Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1952 — Page 30

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CLEANCUT AND COLORFUL—BIlock’s bachelor haven .at Essex House, Pennsylvania and Vermont Sts.

Block's Decor

Scores High With Men

By OPAL CROCKETIT Times Homes Editor

GRIS swooning for invitations to the altar can pick up a tip on baiting backward bachelors at Es-

sex «House, Pennsylvania and Vermont Sts.

There, in apartment 203, Block's has furnished a bacheJor apartment along with two others. Decorations stress comfort, color and simplicity, long sought by male shoppers—and often overlooked by the girl friend who is living alone and doesn't like it. While she’s worrying about her hair and coyly saying she doesn’t know a thing about housework, the bachelor she's gunning for may be fed up with four walls and go house-hunt-ing for a turn at domesticity, » ” a LIGHT WOODS — bleached mahogany and oak—give feeling of space in the living room. #Tweed plaid upholstery covers an Oxford barrel chair. A tub chair is covered in brown texture. The hide-away Simmons sofa is beige texture. Mannish Scotch print drapes “eombine shades of beige, brown and peach, and the Townley cotton carpet is rose-beige. The lamps will catch any man’s eye. Three are black wrought-iron, very modernistic, with snow-white shades. Another is red wire, very ultra,

Ham Dinner

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.

Times photos by John R. Spicklemire.

SIMPLE BUT SWANK—Modernistic lamp by a big brown chair.

WHEN BACHELOR TURNS CHEF—Table seats six and becomes desk after meal-time.

with ebony shade. If the man prides himself on his cooking, he's all set in Apartment 203. The light wood Saginaw desk expands into a table. Upholstery of the light chairs is yellow, green and cinnamon, right with the California pottery dishes of pale chartreuse ‘and cinnamon. Those meals can be" whipped up in a flash on a stove that bathroom is in beige, banded by mulberry. Just outside is a is part of a Schwitzer-Cummins

and Festival

Set for Next Saturday

THE ANNUAL baked ham dinner and summer festival of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral Societies will be held Saturday from 5 to 11 p. m., on the Cathedral Grade School grounds at 13th and Pennsylvania Sts. Charles

Fridrich Sr. and Arthur Herald are general chairmen. Mrs. Lawrence Scheper and Mrs. Anthony Steffey, are dinner cochairman, Cathedral Grade Schoo! Mothers’ Club is dinner sponsor. Mrs. Howard Scott is club president, and Mrs. C. M. Bradley, arrangements chairman.

The following will assist in serving: Mesdames William Dwinell, Frederick Feigert, Charles Freije, Harold Kurtz, Richard Keating, William Jones, Francis Koffenberger, Francis Goodnight, Burt Claussin, Howard Allen, Mary Rita Bobbitt, Russell Battereal, Joseph Fitzgerald, Howard Bea, Alva Brown, Burt Kuchler, Francis Louber, Thomas Laughlin,” Charles Dixson, Marjorie Sears, Jane Burr, Wendell Sutton and Arthur Herald - and Miss Betty Scott. 8 =.» COUNTY stoga.committee includes: Mrs. James Sheridan, chairman, Mrs. Clarence Neville and Mrs. August Krieg, cochairman and Mesdames George Potts, Paul Wilson, Warren Freeman, William Creagh, Thomas Cooney, Charles Heck, West Reberger, Michael J. Connor, George Rickey, Sarah Jane Behringer and Catherine Crush and Misses Florence O'Connor and Alma Kennedy. 3 Linen booth, sponsored by Cathedral Altar Society—Mrs. Anton Dum, chairman, assisted by Mesdames . Marie Ferris, William J. Morgan, Lucille Wells, Daniel O’Briwn, Michael Ford, and Fred Gisler and

Legion Unit Plans Supper

Robert. E. Kennington Unit, American Legion Auxiliary, will be hosts for a covered dish supper at 6:30 p. m. Thursday in the Post Home, 4174 College Ave. for the district past president's parley. Mrs. John Valentine is chairman. Assisting her will be Mesdames Hazel Pflueger, Pearl Haines, Mable Maley, Margaret Retherford and Jeanette Bennett, : Mrs, Violet Doane, retiring president of the unit, will be a special guest. Mrs. Hazel Max-,

a brief business session followed by a social hour, +

Misses Elizabeth Sowar, trude Greihage and Helen Glynn.

o o » RELIGIOUS articles, sored by Senior Legion of Mary —Miss Margaret Shea, chairman, and Mrs. Helena Davies, co-chairman.

