Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1936 — Page 18

Early Marriage

for Widowers

Says Action May Indicate Respect, Affection for ‘Wife.

Jane Jordan will study your problems for you and answer your questions in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—What do you think of a man - who will’ marry again within a few months of his wife's death? I always thought my brother-in-law was in love with my sister, He was devoted to her in her lifetime and overcome by her loss. “But whén he married six months after she passed away . I knew he didn’t care for her at all, and his tears at her funeral must have bee n insincere. I'm through with

him. I don’t like |"

to have him come to the house any Jane Jordan more. My husband likes my brother-in-law, and thinks I'm too hard on him. Do you? A SISTER. likely you are. When widowers marry without the conventional period of mourning, it is not necessarily 'a reflection. on their relationship to the first wife. It may be an indorsement. The happy, contented ‘ and emotionally satisfied husband is more apt to try to. reproduce the conditions of his first, marriage immediately than the man who believed his marriage to be a failure, and who had gradually grown away from his wife and his home. All the grieving in the worid will not recall the partner who is gone. Since it is not easy to readjust a life that has included another to a life that.concerns only oneself, the healthiest thing to do is to replace the lost partner as soon as

‘Answer—Very

a suitable person is found. * hose who stubbornly hang on to:

unproductive grief may not be the most. foving people in the world after all, but only the most unadjustable. Sometimes the grief is only a blind to cover up a deeper sense of relief at release. The realization of this fact usually is too painful to be tolerated by a conscientious person. To compensate for his own hard-heart-edness which he secretly deplores, he may hang on to grief to prove to himself as well as others that he entertained no death wisnes. To grieve makes him Ieel better about pimself. Dear Jane Jordan: — What is meant by the term “emotional infant” as applied to adults? How does an emotional infant act? QUESTIONER. Answer—An emotional infant is one who matured chronologically

PARTY dress, even for a very little girl, should have an air of festivity and’ No. 8802, with its ruffles, is certainly in that classi-

fication.

Easy for Mother to make, too. Choose sheer white cotton,

printed or embroidered in pastel shades, and add a narrow blue ribbon for the sash. Dotted swiss, organdy or silk also ‘are appropriate. Sized 2 to 8 years, the 6-year-old size requires 2. yards of 39-inch material

and 2 yards of ribbon for the belt. has up-to-the-minute style notes is No. 8420.

A practical play dress that also The Peter Pan collar

and turn-back cuffs should be white if the dress is in solid color. Challis,

gingham, pique or lawn are suitable.

Patterns are sized 4 to 14 years.

Size 10 requires 2% yards of 35-inch material and, for the collar, % yard

of contrasting material and 2% yards of ruffling. To secure a PATTERN and STEP-BY-STEP SEWING INSTRUC-

TIONS, fill out the coupon below.

The SUMMER PATTERN BOOK, with a complete selection of late dress designs, now is ready. It's 15 cents when purchased separately. Or,

if you want to order it' with the pattern above, send in just an additional

10 cents with the coupon. a

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES, TODAY'S PATTERN BUREAU. 214 W. Maryland-st, Indianapolis. " Inclosed is 15 cents in coin for

Lo

je. Pattern No. sstssensesstbsscrasevattavansonresy Size sssesssssccnne

~ Name ieescasssassensttenctesn teste Address Sermo NIRRRRYS

City a iE hisaaakins dash State ..............

\

Sees Politics Women’s H ope

By United Press

it Comes but

ENTIRE STOC

v

Barbara Ann Stone, Ruth s Coughlin, Peter Pierson and Billy 1 Moun-.

tain (left to right) practice pony riding at Riverside Park before the - St. Joan of Arc. Woman's Club outdoor party tomorrow night ¢ on the

school grounds.

A pony track is to be a feature,

-

without maturing emotionally. He |

may have a good business head and be able to support himself and a family, but in all emotional issues he reacts exactly as he did while still in the nursery. He may howl and scream for his own way. He may attract attention to himself by having tantrums. He may expect to occupy the center: of the stage at.all times and have people wait on him as his parents did. Few adults are completely free from infantile reactions. Have you never seen a grown-up act exactly like a spoiled baby?

MRS. J. A. BROWER HEADS LUNCHEON

‘Mrs. J. A. Brower is in charge of the women’s luncheon bridge and

keno party to be held Wednesday

at the Highland Golf ang: Gountey Club.

