Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 June 1948 — Page 14
Beures, Greenville, 8 Ci
epefft his high school career at/i
Tech even though his parents moved south during his freshman
We, the Women—
‘Work Quality, Not I Label,
in his work is to stick a fancy label on it. t that is no real solution. ‘No secretary is going to be better off for wearing a little ‘pin telling the world she's’ no
: : tii
g
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
—she's got a good chance to be |8 knockout,
- |“T'o Dress Well, F Just Ignore The Weather’
-Secret Is in Buying Ahead of Season By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, June 21—-When a woman can ignore the weather, she’s won the first round on the way to being well.dressed, Dressmaker Fira Benenson says. When she can ignore the fashfon magazines, too—just a little
Miss Benenson be-
Teen Problems—
By JEAN YOU'VE accepted an invitation to a wedding and you've sent the bride a present. Now, the ceremony! Be sure to be on time. They simply don’t let
At a church or home wedding, relatives friends of the ride are al seated
“on
i
“The front pews, are reserved for
along. ts and ight
$004 Will AITIVe After the Oiner | guests are seated. So don't
when to stand d on the
| form of service used. Follow
bridégroom, bridesmaids and whomever else is in line. Try to say a word to esch--if it's only, “Lovely!” And omit kisses unless you know them very, very well.
ee tuk [YOUR MANNERS—
Situation: You invite guests for dinner at seven. rong Way: Have ‘dinner ready to go on the table at seven. Right Way. Allow some time for the guests to talk and relax before dinner is served. This short wait also will take care of the guest who is a little late.
-
» » . Situation: You hear from someone else that an ac-
quaintance of yours is going to have a baby. Wrong Way: Next time you see her ask her if it is true. Right Way: Wait for her to tell you the news herself.
Tips for. Wedding Behavior
You To aN
Let's Eat—
in the center is perfectly beautiful, much simpler to make and much more pleasant "to the way the
CRABMEAT SALAD: Inncheon) 1c crabmeat pat (8Y-0%, can | 1 tbsp. French dressing 1 thsp. lesen juice 1 tsp. 8% c. pak diced celery Dash cayenne 1 tsp. vinegar Few drops onion juice Mayonnaise 4 medium or 2 large tomatoes, chilled 2 hard-cooked eggs Lettuce Canned, frozen or freshly cooked crabmeat may be Look overdthe crabmeat ded discard any of the thin cartilaginous bones or spines. Do not flake the fish too fine. Add French dressing, lemon juice and salt. Cover tightly and let marinate in the refrigerator for an hour or 80 if possible as this standing improves the flavor. the celery, cayenne, vinegar, onion juice and mayonnaise and
to blend. Wash the tomatoes, remove the tem and blossom scars, Cut fhe medium tomatoes in
LOUISVILLE . NASHVILLE. n ATLANTA. . .
Call Lincoln 1515
VIA 4-ENGINE SILVERLINER ‘TRIED AND PROVEN DEPENDABILITY or your fravel agent
vero. 45min eo & hs oo 3 hrs. 35 min. -
shape or the large tomatoes in
halves crosswise. Arrange on lettuce. Heap. the salad. lightly into cups or on slices. . Garnish with the hard-cooked egg slices. Serve with additianal mayonnaise if desired. : Serves four. /
. 8» FREEZING GREEN BEANS ‘or Wednesday dinner) Select ‘only the Slightly underdeveloped, tender beans. The best
Now add
toss with two forks, just enough pin
Miss Aida Saltz Wed
To Stanley Larman
At a 4:30 p. m. ceremony yes« terday Miss Aida Saltz was married to Stanley Larman. Rabbi Samuel Fox of the United Hebrew
Congregation. performed the rite
in the home of the bridegroom's mother, Mrs. Charles Larman 4349 Washington Blvd. Mr, and Mrs. Meyer Baltz, New York, are the parents of the bride. The bride's dress was embroidered white Srganey styled along. simple She wore a cluster of Ps ae flowers in her hair and carried
.{an heirloom Bible accented with
an Yrchid. A’ buffet and reception for the immediate families and guests were held in the home after the ceremony, The couple is motor.
+. ling through Canada.
Make Foods Easy to Eat. oe As Well as Pretty
By META GIVEN IT'S PORSIBLE TO concentrate so much on m usher put Pretty that ane can forget the Importance of ARIE hers easy to eat. . Tomatoes cut into three crosswise slices and restacked with soft fish salad mixtures between are most attractive. But they take too much time to prepare and are a struggle A large thick slice of tomato with the
foods
sad heaped Hghtly |e
Varieties are Stringless GreenRefugee, Egyptian, Kentucky Wonder and Blue Lake. round-podded, fleshy beans with a minimum of fiber give the best results. Freeze promptly. . Keep cool to prevent drying and wilting if necessary to hold a few hours. Wash thoroughly to remove all the soil clinging to
/ {the fuzz. Cut out the spots and
bruises, string if necessary, snip off the ends. Sort for size, keeping the best specimens for freezing Cut the rest in three-quarters inch lengths. Prepare two to two and a half pounds at a time. Put the beans into a wire frying bas-
‘one. pound) at a time in four quarts of boiling water for three to four minutes depending on the size.
