Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1937 — Page 16

PAGE 16

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

_

WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1987

2

And now, to mark the close of day, comes the evening prayer.

fix their eyes on the wall-picture of the Child Jesus and ,repeat their little prayers.

sions of Yvonne, Cecile and Annette at left. with Nurse Noel.

All kneeling, the five little Dionnes

Note the rapt expres-

But Marie has turned to exchange some silent secret look Emilie beside Marie maintains the correct attitude. Thus each day closes.

TR

And now the five little girls troop off to bed. Mostly they crawl into the side-barred cots by themselves as Yvonne is doing at left, but a boost comes in handy now and then, as Annette is finding out. A bed for each child, and then one of the nurses will also take her place in the bedroom for the night.

Claims Boys Want Girls To Show Their Affection

‘Frank’ Also Declares There Is No Shortage of Men

Here; He Draws Wrong Conclusions, Jane Says. : Join in all the discussions which interest you. The best letters will be

published in this column. | n 8 n | ®

8 # . | EAR JANE JORDAN—Allow me to say a few words that will not be to your liking. Many, many times 1 have read your articles andywondered where you get this stuff that a boy does not want a girl to show him that she cares for him: If she wants him she will let him know and

give him a good chance to get her. You're just all wel about girls having trouble in getting a man. Their biggest trouble is getting a baseball bat big enough to beat - away the boys who want ‘heft. These silly letters which girls write to you about not being able to get a boy friend is just their way of getting a laugh at your expense. You had better get wise to your own business. A girl ean’t hide out on the boys. They will find her any place without her trying. Trusz the girls are all looking for a handsome young millionaire: but anyway (they get their man even if he is only a drunk, and whe isn't? It is the boy who can't get a girk because there aren't enough &irls to go around. That is one reason why girls get married at 14, 15 and 16. |A young man knows if he doesn’t grab her quick someone else will. A man wants to hear a girl say “I love you,” don't think he doesn’t. -A man will not run away from a .girl who shows him she loves him if she is the right kind of a girl. FRANK. ANSWER—You have been drawing a lot of wrong conclusions from one or two letters. If you had read as much as you think you have, you would have found letter] after letter where I told the girls not te be afraid to show their interest in a boy. Love begins with the emotional impression that we please somebody. It is eratityige to our self-esteem and reinforces that feeling of personal worth whigh is one of the basic needs of human nature. Naturally we try hard to please the person who is pleased with us, - the better to enjoy his admiration. He, in turn, is gratified by our efforts and responds with more affection. The next thing we know | we have a love affair in full bloom, It is folly for a girl to hide her interest, if she feels it, from a boy who is interested in her. The only time I ever advise her to go light her fires on other altars is Where the boy is obviously indifferent, when ‘he has wearied of her attentions and has attached himself to another = It bores a boy to have a girl hang on forever after his fancy for her has flown. Your statement that a man will not run away from a girl who shows that she loves him, if she is “the right, kind of girl.” is absolutely inaccurate. Hundreds of girls, as right as can be from the standpoint of good character, could correct you with letters from their own experience if they would take the trouble to write them. It is obvious that you have had a bitter personal experience. In your hurt and disappointment you have projected your resentment against one girl on to her entire sex, endowing women in general with the characteristics of one woman in particular. Moreover you have credited all men with having the same attitude toward women that you have. : It would be interesting if the boys would write and tell us what girl they like best: The girl who shows her love or the one who keeps them guessing. You would be surprised, I feel sure, to find some who confess that they are most intrigued by. the unobtainable. JANE JORDAN

Gay-Colored Summer Styles

Are Modeled by Socialites

Summertime is playtime, and the new costumes for beach, country clubs, cruises and travel are as gay as the holiday mood. I. S. Ayres & Co. presented a summer fashion show this afternoon and society women and models paraded the styles.

