Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1937 — Page 24
PAGE 22
16-Year-Old | Secret Wife Asks Advice |
Lunts,
NN RR
Annulment Is Best Jane
of Marriage Course, Says.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan, who will help vou with them hy her answers in this column.
PEAR JANE JORDAN-I| have thought of writing |i to vou for some time but was | : afraid you would overlook my | problem. I am a girl of 16 years who is married secretly. | I was married last August at th age of 15. My husband and I ran | away and got married. I lied about | 1 Don’t blame my husband, | for it was all my fault because 1 did not tell him the truth. He thought I was 18.
ny age.
We never told anyone abont onr parAfter abont four months 1 got tired of him and told him so. He begged me not to quit him but I did. Since then I have been going with several fellows. I like them all right but somehow I don’t feel the way I did about my husband. | I know you will say I am too | voung to know what love is, but I| would like to know what to do. He nts me to go back with him and I want but up other dates, I
marriage. I live with my
ents and Ne lives with his,
The Lunts
Ta
to very much, hate
than Still
tn want to almost any other plavers. we should make our mar- they
Known, I am terribly worried
Wallis” Hat to Be Shallow-Crowned
n't know what my do to me if
do
parents knew. But give me some WORRIED hat
thev please
Bu United Press MONTS, France, March 25.—Mrs. Wallis Simpson's Easter hat is shal-low-crowned. and trimmed with flowers, attaches of the Chateau de Cande reported teday.
Mind Your Manners
ANSWER honestly
+}
1 think ¢ ing vou do take parents into let them have lied After all, you got vour false pretenses. You don’t really want to be married. You to be free to run around with and have a good time Marriage is for adults, not children. It entails certain responsiwhich you are not prepared to assume. Divorced from these responsibilities, marriage simply will not work, as you have discovered, You two have looked on it as a lark, a gesture of deparents, 2 method of growing up in a hurry graduated from
can your
iS confidence | marriage
vour
ana
yout
license under
want
the bovs
hilities hv T'est vour knowledge of correct social usages by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. Is it ever permissible to convey meat to the mouth with the fork in the left hand, prongs down? 2. In setting a table, . should the water glass placed? 3. In setting a table with the dinner napkin at the left of the plate, where should the open corner of the napkin be placed? 4. May one drink soup when it is served in a bouillon cup? 5. In eating soup, is the spoon dipped toward or away from oneself?
fiance against your
where
have be
before von the family. € you are a pretty spoiled she get what simply Mv guess 1s that vou wanted to show your parents that you were not the child they thought. However, you have the courage
A secret marriage was
nks can
wants by grabbing it
didn’t to defy them openly, of Aas-
A
your compromise, your serting independence while clinging to vour dependence How often when mother corrected vou have vou thought, with satisfaction, “I am no child, Mother, I am a married woman, like yourself, What would you do if you knew?” Now you find vou don't like being tied down after all. You don’t want sacrifice your other friends or vour carefree good times, You want to be married without accepting the of marriage. In words, you want to remain a child with grown-up privileges. It can’t be done. Now the most courageous thing you can do 1s admit your mistake, You can’t work out your own problem without your parents’ help which proves you are by no means ready to get along without them in marriage
way : What would you do if— You are at a dinner party and are offered food which you distike— (a) Refuse ijt? (bh) Accept it and leave it vour plate? (c) Accept it and make a pretense of eating some of it?
vour
on
» n »
Answers 1. Yes, this is the Continental method which is coming more and more into use, 2. At the right about onehalf inch from tip of knife. 3. Open corner becomes lower right hand corner nearest plate 4 Yes, handle. 5. Away, .
tO
cone othel
ditions
holding it by one
Best “What Would You Do?” solution—(e), {Copvright. 1937
NEA Service, Inc.)
o
"Mr. Lunt spent his bovhood days. |
jcony under rafter gables.
| Persian linen.
