Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1950 — Page 27

frees a >

wount=1

00

Wop rary

ianapolis

SUNDAY, AUGUST 6, 1950

__ver Military Academy, watch the raising of 4

InformalityMarks

Social News By KATY ATKINS AFTER THE win over Cincinnati when its

Junior Wightman Cup team came to play our girls at Woodstock, it was sad to lose 5-4 to Louisville last ‘Tuesday. Their number two player, Jane Miller, was an especially. attractive 1ittle blonde with straight, well-cut

oYs!

LAY]

own:tairs st adore wn from ys! Eye-

95

style all of Fin wine vee. 450 ees 495.

n a new ite! Sizes ces. 4.50 ces. 4.95

a sturdy lel Wine 49%

CCASIN ugh and

ver 450 roe +495

emesis

— si

wd

fhe

&

~ fish had followed Sally u « da. 80. she uldn’

. hair. The small gallery was interested in a 15-year-old, June Kroeger, playing her first season. She started on indoor courts last winter.

—Susan—-Atkins was — back

from Wawasee in time to play on the local team which, in addition to the girls who took part the previous week, included Pat Stewart's sister, Billie, Mary McLaughlin, Mary Jongavort and Jane

“raat same day 8 group of

" a. them were Mesdames

Robert Hensel, Louis Schwitzer Jr., P. F. Searle and Norman Kevers., s

- Surprise Party

MARTHA LEE and Virginia Williams and Estelle Chambers gave a surprise birthday party for Sally Kackley at Woodstock about a week ago. special sort of birthday party. Sally had never had a surse party given for her. Auinks birthdays are bad anyway, especially when one has gone to camp as a youngster, so this made up for the many celebrations she had missed. Sally is quite a fisherman. Dodey Greathouse brought a painted scene of sky and water with a tiny smoked fish swimming in the sea and a note explaining that the little

“tingly by wearing a ble cotton frock with a lighter blue band printed in a fish design at the hem. Paper mats and silly presents made a lively party at which everybody felt about six years old. “Jo ‘Madden, Marnie Ruck=-" elshaus, Bunny Conrad and Kacky Brown, home from Roaring Brook, were among the guests.

“Summer Guests

IT WAS nice to see Josephine Link Nesbitt and her son, Alex, when they stopped for two days with Frances and Dudley Pfaff on their way to Ottawa. Mrs. Carrie Link drove out with them and is visiting friends. Jo has been living in Darfen for some time. She is with Lurrella Guild Associates where she has had some fascinating assignments, such as doing the interior decoration for two houses in South America, working only from blueprints. ~ She also designed the decoration for the new coaches

——on the New York, New Haven -

and Hartford Railroad and the new uniforms for the waitresses in the diners and other attendants. She was wearing a very smart outfit herself the night she was here. It was a dress and jacket of stiffish mate-

.rial-in-pale-blue with a gold:

metallic-thread through it.

: Attends Palace Event

~ picks

JOSEPHINE'S red - headed son, Alex, is a charmer and sure to go places. At 17 he is going to Magdalen College at Oxford in the autumn. He has recently returned froma London where tended one of the garden parties at Buckingham Palace. There he was resplendent in a cutaway and top hat, which he had rented from the famous old Moss firm. Mr. and Mrs, Tom Hendand their daughter, “Ceci, were in town for a few

{Continued on Page 28—Col. 2)

“SALLY co-operated unwit-

he at- -

Photos by Henry E. Glesing Jr. Times Staff Photographer.

The Admiral comes aboard . . . Midshipmen in the summer Naval School, conducted by Cul

a

a four-star flag.

Archery lesson . . .’Lt. Robert McKay, La Junta, Colo., in

the dress of the Koshare Indians, instructs Paul Reed Marquis

» Boggs, 1422 Loretta Drive.

Sailing on the lake . + » Bob Ellzey, El Dorado, Ark., and Jim Watkins, Muncie, ride a brisk wind on Maxinkuckee.

Concenfration vs oJ. Albert Smith Jr., 4530 Park Ave.,

Society. .28,

Teens ..... 30- Food crvees ” Clubs ..... n Fashions”. . 3

29 Gordons i 1

In formation . . . Midshipmen ih to their positions flanked by the waters of Aubeenaubes 1

Bay and Naval School Headquarters Building.

Canner Tells Her ‘Secret

works on a handicraft project in Culver's Woodcraft School for

boys from 10 to I3 years old.

‘Drum and Bugle Corps . . . George R. Herrmann, 1505 S. East St.; Robert H. Lanham, 4916 Young St.; Frank E. McKinney Jr., 4906 N. Meridian St., and Peter H. Mellvaine, 5054 N.

Capitol Ave., are on parade.

By MARJORIE TURK

SCULLING A boat, tying hitches and reading a flag hoist . that's what boys in the summer camps sponsored by the Culver Military Academy are learning.

Young men are taking instruction in cross-country riding, jumping, schooling, polo and mounted games. © 10 to 13, the Woodcrafters and Cubs, are being trained in the

“Tore of “the Pottawattamie Indians who once lived in the Lake Maxinkuckee countryside.

