Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1951 — Page 9
41081
ack-to-school suit as with imp not too ler shoes are
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tion rf
few weeks ho want to them to do world.
and individ-
» i for Freeio Free Eu15 opened a enough to the satellite ning date of 8 yesterday of Freedom 0 all of us in Inds. > making to >» work and ie Iron Curth as much on as they is felt that te the Kremlite nations. rusade also
that carry satellite na-
encia? ) remember lencia was a 2. few years ge by that ar as the fruit from
Ee J
| KITCHEN"
At Athletic
Organized Nov. 1, 1899, the club meets the dhird Monday of the month. Luncheon meetings are at 12:30 p.m. business sessions at 1:30 p.m. and programs .at 2 p.m. Mrs. E. Carl Watson is president. The group is an affiliate of the Indianapolis Council of Women. Mrs. Hope Bedford Nevitt will be guest speaker for an Oct. 15 guest tea in the Woman’s Department Club. Assisting Mrs. James A. Stuart, chairman, are Mesdame J. O. Cottingham, A. R. Dittrich, F. E. Bibbins, D. A. Grove, C. R, McCotter and Bobert| E. Neff.
o n ”n 2 NOV. 19 Mrs. Arthur R. Baxter, 5110 N. Meridian 8t., will be hostess for a tea. Mrs. Hugh Baker will be the speaker, Assisting the hostesses will be Mesdames John G.. Benson, Russell 8. Bosart, Leonard G. Carlin,
FOWSDAY. SEPT. 4, whoo.
Research club Sets Opening Fall Event
L. McKechnie,
First manse “Here Birds.”
William H. Cooper, Albert F. Buchanan and Thomas D. Campbell. Highlighting the Christmas tea! Dec. 17 will be a program by the| Butler University Choir in. Jordan + Hall at Butler, Mesdames Chafles C. Josey, A. W. Bowen, H. E. Sutherlin, Thomas P. Woodson, Milo H Stuart, Warren D, Oakes, Ralph| .G. Morgan and Loren M. Ed-| wards will be hostesses.
=" o on SGERMANY as I saw It”
will |
inamed
Club
HE Indianapolis Athletic Club will be the scene of the opening fall event for the Woman's Research Club Sept. 17. A President's Day luncheon is scheduled for 12:30 p. m. Past presidents of the club will present the program.
——
sistants will be Mesdames Robert W. A. Shullenberger, Parker P. Jordan, J. H. Hellekson, Herbert R. Hill and A. 8. McLeod Feb. 18 a tea has been planned in the 38th St. branch, Merchants National Bank, Mrs. Walter E. Jenney will discuss ‘‘Has Mary Lincoln Been ‘Framed’?” Hostesses for the afternoon will be Mesdames Richard C. Raines, L. H. Millikan, Harry D. Kemp, Frank G. man, Henry L; Davis and C. E. i Cottingham.
Merle.
8 n n
A LUNCHEON Mar. 17 in the Church talk on the Mrs. Arthur P Thomas
Congregational will feature a and There. With
will be the speaker.
Serving as hostesses will be *'Mesdames 'T. L.
Locke,
Root, . C. A. Pfeiderer, M. W.
| Johnson, Thomas and F.-G. Bock. The social committtee will assist Mrs. Pfleiderer at the Apr. (21 tea in her home, 6080 Crows Jean Brown {Wagoner will talk on “The First
Nest Drive. Mrs. First Ladies.” Only hostesses ' have for the. final a tea,
Assisting will be
be the subject of Miss Elizabeth! logan Hall. W. H. Remy, Watson,
Goett’'s talk Jan. 21. Mrs. M. Kilby, 5772 Central Ave, be hostess for the tea. Her as!
Paul Howard J. Lacy, H. 'W. Krause,
Beckett.
Sidener,
Her-
T. E.
been meeting, May 19 The place and program will be announced later. Mesdames
Methodist Hospital
| Accepts 114
Students
One hundred and fourteen students have been accepted for the fall term at the Methodist Hospital
Nursing School.
They will be pre-clinical students for the first six months. on ” INDIANAPOLIS GIRLS in the group include Miss Loretta 2 Lee Compton, 1058 N. Tremont % St; Miss Janet Eileen Dyer, 5028 S. Walcott St.; Miss Jill Suzanne Gipson, 5217 Broadway; Miss Ruth Anne Grafe, 6042 Oak Ave.; Miss Barbara Ann Haggard, 4814 College Ave. and Miss Barbara Gail Helfenberger, 2221 Prospect St. Miss Mary Jane Hoffman, 1221 N. King Ave.; Miss Dorothy Jane Horan, 3337 Kenwood Ave.; Miss Carolyn Louise Keyt, 2224" Langley Ave.; Miss Rose Louise Laut, 2658 Napoleon St; Miss Dorothy Charlene Lusk, 3130 Central Ave.; Miss Ruth Ellen Middleton, 6751 E. Peasant Run Blvd:
2 2 =
MISS GLORIA SMITH, 3793 Creston Drive; Miss Phyllis Ann Turley, 1630 Spruce 8t.; Miss Rose Marie E. Tyner, 3418 N. Drexel Ave.; Miss Louise Van: Zante, 47 Barbara Jane Whitney, 1325 Parker Ave.; Miss Naomi Ruth Williams, 1510 Edgemont Ave, and Miss Bervli Audrey Wolma, 2622 E. 11th St.