Mrs: Hvicber Is

from’ Washington where she attended the wedding of her niece, Mis$ Florence Johnson, formerly of Indi-

of Mr.'and Mrs. Ray Gordon, Jeffer= son, Md. The: bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. merly lived here. The couple returned to Washington, Bfer a wedding trip, for resience,

The bride attended ' St. Agnes was graduated from Sacred- Heart Academy, Washington. Mr. Gordon is a graduate.of John Hopkins

University.

Hospital Sengiry Equipped

‘With Air-Conditioning P lant

Surgeons at Methodist Hospital worked today in cool comfort provided by a new air-conditioning system, turned on yesterday. : This is the first of a series of units to ‘be

installed in the hospital, according

to C. C. Hess, assistant superintendent. Several difficult met in air-conditioning the surgery. Mr. Hess said. This was one of the

50 ENROLL FOR. YARNELLE CAMP

Instructions for the third annual camp: for Tabernacle girls will be given at a parents-campers- meeting at :8 p. m. today in McKee Chapel of the Tabernacle Presby--terian Church. Fifty girls, the capacity of the camp, and 10 counselors, under the direction of Mrs. James B. Martin, are to leave for Yarnelle Camp Aug. 1. Girls who have registered to date are: ‘Betty Aspinall, Gloria Attkisson, Alice Berman, Betty Burchkes, Marjory Clark, Marjory Callo-

way, Catherine Clark, Betsy ‘Dale,

Blossom J. Degischer, Evans, Jane PFreihofer, Chlloris Fisher, Marjorie Geupell,© Mary Henshaw, Nancy Hurt, Phyllis Hall, Dana Eackerd, Martha Haverstick, Marilyn . Hooley, Sally Hammond, Agatha Kemper, Jane . Martin,

Barbara

Miriam Martin and Betsy Maynard. |

Jane Meyers, Jane Mendenhall,

Marcia Mendenhall, Janet Malar=4

key, Marie Morgan, Betty J. Mosiman, Mary Mayer, Winifred Marriott, Patty Plummer, Sally Peterson, Patty Peterson, Shirley Ostermeyer, Joyce Overbay, Dolma R. Overley, Lois Richardson, Betty Richardson, Suzanne Reel, Jeanne Shirk, Barbara Smith, Virginia Spiegel, Anna Spiegel, Helen Shumaker, Janet Tripp, Cynthia Templeton, Anna Wood, Martha Wynne, Mary Lou Van Horn, Jane Williams and ‘Rosalind Wholmes.'

: ENTERTAINS CLUB IN MOTHER'S HONOR

Mrs. Helen Croner entertained members of the Bonnie Briar Club today at her home, 3839 Winthrop. The party was in honor of Mrs. Croner’s mother, Mrs. Lena Hub bard; who recently observed .her eightieth birthday.

Salad Suggestion If a salad is to be the main dish, make a large one. Use . various fruits or vegetables, cooked or raw, or fish, cottagé cheese, or eggs.

once a yea

$$

Children’s

problems : were.

largest hospital - installations in the country. The question of regulation of temperature ‘and humidity was settled by a thermostatic ‘control system. whereby ‘both = temperature and humidity can be regulated to any degree in any room. This meets the requirements of surgeons for their individual patients. Surgeons who sdw the system in operation ‘expressed themselves as Pleased, ‘according to Hospital officials.’ air “should prove béneficial to” patients, some said,vand. should: aid in preventing infection.

New .Percolator Big H elp

‘Those family rifis resulting from

‘house when his morning coffee falls short of the strength he likes are solved by a percolator that may be

later has a ‘dial on which are the words, “Weak, ‘Medium, Strong.” The current, automatically turns. off when the coffee has ‘reached the desired strength.

Wed $ Recently

—Photo by Dexheimer-Carlon. Mrs. Earl W. Mericle was Miss Ruth Pink, daughter of Mr. and

»Bath From East|

Mrs. “A. 3. Hueber has returnod

-anapolis, and Gefald L. Gordon, -soi»

Homer F. Johnson, for-.

Academy at Memphis, Tenn. and’

The €doled, washed, filtered’

the peevishness of the head of the.

adjusted automatically. The perco- |

Look Ahead on New Coiffures, Expert £ Advises

BY ALICIA HART Times Special Writer

This is a good time to try a new Coiffure. It takes a few weeks to train” hair a new way, so, if you begin now, your hair will look well groomed and attractive when your | social life begins again in SeptemIt is a good idea to change fhe | ‘part .at least once a year. Right

your nose too long and pointed, you ‘might try a center part This ‘lends itself admirably to the brushed backward effects thai are popular. Regardless of ‘what you try, Temember that casual curls and soft, wide waves ‘which sweep upward from the neckline at the

back and backward at front and sides are better than severe lines.

