Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 January 1947 — Page 20

officer nominating com-{" des Mrs, Rudolph John- |

Mrs. George Mellin,

e; ’

= and Jack Burkhart will play the title role in the Junior Civic thea- % ter's production of “The Wizard of # OF" to be presented beginning to- # morrow afternoon for four per-

Shaul, Shirley Wishaar, Sexson, Linda Lou Vogel, Judy Vond and Sandra Goodin. " The crew will include Marilyn Bhaw, stage manager, assisted by Nancy Lynch; Bruce Pearson and # Paul Moffat, lighting; Wilma Rugh, 4 Carolyn Mayers, Patricia Bates, i Joyce Johns and Helen Letsinger, k properties; Barbara Lemons, make2 up; Mildred Russell, costumes, and © age Moore and Bill Pohlmann, oe

stage crew. a The play will open at 4 p. m. to- & w with a Saturday performance at 10:30 a. m, Matinees will “' be Saturday and Sunday at 2:30 ‘é o'clock. : Furst Wrist Watch

+ + Queen Elizabeth, in 1572, received

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ARRANGE CARD PARTY—Mrs. J, Ingalls Gerry (left) will be one of the hostesses at the annual party of the Women's organization, National Association Retail Druggists, to be held at 2 p. m. Feb. 18 in Ayres’ auditorium. Mrs. Paul Wyand eft) is chairman of the committee in charge of cards and tallies. chairman for the event, also will be assisted by Mrs. William Oren, tickets: Mrs. Russell M. Manring, : S| Mrs. George Lanigan, prizes, and Mrs. William Hamaker, candy. | Mrs.” Manring is, president of the group.

rs. Will Rossiter,

hostess! Mrs. Frank Lobraico and

Let’

» " » MONDAY

Orange juice Milk toast

Tanebeln ©.

Caulifiower and carrot bake Pan-fried bacon Bread and butter Doughnuts : : Dinner = _ {Deep fat-fried “halibut Parsley buttered potatoes Buttered beets _ | *Sliced cucumbers

-

dressing » Mixed fruit cup and remaifider of

“putterscotch brownies

Eat 4 Given : ; . PROBABLY THERE IS NO business that produces so much satisSon; Mishawaka; Mrs. James Kir-'¢. tion in this world as cooking. Even the development of recipes may { Win, Pt. Wayne; Mrs. Walter Eskew, ove helpful down through the centuries. . E We still are using something very similar to our great-grandmother’s t New Albany, and Mrs. Walter 14 time sour cream dressing. And 2 = = , : | we're using it on the same vegetables they used—sliced cucumbers and tomatoes and cole slaw. To-

morrow a recipe for sour cream dressing will appear.

és

with sour cream!

THURSDAY Breakfast Stewed prunes and apricots Soft-cooked eggs Buttered rye toast Luncheon * Avocado ‘chicken soup Hot rolls and butter Oatmeal cookies

-

or prospective brides. Miss

guests will be Mrs,

shower at 2:30 p. m. Saturday

Guests will include Mesdames Thomas Marshall, Carr Marshall, Grace

Parties Planned to’ Fete Miss Fogarty 2 And Mary Lu Marshall, Brides-to-Be |

A NUMBER OF PARTIES are being planned to hon- | Mary Lu Marshall, who will | ‘be married to Herbert C. Spencér Feb. 1, will be a guest .at a linen shower tonight given by Miss Janet Stayton. Mrs. Chester A. Stayton will assist her daughter. Other Thomas J. Marshall, mother of the bride-to-be; Mesdames Carr Marshall, George A. Tindall and James R. Hardin, Miss Dottie Clarke of Kokomo, Misses Barbara Bran, Nancy Spencer, Shirley Snyder,

Jeanne Clancy, Joan Parr and Anne Steinmets. ; Mrs. William Patterson and Miss Clarke will give a

personal in the Indianapolis Athletic club.

Watkins, George H. Graves Jr. and John D. Smalts, Misses Bran,

Stayton, Spencer, Martha Hall, Barbara Wells, Nancy Ostrander

Winchester; Miss Dotti Beck, Flora, and Miss Janet Alexander, Rushville. Miss Bran, assisted by her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth M. Bran, will give a crystal shower Monday. Guests, in addition to Miss Marshall, will be Mesdames Graves, Hardin, Patterson and Herb DeHaven, Misses Clarke, Spencer, Snyder, Clancy, Betty Cramer and Elizabeth Bran and Mrs. John D. Smalts. Dr. and Mrs. Marshall will honor their daughter and Mr, Spencer at a bridal] - dinner Tuesday in"the I. A. C. The wedding rehearsal in Sweeney chapel ‘at Butler university will

the prospective bridegroom: Dr. and Mrs. E Burdette Backus, . Mr. and Mrs. Carl Marshall, Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Butz, Misses Bran, Clarke and Spencer, Lewis 8S. Campbell and Joe Spencer.