Beach coats are as flattering as any evening wrap. One yellow cotton | (¢ shoulders,

‘robe, fitted on gored lines, is fastened down the front with a zipper, tagged with a yarn tassel. Miss Estelle Burpee wore a playdress with a peasant ancestry. Its full-gathered ®—— EE skirt is flowered and scalloped at shaus, W.. Hathaway Simmons, the bottom; its plain blue fitted | Fletcher Hodges, I. C. De Haven and | blouse buttoned in red. . Wiliam H. Wemmer were other so- | Bathing suits come in sleek silks, |S Women leading = visitors cottons 2 pleated skirts Bt through a day of fashion consciouswools in new patterns. i Wemmn, The new rain-washed pastels are | - ' yer er appeared in a combined with dark shades for | oWn tweed cape as an example unusual effects. The styles have a hr a traveling ensemble. definite poised air—no more is the or two daughters, Barbara and careless mood setting the pace. Sr en, in Vn isis of blue Fashions under the moonlight | frocks pd apd : hs and white are romantic. Mrs. Conrad Ruckel- | pate pars ed wi B or: shaus wore a web of black lace purposelu

hovering over a blue-gray slip. MERIT

Another model of floating white chiffon is robe de style, with a gar- Shoes for the Family land of lilies of valley circlin TH? Kine, edged ||| Meropams BRL < psp diareds

off-the-shoulder neckline, edged Moro at wae 332-334 W_ Wash,

briefly in green. St. Mesdames Thomas Ruckelshaus, Neighborhsed Nor tr 2308: Mendis

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OOK the lady of fashion] + wherever you go. Make the smart daytime frock (No. 8967) with a becoming collar and princess lines forming a yoke effect in front and back. The collar, cuffs and handy pockets may be trimmed with braid, ribbon or binding. Good in linen, voile, percale or seersucker. Patterns come in sizes 14 to 20; 32 to 42. Size 16 requires 4! yards of 35 or 39-inch material, 4!i [yards of 1!'sinch bias fold required for trimming. To obtain a pattern and STEP-BY-STEP SEWING INSTRUCTIONS inclose 15 cents in coin together 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, send in just an additional 10 cents.

giddy. protect the eyes, and long, foolish streamers trailing almost to the fioor or long veils which flutter in the breeze. Colors “are splashed together in riotous coufusion and are stamved onto cottons and silks in bold designs. Flowers are large and brilliant and blooming on waistlines. Tidy mess jackets hug the figure with sports clothes and evening | dresses; capes are squared off on trail over party gowns or fit snugly over afternoon dresses.

They have wide brims to

AROUND THE CLOCK WITH THE QUINS—No. 12: So to Bed

All Photos Copyright, 1937, NEA books Ine,

All tucked in now, snug and warm, it will be only a matter of minutes before those bright eyes with’ which Yvonne and Annette peer from the blankets will be closed in sleep. Then quiet enfolds the nursery, and the Dionne quintuplets have completed another day.

Todays Pattem Babies Are People—They

Enjoy Appetizing Food

| Handling Food and Learning How It’s Cooked Will

Increase Appreciation

of It, Writer Declares.

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Service Staff Writer

Nursery foods, of course, should be simple. Out of the mouths 'of babes

| may come wisdom, but foods fit for infant epicures.

{i The appetite of children is born

t into these same sensitive mouths should go none

wise, but the puritanical food many

mothers set before them often blunts their natural wit in eating.

| Then young appetites fail and doc- « | tors recommend tne mountains and ! cod liver oil, and no one is’ happy. | The mountains and oil are excellent, {but a few vivid recipes might have achieved the same thing more cheaply. Take spinach, for example. If your child hates it, then don’t make him eat it. The markets abound in other equally good green vegetables. Or take oatmeal. If daily you fight the oatmeal battle over the nursery table, desist. Try wholewheat toast. As long as that 'potential epicure gets enough vegetable and cereal food in dis eating day, the form of that fodd should be left to his, not your, preference. It is easy to teach a very young | child to enjoy almost all types of | valuable foods. Oranges, grapefruit, bananas and orchard fruits are dra- | matic in color and shape. Teach | him to take these foods realistically. If you develop a child’s sense of | smell for focds, you will guard him in his youth against eating unfresh | and spoiled foods for the rest of his life. A fresh egg has its own smell. Let your infant epicure. actually | learn the smell of a fresh egg both | when raw and cooked, and you have | set his tiny feet on the road to food | enjoyment,

|

Outgrows Smelling Period

When the child epicure has graduated from the smelling grade, promote him into the kitchen class. Let him watch how food is prepared. There is a world of difference between a raw potato and a mashed potato. First let him take the potatoes from the bin, feel their hardiess, see their earthly skin. Let him watch you peel them, then let him wash them for you. When they are tender, drain at once and with: a fork, actually feel what has happened- to them. He can stand near while you mash them and can hand you butter and seasonifig and milk as needed. This little drama of the mashed potato has two great values from a child education standpoint — it demonstrates and it allows the child to participate in a family activity. After the kitchen-helper grade, he should pass into the principles and

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let him!

practice of cooking. If very young,

gelatin, place it in a bowl and then add the required amount of warm water from the tap.

