Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1936 — Page 8
~ Proper Lights,
\
‘Wall Colors
Correct Design Seen ‘ Essential for Good Work.
Light-colored walls and good illumination from windows and night lights are a necessity in the kitchen for good work, and good ventilation is equally necessary for health, according to Miss Janice Berlin, Marion County, home demonstra-
tion agent who points out that much fatigue can be traced to eyestrain and poor air. Her recommendations for lighter and airier kitchens follows: White, ivory, tan or yellow walls and woodwork reflect light and dre aids in improving kitchen lighting. Sometimes a cool light green background proves sjccessful. Colors to be avoided are drab grays and browns, dingy greens and blues, which seem to depress the spirit and tend to absorb light instead of diffusing it. For best lighting, and also for cross ventilation, a good kitchen has windows on at least two sides, or one or two windows on one side and an outside door on another. The cross draft will take out hot air and odors, especially if the windows are high and opened from the top. Another advantage gained from setting kitchen windows high is that large pieces of equipment, like the sink or refrigerator, can be placed under them.
Curtains Are Attractive
The stove should be placed so that drafts do not strike directly. Such drafts are a fire hazard and decrease the efficiency of the stove. A screened transom over the outside
door and over the windows, if they are not sufficiently high, will aid in carrying off cooking smells. An outside door with glass in the upper half adds to the light. Curtains can brighten a kitchen if colors are good and they do not shut out too much light and air. Builders have set many sinks in dark corners, but it is not impossible to move a sink; in fact, it is often done for better arrangement. Some authorities say the sink belongs directly under a window that looks out over the garden or highway. The location of the window with respect to strong sunlight often determines the best location. A central overhead kitchen light is usually unsatisfactory because the worker is forced to stand in her
own shadow at some point in the
.
SETS IEEE 5
EWR EE NL Ep
comfortable appearance. Use cotton crash, gingham or pique : Sid 1 1e 29 and 32 10 0. Size 16 requires 3's yards of "To secure a PATTERN and STEP-BY-STEP
room.. It may be better to have separate lights over each work center such as the sink, the range and the table. ;
CHICAGO SELECTED SCENE OF WEDDING
The marriage of Miss Elise Gibsdn and Albert William Levi, Hanover, N. H,, is to take place Wednesday in Chicago. Miss Gibson, daughter of Mrs. Nellie Gibson, is a graduate of Tudor Hall and the University of Chicago. Mr. Levi is a graduate of RDNartmouth College and received his master of arts degree from the University of Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs, O, A. Jose Jr. are to sail from New York tomorrow aboard the 8. S, Exeter for Mediterranean ports. Mrs. Thomas D. Stevenson and Miss Margaret Stevenson, 5701 N. Pennsylvania-st, sailed for Europe Saturday, after several days spent at the Madison in New York.
R. H. Barnette Jr. Wed in February
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Norman, Pelham, N. Y. and Spring Lake, N. J, announce the marriage of their daughter, Mrs. Margaret Norman Collins, to Robert H. Barnette Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Barnette, 5021 Washington-blvd. The wedding took place Feb. 29 at Greenwich, Conn. The bride is graduate of the Academy of Holy Child Sufferee and Miss Conklin’s Secretarial School, both of New York. Mr. Barnette is a Culver Military Academy graduate and attended the University of Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Barnette are at home at 3415 94th-st, Jackson Heights, Long Island.
rd A A A
VEN the novice will need little more than an hour to make this grand
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BY MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Times Fashion Editor 3 “YTYLEASE suggest a practical outfit that will stand up for a week-end .trip of motoring, country club partying and town gadding,” writes an Indianapolis matron who has an aversion to carrying excessive luggage for a short trip, yet wishes to have a crisp, trim look through all hei*hot
| weather activities.
Good to Eat
OUBTLESS the meals that Vermont women serve to their families have had a lot to do with figures that have just come to light in a report of the Census Bureau, showing that Vermonters live longer than any other Americans. So today I shall give you some authentic Vermont recipes which suggest lurking vitality in dishes that for generations have been standbys in homes, where Green Mountain boys and girls are brought up. SOUR CREAM RAISIN PIE
2 eggs, slightly beaten 1 cup sugar 1 cup sour cream 1 tablespoon flour 1s teaspoon salt 12 teaspoon nutmeg 12 teaspoon cinnamon 1 cup chopped raisins 12 cup nuts, chopped 1 unbaked pie shell.