Tea Sunday MISS LOUISE FOGARTY, who will become the bride of Daniel M. Higgins on Feb. 8, will be honored Sunday at a tea and personal shower. Hostesses will be Mrs. Maurice L. Fogarty and Mrs. John T. Fogarty. The party will be in the former's home, and Mrs. Ralph

Pinner

green pepper, watercress chopped egg salad Bread and butter Pruit cup made of diced pear, Queen peaches, orange and grapefruit!

Milk to drink: Four c. for each .child; 2 ¢. for each adult. | : 48 8 FRIDAY Breakfast

Milk to drink: Four c. for each Tomato juice

child; 2 ¢. for each adult. “ - ®

TUESDAY

Breakfast Orange juice

sugar and milk Buttered toast Jam 3 2 Luncheon Denver green pepper fried in patties) Lettuce and raw spinach salad Raspberry gelatin Dinner Pan-fried chicken

Buttered Brussels sprouts Canned Queen Ann cherry salad *Peach pie

child; 2 c. for each adult. - ”

WEDNESDAY

Breakfast Applesauce Poached eggs on toast

Luncheon *Macaroni. fish salad Radishes and pickles Crusty rolls Orange and banana fruit cup : Dinner Pork sausage patties {Poached apple slices Grated potato pancakes

dressing Cup cakes

A

: the first wrist watch ever made.

child; 2 c. for each adult.

Hot cooked wheat cereal with brown

sandwiches (egg, ham and

Sweet potatoes with cranberry sauce

Lettuce with peanut butter salad

Milk to drink: Four c. for each

Sour cream: griddle cakes with butter and sirup. Link sausages , * Luncheon *Stuffed eggs baked in cream sauce Buttered green beans Bread and butter | Fresh pears Dinner Braised lamb shanks Mashed potatoes Parsley Puttered carrots Cream of tartar and soda biscuits Minted apples - Lettuce with 1000 island dressing Chocolate ice cream Milk to drink: Two c. for each child. . fd 2 SATURDAY Breakfast

Milk to drink: Four c. for each Tokay grapes : Ready-to-eat cereal with sugar and

cream English muffins and jam Luncheon Escarole soup Swiss cheese on rye bread Almond cookies Dinner Deep fat-fried haddock *Tartar sauce

Escalloped tomatoes Stewed plums

child. 2 ¢. for each adult. » ” » SUNDAY Breakfast Sliced oranges Sweet rolls Link sausages Dinner

NAS

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Roast turkey with bread dressing § | Mashed potatoes fi | Buttered green beans and mush i | Cranberry jelly Bl | Relish plate of celery, pickles, olives § | Bread and butter 12 | Raisin’ pie | Supper d | Oyster stew {| Oyster crackers | | Carrot sticks Pickled beets *Canned pears with ginger sauce

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EVENTS

CLUBS

CRUE

OBCT

Moore.

USO UU

OO

BUCURUTUS

BOBO

sylvania, hostess. _. SORORITIES

today. an's hall. ; ta Chi Sigma. 8:

8. Ritter, hostess.

A

Chili con carne Lettuce, tomato, carrot, Sonlitowet: {

=

sections and grapes.

Heated canned shoestring potatoes

Milk to drink: Four c. for each

radishes,

Milk to drink: Three c. for each|

*Recipes for dishes marked with . asterisks will appear tomorrow

Fall Creek Garden. 10 a. m. Pri. Mrs. Harold Dunlap, 4601 Graceland, hostess. “Edgings,” Mrs. Ben

Friday Afternoon Reading. Fri. Mrs. B. C. Wright, 3545 Kenwood, hostess. “Uncle Sam's Bird,” Mrs. E., W. Stockdale; “Peep at Things to Come,” Mrs. E. C. Wischmeier. ‘Columbia chap. I. T.-8. C. 12:30 p. m: today. Mrs. C. C. Winchell, 3870 Broadway, hostess. Luncheon. Mrs, C. J. Ancker, speaker. Woman's Round Table. 1 p. m. Fri. Mrs. J. F. Edwards, 4335 N. Penn“Chinese Art and Music,” Mrs. K. E. Lancet.

2 | Alpha Alpha Gamma Nu. 7:30 p. m.

