Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1937 — Page 14

PAGE 14

17-Year-Old Girl's Father Will Not Allow Her Any Dates With Boy Friends

Jane Advises ‘S. M.’ to Prepare to Take Care of Herself and to Make Social Contacts in the Daytime When Papa Isn’t Present.

Jane Jordan will help you with your problems by her answers to your questions in this column,

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” ” ” EAR JANE JORDAN—I am a girl of 17 and have lots of boy friends who would like to have dates with me, but my father won’t let me go with any boys. He will not let me go with any of my girl friends either, because he thinks that I will meet a boy on the way who will speak to me. I am just like a wall flower who cannot do anything or say anything. He thinks that I am not big enough to watch what I do or say. I do not go any place but to church on Sunday nights and when the young people speak to me in front of my father he gives them dirty looks and says things to hurt their feelings, and they are afraid of him. Sometimes they get mad at me for what he does and says to them. Should 1 give up my friendship with the boys and girls? I don’t know what life 1s yet. I never have had a good time. If it wasn’t for my mother I don’t know what I would do. I am a junior in Technical High School and I want to quit to get a job and finish school later. What would you advise me to do? S. M. ANSWER-—If you have any aptitude for learning at all, it will be better for you to stick it out in high school until you finish. It would be smart for you to choose a profession now and prepare for it. You are in a school which stresses vocational guidance and to neglect this opportunity to equip yourself for work would be folly. As I have said so many times in this column, the ability to postpone the desires of the moment in favor of a future goal is the mark of a mature and intelligent person. If you do not learn to do this you will always be a bungler in life, incapable of solving your own problems. A really ambitious girl would work her way through college. That

Drink Water, Doctor Says

Writer Told Habit More Important Than Fluid Itself.

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Having asked a doctor about the amount of water required by children, and the kind they should drink, I learned a few things that may help the mother who thinks her baby doesn’t drink enough. First, he explained, extra water taken by a baby was more to form the habit of liking it than for the advantage of the extra fluid itself. Milk and formulas contain just

needs, but he should learn to drink water by itself anyway. “And, of course, it may be thirsty,” he added. My next question was, “What is the best kind of water for babies and little children ” “If the water supply of the city or district is known to be pure by analysis,” he replied, “the children can safely drink it. But I recommend boiling and cooling all water for infants. They need purity to the utmost. he added, “because it contains cer-

nature intended us to have. However, when there is any doubt

heavily ‘chlorinated’ as a precaution against disease, then I advise the parents of very young children to search for other sources.”

Most Babies Drink Plenty

would take yon away from home for four years and give you a chance to lead some social life away from your father’s domination. Of course your father is wrong—terribly wrong. It is just as important for you to make a good social adjustment as it is for you to graduate from high school. Over and over psychologists have proved that the healthest and most normal adults are those who have played with both boys and girls of their own age all of their lives, The fact is that we live in a world peopled with both sexes and our job is to learn how to get along with them, There is no intelligent reason to confine a girl's contacts to her own sex until she is 19 or 20 years old and then expect her to get along with men. Parents actually do their girls a damage by hiding them from boys and bring about the very results which they hoped to avoid. It should be obvious that ignorance of the male sex is no protection. The girl who is most often deceived, betrayed and disillusioned by men is the ignorant girl who did not know what to expect. Her training should have begun at the cradle. Your father's mistaken atitude is a handicap in life which you will have to overcome. He is not home all day. That gives you 12 hours free from his watchful eye. You will have to be more charming, more friendly, less catty, and less critical than the average girl in order to gather a loyal group of friends around you who will love you in spite of your father's glowering. If their sympathy is aroused, your plight will arouse them in your behalf instead of vice versa. Make friends in the daytime. Study hard at night, Do not try to escape until you have the equipment to take care of yourself. Don’t give up because your problem is tough. Lick the situation by using your wits. JANE JORDAN,

dianapolis

| hostess.

Mrs. Walter

Mrs. Walter | chairman, has

| Weir,

| Grief,

The wardrobe (estimated cost, $4000) with which Mrs. Wallis Simpson will dazzle Riviera admirers in the weeks before her expected wedding to abdicated King Edward VIII of England. includes a smart Molyneux spring coat waist and full skirt.