Combine eggs and sugar and beat until well blended. Gradually stir in sour cream. Mix flour, salt, nutmeg, cinnamon
together. : Add to raisins and nuts and mix well. Combine with first mixture. Pour into unbaked pie shell (9inch size) and bake in hot oven (450) for 10 minutes, then decrease heat to moderate oven (350) and bake 30 minutes longer, or until knife comes out clean. BLUEBERRY CAKES FOR SIX
2 cups flour 21; teaspoon baking powder 12 teaspoon salt 342 cup shortening. 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup sugar 1 egg $ cup milk 11% cups fresh blueberries or huckleberries 2 tablespoons powdered sugar.
Sift flour, baking powder, and salt three times. Blend shortening with vanilla. Add sugar gradually and cream until light and fluffy. Add egg and beat well. Add small amounts of flour, alternately with milk, beating after each addition until smooth. - Pour half the batter into a greased pan, 9 by 9 inches, cover with blueberries and pour remaining batter over the top of the berries. Bake in 8 moderate oven (350) 45 minutes until done. - Sprinkle with powdered sugar and cut into 3-inch squares and serve warm with or without butter. ———————————————————
Hair Is Matched
June Knight, who recently returned from New York, wears “brownette” accessories to match
lr
effective and blends in beautifully |.
with all of the summer shades. Closet May be Added
bedroom that does not have
38
Of course, there are multitudes of tailored sheers that are. as
smart as a whip; “there are cool,
charming crepe prints with con-
-trasting - jackets and there are cot-
ton. and linen ensembles: in dark colors (black preferred for new=ness). : . Any one of these fabrics is smart for all-round summer wear on the street, at the country club or the restaurant, but out of the maize of things practical and up-to-the-minute in one of these rough textured knitted suits for motoring and general vacation doings. There's a cottoncoolness about them and with the adoption of different accessories they can go completely sporty or take on an urban sophistication that will meet any occasion with well-dressed assuredness.
2 ” 2 Ir you plan to wear an outfit on your week-end trip that will not have to be supplemented with anything but an evening frock, consider this vertical self-striped two-
"| piece knit worn by the lady on the
left. It's as trim as a whistle and slim as a birch. In natural linen, this costume provides a beige background for colorful accessories and is due to arrive back home as unwrinkled and fresh as it appeared at the starting point. The three-piece ensemble (right) is a frosty white knit of leaf design stitch. The three-quarter length coat is the casual sort of wrap that Is indispensable to the summer wardrobe after sundown. Accents of color in sharp or subtle contrast may be brought out in hat, gloves and handbag, and youre ready to let come what may!
smartness we suggest
Sunnyside Guild Party Tomorrow
Sunnyside Guild is to entertain witheits annual chicken dinner party tomorrow at the Sanatorium. Mrs. Carrie Hammel and Mrs. Edward Mitchell are in charge of the afternoon and evening program, to consist of songs by Mrs. Charles C. Martin, accompanied by Miss Louise Hardesty; readings by
Peggy Trusler; piano selections by
Joe Lewis and Edward Mitchell. Betty Jane Mitchell is to dance and Phil Parsons is to give guitar numbers. The Harlan brothers, radio artists, also are on the afternoon and evening programs. : Mrs. B. B. Peftijohn and Mrs. George W. Shaffer are chairmen of the dinner committee, assisted by Mesdames Charles ¢ Seidensticker, Carl E. Wood, Floyd Mattice, John D. Pearson, A. B. Chapman, Wallace O. Lee, Mort Martin, Howard Linkert, Harold M. Trusler, Stowell C. Wasson, Sydney Rice, James Seward, L. C. Burnett, Chantilla White, Herbert Tyson, E. P. Akin, Charles Renard, Kurt Schmidt, Robert J. Clarke and William H. Hanning.
. ke for Youngster Vacation Help
Planning = Needed on Mother’s Part for Harmony.
(Dr. Morris Fishbein discusses infant health. Page 12.)
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON - Mothers: now face vacations, which, although they smack. of magic to the children, don’t thrill their maters any too much. ;
every second to locate the venturesome, patching up quarrels and nothing in order. Thus the picture unfolds itself for the summer ahead. Vacation time is always hard on mothers. Gone are the long peaceful hours; gone the quiet in which baby so peacefully slept his quota. Doors slamming, things torn up, clothes never right, and eternal ap-
| petities to be appeased at odd hours.