. Mrs. Pauline Fair}

Ittenbach and Miss Cecelia Drew will pour. Approximately 40 guests have been invited. ss .8 # Of interest to Indianapolis friends is the engagement an- | nouncement of Miss Persis-Jane

Ann cherries, canned, Peeples of Chicago and John

Frengel Cline. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. Cornelius James Peeples of Chicago and Mr. Cline is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer L. Cline of Scarsdale, N. Y., formerly of Indianapolis.

Teen Talk—

movies, games—and all for free. week. of that

certificates.

bar and club room.

schools.

gate after the “show.”

Between 4 and 5 p. m. on Monday, Wednesday and Priday week there’ll be free “splashes” in the pool for teenage gals—for those with medical

For those who don’t have them, free medical examinations will be given on Tuesday evening starting at 6:30 o'clock. And the boys: are not being left out of this big week either. They are urged to take their examinations in order to participate in the co-ed swimming events and other | 2 8 activities at the Y. W. C. A. Many are members of the Tuk- | A-Pache club, a Y. M. and Y. W. group, that operates in the Central Y. W. C. A. with its own coke

Y-Teen clubs also are coming | in Tuesday—they are the girls’ groups in Indianapolis high

” » o TEENSTERS are invited to attend the movies on health which will be shown .that Wednesday night and boys, too, are welcome. The coke bar will be open until 9:30 p. m. where they can congre-

Y-Teen members are working now on their poster contest. Using the theme “Fit for Fun,”

The wedding will be in the early spring. : Miss Peeples attended Lasell Junior college in Auburndale, Mass, and was graduated from the University of Chicago. Mr. Cline is a graduate of Phillips Exeter academy and Princeton university.

My Day— Rise Is Slight

In Airplane - Accident Rate

By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT NEW YORK, Jan. 23.—-I mentioned casually the other day that 1 was going to fly back from a trip which I was taking, and to my surprise, several women around me said, “Aren't you afraid to fly after all the accidents?”

ATTEND REPUBLICAN TEA—Attending the tea given by | Mrs. Katharine W, Atkins yesterday in the Columbia club for Marion county Republican precinct committeewomen were (seated, left to right) Mesdames L. R. Wilson, Florence Bischoff and J. Earl ouse. Mrs. O. L. Maberry (standing) was one of the ward vice chairmen who assisted Mrs. Atkins.

Frank

XSDAY, JAN: 28

TF

Pansy Pocket

That thought had never occurred to me. We go right on traveling by automobile, yet many more people are killed by automobiles every year than by almost any other

.|method of transportation.

Our domestic carrier airplanes in 1940 flew 108,800,436 revenue miles. In 1945, they flew 214,959,855 miles, and in 1946, 328,644,764 miles. The overseas lines in 1940 flew 10,716,827 miles; in 1945, 32,630,552, and in 1946, 67,950,557. : ” ” - WITH THIS increase in mileage { flown and a great increase in the {number of passengers carried, there !was naturally an increase in the

| number of accidents involving fatal- |

ities. The domestic . scheduled airlines had a total of three accidents involving fatalities in 1040, eight in |1945, and nine in 1946. The over|seas operators had no fatal acci-

lin 1946. : On a percentage basis, therefore, passenger fatalities have not grealy

Week of Free F wn and Play Planned for Teen-Agers Feb. 3-8 at Y. W.C. A.

By BOBBIE SCHAEFFER A WHOLE WEEK jam-packed with fun—swimming, dancing,

That's what's in store for teen-agers the week of Feb. 3 at the Y. W. C. A. wher the entire organization will observe “Fit for Fun”

! health, the value of medical examinations and posture—or any of the other prerequisites for being “fit.” | “Be fit so you won't be a drip” happens to be one of the “classic”

| girls may make the posters any size and as clever and attractive as possible. The winners will receive cash prizes and their posters will be exhibited in the Y.W. C. A

” “YOUNG TEEN FUN” will be “had by all” on Saturday morning, Feb. 8, climax of the week. Girls of junior high school age may swim, enjoy games, sing or see movies. “Fun day,” as. it is usually “called on Saturday mornings, is a class program for this age group. Aproximately 35 girls at- | tend from 9 a. m. to noon taking class instruction in three activi~

“gym” or others. There is an

Saturday morning session. On Feb. 8, and the entire week, many other teen-agers may get acquainted with the Y. WwW. C. A. and its activities.