Theta Alumnae (SET BY ‘DESPE T'o Hold Election | This Saturday

Officers are to be elected for the | coming year at a meeting of the InAlumnae Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority at 2:30 p. m, Saturday. Mrs. John K. Good- | win, 1220 Pickwick Place, is to be

Greenough will | view “Patriotism Without Trumpets.” Shirley, as | Mesdames Stuart La Rue, Evanson | Earp, Rogers Smith, Llovd Harter, | John Alexander, Edwin Cree, Daniel George Witt | Woods and Misses Elizabeth DeHester Lee Moncrief and

(Both costumes sketched from radiophotos transmitted exclusively to NEA Service.)

loops of silk cord braiding.

| (right) with fitted beltless |

The neck is collarless and small widens into fullness.

revers as well as the front opening are edged with The evening gown: (left) selected from the Molyneux collection is of Mrs. Simpson's favorite silver-gray cast blue satin, made on sheath lines to below the knees, where it

RATE’ LEAD

query.

| »

Today's Contract Problem v)J J oA

North has the contract for six spades. Even with the loss

of only one heart, he has a | f choice of plays to win 12 tricks. Should he depend on the diamond finesse, or try a double

of finesse in clubs?

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Opening lead—d 8.

it is the other way.

into. needs and is not getting, or some | condition of his system needs at- | tention.” | “Should =a { with his meals?” | The doctor said that is the com- | monest question about diet.

East Pass Pass Pass Pass

25

explained. hurt, if the little one insists. But children in general, when they are on regular regimen of three meals a day, shouldn't have more than a glassful at a meal. And it should

with the mouth full of food only

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half chewed.

about enough water for the infant's

I like natural water,”

tain elements and minerals that |

whatsoever, or the supply is a bit

“How much water should children in general drink?” was the eventual

“Usually they take what they need, but occasionally we find a child who needs more than he is drinking. However, this is not common, because his milk and vegetables and fruits are full of water. It depends on his diet and what other fluids he is given. Sometimes

regular liquids, it needs to be gone |

He is craving something he|

child drink water]

be sipped slowly and not gulped

THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1937 Baby Should | Adult Educator

Pork Needs To Be Baked Thoroughly

Recipe Given For Crown Roast With Rhubarb Filling.

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Service Staff Writer

Statisticians report that half the

Mrs. Lydia Ann Lynde has gone to Washington to assume duties as parent education extension specialist of the Co-operative Extension Division, United States Department of Agriculture. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, P. M. Hildebrand.

Noted Women To Be Honored In Temple Rite

Services at the Beth-El Zedeck Temple tomorrow night will be dedicated to women’s service to human-

ity. The program wiil be sponsored by the Indianapolis Section, National Council of Jewish Women. Mrs. Samuel Dorfman vill deliver a sermon, “Religion and the Modern World.” The opening prayer will be given by Mrs. Jack Dee; reading from scriptures, Mrs. Arthur Rose; responsive reading, Mrs. Joseph Miller, and closing prayer, Mrs. Harold I. Platt. Music will be provided by the temple choir, composed of Mesdames Aaron Unger, J. Witoff, Misses Belle and Helen Klein, Sally Maurer, Alia Kline and Hortense Kauffman; Sam

If we find a| Hochman, Melvin Unger, Leo Kline child drinking, say, three quarts of |and Maurer Sicanof. water a day, besides his foods and |

Misses Mildred Loeb, Sylvie Mai- | erson, Lille Mae Smith, Miriam Sicanof, Sylvia Werner and Lorraine Wormser are to usher. Mrs. Sam Dobrowitz, hospitality chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Al Levinson, Morris Shapiro and Louis Sagalowsky at a social { hour, Mrs. Elias Charry and Mrs. | Abe Unger will preside at a tea { teble.

| “The baby or small child should

| be given water between meals,” he| (Yo 7 A .noeennioe 1/7 “Oh, a sip or two won't| (Good Accessories Vital

If you are shopping on a budget, remember that really good accessories make an inexpensive suit or dress look expensive. If you have to economize, do it on suit or dress, but not on shoes, hat, gloves, bag or blouses.

meat eaten in the United States is pork. Dietitians tell us that pork meat must be thoroughly cooked. And these recipes confide their tender, succulent secrets. Crown Pork Roast With Apple and Rhubarb Filling