Is it any wonder we hunt up calendars to see how long we have to grin and bear it? Yet, the children aren’t to blame. They put in the days as best they can and after the first flush of freedom wears off, they are as bored as anybody. - Your Own Scheme Is Best
The best way to take anything is to face it. The next thing is to control a situation instead of letting it control you. The only way to keep control is to plan and then live up to the plan as closely as possible. In giving the following suggestions I haven’t the least idea that they can be lived up to, not exactly that is. But perhaps some mothers will see what I am driving at when I say to do so and thus. It may not be your idea at all, but it may guide the way for your own more practical notions. ~ First—Get the kids up on time each morning for their regular breakfast. Let them eat together and not when they chance fo grace the table. Second—Have some plans up your sleeve each day to get them
pass the time away. I think I should spot some old boards somewhere to be had for the taking, or a song, and then supply nails and hammers and an idea for a dog house, a ‘chicken coop, or a boat.
‘| Maybe there is no dog or hen,
so much as a drain to float a match box in. But that doesn’t matter. Anyway you might buy a hen or salvage a pup somewhere If such a thing couldn't be considered, Johnny can always make a wagon of sorts, or paint the ash-can, or make props for the beans.
Give Them Small Tasks
Third—Let them help out with the work. Assign some small task for each child each day. It won't be done to your liking, but it will be ga stabilizer and an anchor. And besides it might teach more than you think. Unless James is too weak entirely, he can and must cut the grass. Luella can certainly make beds up some way :if she is high enough to see over. Julianna can dust up the worst and set chairs straight. It doesn’t matter exactly * what they are given to do, or what play is suggested, no great shakes whether Henry is keeping a book of pressed flowers or gathering locusts or caterpillars in the interest of riddance. The thing that does count is suggestion and a certain amount of co-operation on your part. It is better to go the wrong direction than to drift aimlessly and without purpose. It is purpose that will help the days go by. Purpose of one kind or another that will save mama's nerves. Purpose that will lead to other ideas and smarten up the lazy. Drifting children are nearly always lazy children, and
Cross. ones. (Copyright. 1836, NEA Service. Inc.)
Martha Slaymaker, W. Z. Burns. Wed; Will Reside in Dallas, Tex.
Mr. and Mrs. William Zulich Burns are to live at Dallas, Tex, following their wedding trip. Mrs. Burns, before her marriage Saturday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Burke G. Slaymaker, was Miss Martha Slaymaker.
The Rev. Abram S. Woodard, Meridian Street Methodist Church,
LOSER HAS
Today’s Contract Problem
Against South's three no trump contract, the club suit was cleared on the second round. How many tricks can declarer make against this de.fense? : ¥ AABTS ¥Ji54
Solution to Previous ~ Contract Problem
BY W. E. WKENNEY
*
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POOR ALIBI
Rubber—E. and W. vull South West North East Pass INT. Pass Pass
officiated at the ceremony in the presence of the immediate families. The bride wore a caramel crepe ensemble with honey colored fox fur trim, and brown accessories. Her corsage was of gardenias and lilies. The bride is a graduate of Tudor Hall, Chevy Chase School and Butler University. She is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. Mr. Burns, son of Mr. and Mrs, Wayne M. Burns, attended Purdue and Butler Universities, and was ‘graduated from the Indianapolis College of Pharmacy. He is a mem‘ber of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity,
SLEEVE CORSAGE COMING IN VOGUE
It may not be proper for a young lady to wear her heart on her sleeve, but a corsage is a different Betty Furness started something when she appeared at.a recent so-
Up late, meals delayed, calling|
interested in something and helpt
Miss Emma Lou Voelker (above) is president of Indiana Alpha chapter, Lambda Alpha Lambda sorority, which is to hold its national convention in Indianapolis from V'ednesday to Sunday.
Athletic Club’s Carnival Opens
Early Thursday
Indianapolis Athletic Club members and their families are to move out, en masse, to Highland Golf and Country Club Thursday for the I. A. C. “sunshine and water carnival.” Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Fox, heading the committee in charge, have arranged a day of activity starting with a golf tournament for women at 8:30 in the morning. Mrs. Benjamin Perk is in charge of entries for the women’s event. Other members of the committee include Messrs. and Mesdames George Hilgemeier Jr., LeRoy Sanders, Harry Herff, Joseph Brower, Caleb York and W. H. Trimble. A golf and tenis tournament for ‘members is to start at noon. Mr, Hilgemeier is in charge of the tennis event, and Mr. Fox, I. A, C. golf committee chairman, is to direct the men’s golf tourney. Afternoon entertainment for women is to include bridge in the clubhouse, swimming and other outside activities. Games and contests are to provide entertainment for young sons and daughters, and there is to be a tea dance from 3:30 to 6, for juniors. Reservations are being made at Highland for the dinner to be served on the porch dining room. A barbecue dinner is to be served at tables arranged near the swimming pool in the evening, preceding the aquatic exhibition to be staged by members of the I. A. C. swimming teams. Members of the girls’ team are to demonstrate “water waltzing” to music as\part of the entertainment. Prizes for the various tournaments are to be awarded during dinner service. Dancing in the lounge and on the south terrace from 9:30 to midnight is to end the day’s program.