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| "By MRS. ANNE CABOT

You wouldn't believe that a 'sifiple one-piece apron could be so | good-looking —but seeing is believdents in 1940, two in 1945, and tWO ing) The big pansy pocket made of {lavender and purple materials appliqued to a piece of the apron material is* the highlight . of this attractive pattern. Narrow lace or eyelet embroidery is used around the edges as added enhancement. To obtain complete cutting pattern, pansy applique pattern, fih+ ishing instructions for the pansypocket apron (pattern 537) sizes 14, 16, 18 included, send 16 cents in

Barbara Greig To Be Married

Mrs. Alfred Frances Greig, 6115 Ralston dr., will be married to Fred C. Odiet Feb. 15 in Christ the King Catholic church. : The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Fred C. Odiet, 3466 Salem st.

' Miss Barbara Greig, daughter of |

Backstage Club Arranges Dance ' Committees have been for the United Nations ball to be

{given by the Backstage club of the

Clvie theater at 9 p. m. Feb, Tin

the Kellersaal of the Athenaeum. ‘A costume party, the event is in charge of Harry Latham Jr. president of the Backstage club, Native groups from the city will participate in the entertainment, Prizes for costumes will be awarded, Mrs. Ruth Whittridge is chairman of the ticket and reservations committee, of which Mr, and Mrs, Ford Kaufman, Mrs. Howard Pelham, Mrs, John Kinghan, E. Edward Green and John Byers are

‘members. : Prize Committee Chairman of the decorations com« mittee is E. M. Hilligoss, Miss Jenny Freeland, Miss Jacque Kapherr, Jim McDaniel, Walter Houppert, Willlam Scott, M. L. Martin and Pat Ditzenberger are members of the committee. Mrs. Kurt Pantzer is chairman

To F. C. Odiet js of ter commitien sre” 1m

Shirlee Leonard, Miss Louise Fletcher and Miss Marilyn Behymer. Co-chairmen of the entertain. ment committee are Kenneth Lemons and Miss Louise Christena. Miss Sara Lauter and Jshn Byers |are committee members. Assisting Roger - Beane, chairma of the publicity committee, are Mrs.

‘Miss Greig has named Miss Anne Farrell to be her maid of -{honor -and Miss Eleanor Ann Allen as junior ‘Bridesmaid. Suellen Angelos of Atherton, Cal, will be the flower girl. Bridesmaids will be Mrs. Jerome P. Greig and Mrs.

29 James PF. Allman. :

James W, Greig will be his broth er's best man and ushers are to be John McDermott and Thomas McClarnon of Brownsburg.

= = | Mrs. Richard B. Buschmann and {Mrs. George F. Wener will entertain with a crystal shower for Miss 'Mafy Elizabeth Fromhold tomorrow evening in Mrs. Werner's home, 317

‘W. 31st st. $38 | Miss Fromhold will be married

to Merrill A. Bowman on Feb. 8 in St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. Guests at the shower will be Mrs. A. J. Fromhold and Mrs. O. E. Bowman, mothers of the couple; Mesdames Delmar Wilson, Wilbur Kauffman, Arthur W. Wilson, Dan Rudd, Frank Wood and Paul Tinder and Mrs. Max Hittle of KokoMoe Misses Sue Guthridg¥, Pat Mc-

Lois Lader of Kokomo.

pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 8. Wells st., Chicago 7.

and Betty Graham and Miss

coin, your name, address and the

Howard Pelham, Mrs. Walter Myers {Jr., Miss Bess Watson, L. G. Gordner and Corbin Patrick.

Miss Johnson ‘Will Speak ‘Before Guild

The Riley Hospital Cheer guild will have Miss Emily M. Johnson, former Red Cross club worker, as a speaker at the meeting at 2 p. m. Tuesday in Ayres’ auditorium. Miss Johnson will describe her experiences in Algeria and Pisa and will display her collection of articles from the Mediterranean area. The executive board will meet at 12:30 p. m. in the auditorium. Plans will be completed for the annual benefit card party to’ be held Feb. 13 in the Murat temple. Committee chairmen include Mrs. W. G. Ennis, general chairman, and Mrs. Car® Aumann, co-chairman; Mrs. Merle Morrison, tickets; Mrs. R. R. Allentharp, radio; Mrs. George P. Davis and Mrs. T. E. Berry, prizes; Mrs. D. E. Compton, candy, and M#8. B. H. Beard, publicity. The guild has purchased an el machine and table, and a metabolism machine for Riley hospital. Four Frohman pastels have been presénted to the Rotary Convalescent home.

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(Committees ~~ | {For U.N. Ball

{Announced

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archbis the pr quarter

*. council

Women Feb. 6 center, Miss of the selectio club al muse Rese! Feb. 4 and Mi

Hon Sets

The | meet al home 2103 8. assisted and Mi New the m Lewis ings, Howare