(4 to 6 servings)

Two rib sections of pork sewed together, salt, mixed spiced, flour, 2 cups soft breadcrumbs, 3 tablespoons melted butter, 2 cup brown sugar, lz teaspoon nutmeg, 15 tea spoon cinnamon, 4 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon orange juice, rhubarb cut in : inch pieces, tart apples cut in cubes. Ask your butcher to prepare the “crown” of pork by sewing rib parts of 2 loins together, with the lean part inside. Salt, dust with mixed poultry spices, rub with flour. Arrange in roasting pan. Then mix together bread crumbs, melted butter, sugar, nutmeg, cinnamon and salt. Place a layer of these prepared crumbs in hottom of center of crown roast. Then add a layer of mixed rhubarb and apples and sprinkle with a few drops of orange juice. Add a layer of crumbs and then another layer of mixed fruit and sprinkle again with orange juice. Keep this up until the center is filled, topping with crumbs. Place filled roast in very hot oven (500 degrees F.) and roast for 20 minutes, then reduce heat to slow (300 degrees F.) and continue to roast until thoroughly cooked, allowing 30 minutes for each pound of pork. Baste frequently and cover thse scraped ribs which stick up to form the crown with brown paper to prevent burning. Serve with brown gravy. You may like the idea of roasted sweet potatoes with this de luxe roast; but erhaps fluffy mashed white potatoes would be better considering the sweet filling {of the roast.

Delta Psi Kappa Names Pledges

Miss Lorraine Smith, Syracuse, N., Y.; Miss Mildred Muench, Buffalo and Miss Mary McCracken, Indianapolis, are the new pledges of Delta Psi Kappa Sorority of the Normal College of the American Gymnastic Union. At the pledge services held recently at the home of the rush captain, Miss Loretta Lackey, Mrs. Ale bert Metscar, honorary grand presi« dent, was the speaker.

Program Is Arranged Mrs. Williams For W.C.T.U. Meeting | | Mrs. Mary Buck will preside at Defends Title Agamst Wallis

{as first-round control of hearts and diamonds, justified the slam bid. Mr. Henry held the West hand. He opened the eight of spades, which proved to be a killer. South could establish the club suit, but the dummy lacked entries to run it. All hope of ruffing out the losing diamonds had to be given up. With any other opening South would have lost only one diamond to East, as he would have ruffed a diamond in dummy and later squeezed East between diamonds and clubs. Due to the opening lead,

South was defeated. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.)

Tuberculosis Work Discussed by Board

The recent passage in the Legis lature of House Bill 79 was the topic of discussion at an Indianapolis Flower Mission board meeting at

Elizabeth Horner.

Mind Your Manners

All vul. Opener—é& 2 Solution in next issue. Water Dulls Appetite “1 would accent the chewing of food slowly and thoroughly more than the water part of it. Too much water with meals fills up the stomach and takes away appetite.

And it also interferes with milkdrinking or other nourishing bev-

erages that the mother prepares.” (Copyright, 1937. NEA Service, Inc.) ere en ona ——————————

25

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Solution to Previous Problem TIN i

By WM. E. M'KENNEY | American Bridge League Secretary Ir whist days there was an axiom, “When in doubt lead | trumps.” In contract the force of

the adage fails, but it might be re-

rect social usages by answering i “« the following questions, then Fond es desperate, make A

checking against the authorita- || “1 "toqay’s hand, R. L. Henry, of Live atiswers below: _ || New York, was in a desperate situa1. Should a secretary knock ||), jj a recent duplicate game. He before entering her employers had to lead against a slam bid, and private office! . | he felt that to open his own long 2. In writing 8 business let- suit would be useless. On the other ter is “Gentlemen” or "Dear || pang North, declarer's partner, had Sirs” the preferred salutation? shown no great enthusiasm for the 3. Is it good form io date a || finally chosen trump suit, although business letter “3-1-37"% : | South, from his bidding, seemed to | 4. When should the numeri- ||)ave it fully controlled. Mr. Henry | cal names of streets be spelled || felt his own trumps were useless, | the Fletcher Trust Co. today. This out? . | for he had only a remote chance of | bill provides for the maintenance 5. Should one answer a busi- |i pyff, | of a 100-bed Tuberculosis Hospital, hess telephone with “hello? South felt that his holding of king | as a unit of the City Hospital. Mrs. (and one of his partner's suit, and | James D. Ermston gave the legisla- | his own strong trump suit, as well | tive report. |

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A a the Francis Willard w. C. T. U. meeting at 10 a. m. Tuesday at the 2 YW. C0. A. Mrs. T. A. Berry and Mrs. Floyd Knight are to give devotions. Mrs. Lance Mantle and the Riverside Quartet will sing. Mrs. C. W. Ackman is to be the principal speaker.