{Your finger waves always should be

brushed out before you leave the beauty . shop. Curls, too, ought to be combed | through and through, then coaxed back into place by your hairdresser. If you are tired of fussing with long hair but hate to give up the flattering effect of a bun or fullness across the back of your head, try a long bob which can be worn down in ringlets or pinned up in a soft chignon. If you like very short hair for daytime but something softer for evening, . try wearing a halo braid or a. thick halo, curl around your | head at. night, . Don't. festoon this with ornaments, clusters of flowers or groups of wax | vegetables. Use one jewel or one fresh flower and nothing else. If your face is’ quite full, you'll find sleek, brushed-back arrangements most flattering. If it is thin and long, fullness at the sides will make it seem less thin. Older women, especially those with tall, statuesque: figures, will do well to forget about curls below the nape of the neck. High curls or dignified swirls generally ~are. more “suitable.

WEDDING DATE SET ~ FOR LOCAL COUPLE

aounced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Catherine Bockweg,

Mr. and Mrs. John Fitzgerald. The ceremony is to be read Aug. 18 at St. Philip Neri Catholic

Church.

Mr. Fitagerald attended Notre Dame University. .

| ACTRESS WEARS

. GIRDLE OF DAISIES

"Barbara Pepper, screen player, wears a filmy dance frock of em-

{ erald green chiffon made with a

halter neckline and no back. It has,a girdle of pearl daisies, and the blond Barbara wears ‘a cluster of similar flowers in her hair ;

For Summer Beauty

our new. scalp and a conditioner.

Mrs. George R. Fink, before her 1\

L recent marriage. ‘

Don't Sues: YOUR. EYES

ss About

now, Af your face isn’t too long or]

Mrs. Catherine Bockweg has an- |

to William Joseph Fitzgerald, son of |

Attractive Dishes Are Boon to Weary Hot Weather Diners

: Frequently Is Scene of Meals of One Family; Yellow China, Hawaiian Mats Give Tables Pleasant and Cqol Appearance.

BY BEATRICE BURGAN Seciety Editor

gasses wiss ave making Shel dining sotings auch sharp souvasts

An brightly colored linen, gleaming tinted china and |erisp, fresh garnishes appeal to. appetites as surely as icy, refreshing

nook, have found. “an outdoor setting as Ine

ed appetites.- If in the rose gar-

i

garden wall across the front of e side terrace forms “The Cloisters,” the Sherwoods’' favorite spot

5

for. resting and dining. The wall |

shields the brick terrace from the street, and.a roof in one corner

Provides shelter.

Uses Yellow China

| Mrs. Sherwood often appoints her - outdoor tables with yellow china, set on ‘colored linen. A bouquet of flowers from the garden usually forms ‘a centerpiece. Mrs; Sherwood has two grandsons, John Hartley Johnston and Geoffrey Johnston, Brantford, Ontario, Canada, with her this summer while their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Johnston, are in Treland visiting Mr. Johnston's father, Dr. J. C. Johnston. Mrs. A. W. Noling, who has returned from Harbert, Mich. with Mr. Noling and their children, Kathy and Larry, admits she is Just: beginning to cope with the hot | weather. . She relies on cool salads to make ‘her. meals tempting. One of her favorites is a mixture of cucumber and cottage cheese, which turns out a greenish white mold and catches

the eves of men, who. often. Scoff Bt) one of its kind in the world. The

such dainties, “It simply looks so refreshing

that it stimulates the appetite, 1

Mrs. Noling said. : She grinds up a cucumber soaked in salt water ‘with a small onion, adds a pound package of cottage cheese: mixes a package of lemon gelatine dissolved in one’ cup of water; adds one-half cup of mayonnaise” and an: equal portion of whipped cream. The last trick is molding and serving on crisp lettuce or water cress.

Finds Porch Practical

‘Mrs. Noling finds her screenedin porch’ a ‘comfortable setting for meals, ~~ In the summer” months, -Mrs. Billie Teel Tappan’ brings out some Hawaiian pieces ‘which form a light and airy setting.’ The lajolla ats from Honolulu replace the usual linen luncheon sets. The wooden kava bowl which ‘Samoans use to mix their ‘native drink serves as the flower container and is surrounded by the dried flower leis. Mrs. Tappan “carries out “the ‘Hawaiian scheme by serving long sticks ‘of

