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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 7

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR PAGE I Tennis Tournament Fans CHf Classmate Visits Miss Atkins ITORIflLLY SPflKirtG THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1946 Betty Johnson To Be Wed To James E. Stone Aug. 4 Bride-Elect Announces Attendants Forj Rite In Broadway Methodist Church i i Miss Betty Lou Johnson will be married at 3:30 o'clock! Aug. 4 to James E. Stone in the Broadway Methodist Church.

Dr. John G. Ben Good things are still coming in small packages, and that's particularly an apropos statement as far as oranges are concerned this summer, especially the California valencies. You may have to buy more at a time, but pound for pound they'll "give" and with as much or more juice than their more "corpulent" brethren. son will officiate The bride-elect is the dauehter their sweet, their sweet, Oranges lend re of Mr.

and Mrs. John W. Johnson, 3111 Guilford Avenue, and Mr. Stone is the son of Dr. and Mrs.

Orville E. Stone, 5241 Washington Boulevard. Attending Miss Johnson will be the matron of honor, Mrs. William G. Johnson; maid i of honor, Miss Patricia Fulls, and bridesmaids.

Misses Susan Singleton and Betty Livengood. William G. Johnson, prother of the bride-elect, will be jbest man and ushers will be Stanleigh Mac-Donald and James Lastly. Miss Johnson attended Butler University where she is a member of Pi Beta Pbi Sorority and Mr. Stone also attended Butler.

gradually add the sugar and blend until fluffy; add the beaten egg and the vanilla. Sift the flour once, measure, add baking powder and sift again. Add to the shortening sugar mixture, blending well. Drop from a teaspoon onto a greased cookie sheet or chill and put through a cookie press. Bake in the oven at 400 degrees F.

eight to 10 minutes. NOTE One. half teaspoon lemon extract or black walnut 0 extract offers interesting flavor changes in this basic cookie recipe. One square of melted chocolate may be added to the batter to make a quick chocolate Wrnf miitvret flakiiif and yellow dilceleretion. ft cookie.

If only cocoa Is available use two to three tablespoons. i s. a sifted with the flour. Then add one to one-and-a-half tablespoons An informal ceremony at 8 o'clock the night of July 3 united in marriage Miss Mary Fox Wild-hack and William Mansell Hansen of New York. Miss Wildhack is the daughter of Mrs.

Donald Morris, 524 Buckingham Drive, and Mr. Hansen is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hansen of Ta-coma. Wash.

Wedding vows were exchanged by the couple at Steam's Farm, Peterborough, N. where both are directing the Peterborough Players, a summer stock venture. Formerly a dramatic director in the Hampton Institute in Virginia, the bride is a member! of the Junior League here. Both were students at Maria Ouspenskaya's School of Dramatic Arts, i Mr. and Mrs.

Hansen will return to New York for residence mint 10 me Datter. (M. They're called "comnanv cud cakes," but it's a sure thing that you don't have to have company SOIL-OFF is ready-mixed to exact proportions i No fun it must. fake it (honed with SOIl-OFF'S fcwgto formula. Miss Ann Atkins (right) has" had as her guest a classmate from Vassar, Miss Mary Anne Harrison of Greenwich, Conn.

Miss Atkins, who graduated this year, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elias C. Atkins, 4344 North Pennsylvania Street. vitalizing, flavorsome bit to many a frosty drink or dessert and there's nothing more welcome any time on one of these shimmering hot days featured by July as a specialty.

ORANGEADE COOLER Orange juice cups Lemon juice i cup Sugar syrup cup Ice cups Water cups Oranges thin slices Combine the orange juice, lemon juice and sugar syrup. Pour over the cracked ice or ice cubes; add water. Serve with thin slices of orange. NOTE Dissolve and make use of every grain of sugar by making a sugar syrup to sweeten your summer beverages. Mix two cups sugar with two cups water; boil five minutes.

Chill and store in your refrigerator. Use to sweeten any summer drinks. (M. VARIATION: Orange Juice combined with equal parts of apple juice, icy cold, makes a refreshing thirst quencher. ORANGE CREAM Orange juice chilled 1 cup Vanilla ice cream J4 pint Ginger ale 1 cup Beat together the orange juice and ice cream until the ice cream is dissolved.

Add the ginger ale. Serve at once in punch glasses with crisp cookies. There's gold in "them thar cookie jars" at least there is if you have 'em filled with "nuggets" when the folks edge kitchenward on a prospecting tour. Here's the "map" for 'em. NUGGETS Shortening cup Sugar Granulated cup Egg Beaten 1 Vanilla teaapoon Flour all-purpose I cups Baking powder teaspoon Cream the shortening well; Miss Connie McCown (left) and Miss Susan Dunlop, enthusiastic fans at the Western Tennis Championship Tournament being played this week at Woodstock.

