 10 EE at

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 2, 146 ce. [Comic Books oe : |

=

Q

Win Out Over Clothes

U. N. Children Prefer : Books—Or Ice Cream By BARBARA BUNDSCHU Ewe Press Staff Sorrespinasns YORK, Dec. 25. ~ The youngsters can’ spot & ruffie when they see one, but—America to East Africa-—most of the prettily young ladies would rather look at a comic book.

anough + between pick their Christmas present dresses at a manufacturer's fashion show this week, But it took ice cream to put the books away. First choice of most of the boys and girls (boys got sweaters, no ruffles) was the dress Jack Borgenicht designed for a portrait —a fullskirted, puff-sleeved confection in blue bengaline with an inset V of white eyelet bordered with a wide blue ruffle at the neck. What They Like Solemn, big-eyed 7T-year-old Malena Pons of Ecuador liked pink and blue best, and the rest went along with her on their second choice—a pink and white striped cotton with white ric-rac braid for trim. Others that drew votes were a circus dress striped with multi- | colored balloons, a blue taffeta

She, Same colorings as the center | party dress trimmed in white, and To obtain transfer for the peacock designs (pattern 5192), {color chart for working, amonts of all materials specified, sketches of stitches used, send 16 cents in coin, your name address and the pattern number to

think garlic ever can be ‘over-used.” |. ins, your name, address, size de-|ADRR Sr ots Shaan

a pretty blue and white print cotton with organdy yoke and collar. The Boys Are Blase The boys liked the names better than the dresses that went with them—“Picnie,” “Trip Away From Home” and “Easter Egg Hunt.” But most of them had no choices even for their sisters. Dreamy-eyed Patrick Coidan of France thought for a full minute and then said “No.” American John Elfmont was quicker—“I didn't see anything,” he said. “They're all just dresses.” Mothers can do their own picking

Indianapolis

. lots of ideas with acfree pinted pattern

Kathleen May To Be Wed Tonight

Miss Kathleen May will become | the bride of Conrad N. Rometil ni a Christmas day wedding ceremony

|at 7 p. m. in the rectory of St.

| Francis De Sales Catholic church. \The Rev. Fr. Joseph Vollmer will |

officiate. |

land Mrs.

Parents of the couple are Mr. Albert E. May, 2942 Sta- |

Sin the confidence of nations in| |each other. It will have to come| p8yning Johnson, vice president; 2 | Mrs. Everett E. Lett, secretary; Mrs, | | Charles Voyles, treasurer; Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, parliamentarian; Mrs. historian: Miss Rose Mrs, Jasper program chairman, and

| When Mrs. Arthur A. Shurcliff

| |

|

|

RING IN THE NEW—White

net and ‘lace, sprinkled with

rhinestones, fuse into an exciting fantasy for an evening of gaigty. Gloria Wood, a juniot af Howe high school, completes her costume with white evening gloves. - Gloria is a member of the Z. E. T. A. club. (Wasson's.)

New Law Unit Organjzed

Mrs. W. H. Vinzant is president

when poorly prepared, but wonderfully fine when made by cooks who

lets Eat Sh

CORNBREAD 18 COMMON fare

know how. Old-time cornbread makers complain these days about | the cornmeal being ground too fine. | This fineness can be offset by using | little or no.flour. A trifle too stiff batter makes the difference between an excellent and poor product. Batter should be medium and when poured should level off immediately in the baking pan.

» » ” BUTTERMILK CORNBREAD (For Saturday dinner) 114 ¢. yellow cornmeal 1 tsp. salt 2 eggs, separated 3, tsp. soda 1% c. buttermilk | 2 tbsps. melted shortening Lift the cornmeal by spoonfuls into the measuring cup, then level off, Sift cornmeal and salt together. Beat egg yolks thoroughly, add soda and buttermilk and beat until thdroughly mixed. Add to cornmeal mixture and stir until ingredients are blended. Add hot melted shortening, beat again, and fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites. Turn immediately into a piping hot greased 10-inch heavy

apolis unit of the National Associa-

tion of Parliamentarians, the first

unit in Indiana.