Toy Booth — Mrs, Joseph Quigley, chairman; Mrs. James Brunni, co-chairman, and Mesdames Allen Trowbridge, Lowell Bowen, Mary Schmutte, Anthony W. Heuer, J. Herbert Hartman, Albert Lee Brown, Zeo W. Leach, Mark Miller, Betty Barnes and H. E. Summerville’ and Misses Winifred Dugan, Betty Augustus, Lillian Lyons and Helen Newton.

Fish pond sponsored by Junfor Legion of Mary. Refreshment stand sponsored by Junior CYO. Ring game sponsored by Senfor CYO. 8kill CYO. “In charge of publicity are Charles M. Moran, and Miss Marie O'Connor, co-chairmen.

game sponsored by

Plan to Save Steps

It's T9%, so much the work as the walking" that wears many women out on spring cleaning jobs, household management specialists of the Agriculture Department say. Running back and forth for utensils and supplies add#¥ weary mileage and minutes, and often interrupts the work so much that it adds nervous tension as well,

But the cure for back-tracking is simple: Plan the job in advance so that it fits into the day’s schedule. Then assemble all utensils and supplies for it on a wheeled table or cart that can roll from place to place as you need it. If you use a sturdy cart with two shélves, it can carry not only the small items like soap brushes, cloths and sponges but also two pails of water for washing and rinsing and the vacuum cleaner as well. By having supplies at a convenient level, you can avoid lifting and stooping as well as backtracking.

New Members to Meet |

New members of Gamma Chapter, Gamma Gamma Nu rity, will meet at 8 p. m, sday in the YMCA.

i

unit that includes ice box and sink: s » s DECORATORS have remembered the little touches a man may forget. .Four Mexican prints hang over the hideaway. A table holds a great brass cuspidor filled with greenery. The mornihg shaving ordeal can be dashed off in pleasant surroundings. The roomy

_.combination closet and dress-

ing room with big chest for the shirts and sox.

Block's interior decorating department was directed by John Britz. Like all the apartments in the 14-story downtown Essex House, the bachelor's living room is filled with light from two big windows. There's a view over the city from the west. Air-conditioned and embracing all the swankness of 20th Century architecture, the $4 million building is scheduled to be ready for living Sept. 1.

‘Marcia Maguire Wed

SHORTRIDGE High School romance ended in marriage in St. Paul's Episcopal Church yesterday. . Miss Marcia Jayne Maguire became the bride of Jack V. Burnett at 2:30 p. m. with the Rev. William

Ger- -

spon- °

FE

Mr. and Mrs.<B. C. Horner, 1241 W. 33d St., announce the marriage of their daughter, Marijone to William R. Wootan, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Wootan, Road 52, Indianapolis. The wedding took place Jan. 5 in Greenfield. The couple are at home at 3449 Kinnear Ave. Both the bride and bridegroom attended Purdue University.

Isabella Group Will Meet

Mother Theodore Circle, Daughters of Isabella, will meet tomorrow jn the Catholic Com-

munity Auditorium. The date has been changed from the circle’'s regular meeting night, according to Mrs.

game scheduled for Tuesday.

All parish chairmen and co- |

chairmen in the city are re-

-quested to attend to make a

report on ticket sales for the Jame.

DO YOU ow

Whyawe have to be the largest re-upholster-ing firm in the State?

WE DO!

It's quality work plus high dollar value!