CLUB SCHEDULES OUTING TOMORROW
The Independent Social Club is to have its annual covered dish luncheon and outing tomorrow at the home of Mrs. H. W. Linabury, Zionsville. Cards ‘are to be played after luncheon, followed by games and contests.
MARY JANE DIXON, R. H. SEWARD WED
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dixon announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Mary Jane Dixon, to Robert H. Seward, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orin A. Seward. The wedding took place Jan, 31. > Mr. and Mrs. Seward are at home at 3519 Balsam-av.
Club’s Season Closed The Challengers Club has closed its activities until September. The last meeting of the year was held recently at the Lincoln.
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. :
Older
Is Home Wrecker, Girl Tells Jane
She Wonders Whether It’s Wrong to Misjudge or Mistrust Others.
Jane Jordan will help you conduct an inquiry into your problems. Put them in a letter today!
Dear Jane Jordan—Do you think when people misjudge or mistrust bthers they equally are guilty of wrongdoing themselves? I do. Which is the worst: Stealing, or breaking up a man’s home? I have a sister much older than I who broke up another woman's home and married her husband. Now she boasts about it. All her worthwhile friends have shunned her and because of it she terms them dishonest. Why, I don't know, unless she sees her mistake, knowing that she stole from a wom an her husband's love. MISS EADS. Answer—I do not know your sise ter or her husband and therefore have not ‘he slightest idea whether she deserves the disapproval of her « friends or not. It seems a little ridiculous to regard love as a commodity which can be stolen like the knives ad orks. ordan Such a view turns Jane J the husband into something of a sap, devoid of all powers of decision. ‘ In order to understand what happened one would have to know as great deal about the man and his first wife. Perhaps the two were so incompatible that release was a blessing. In this day and time we do not regard emotional change as crime although we do recognize that most marriages could succeed if the partners had a more mature attitude toward life and were less ine fantile in their love needs. Sometimes a second marriage works beautifully after the first has been an ignominous failure. It is a more common occurrence when the mistakes of the first marriage pursue the individual into the second adventure which becomes a repetition of the first and so on ad in< finitum. In all kindness may I say that it is significant that your condemnation falls only on your sister in a situation where three are involved? Are you altogether fair? - It suggests that you always have regarded her as a rival who managed to outdistance you no matter how hard you fried to keep up. Could this account for your complete lack of comprehension of her problem, or is she really as wrong as you believe? Don’t you see that if your sister boasts of her conquest it is done to still the uneasy. twinges of her social conscience? The insecure call attention to their conquests because they need reassurance as to their own powers, but the secure feel no necessity. ' The chances are that your sister enjoyed depriving another woman of her husband and would not have felt quite so attracted to the man if no competition for his affections was involved. ‘Even so all this indie cates is that she has certain neue rotic needs in love which we cone demn because they make us une comfortable. Whatever discomforts us in others needs inquiry, and research into our own reactions is apt to reveal reasons not as righteous as we supposed. You start your letter with the statement that people who misjudge or mistrust others are equally guilty of wrongdoing.’ Do you mean that they condemn in others behavior in which they dare not indulge themselves?
GINGERBREAD BASIS OF TASTY DESSERT
Homemade gingerbread turns into a proud dessert when it pauses on its trip from oven to table just long enough to be covered with a snowy “frosting” of cream cheese. The very next time you bake a batch of gingerbread, be sure to try this next-to-no-trouble, delicious topping. 1 cup cream cheese 1 teaspoon grated orange rind 2 teaspoons confectioners’ sugar Few grains salt 3 tablespoons orange juice Mash cream cheese with a fork; add orange rind, sugar, salt. Add orange juice slowly; creaming thoroughly. Spread on gingerbread.
Four Are Initiated Informal initiation services by Kappa Gamma Alpha Sorority were held recently for Misses Marguerite Peters, Margaret Hart, Helen Tindall and Mrs. T. O. McCleaster
SALE!
€ Pair
Pe
VACATION
HOSIERY
Chiffens and 80¢ Value
Regular . - NISLEY SHOES
44 NOR PENNSYLVANIA
Keep Cool and Comfortable!
Modern Croquignole
* Permanents
iz $159,