JANE JORDAN,
A brand-new dish for Easter
Na TASTIEST FRAN PIE | EVER ATE ....AND
"OF COURSE, a, T's MADE ¢ &K° 3 WITH Spry Sg : RG —— \
N,
0 A ————————————" ——————
HAM AND EGG PIE A tempting main dish for Easter or any day 3 apes, slightly beaten 2 cups cooked ham, cut in 15 teaspoon pepper §-inch eubes 14 teaspoon baking powder 15 cup milk
1 eup grated cheese 1 unbaked pre shell
| | Beat eoge elightly and add pepper, Baking powdar, milk. ham | and cheese, Por into unbaked pie shell. Bale in very hat aven | (175° 1.) 20 minutes, or nti] knife inserted cames ont clean. (No soggy undercrust, made this new way with digestible Spry.) | Serve with grilled tomatoes or a green salad. Serves 6. | | | |
SPRY PIE SHELL cakes ever. Try 134 cups sifted all-purpose flour 1 cup © 14 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons cold water (about)
Sift flour and salt together, Add 24 of Spry and cut in until mize ture is as fine as corn meal. (Done in a jiffy with meple-cyen Spry!) Add remaining Spry and continue cutting until particles are size of a nayy bean. Sprinkle water, 1 tablespoon at a time, over Ly With a fork, work lightly together until a dough je formed. Roll dough 34-inch thick, Place dough in pie plate and fet relax S minutes. Pat with ball of dough. Trim pastry 35 inch farger than pan and turn back edge. Flute rim. |
Bon i — ——————————————— i —" "a
tender fried foods
easy to digest as
flakier pastry, too in yout mouth and are as
No smoke when frying, either. Get Spry today. Sta fresh and sweet indefinitely right on the pantry shelf.
JESSY ALL-vegetable shortening=TRIPLE-CREAMED!
SX RYSY NN
(Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne) have three homes. ® While this may sound a bit plutocratic, the Lunts in truth have very | simple tastes, only insisting upon comfort. Their real home is the theater, for they spend more time backstage They also have a home in New York. | do need a home for summer
and recreation. Then they live | on a farm in Genesee, Wis, where |
| So fond were his memories of | | Genesee that when he married he persuaded Miss Lunt to go there land have a look. They have spent their summers there ever since. The Eunts modeled their small | farmhouse after a Swedish manor- | [house and actually built it them- | (selves with the help of Lawrence | Farrell, their company manager, | who is a carpenter by trade. The | exterior has slate blue trimmings with a wide uncovered veranda, | painted bright red. In the middie of the white portico is a figure of a “hausfraun,” with welcoming hands, surmounted by the inserip- | tion, “Velkommen,” which means | “Welcome” in Swedish. The living room decorations, as | colorful as Joseph's coat, were | painted by Mr. Lunt. The design is of quaint peasant motifs, with figures and conventionalized patterns. The furniture and rugs are | genuine Swedish antiques. The studio, finished with a rough log effect, has a quaint upper bal- | On the wall is a large tapestry print of In the center of the hangs a portrait of |
{
balustrade Lynn. A large swimming pool on the | grounds is fed by a natural supply of mineral water that provides effervescent bathing. The Lunts call themselves “grasg root” farmers, as they raise their own vegetables and do their own | plowing, seeding, harrowing and gardening. Miss Fontanne over the vegetables. “Never have I tasted such vegetables as we get every day during the summer,” she said. “The best part of it is our herb garden. If we are cooking and feel that the dish needs a dash of herbs one of | us runs out to the garden while the other watches the boiling pot.” | The Lunts are to appear at Eng- | lish’s in “Idiot's Delight,” for a | three-day engagement, beginning tonight.
is enthsuiastic
Mark Golden Anniversary Mr, and Mrs. Harry Dilehay en= tertained with a luncheon today in celebration of the golden wedding anniversary of Mrs. Dilehay’s par= ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wynn. Members of the Happy-Go-Lucky | Club were guests.