‘SHELBY

UPHOLSTERING CO,

Josephine | Leach, regent, so as not to conflict with the charity baseball

3631 MASSACHUSETTS AVE.

v

Burrows performing the double ring ceremony. The bride is the daughter ‘of

' - Mrs, Christine Maguire, 5134 N,

Illinois St. Mr. Burnett's parents are Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Sellers, Milwaukee. ” 5 ” A WHITE ballerina taffeta and satin gown with satin jacket was worn by the bride. The elbow-length veil" was attached to a cap of drange blossoms. She carfied Ruben lillies. Miss Janice Segal, maid of honor, wore a powder blue net

dress and a garland of- yellow

carnations matching her bouquet. The bridesmaids, Miss Norma Graham and Miss Fayetta Higgins, wore canary yel-

low net frocks and the three

dresses were ballerina length.

Robert Tharp was best man and ushers were William Shaw and Leroy Gruenert. After the ceremony and a reception in the bride's home Mr. and Mrs. Burnett went to Lake James, the latter wearing a pink suit. "At home address in two weeks will be the Illinois St. address.

Meat Patties Made Tasty

Shape. your favorite ground meat mixture into patties, then brown them on both sides in a little added fat. Place patties

in a baking dish and spread ||’

lightly with mustard. Top each patty with onion slice and a thin cheese slice. Pour tomato soup over

all and bake for 25 to 30 min- | utes in a moderate oven.

an

Couple Leaves on: Honeymoon

ME AND MRS. PATRICK J. O'NEILL JR. are en route to north-

ern Wisconsin and Minnesota following their marriage

at 10:30 a. m. yesterday in St. .

Joan of Arc Catholic Church. Mrs. O'Neill was Miss Audrey

Ann Herber, daughter of Mr..,

and Mrs. K. H. Hérber, 4025 Broadway. Mr. O'Neill's parents live in Logansport. Msgr. Clement Bosler read the double-ring ceremony and the bride's father gave her in marriage. - = = MISS HERBER was gowned in white imported organdy fashioned with a high neckline. A wide band of embroidery formed an off-the-shoulder effect. The

gored skirt had a front panel

edged in embroidery. The skirt extended into a slight train. She wore an elbow-length yeil at-¢ tached to an embroidered crown and carried a white rose cascade. on s o

White eyelet organdy over -aqua taffeta and headbands of white organdy flowers were worn by Miss Helen Herber, matron of honor, and_ Misses Ann Herber, Charlotte “Herber and Mary O'Neill, bridesmaids. They carried pastel floral fans. Jerome O'Neill was best man and ushers were John O'Neill, John Griffin and Paul O’Connor. A breakfast was held in the Hawthorn Room and later a reception was given in the Herber home. At home address Aug. 10 will be Cumberland. The bride belongs to Sigma Beta Sorority. Mr. O'Neill attended St. Joseph's College.

"stitching hems,

© By JOAN SCHOEMAKER

EASONING in “the Harold Fay household, 2420

. N. New Jersey St. takes

on a Portuguese, Hawaiian, American and Oriental flavor. Mrs. Fay, Hawaiian by birth, lived with her Portuguese grandmother as a girl ‘and

manently when she and her usband came to live in Indianapolis in 1946. “I never tasted hamburger with spaghetti, ” she says, “until IT came .here. Now we have ot at least once a week.” “Meat was cheaper at home,” she continued, “probably because we had it on the island ..and there was no shipping “cost. Practically everyone has a pig in the back yard. If there is a wedding, birthday or anniversary, they have a luau and invite the whole neighborhood. n

THE traditional Hawaiian lpau is a party at which a whole pig is served, Killed and roasted with hot rocks under ground, the pig is served with seaweed and salt; raw salmon fixed with onions, tomato and water and opihies, sea food similar to clams which are mixed with salt and hot peppers. The Orientals on the island contributed chop suey to Mrs.

4

i Fay’s cosmopolitan cooking.