Beauty And You to use ngm By PATRICIA LINDSAY bottle. Arwy lns i in July and Mr. Hansen wUl begin Repertory Theater company di- noted producer of Shakespearean i drama. Kleber-Elson Vows Mrs. Margaret Elson and Roy Kleber, formerly of Indianapolis, were married at 11:30 o'clock the morning of July 6 in the Arch Street Methodist Church in Philadelphia, Pa.

The bride Is the daughter of Mrs. Emma Laurie of Fort Wayne mA Ua I. 1 ested quality-Save. Underweights Require Balanced Diet And Exercise to enjoy mem: COMPANY CIP CAKES Shortening cup Sugar cup Eggs beaten 3 Lemon extract 1 teaspoon Milk 'j cup Flour sifted lj rups Raking powder 2 teaspoons Cream the shortening, add the sugar gradually, creaming until light and fluffy. Add the well-beaten eggs.

Sift the flour once, measure, add the baking powder and sift again. Add the flour mixture alternately with the milk, beating well after each addition. Add the lemon extract. Pour batter Into greased muffin pans, flll-nlg each about two-thirds full. Bake in the oven at 375 degrees Fahrenheit 20 to 25 minutes.

VARIATION: One-half cup of raisins, chopped nuts, coconut or maraschino cherries may be added to the batter for variety. Sprinkle a mixture of brown sugar, shortening and chopped nuts over the top of each cup cake, thus baking the icing as the cakes bake. (M. Tiieae email aquarea are for your con. venlence In ahopplns for the epwlnd ingredlenta; b) checkins off the Inxro-dienta whrn and aa you uie the reclpra.

For EAT-ltorlally Speaking broadcasts, tune In WIRE, 11:30 a.m., Monday through Saturday. your disinfects and deodot- ires. Seals paint pores. Prevents peeling 50ILDFF GenuMed ami uic ui lucrgi uuju la tile HOI1 UI Mr. and Mrs.

Frank A. Kleber, also of Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bates of Paterson, N.J., were the only attendants at the wedding.

Th couple will reside In Philadelphia. I MM Mefekeeeing The approaching marriage of their daughter, Joyce, and Pfc. Charles W. Ennis, son of Mr. 1 and Mrs.

C. W. Ennis, 1706 Cen-i tral, has been announced by Mr. I and Mrs. Forrest L.

Skillman, 1118 North Ewing Street. Vows will be exchanged by the couple at 7:30 o'clock the night Of July 24 in the Broadway Methodist Church with the Rev. (N. S. Jeffrey officiating.

vegetables (celery, cabbage, lettuce, turnip greens, spinach); (c) fruits (fresh and dried fruits and those canned without a sugary syrup or frozen fruits). Regular daily exercise (preferably out in the open air) does two things for the underweight: (1) It takes her mind off herself (as underweights are likely to be slightly introverted), and (2) it rouses a sluggish bloodstream and sends it coursing through the body, bringing nourishment to a sluggish skin, dull hair, flabby muscles, etc. It creates an appetite a natural desire to eat the menus she has planned. IT IS EASIER to reduce than to gain weight but normally gaining weight is possible. Miss Underweight should first visit her doctor for a general examination talk to' him freely about the inability to gain weight, constipation, if that exists, lack of appetite.

Be certain to be truthful with him and if she has a mental problem discuss that also. He must know all that ails her to help her. THEN SHE MUST plan menus for a month's period write them down and follow them daily. They should be well balanced: starches, fats and sweets should make up one-fourth of the food she eats (not more); one-fourth of her menus should include protein foods lean meats, poultry, fish, cheese, eggs, milk, peas, some beans and whole grain cereals. The remaining half is divided Into three parts: (a) root vegetables (beets, carrots, turnips, parsnips, onions and radishes); (b) leafy Miss Matkovitch Wed THESE WOMEN your very first treatment Made possible by the Kinesthetic Technique and Body AUNT HET By ROBERT QUILLEN Registered U.

S. Patent OfBca A lady just Lost 44 Pound and 8 Inches Off Hips Before her marriage on May 4, Mrs. Jerome A. Hellmann was Miss Dorothy Matkovich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Matkovich, 968 North Arnolda Avenue. Mr. Hellmann is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J.