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By MARY FENTRESS United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, March 4.—Mrs. Harrison Williams, New York, set forth today on an ambitious shopping tour to defend her title of “world’s bestdressed woman” against the challenge of Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson. The Manhattan society woman, whose husband has been telling the Securities and Exchange Commis- | | sion in Washington how he devel- | | oped a $2,070,000 investment into a | | position of influence in $2,500,000,000 | of utility companies, has the family | | fondness for big figures. She purchased four beaded cock- | | tail jackets, entirely handmade—at | about $750 each.

Test your knowledge of cor-

Couple to Return

From Bridal Trip

Today’s Pattern

feminine furred swagger Well tailored monoto nes. Fingertip, three - quarters or full length coat. Gray, powder blue and navy,

Utterly are suits,

tweeds,

After their return from a wedding trip to New York, Robert Tross and his bride, the former Miss Edna Lilyan Zier, are to make their home in Columbus, Ind. The marriage of Miss Zier, daugh- | ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Zier, 10 Mr. Tross took place Sunday at the | Zier home, 4031 College Ave. the | Rabbi Elias Charry officiating.

Real Race Develops

Mrs. Williams has been named the “best dressed woman” for four consecutive years without much of a struggle, but the wide publicity given to Mrs. Simpson's trousseau for her marriage to the Duke of Windsor has narrowed it down to a real race. Mrs. Simpson is known for her conservative—and at the same time ultra-smart—choice in clothes. Mrs. Williams ordered the four jackets—that's $3000—in different colors from Schiaparelli, swank couturier whose accent belies her | Italian origin. Schiaparelli, who has dressed Mrs. | Williams for several years, calls her “my best worldly mannikin.”

What would you do if— You were a secretary whose employer calls attention to a mistake in a letter which he had dictated— (a) Say, “I'm sure you dictated it that way’? (b) Say, “Some one interrupted me when I was transcribing my notes”? (¢) Say, “I'm sorry. I'll rewrite it, Mr. Brown”? ”n

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Two and Three-Piece Styles

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Answers

1. No, she should slip in as unobtrusively as possible. Good judgment will tell her when he Shoyd not be interrupted at all. 2. “Gentlemen” is preferred. 3. No, use “March 1, 1937.” 4. When expressed in one or two numbers, as Twenty-fourth Street; but one writes 155th Street, 5. No, one should establish identity as soon as possible by giving the name of the firm and his name or that of the department.

Feltman & Curme’s Shoes Will Help a Lot! w

Put Spring into your step! Quality constructed shoes that guarantee comfort and satisfaction plus up-to-the-minute styling. See our new selection for spring . . . all the favorite styles, patterns,

Dresses Simply

~ The “world’s best-dressed woman” | | is tall, stately, blue-eyed and has | | curly blond hair. | Like Mrs. Simpson, she dresses simply, preferring sport clothes and | tailored street costumes. She goes in for bright colors, particularly reds blues, but often wears black, Beautiful furs and Jewels, famous on two continents, set off her Ccos~ tumes, Mrs. Williams selected. in addition to the $750 cocktail jackets, a wine colored, crinkly mousseline for a cool summer evening gown, made

with low-cut decollete back tnd front.

Best “What Would You Do” solution—ec. Admit mistake graciously. Alibis are bad.

OUR new spring dresses will look much nicer if worn over

a form fitted slip (No. 8937). This one has darts at the sides, and the form-flattering up-lift seam lines now in vogue. The skirt flares at the lower edge. Make it in silk, crepe, satin, taffeta, rayon or chiffon. Pat-

For dinner wear, she ordered a dark blue dress in fine wool- jersey, made with high-necked front and bare-shoulder back. An accompanying tailored jacket of navy jersey is

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