‘Give Him Beef’

A prime roast of beef is one of the most savory facts of life and no child has learned to live until he has seen the steel edge of a carving knife pass down through that perfectly cooked roast. Give him beef. He is a growing animal and needs sturdy food. . Beef will catch his imagination and in its red nourishment he will find . spontaneous enjoyment. Encourage the child to relish its flavor. Don't spoil his practical exercise in epicureanism by telling him that roast beef is good for him. Enjoyment is the birthright of every child and in the food he must eat to achieve his stature and maintain health, there is such vital pleasure as makes gangster movies and lollypops seem but the substitutes for natural enjoyment.

<he cannot do any stove work. But | he can open a package of prepared |

It is nearly 6:30 and the children are tired and usually quite ready to crawl beneath the warm blankets.

SINGLETON DEFEATS HAND

Today’s Contract Problem ‘South has the contract for six clubs. On the winning ace of hearts in dummy, at the first strick, what card should South play from his own hand —a losing spade or diamond? AS 7654

A8 K2 107 N

53

All vul. Opener—¥ Q.

Solutioft in next issue. 28

Solution to Previous Problem By WILLIAM E. M' KENNEY American Bridge League Secretary HETHER 'a player should open a singleton in a suit bid by his opponents, in preference t03 leading a suit bid by his partner, depends largely on the probability of partner regaining the lead before trumps are drawn, as the purpose of a singleton lead ordinarily is to make a small trump that otherwise would be valueless. Today's hand is an excellent example of a singleton opening that is. unquestionably correct. West, the

leader, holds the ace of trumps and thus must get the lead whenever trumps are led.

73 ®5432 94 AKQJ1086 v6

®Q76 oo AS Rubber—N & S. vulnerable. South West North East 1 Pass 2¢ 2v 36 Pass 44 Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead—@ 9. 28:

two tricks, one ruff will beat the contract, and if the singleton jis led at once, there is a chance for a twotrick set. ‘| South's. opening bid, while based on minimum high card values, had behind it a six-card suit, solid save for the ace. His partner's diamond response seemed to him to justify a jump rebid. West, before making the opening lead, reasoned that his partner could not be relied upon for more than two tricks in hearts, if that many, as he had made only a nonvulnerable overcall. Heart tricks available, even plus the ace of spades, were not enough to beat the contract, and West correctly reasoned that his small trumps might” be donverted into tricks by an immediate lead. South won the first diamond lead, and led a trump. West won and led

If his partner hasia heart. East, realizing the effective

Spring Care of | Skin Important

~ BY ALICIA HART NEA Service Staff Writer The care you give your skin right now, during these early spri days, is most important. Unl you protect it from overdoses of sunshine, and se avoid { windburn, you'll have a. leathery= | looking, rough complexion before

{ you know it.

After months of being a verita= ble hot| house plant, you ought to take sun, wind and active sports in moderation hh your skin gets’ used to the new. conditions. Cream face and throat, and apply fresh ‘makeup, including | founda-

‘tion lotion, beforé you go out to

walk in the breeze, ride in a'rumsble seat or play golf. Clean with cream as soon as you get! back in the house. | ‘If you are contemplating sunbaths on‘ the "roof, use a suntan preparation on face, arms, shoulders and legs. Dan't stay in the sun more than fifteen minutes the first day, twenty the second day, and half and hour the following three. Allow your | skin to become accustomed to exposure gradually, and you'll have asnice even coat of tan, instead of a bad burn or rough, red splojches.

defense devised by West, returned a diamond which West ruffed. West led -another heart and, as South had to follow suit, West was able to utilize his last trump to ruff a diamond and thus defeat fhe con= tract two tricks.

(Copyright. 1937, NEA Servies, Inc.)

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