Participating in the eight-

-. week program are 50 camp-

ers from Indianapolis. ” ® = = HOOSIERS have long supported the 47-year-old summer school. have homes at the northern Indiana lake and have sent two generations of sons to the institution. The camp is a vital part of ‘the life of the resort. Besides providing training for the cottage bwners' offspring,

. daughters are perennial

guests at the weekly formal

Many families

And boys from

and informal dances. And the

adults are often serenaded by the campers on their moonlight sails. Other adults get into the camp life when they come up to Maxinkuckee for week-end visits with their sons in the camp. A ‘stop at the Inn, which is run by the military academy, is considered a holiday excursion for mom and dad, : 3 = ” » AMONG the 50 Indianapolis boys now attending the eight-week session, 22 are repeaters. Twenty-six are in the Woodcraft School for boys from 10 to 14; 21 are in the ; A

¢

On the trail . . . James A. Holcomb, 411 Buckingham Drive,

and Robert H. Sommer, 5502 Washington Blvd., troopers in the summer Cavalry Camp, take out thee mounts for an afternoon's

canter.

Nayal School for teen-agers from 14 to 18, and three are a part of the Cavalry School for older boys. . ; Boys in the Woodcraft Camp have a full program of nature study, overnight camp-

ing trips-—down=-the: Tippee: ieanoe River, participation in.

Indian dances and sacred rites and a sports schedule which includes archery,

. basketball and baseball,

swimming, track, boxing and tennis. Any other athletics which the youngsters might want to pursue, badminton and volley ball, ete., each with an instructor to provide equipment and judge. 7 s x = THE Naval School uses the Culver fleet of over 100 craft. The boat pier extends into Aubeenaubee Bay. Adm. H. E. Yarnell, USN, heads the school,

-

are also available,

The instruction is designed to stretch over three sum-mers-~the boys starting out with cutters, Cape Cod catboats and Cub-Class sloops and progressing to Vikings, Lightnings and to the Ad-

..miral Rodman, 56-foot diesel-

powered flagship. . » . THE CAVALRY troopers are first taught a firm and secure military seat and platoon and troop mounted drill for parades. And infantry drill, according to the regulations of the War Department, is a part of the .midshipmen’'s and troopers’ summers in the military school. ° Instructors insist that the

*" men are fond of the drill. On

the lighter side social dancing is taught together with balls. room manners to complete

the training of the “officers

and gentlemen.”

naval instruction.

In a Personal Voir

College Girls Learn Ironing,

How to Soak Aching Feet

‘WHAT DO YOU LEARN on a college board? How to iron a

tallored shirt; not-to-eat hot fudge sundaes when wearing a-con-tour belt, and how long to bathe tired feet in epsom salts. And there ia host of other things that the 33 Indianapolis

Ayres’ are picking up.

Whether the store calls its

five week employees college fashion board members or college sales representatives, the purpose is to promote col= lege fashions with authentic models. and sales girls, The purpose as far as the young employees is concerned is to get experience, have fun and make money.

Two for Five Weeks

MANY, LIKE Pat Shardelow, Miami University, now in Block's held another summer job before joining the board. Pat, who is a design major, worked in interior decoration with the’ Maxwell Coppocks. Pat doesn’t have too much trouble keeping a tailored

white shirt clean to wear to

work -every day (the store provides the girls two for the five week period) but she

hasn't mastered _the ironing - of the collar.” .

Patty Kossatz, Butler Block's, had so much fun college boarding that she’s trying it for the second time. Besides the fun of working with the new clothes and meeting people Patty is vitally interested in the merchandising end of the business and hopes to have eventually a job in retail advertising.

Special Date CONTOUR BELT sufferer, Nancy Byus, Bu tler,

Block's has switched to coffee and zweibach for break-

fast and salads for lunch. While Ruth Ferris, William®

Woods, Block's falls into the

-

_.college girls working through August.in Block's, Wasson's and

company of a tong list of tired feet martyrs. Ruth, who'd been angling for a special dancing date at a special dancing spot for a long. time, was unable to get up for even a slow. one step

(Continued on Page 29, Col, 5)

‘Mrs. Jota W-R

ing foods for winter use. “of the subject will be dis-

Of Success

By JEAN TABBERT

/. “A full pantry . .. the

key to contentment. Mrs. . James W, Reilly, 5832 E. Troy Ave, finds this formue la the key to a happy family, too, Mother of six, Mrs. Reilly is a veteran food preserver.

oe re i ————— This 1s the beginning of & series on canning and frees-

cussed with information and tips hoth for veteran ecan-

__ mers and beginners.

“I.ast year she canned “200 + jars’ of peaches from the trees her husband tends in their back ‘yard. This year {limess and a short crop may cut into that record. - But she's counting on her daughter, Phyllis Jean, to help with the canning job. Phyllis has learned much of her mother’s technique. Tast week she was & champion in the fourth division canning of the county 4-H show, In the fall she'll enter her products in .the state fair, Her sister, Margaret Ann, was state canning champion in 1947.

Outlook Uncertain THOUGH THE peach outlook is uncertain just now, - many homemakers

a full shelf saves standing in -gtiper-market Hnes-and- keeps their pocketbooks plumper. But the tricks le in the, canning itself, fine points that retain the natural flavor of the fruit, make it attrac--tive and delicious. Mrs, Reilly does it this way: Halve. the. fruit, then. re. “move the seed. Next peel. It's not necessary to-scald the peach before peeling. Scalding often damages firm fruit, makes it mushy, unattractive “in the jars, Then drop the fruit in boiling sirup; let come to a boil. Shell pack in - jars. This means to turn the fruit face down in the jar. Packed thus, it takes up less room. Cover with the sirup, leaving as

(Continuéd on Page 35, Col. 6)

stands by veedy to advise her or ter, Phyllis Jean, on * the ine points of canning peaches.