<4 PIES, CAKES, FRIED FOODS uh. everything now doubly delicious made with Spry
OURLY delicions and so digestible, so easy to make! No long, hard beat ing when you mix a cake. Tviple-orsamed Spry blends like magic, ents mixing time in half, gives the lightest, finest favored
3.8. CAN SAVES You Spry for
. crisp,
1b. and that melt 3.
if baked.
ON 3
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ‘Grass Root Farmers,” Build Own Home
WORKS UP TO END OF PLAY
Today's Contract Problem South is playing tract at seven hearts. The first two leads disclose that West held eight elubs and no hearts. What distribution of the other suits can give South his contract?
the con=-
QN7 764 7
>4 None
N
Ww E
Dealer | J3 AKS73
(Blind) (Blind)
97514 Opener—é& K, Solution in next issue,
None vul.
18
Solution to Previous Problem By W. E. MKENNEY
American Bridge Leazue Secretary
A end play at bridge usually comes near the end of a hand, when declarer is able to throw a chosen opponent into the lead and force him to make a play that will net an extra trick. Usually such a situation is built up, but now and then there turns up a hand in which an end play develops almost naturally with the opening lead. Today's is an example. West,
A fete
AKINO8T, $986; + aQ76
N Ww S Dealer A None WAKJT $AQI09765 a A110 Rubber—=All vul. West North Pass 14 Pass 49 Double Pass Opening lead—#$ 4.
E
Fast Pass Pass Pass 17
| before the dummy went down,
| thought he had a fine chance to beat the contract. That his eonfidence was misplaced was soon demonstrated, even though the end play did not come until the twelfth trick, when West was forced to make the losing lead. South won the opening diamond lead with the queen, and returned a diamond, clearing the suit. Now the heart was finessed, not with the expectation of winning the finesse, but with the hope of limiting West
|
Discipline | Not Always | ~ Punishment
Warning to Children] Often Given Through Admonishment.
(Last of a Series)
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Discipiine does not necessarily | mean punishment.
must not do that again or you will be hurt in some way, or lose the | faith of your friends. Once you lose the respect of others, you are done for.” The “constructive” type of punishment, or the preventive, is better than the one known as retribution, but the latter teaches its own les- | sons, too, or should. Being so different in sensitiveness, | some children will be worse for the very same punishment that will im- | prove their brothers or sisters. A | cross word or a spanking at the | wrong time and to the wrong child | had better be left unsaid and un- | done, and another way substituted. |
Infant Is Heedless of Rules
Very little children are slow about picking up the fine points of what we call “good behavior.” They see | {no great need to conform to rules, | because their reason and judgment | have not been developed. Moreover, | the animal urges are strongest now, | because they are developing their bodies by action. | The correction of a little child who has been sensibly handled from birth gets better results if it does not bruise these natural attributes. His disciplining consists of largely | | keeping him busy and interested, [and of reducing chances of miscon= |
[duct to a mipimum, For every fhunared children there are a hundred different natures. | Some can be punished without a dis- | {senting word. Others set up strong wills against restraint or correction. | Still others are incorrigible to any | kind of law, because nature forgot to |endow them with the beginnings of | moral sense. { In no case should punishment be |a mere blow-off to ease the parent's | | impatience or temper, but even so, [the child has to learn that one of [the consequences of misbehavior all {through life is the righteous wrath it engenders in others. (Copyrignt, 1937. NEA Service. Inc.) { diamonds. Then he laid down the two high hearts and threw West into the lead with the last heart, West still fought on, leading the jack of clubs. But dummy’s queen | held the trick, and declarer’s ace of clubs accounted for the needed trick to complete the contract. South’s bid of five diamonds, after his partner had shown a preference for hearts, was in the nature of a
in his choice of plays. West could see that he was in| difficulties, but made his best choice. | He laid down the ace of spades. | South ruffed. | Now declarer led four rounds of
: :
Nothing Takes the
FLOWERS
® Blooming Plants in abundance
* A Potted Plant will bring joy to every home
Cl
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PRICES REASONABLE
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ALLIED FLORISTS OF INDIANAPOLIS
slam try. North, although he held thi'ee hearts and only two diamonds, decided that the final decision, after West's double of diamonds, should rest with South. | (Copyright, 1937. NEA Service, Tne)
Place of
at EASTER
In short, the punishment of chil- | dren is “substitution.” Whatever | form it takes, it should convey to | the child something like this: “You |
jof 39-inch contrasting. | needed {requires 47s yards.