Turn the beans into a cold basket, dip into a large amount of iced water for one to two minutes. Drain immediately for one to two minutes. Pack cold in moisture-proof vapor-resistant containers. Pack the whole beans’ carefully to preserve the shape. Seal and freeze at once. 10 in yields six to seven
To serve, plunge into boiling water until soft, drain ‘and serve.
na|Bake Sale Set
The Indianapolis - Council- of Camp Fire Girls will sponsor a bake sale at 9:30 a. m.. Saturday at Sears and Roebuck’s department store.
Theater Party The Alpha Chapter, Chi Phi Gamma Sorority, will meet at 6
p. m. tomorrow for a dinner and theater party.
Le
RI LITA
RESEARCH
% | “Just anything” {in desperation,
E {shop for beach clothes in March,
ket; blanch one quart (about
Miss B. says the secret is a lot of self-concentration in" a detached sort of way. The result doesn't have to be a lot of clothes . Just no mistakes. One way not to make them is to shop far enough ahead of Then you don’t have to buy
Miss Benenson points out. But it takes imagination to
and that's where the weather comes in. The lady's got to remember she’s falling for a hot pink dress because it's such a change from outside.
§ |the snowstorm
. » ‘Being Stron Minded Is a Big Help, Too Shes 9. to Pre out how It'll in August, with the heat ering on the sand, If she can settle for gray on a gray day, she’s in. Miss Benenson also says you shouldn't buy a colored dress without seeing it in daylight. It Bas not yet been figured out how to buy a colored summer dress in a snowstorm on this basis, however. But the chances are even dark daylight is more accurate than electricity. . As for the fashion magazines, they'll tell you that such and such a color is all the rage; that high collars are in this season, maybe, or that little white lingerie touches. are the best possible way to look feminine. All fine advice, Miss Benenson said, but not for everybody.
make you look like the dining room wallpaper. If you've got a short neck, ,ou’ll look strangled in a high collar. 1f you haven't time 0 keep the lingerie laundered, you'll look awful. It takes a strong-minded woman, maybe to ignore both those omnipresenca, but she's got the “satisfaction, Miss Benenson said, of knowing ‘she wears her clothes instead of letting them wear her.” Which means she’s well-dressed.
The Doctor Says—
{Injury Often
Is Related To Disease
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
repeated injuries can cause trouble to. the human body. However, the relation of injury to disease is complicated. It is quite easy to hlame a fracture or tear of the flesh on some single injury. A puncture of the skin by a tool which has dangerous germs on it and is followed by septicemia can also be assigned to the injury. In other cases, however, the relation between the injury and what followed i= hard either to prove or to deny. . # . ONLY a few of the conditions
sudden or repeated injury can be mentioned here. The bones, muscles, and ligaments are perhaps particularly susceptible to injury. The finger can be pointed at the injury causing trouble in these tissues- quite easily in most in-
The| stances.
In the case of the spine, the problem is particularly’ difficult, however, ‘since symptoms of spinal trouble following injury can occur without any definite signs which can be identified by physical examination or by X-ray, The heart, the lungs, the stomach and intestines and the urinary tract all are susceptible to damage from injury. Whether in an individual case there is a relarders of how«ver, is often hotly debated and tannot be completely settled.
League Delegates To Attend Festival
The Indianapolis Junior League, sponsor of the Community Puppet Theater and Workshop, is sending Mrs. Robert Reid, Mrs. Joseph Miner Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. John Ross as delegates to the National Festival of the Puppeteers of America to be held tomorrow and Wednesday in Oklahoma City, Okla. The workshop, located in the rear of the Rauh Memorial Library, is staffed by volunteers from the community and from the league.
That such and such cdior may/| -
EITHER a single big injury or| 440 small
which may be associated with}
be worn with or without the flower trim. Tiny flowers are crocheted separately and sewn to the finished gloves. To order complete crocheting instructions, small, medium and large sizes included, stitch {llustrations and finishing directions for Pattern 5098, use the ¢oupon below,
« ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 530 8. Wells St, Chicago 7, Ill : No. 5088 Price 16¢
NAMO covsssssercrssunsnonvss
Street Coates I ERS Et sere as
evessisscnr BIBLO acess
skirt make it a style she'll be proud to wear, And easy sew-
ing, too.
Pattern 8345 is for sizes 11, 12, 13, 14, 18 and 18. Sige 12, |
1% yards of 39-inch.
The Indianapolis Times "214 W. Maryland Bt,
Indianapolis 9 No. 8345 . Price 25¢ Sivei..0vsesie : NAME +ecrerisrrassessansen BEE ora srnsnsavatorsons
City. .caesenseess State... cus
' spade contract, which w ‘ feated. We arrived af
Men and Women—
By ERNEST E. BLAU FTER 100 YEARS of the “women’s. rights” movement, the femmes still complain they .aren't getting a break. The male still runs the government, makes all the rules, bosses the frails around and gets the fat pay envelopes. The 100,000 women's organizations in this. country ‘haven't licked the problem at all. If the babes are really serious about running the show, what they need is one big, strong organization-not 00,000 clubs. .