Tips on Suds
Summer potatoes are highly i perishable and are not suitable 5 for long storage under any conditions.- Buy them in small quantities, keep cool but hold without refrigeration. When refrigerated, they quickly accu- § mulate sugar and have a very 2 sweet flavor when eaten.
NEW Tv | SHOW | WEDNESDAY 2:30 P.M. | SALLY SMART w "BLUE FLAME
fosuiiis
{In The Blue Flame Kifchen, Sally Smarf, fop-flight New York ‘home economisl, brings you many a new recipe and fricks in planning and preparing | appeizing, budgel-wisp menus.
'
Bankers Lane; Miss |
Classes open tomorrow. The new ‘students will observe orientation all week.
Easy to Knit
By MRS. ANNE CABOT
Pattern: 2635 includes complete knitting instructions, material requirements, stitch illustrations and finishing directions.
ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 3712 W. Quincy St. “Chicago 6, IIL
No. 2635 Price 25¢ Cabot Album 25¢ . Name hessettscssserienitnses. Street ecccevscecscccccccccnsenne
City Bess sNILNIINRIectRtNRsRanLRS
Ie sa big, pastel color Cannon face. cloth! Hurry — get yours today!
MARRIED—Mrs. Robert W. Carr was Miss Barbara Ann Lazzell before ker marriage last Saturday in Union Congregational will!B. C. Downey and Wymond J. Church. Parents of the bride are Mrs. Jessie Lazzell, 4614 Farns-
worth St.,
and Mr. George D. Lazzell, 4130 W. Vermont St. The
bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hunt, 646 N. ‘Ham.
ilton Ave.
THM MYSTANAPCLIS TIMES
Three kecal Girls ovited To Stephens’ Leader Parley
Among the student leaders at Stephens College who have been invited to return to school early this month to attend the Campus Leaders Conference are three local
girls. They include Miss . Workinger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Verner Workinger, 13168 E. Southern Ave. social chairman of the Senior Independents, and Senior Sister in her residence hall. Miss Sally Mannix, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Mannix, 3602 N. Linwood Ave. vice
' president of the American Guild
of Organists. Miss Drusilla Jane Beall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn T. Beall, 5911 Guilford Ave. co-chairman of club and a Senior Sister in her residence hall. The special workshop session will be held on campus Sept. 13 through 15. All student leaders will be honored Sept. 13 at a dinner in the college.
Loreiei
the Indiana -
Delta Gamma
To Fete Girls
Theta Chapter, Delta Gamma Sorority, will entertain at a dessert party tomorrow girls who will enter Indiana University this fall. The party will be from 7 p. m. in the home of Miss Judie Morrison, 6185 N. Meridian St. Chapter members attending from out-of-town will be Miss Becky Sue Isom and Miss Kathy Owens, Bloomington; Miss Cynthia Gift, Kokomo; Miss Laurale Rozelle, Anderson, and Miss Linda Harrison, New Castle. Rush chairman is Miss Barbara Redding.
to 9
'
irs. Reymond P. Jabaley
Miss Yolanda Katter
Married Yesterday
SCORTED down ‘the aisle by her father, Miss Yolanda Marie Katter exehanged wedding vows with Raynond P. Jabaley at an 11 a.m. ceremony yesterday in
St. John's ‘Catholic Church. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Bernard Sheridan officiated . at the single-ring rite. "Parents of thetcouple are Mr. and Mrs. Moses Katter, 2251 E. Riverside Drive, and Mrs. Charles Jabaley, LaGrange, Ga. 2 ” a ATTENDANTS dressed in white were the bride's cousin, Miss Olive Katter, Johnstown, Pa., ‘maid ‘of honor; and the bridegroom's sister, Miss Helen Jabaley, LaGrange; Miss Vir-
. ginia Todd. and Miss Vivian
Todd. Fred Jabaley, LaGrange, was his brother's best man and ushers included Dr. George P. Katter, tfie bride's brother from _ Chicago. 11l.; Wiley Maloof, Atlanta, Ga., and .James Mansour, Newnan, Ga. : . = 2 2 = IRENE AND ' NOREENE Maher were flowergirls and Michael Olmstead was rings bearer. After a reception in the Indianapolis Naval Armory, the couple left on a wedding trip to New Orleans. They will make their home in LaGrange.