| BY -STEP | TIONS inclose
tsend in just an additional
-= THUR
Today’s Pattern |
r
£3 | ee) Nt”) a. Vn \ ELE
7
HE very picture of attractive |
is to
leisure hours 8016). As itself it can be
daintiness for (No, simplicity
the house coat making, it
easy
is
to eut and sew that
finished in a few hours’ time, Good !
in flowered challis, chintz, printed silk, or marquisette with swiss col= lar and sash, Patterns come in sizes 34 to 48. Size 36 requires 4%, vards material, plus 5 yard 21% of riboon the Short
yards
for belt. length
To secure a pattern and
SEWING
STEP-
15 cents in coin to= gether with the above pattern number and your size, your name and
| address, and mail to Pattern Editor,
The Indianapolis Times, 214 W,
| Maryland St., Indianapolis.
The SPRING AND 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,
10 cents,
Winters, the
410 N, Vanderbilt
Mrs. Dorothy S. Meridian St, is at Hotel, New York.
BETIY
A SALE OF
Easter
= $ 3
S0 |
is |
INSTRUCT |
\
SDAY, MARCH 25, 1937 | Reducing Is Not Sole End Of Our Diets
Menus Place in Health
1 | Programs. | . .
Have
Important
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX | NEA Service Staff Writer Ours is a dieting nation, wood beauties have set the fashit lin bodies that are slender and die that are dangerous. But dieting { should be regarded as a serious ma ter. Physicians take it | do nutritionists. And slender [are not the only purpose of die As every mother know in at { family there is often need for a { for anemia, for diabetes, for under | weight, for allergy requireme: | How can the untrained hou {find recipes and menus of inter | when some member of her family [must go on a special menu? Fi [she should consult her family phy | sician, then she might profit | read two valuable new book | give general nutrition 1] advice to the layman Food in Health and Disease “Dietetics Simplified,” is hy logert, Ph. D nutrition with a institute and former | medicine at University of land Yale University: and M | ter, M. A., Head of Home Economics {and Nutrition Department of Publis Welfare, Utica, N. Y.,, with an excel lent public health and hospital rec« ord of experience. This book explains the use of health and disease which revelation to the lavman Its sections on cookery diets, and its menus and rec [men, women and children who
riou
bodies
SOWi!
now consultant nationall
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authentin food 1
will
01
|adhere to diabetic menus, or tubers {culosis, arthritis, anemia and | special diets, will be of incalculabla help to the puzzled hQusewile “A Diebetic Manual,” by i Bortz, M. D, associate prof medicine, Universily of Penney nia, and assistant editor of tl clopedia of Medicine,” is a th® housewife who tries to keep her family meals and the special dias | betic diet more or same line
Mrs, Charles Howard ‘Gives Luncheon Party
Mrs, Charles P. Howard tained with a luncheon and party yesterday at her home, 2715 [| N. Meridian St. Guests included the win ( ternational Typographical Un officers and department heads, i They were Mesdames Woodrul
Randolph, C. M. Baker, Franci
Barrett, William R. Trotter \
atl
\ C 1
hoon
less along tha
ener card
H. Chambers, Clark B. Hicl B. Lindsay and Walter Rose
GC AY mmm om
NEW 1937
Frocks
IN THE NEWEST SPRING FABRICS!
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Philling | ‘meder Bl
Thistle, |
You Can't Help Feeling
, Y Lovely in These Dresses,
Daz: to Choose From.
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Gay +.» And Looking Help Yourself to These
ing Values Tomorrow! 500 Crisp New Styles
ETTY GAY
5 East Wash. St.
=