Suppose they started a super-club—let’s call it the World Order of Women—and got practically all the gals to Join. WOW! What they could do sgives a ay the creeps! x
wr WOMEN had 211 voted, regardless of party, for only women candidates, riglit now we'd have 32 women Senators, a full female House of Representatives, 33 women state governors and heaven knows how many feinale state legislators, mayors, aldermen and dog catchers. The WOW’s would be the
+ Operetta Stars To Be Honored
The principal members of “The Desert Song," the opening attraction of the “Stars Under the Stars” series at Butler Bowl this summer, will be honored at a “dutch treat” dinner at 7 p. m. on uy 7 in the Broadmoor Country ul The Indianapolis Theater Association, sponsor of the summer musicals which will open July 10,
is chairman of the event. Her committee members include Mesdames Noble Biddinger, Joseph M. Bloch, Jack A. Goodman, LeRoy G. Gordner, John I. Kautz, George A Kuhn, Harry T. Pritchard, Ralph W. Showalter, Robert 1 Tyndall, Harry V. Wade and A. E. Wilhoite. Guests will include members of the Theater Association's Board of Directors, .contributors to the series and special friends of the outdoor musical productions.
Announce Betrothal Mr. and Mrs. Jesse L. Taylor, Acton, announce the engagement of their daughter, Frances, to Melvin ‘Luebkeman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Luebkeman, all
of Acton. The wedding will be in August.
v
Zip tastiness. No wonder the small | fry like Kellogg's Corn-Soya. The toasty golden shreds are a combination of Corn, for flavor and energy, with Saya, for body-build-ing food value, plus vitamins and minerals, too. Get some today.
zest . . . in never-before
will be host. Mrs. Earl B. Barnes|
Why Don’t Women Organize | Against the Men?
biggest pressure group in history. They could get higher *
wages for working. - gals, right across the board-—or all female—28 per cent of all wage earners—would strike! What could any boss: do without his secretary? Since they buy over 80 per cent of goods sold, the gals could teil any industry to lower prices, or be boycotted and put out of business, They could boycott the males, too. Think what concessions that would ‘wring out of the wolfish sex! But there's a catch: Most
|, gals don’t want to run the
world. All they want is to run a man. Run him if possible.
>»
AAMILE HIGH
~-here is scenic grandeur, door fun and
Chicago 5 pm d
L. JMsison,
1 heart contract.
. of hearts, and .then made.
Sonal Agent a0 ThL Phot FRani FRaukiin 1558 Bg
Please send me complete information sbout Colorndor 3 also information Shout.
tournament Mastér. My official ‘Quitfes fn the past had prevented me AE participating in fmportant events, However, I had- accumulated 207. master points and needed three more for the-coveted titls
event with Anne Rosenfeld ot Cleveland, when - : We finished
MISS Rosenfeld was the de. clarer on today's hand. Some of the contestants made the mistake of getting Int into a four was
thought was a formal, 1
ne trumped the ope lead of the king of clubs: Tealized she had to San against a four-one Humps, 80 she cash then led ‘a’ pods oa) to dummy’s queen. When
‘ both opponents followed; she
. led the three of spades "trom dummy. - .- | East trumped With the fou the
mistake of leading back “thé queen of clubs Anne trumped with the eight of hearts, cashed the heart ace, wént over
. dimmy by playing the nine o 1 ‘ hearts, then led ‘the other high
trump, picking up Xaste last heart, returned het hand at a diamond, yo the two Sod aden and ruffed dummy,’ making
A diamond return by Fast after trick four might have * given © declarer more toupls with the hand. se
: Republican Wormer
To Haye Supper The Fourth Ward Women's Re publican Club will have a. bufiet supper and election of officers ‘at 6 p. m. tomorrow fn the home of Mrs. Joseph J: Bering, 3620 Woodland. Ave. Mrs. Jesse W. Cafirion
{is chairman of the Nomina minittee. tag
Co Mrs, Frank 'P. Hise will outline the club's activities at the recent state convention and delegates to the State Federation of Women's Republican Clubs will be chosen,
-Brill, LeRoy-H, Bassett, Nellie £ Grubb, . J. Mingle, . L. «Millikan, -
Tecksmerer ae Gsorge Ve Wah
Hie
pA
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MONDAY
Hox
Set Lal 0f 73¢, Some |
fod San
* Although bal were close to 2 1 Indianapolis 81 they, lost some with a late oF higher. 2 igh This -is still day's ne iiat wh high : for the previous record all-time high wa
fairly actively = cents over last Cows were slow weak. Later ti more lower. Vealers were $1 lower and sj around 50 cents
Good to’ choles Common and mediv Culls (75 pounds
S Feeder and Steck Creice— 500- 800 pounds .
500- 800 Madfume - - + 590-1000 pounds: C3o0- "900 pounds Gond to choice— 500 pounds down nds: own i 2 Calves
from Charles Hanna Ave., + ered today. 1 was found: at embankment: ¢ terday by tw W. McClain, 3 Edward Sauer Who were rid] The safe had ut the owne: missing. - It ¢ Mr. Orme sai