lengthwise into slices to serve with ‘their cold drinks, she explained. Mrs. Tappan has a favorite cheese ring salad which is decorative on a luncheon menu. * She soaks a tablespoon of gelatin in a quarter cup of cold water and dissolves over a pan of hot water. Two packages of Philadelphia cream cheese and one-half cup of roquefort cheese are worked together with eream and added to the gela-. tin. A cup of whipped cream is jadded to the mixture which has been/ mixed with one-fourth feaspoon of salt, one teaspoon of onion juice and a fourth teaspoon of paprika. The mixture is turned into a ring

| marinated in French dressing cir-

EVENTS

CARD PARTIES

Townsend Club 10. Mon. p. m. Progressive Spiritualist Church, ParkBingo and ice cream social. National conven-

pineapple with’ ice ‘tea. Hawaiians * always cut pineapple

such sharp contrasts

mold: and chilled until firm. Mrs. Tappan serves the salad on a large platter, surrounding it with lettuce and water cress, with canned pears

cling the ring.

PARTY IS CANCELED BECAUSE OF HEAT

cause of the hot weather.

Flowers on Belt

big. bunch of gaily colored field flowers in the wide swathed belt of her chartreuse crepe dinner

av and St. Clair-st. tion reports.

Curtis’ Reed, assistant hostess.

1336 N. Delaware-st.

SORORITIES Co-Wa-Ma Club. 8 p. m. today. Mrs. William Smith, hostess. Mrs."

PROGRAMS AIL American Townsend Club. 7:30 p. m. jo

Odd Fellows Hall

Paris School For Women to Be Electrical Engineers.

BY ROSETTE HARGROVE

PARIS, July 17. - (NEA) — Ten years ago, with no capital but plenty of enthusiasm and ardor; Mademoiselle Marie-Louise Paris founded her Institute of Women Electrical Engineers, the first and only

Institute was open to girls of all nationalities. Under her inspired guidance, 150 girls have been graduated from the Institute with the diploma. of engineer. which hitherto had either never been: considered compatible with feminine capabilities or had been occupied by men.

‘According to this very progressive

and dynamic French woman, there is no reason why scientific ability should remain the exclusive possession of men. Until she. founded her school, few. if any Frenchwomen were afforded the advantage of a scientific education, although many were attracted by: it. Literature, the arts, and later on medicine and law were the: only fields open to the sex. Science, electricity and mechanics seemed absolutely inaccessible. Of ' course, there were a few women like Clemence Royer and Madame Curie; but it was out of the question to dream of emulating or even approaching their achievements. Marie-Louise Paris belongs to the bourgeoise. Her father was an offi-cer-in the Army ‘and:believed in a sound education for his two daughters. They both studied at the University of Grenoble and took science as a side course, because they happened to be interested. After the war, the girls were faced with the problem of earning their living, as were so many other girls of their social standing. Electrical engineering had a particular appeal for Marie-Louise, so she ghntinued her studies and was one of the first women in France to obtain her engineer’s diploma. Her first job was

in a laboratory where she was put

in. charge of measuring. electrical units. - Later she studied signaling and secured a post in the signal station at Laon, an. important railway junction in Brittany. -

Each has obtained a post

“It was never my intention. te train women to compete with men,” she:says. “On the contrary, my aim has always been to ensure a closed collaboration between them. Only thus do I understand progress.” But I do think that woman can play & very important and efficient social part in the various aspects of indus= trialism, besides developing into an excellent technician. “The woman engineer can do much towards introducing the hu= man element in factory or worke shop by her daily contact with the worke She can do a great deal towards attenuating the overs mechanizéd side of factory work. ‘And the most comforting result of my efforts is that every year I find the number of industrialists ‘anxious to secure the services of my girls increasing.”

MEETING ARRANGED BY CHURCH GROUPS

The Woman's Auxiliary and the Choir Chapter of St. Paul’s Episco= pal Church are to meet jointly at 1 p. m. Monday with Mrs, Josephine Fry. hostess. : The meeting is to be held at. the home of Mrs. Fry's daughter, Mrs, Bon O. Aspy, in Brendonwood. . -

KATHERINE M'CLURE" TO TEACH AT LAKE

Miss Katherine McClure, daughs= ter of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Mc Clure, is to leave Sunday - for Winona Lake where she is to join”

the teaching staff of the Presby= terian Young People’s Conferench

for four wi The e ment of Miss McClure to Cecil E. Edwards, Dayton, O., son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Edwards, Glenburn, Pa. recently was announced. The wedding date has not been. set.

- Protecting Floor When painting about the house

glue a paper plate to the bottom

of the paint can. It will protect the floor by eatching drips.

TAS a

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