Use Lemon on Fish If there isn't an Isaac Walton in your family and your fish is store bought, wash it in lemon juice and water before cooking. This whitens the flesh, also minimizes the fish odor.
_ Indianapolis Times,
By MARGUERITE SMITH Times Garden Editor
Q—We have seed pods on our
magnolia and we ‘are wondering if we can plant them. If so, when and in what kind of soil? Mrs. F.C.
A—If you haven't already done
80, soak the seeds at once in water (or a water and washing soda solution) to get the outer covering off. This often decays and ruins the seed within. Then plant seed in-a cold frame or seed box that you can leave outdoors and cover with straw over winter. Use rather light sandy soil for seed bed though the young transplants that should appear in spring will need a rich humusy mixture when - they begin to grow. It also will probably be worth the trouble to use a seed disinfectant (ask your seedsman about the mercury compounds) before planting.
Stn all questions on gardening to Marguerite Smith, The Indianapolis 9. Queries must include names and addresses to be answered.
"PAGE 0
Conference to Deal
With Women's Role |
In 'T Decade’ n ‘Defense Decade Times Special . WASHINGTON, Sept. 4—More than 600 official dele gates already have been appointed by educational institu« tions, ‘national educational organizations and selected women's groups for the “Women in the Defense Decade”
ronference. Called by the rAmerican Council on Education, the conference will be Sept. 27-28 in the Hotel Commodore, New York. . The total tenance] is expected to reach 1000 a - 8 AMONG THE CHIEF speakers will be Miss Anna M. Rosenberg, Assistant Secretary of Defense; Rep. Frances B. Bolton of Ohio; Mrs. Margaret Culkin Banning, noted Cauthor; Oliver C. Carmichael, Carnegie
Foundation - for®the Advance- ’
ment of Teaching president; Dean Althea Hottel of the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania and Ar-
thur S. Adams, American Council on Education president. In outlining the conference purpose Dr. Adams said here today, “During the past year we have had a number “of conferences on manpower. Always during the course of these conferences some alert woman
would rise in the audience and
say: ‘How can you presume to solve manpower questions when you block out the repregentation of over half the population of the county, namely womanpower?’ . a ” ” “A NUMBER of us became concerned with this particular aspect of the matter. After discussion we decided it was high
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time some exploration was
made of the ways in which the potential represented by woms en, as people, - might be mar
‘shaled and brought to bear on
the problems which_mse as a nation will inevitably face during the next decade. “What this defense decade will require of us, no one can foretell with certainty,” he continued.
“But we know the free way
of, life draws on womanpower for survival almost as heavily as it draws on manpower, What we seem not yet fully to have learned is that women’s work' and women’s special talents, if used in’ community problems during less critical times, might: obviate the recurring crises that threaten to’ destroy the already weakened fabric of our society.
» =” 2 “WOMEN ASK full partner. ship. both in opportunity and responsibility because it is also their homes and their children whose. well-being . insures the survival of civilization.”
The two-day conference will ‘open- with a general session at 9:30 a. m. Sept. 27. Panel discussions are scheduled for both days. Topics include home, citizenship, health and welfare, armed forces, production for defense ‘and peace, education, creative
leisure and everyday economics,
=
Veronica Redmond Exchanges
Vows With Eugene T. Rone
Miss Veronica Redmond bécame the bride of Eugene T. Kremer yesterday in a ceremony at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church.
The Rev. Fr. Conan Mitchell read the double-ring rite.’
o ” ", PARENTS OF THE couple are Mr. and Mrs. Alfred P.
Redmond, 935 High St., and Mr.
and Mrs. Allie T. Kremer, 1508 Charles St. - Mrs. Lawrence W. McMurrer was her sister's matron of honor and bridesmaids were Mrs. Frank Scheib Jr. and Miss Nancy Bertram.
un = =
THE BRIDEGROOM chose his brother, Allie T. Kremer Jr., Middletown, O., as best man and ushers were John Scheib and Frank Scheib. After the ceremony, a breakfast was held in Lake Shore Country Club and guests were received in South Side Turners’ Hall. The couple left on a wedding trip to Sarasota, Fla.
All Ages Will Like This Salad
Salad magic for youngsters and oldsters is wrought with
"bananas and peanut butter.
/
- around fruit,
Peel fully ripe banana, yellow peel flecked with brown, Cut banana lengthwise into halves. Spread cut side of one “half with peanut butter. Top with other half, sandwich style. Cut crosswise into slices. These gay slices can be arranged overlapping in a circle cottage cheese and greens, to make a most attractive and nourishing salad. Bananas have a well rounded supply: of vitamins, essential minerals and quick food energy.
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