“I take green beans and slice *them thin for chop suey,” she began. “Then I cut up onions, fresh broccoli, if IT can get it and bean sprouts. I cut up and brown any kind of steak I can buy. Then I add the vegetables when the meat is tender and

cook them until they're not quite done. ” o ” “I ADD SOY SAUCE after

the meat is browned and" thick+ en the meat broth with flour. I

Sewing Is

Made Easy

A sewing machine designed for the unmechanical woman panicky over attachments for fancy stitching has hit the local market. This machine is the Necchi. All attachments are built in. Levers do the tricks, blinddarning - and mending. ; The machine makes buttonholes, two and four-inch, It appliques. - It embroiders. It sews stfaight or zig-zag—goes forward and reverse. Those forgotten pins in a garment cause no trouble. The machine rides right over them and over heavy seams. Here to explain the Necchi for the next three weeks are demonstrators representing Necchi's Illinois distributors. The free demonstrations are sponsored by Rose Tire Co. Inc, exclusive distributors of the Necchi in Indianapolis and Marion County. Demonstrations are held at the Rose Tire branch at the Stop & B8hop Super Market, 2625 Madison Ave. Hours are 9 a. m. to 10 p. m. Mondays through Thursdays, 9 a. m. to midnight Fridays and Saturdays, and 9 a. m. to 10 p. m. Sundays. Bargain sewing booklets and free gifts will be dis- - tributed. Later free sewing schools will be held one night a week for Necchi owners and other women interested. The Necchi comes in portable and console models. As the latter its cabinet forms a desk.

Marjorie Copeland Becomes

Bride of Jerry

AT HOME address of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry E. Knight |

is 4034 Boulevard Pl.

Knight

Mr. Knight, son of Mr, and Mrs. Loran Knight, 1712 Montcalm St., wed Miss Marjorie Jean Copeland, daughter

of ‘the Harry H. Copelands, 3624 Northwestern Ave. last Sundgy. The Rev. Howard F. Miller read the double-ring

ceremony in Seventh Christian

Church.

The bride wore white slipper

satin, ballerina length, with illusion net veil attached to a band of lilies of the valley. She carried a white Bible topped with a white orchid.

The matron of honor, Miss

Nancy Tames, wore light blue’

organdy. Miss Barbara Absher and Miss Elizabeth Sauer wore light green and pink stole frocks and carried colonial bouquets. Truman Knight was best man and ushers were Ulysses G. Knight and James Knight. After a reception in the church the couple went on a wedding , trip.

Mrs. Jerry E. Knight

adopted the United States per-'

This is it!

of Summer

Dresses—

Final CLEARANCE SALE

Sportswear—

Drastically Reduced!

“Tomorrow's Fashions Today”

Millinery— Skirts—

| Cecily

Preview for Fall STARTS TOMORROW

Times photo by Ray “Bright.

SUPPER—Mrs. Harold Fay prepares hamburgers, Portuguese-Hawaiian-American style, for the Fays’ evening meal.

serve it with rice which is boiled until dry and steamed for 20 or 30 minutes, and serve green onfons or tomatoes as a side dish.” Another dish she “inherited” from her Portuguese grandmother is cabbage soup. It combines split peas with cabbage and ham and boiled potatoes. “Everything I cook has to have gravy,” she pointed out, “because my husband happens to like rich brown gravy that has a good meat flavor.” 8 ” ” ONE OF HIS favorites is hamburger cooked in the gravy. To do this Mrs. Fay makes patties from hamburger, salt, pepper, eggs and onions. This is fried until brown and removed from the skillet. The meat drippings are made into a gravy with flour and

: Juice of one large lemon Rose water Sugar sirup (hot)

the rose water.

water and then the hamburger patties are returned to the gravy to simmer gently until thoroughly done. “Lomi salmon and pol often make up a whole meal on the island,” she pointed out, “but I never learned to like either one.” Poi is a potato-like vegetable, which growf under water and is boiled and peeled. The na-

tives pound it until it is like a

dough and then thin it with water. In some homes it is eaten-as often as three times a day.

Dinner Meeting Set I-Tops, the Indianapolis PBX club, will have a dinner meeting at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday in the dining room of the Warren Hotel.

ERNIE NEI R RNR A RN NTO R TRAN ROOT RRSP R NRE RETO RRR RRR asus Ine

An Exotic Recipe...

RASOGULLAS

2 pts. milk 14 1b. small lump sugar

; Bring the milk to a boil and add the lemon juice. Strain through cheese cloth and allow to cool. Add Shape the milk residue into balls, placing.a lump of sugar in each. Add the balls to the sirup and cook gently for 10 minutes.

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