Other officers Mrs.

are

Harry Kuhn, | Marie Cruzan, auditor; | P. Scott, | Mrs. H. P. Willwerth, in charge o publicity. Meetings will be held a

We | 10 a. m. the fourth Tuesday of each

{ month. | lq

John

———————

skillet and bake in a hot oven (450

at once with plenty of butter. Serves five. » . . TURKEY A LA KING (For Sunday supper) tbsps. butter 14 green pepper, cut in strips 1% lb. fresh mushrooms, sliced % c. floyr 1% c. cream, or evaporated milk 1% ec. canned chicken broth Salt and pepper to suit taste 12 ec. cold diced turkey t] 2 pimiento, cut in strips Melt butter in top of double | boiler over direct heat, add green | pepper and mushrooms and simmer for five minutes, covered. Lift out pepper and mushrooms. Blend flour into the fat, add cream or milk, broth and seasonings, &nd cook with constant stirring, still over direct heat, until sauce boils and thickens, * Add turkey, pimiento, green pepper and mushrooms; place over boiling water, cover and cook until

tion st. and Capt. and Mrs. Elbert F. Romeril, 4801 English ave. Miss Helen McCotter, the bride's {only suit. brother's best man. The bride will |

wear a gray gabardine suit with black accessories and a corsage of

gardenias and roses. A reception will be held in the

Romeril home following the cere-

mony. at 1541 N. Euclid ave.

attendant, will wear a fuchsia Elbert Romeril ITI will be his

The couple will be at home

Wine Bottle Coasters

Barometer . Hand-Carved Glass Emblem Ring Chest of Sterling Flatware Sterling Tea Service

the occasion—whomeyer you wish to i will be glad to assist you with

Desk Chairs Gold Accessories Ornamental Figures Trays Diamond Ring

| went to England as a girl, she be- | came interested in the ancient English art of change-ringing of tower bells and became so proficient she was soon given a bell in St. Paul's cathedral, the first Amberi-| can woman ever to ring a peal-—| and the second of her sex.

:

Mrs. Shurcliff located some hand f bells and organized her Boston friends to learn the art. She is now president of the New England Guild of Handbell Ringers, and is | still, probably, the only American "woman who can ring a peal on § tower bells.

2 rr | Red Cross Worker Mrs. Winifred Coulter, 81-year-old dressmaker of Laramie, Wyo, ran [up a fecord of 4027 hours of sewing work in the war service she performed for the Albany county Red Cross chapter. She made 2088 gar-

\

rice.

Tower photo,

| ENGAGED—Miss J. i

Eliza. | beth Weinke will become the

bride of Charles Whitmer in a |

| Jan. | ceremony in Albuquer- | que, N. M. Parerts of the | couple are Mr. and Mrs. Wil. liam F. Weinke, S. Harding rd, and Mrs. G, H. Robison, Albuquerque, :

1

turkey is heated through. hot over toast, baking powder biscuits, crisp noodles or fluffy boiled

Serves five.

Whittleton

——

INDIANAPOLIS, INC. WISHES ONE AND ALL A VERY

MERRY

CHRISTMAS!

Serve

| DECEMBER WEDDING— | Mrs. F. O. Huston, 31 Hendricks announces the approaching

pl.,

marriage of her daughter, Gwinn. He is

the son of Mr. and Mrs, A. R. | Gwinn, 565! N. Keystone ave.

ty, to Donald H.

P. H. Ho photo.

| The wedding will be Sunday in

= | in the department stores this spring —price tags $2.95 to $7.95.

Leib-Kerley Wedding Is Read

Miss Lee Kerley and William Franklin Leib were married at 8 p. m. Saturday in the chapel of the First Presbyterian church. Dr. {George Arthur Frantz officiated at {the informal ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Norah B. Kerley of Crossville, Tenn. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Leib, 3540 N. Pennsylvania st. . The bride wore a beige crepe dress with sequin trimming and a corsage of gardenias. A reception at the bridegroom's home followed = the ceremony. | Mrs. Leib is a graduate of the | City hospital School of Nursing, {and Mr. Leib is a student at Indilana university and a member Of | Delta Tau Delta fraternity. The couple will be at home in Bloom-

Bet-

the First United Brethren church. |ington.

and Negligees

hy to by off

Sensational after-Christmas sale of robes, negligees. Not all sizes in every style, but plenty of all

sizes!

Silk Negligee, white, wa

s 49.75, now 23

Faille House Coats, sizes 38 to 46, were 12.95, NOW. ...... 10.00

Silk Gown, white, was 49.15, now 25.00

Jersey House Coat, was 25.00, now

19.73 Suede Robe, was 10.98, now §.30

Wasson’s Lingerie, Third Floor

Size size!

Sati 12 {

Size eve!

Won Won Won Won ‘Won Chil