H. Hellmann of Tipton. (Moorefield.) in only 15 See how easy it would be to lose 5 or 10 pounds and 2 or I inches in spots. START TODAY AND SAVE HALF THE TIME AND EFFORT O. I.

Pal Off. Visits Relatives Mrs. Robert M. Stith of 3755 Washington Boulevard is in Terre Haute visiting relatives, and Mr. Stith returned last night from Lake Wawasee, where he has been staying for a few days.

TARR SYSTEM 511 Roosevelt Bldg. RI ley 1184 "Well, that's the last 'time I'll ever eat in that place. I finally got a table where I could see into the kitchen, and one look was plenty." "Good morning, Mr. Frelinghouse, dear! Dorothy Dix Says Good Thinking Would Avert Calamities TO BEGIN WITH, there would be few unhappy marriages if A LITTLE bobby-socker who is at that enviable age that comes only once In a lifetime, people used their brains, Instead of their fancies and their wish bones, in picking out their mates fill There would be no silly, boy-and- girl marriages that are for' doomed failures. No rich old men when one knows the answers to all of the $64 questions, takes me sharply to task for saying that common sense is one of the things most needful in marriage.

She opines that common sense is excess baggage in marriage, because marriage is a gamble and common sense has nothing to do with the way one turns out. I stand reproved, but being one of the senile adults who through many a long year has watched, and women would buy themselves young wives and husbands. Sensible people would count the cost of wedding rings before they bought them. And only morons would marry on the grabbag prin ciple, with the idea that if they didn't like what they got they would chuck 'em and marry some body else. And if common sense would Cool light-weight to pack lor vacation! practically stop divorce at Its source, because It would keep people from wanting decrees ab solute, it would also teach hus witn pity ana exasperation, so many marriages end in the divorce court that should have gone on to a Golden Wedding day, I still believe that a lot of good, hard, horse sense will do more than bands and wives how to make the best of their bargains, instead of wrecking a fairly good marriage because it didn't come up to all of their rosy dreams.

Common sense would make a man reflect that though his Maria was no (MM si i mmm mMmlm j-SAl ''vL'li 'l Weft" 1 1 1 im TP Glamour Girl, she was a cracker jack cook, and make Friend Wife realize that though her John Arm might be short on sentiment, he was long on money, and that a mink coat can cover a lot of de fects in a husband. vBriefs any other one thing to keep a marriage a going concern. OF COURSE, marriage I a gamble, and it Is true that everyone who enters into the holy estate does so at his own peril, but, it is precisely because it is so chancy that there is a super-need for our using every particle of Intelligence God gave us when we start upon the adventure. So it is not too much to say that how every marriage pans out depends not so much upon how romantically in love with each other husband and wife are, or AND THE ONLY real, bonaflde, blown in the gla.TS recipe for making a happy, peaceful home is common sense. No man and woman in the worla ever thought alike, or had the same Interests and desires and tastes.

Every husband and wife are bound to what fine characters they possess, or how conscientiounly they try to do their duty, as it does upon their common sense. for August-Info BEAUTY PAYS WELL! SMklnt inUrtln waj of urn-Irr a Uvtng? Uet to the practical, helpful facta about our Beaut course. Steady employment waltlnK. Special ratee and terma, Writ or prion for free booklet. Cotton and Rayon Brief, 59c Carter's All-Cotton Brief, 60e Just what you need the sleek comfort of Carter cotton briefs.

So light, so cool, you hardly realize you have them on at all! Wonderful under shorts, slacks, etc Colors white, tearose, blue (in rayon and cotton). Balbrig-. gan type in white, yellow, tea-rose, electric pink. fall quiet, side-swept drapery of rayon crepe InttrMtionil laauty Schiol MA. 7131 circled with a band of satin to highlight its hue of Mid MS E.

Waak. St. have opinion and prejudices and ways that clash and get on each other's nerves. There are always plenty of things that every couple can quarrel over and argue about. The foolish do this and make their homes places of torment, but the wise, who have been blessed with good, hard, common sense, keep off of each other's don't-step-on-the-grass sign.

They skip nimbly around every forbidden topic. They avoid controversial subjects and only discuss the matters on which they see eye to eye and can yes-yes each other. And they liv happily together in a home that is filled with the peace that passes all understanding. No need for common sense In marriage? Why, It Is needed there more than anywhere else in the world. (Tomorrow SiMrt Motew-ta-Law,) Season Black 29.9S Fashion Shop, Second floor is As Seen In July Vogue III Ml Watson's Underwear, Street Floor Why lay la We Supply 1m JUST CALL RI.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1862-2024